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The
Alabama Blues
Project (ABP), based in
Tuscaloosa, Alabama, has been
called “a unique program that
helps children find harmony and
hope.” The ABP us a nonprofit
group dedicated to educating the
public about blues music and the
vital role that Alabama
Musicians from W.C. Handy to
Dinah Washington have played in
its evolution.
Once a week in
the spring, the ABP runs an
after-school program known as
Blues Camp. The camp is also
presented as an intensive
weeklong session in the summer.
Since its inception in 1995, the
camp and other programs have
reached more than 100,000
children. Seventy-two percent of
the campers are considered
at-risk because of poverty or
special needs. For the majority
of them, the chance to express
themselves through music is an
incredibly liberating way to
deal with behavioral issues or
horrific family environments.
The ABP blues camp is a lifeline
for the children whatever their
background.
Miz Thang has
been a guest artist at the
Alabama Blues Camp for the past
five years, leading children in
art projects that honor Alabama
blues greats. She always comes
up with highly unusual projects
that capture the kids’
imaginations and encourage them
to express themselves
creatively. For example, at Blues Camp, the group made
cigar box guitars and shakarees
out of gourds.
But in 2008
Mix Thang
contributed much more to the
Project than her time and
artistic skills. She donated the
Blues Door, which chronicles
hundreds of blues greats from
Alabama. The Blues Door includes
a written and pictorial history
of Alabama Blues.
Using extensive
research Miz Thing crafted
the door with cut outs
made from cabinet grade birch.
The Blues Door is
currently on display at the
Alabama Blues Project and is
seen below displayed at the
Alabama Blues Project Blues
Camp.
The
children and teens at Blues Camp
love Miz Thang and she loves
helping them release their
creativity.
Miz Thang is
available to lead group art
classes and projects for
children and teen-agers.
Email
her to set up an art
program for your group.
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