As School Year Comes to a 'FotoFinish,' Kids' Art Is in the Spotlight

As School Year Comes to a 'FotoFinish,' Kids' Art Is in the Spotlight

A piece by a Hall Academy for Success student

TO SAY THIS school year was a tough one for Houston students is an understatement. Masks in the classroom came off just a few months back, and even now, the dregs of the pandemic still require due diligence on the part of parents, teachers and kids who just want to go to school and be with their friends. Knowing the return to the classroom would be challenging, even scary, the teaching artists of FotoFest decided to use the power of art to help students examine and articulate their feelings through writing and photography.


FotoFinish 2022: Fun in the School Zone is the culmination of their work. The family-friendly exhibit, opening on Sunday, features 387 images taken by students from over 25 classrooms participating in FotoFest’s in-school and after-school Literacy Through Photography residency program.

“We were really thinking about how to re-engage the students with collective image-making and provide a safe space for healing,” explains FotoFest Learning Program Manager Chelsea Jones, who curated the exhibit with Teaching Artist Adanna Ade.

Over the course of the school year, Ade and her fellow artist-teachers introduced the students to the fundamentals of photography, initially using writing exercises to record and transform their feelings and experiences into images they could capture with point-and-shoot digital cameras. They also made it a point to take the students for outdoor walks and encourage what kids do naturally: play. “It’s just amazing to see the work the students produced as they were re-engaging with their friends through fun,” says Jones. Leaves, grass and flowers became popular subjects, but some students creatively re-staged their surroundings for poetic effect, as in a photo of a stuffed, purple bunny resting atop dried, autumnal leaves piled high against a chain-link fence.

Fun in the School Zone also includes a separate “reading room,” a space Jones describes as a “modern grandmother’s house,” with books to read and games to play. Visitors to the room, regardless of their age, are invited to do some of the same work that the students did in the residencies. “We want to bring out the inner child in everyone,” says Jones, “because we know that’s the place where healing happens, when we just let loose and play.”

FotoFinish 2022: Fun in the School Zone is on view at Silver Street Studios May 15 through June 4.

The 'School Zone' reading room

Photo by Jennesys, an Humble Middle School student

Photos by students of Cobb Sixth Grade Campus

Art + Entertainment
Thrive & Inspire: Creating ’Something Bigger Than Ourselves’ Drives Gooch and Pappas of RYDE

Ashley Gooch and Andrew Pappas, Co-Founders

WHAT INSPIRES YOU as you grow RYDE? The RYDE community and our team inspire us every day. The goal from the start was to create something that is bigger than ourselves — our community is just that. We want to push the limits of what a fitness experience can be. Our new Heights studio is a testament to that commitment, offering a high-energy indoor cycling experience in a stunning space. RYDE Heights opens in April, exactly eight years after our first location opened on West Gray in River Oaks.

Keep Reading Show less

Casey Axelrod, Stacey White, Christy Robinson, Laura Lewis and Mia Oliva

PETE BELL'S COTTON Holdings company, known for never doing anything halfway when it comes to parties, celebrated the return of the of the A&M-UT football game after a 13-year hiatus with the most lavish tailgating more gridiron fans have ever seen.

Keep Reading Show less
Style+Culture

David Cordua

FOODIES WITH BIG hearts were in heaven at the annual Signature Chefs restaurants expo and fundraising dinner benefitting the March of Dimes. Held at The Revaire and chaired by Kristen J. Cannon and Mignon Gill, the event took in some $425,000 in support of healthier mothers and children.

Keep Reading Show less