Student Spotlight: DJ echo emerald

Headshot of a white teen whit blond hair and headphones, with text "DJ Emerald Echo" beneath, and graphic of sound waves
Photo by Carlos Cruz

KEXP’s Youth Radio Program allows youth to work with KEXP DJs, to gain knowledge and training in music curation, board operation, physical and digital asset management, and basic broadcast DJing skills. The youth also become one of the rotating hosts for 90. Teen, a show programmed and produced by teens which airs on Saturdays, 6:00-7:00am.

One of our interagency students, DJ emerald echo, is part of the program and just hosted his first show on Saturday, Nov. 23! He shared his set list with us below.

Listen to his show through KEXP’s archive, by going to Nov. 23 and then Youth DJ.

I grew up in Seattle on many of the songs from my sets. I fell in love with 80s 90s rock on my Walkman and expanded from there. I have been exposed to all different types of music since before I could talk and I love the impact it has on the community. My favorite genre currently is house and 90s hip hop/ rap but you can never forget the classics. I’m looking forward to the opportunity to share my favorites with listeners like you and I hope you like my show 🙂 

NOV. 23 SET LIST

Modjo – Lady (Hear Me Tonight) 
MODJO

Holly – True 2 Me 
TRUE 2 ME

Stardust – Music Sounds Better With You 
MUSIC SOUNDS BETTER WITH YOU

MC Conrad, Seba – Words 2B Heard Meets Planetary Funk Alert
VOCALIST 01

Joey Bada$$ – Righteous Minds 
1999

Cypress Hill – Insane in the Brain
BLACK SUNDAY

Skee-lo – I Wish
I WISH 

The Pharcyde – Passin’ Me By 
BIZARRE RIDE

Ezra Collective, Yazmin Lacey – God Gave Me Feet For Dancing
DANCE, NO ONE’S WATCHING

Kelly Finnigan – Be Your Own Shelter
BE YOUR OWN SHELTER

INXS – Never Tear Us Apart
KICK

Walter the Producer – Now We’re Getting There
PLEASE HELP ME I’M SCARED

Read More

Faculty Spotlight: Yaz Williams

A selfie of Yaz, a black person in their 20s on a sidewalk, wearing white sunglasses and their shaped in 5 points

Yaz joined Arts Corps last winter as a Classroom Assistant and this year they are stepping up as a Teaching Artist. Recently, they were kind enough to share some of their thoughts, experiences, and practices of being a teaching artist.

“Being a teaching artist to me is being able to have influence and be influenced by the youth without being necessarily in a traditional educational setting”.

Yaz had always wanted to be a professional creative but they never expected to be an educator. To them, traditional educational settings place teachers in a loop, bound by a list of requisites they need to teach in a set amount of time. In their mind, this seemed taxing and problematic, because it often leads to difficult conversation being dismissed in the classroom due to a lack of time.

However, Yaz realized there are alternative routes to be an educator, giving them the opportunity to be someone who can have these difficult conversations, “We all come from different backgrounds. I’m not going to shy away from the experience of your background in comparison to mine. We come from different backgrounds, and sometimes we have stigmas against people with certain backgrounds. We’re gonna talk about that.”

Yaz’s practice centers the power of voice, the power of choice, and teaching responsibility through action. When they set rules, they explain the reasons behind the rule by discussing how each action is a choice and how each choice has consequences for ourselves and others. “I’m not gonna be like, oh, you did this wrong. I’m gonna say we don’t do these things because of this. We should not do that because these are the consequences of that action.”

This also leads to teaching youth how to advocate for themselves and respect others’ boundaries, “I want [them] to be learning how to ask for help. I want [them] to learn to say ‘I’m not okay with that, I’m not comfortable with that, you made me feel this way’”.

Yaz uses art as a way for students to practice their power. When Yaz presents an activity they say, “I’m gonna show you how I do it. I’m gonna give you the tools for that. But then it’s up to you how you wanna achieve that goal. And you might not even want to achieve the same physical goal that I would.”

The most challenging thing about using art as a medium is that a lot of people, regardless of age, view art as a skill or as a privilege.

“Art is a right”, Yaz says, “Everybody has the right to create…[But] a lot of times kids will not pick up a paintbrush, pick up an activity because of that inherent, ‘Oh, I’m not gonna be good at it’. I’m not asking to be good. I’m asking you to try.”

So the focus of their art lessons is not just about improving certain skills, but also about pushing through the fear of failure, the fear of success, the “taking yourself too seriously”.

“In my space I want you to participate, and participation is success. Working through your frustrations is success. I like anything you give me. But I’m gonna defy some things because I want you to see your own progress.”

Challenging what art or success might look like allows Yaz to approach learning as a process rather than a product, recognizing students as individuals with their own needs and skills. For example, Yaz might say, “I wanted you to try tracing it, because this is teaching you how to hold a pencil. I’m looking at how you’re holding your pencil, so I can see if I can correct the way that you do it. Even still, if you hold your paintbrush up here, that doesn’t mean you’re better than someone that holds your paintbrush down here. It’s that you have different versions of control, of how you use your paintbrush.”

For this upcoming year, Yaz wants to lean into the sense of limitlessness that art as a whole has to offer and so for their for first curriculum as a teaching artist they choose the topic of world-building.

“I’m really, really excited to see what comes out of this entire course because I might have painters, I might have story writers, I might have people that build a little tribe of dolls because they have that skill set. I’m just excited to see a new generation of artists that have the freedom of being whoever they want to be, because they were taught the techniques of something, the definitions of something, rather than how you should create with it.”

Something else they’re excited about being a new Arts Corps Teaching Artist?

“At the excuse being a sap, I’ve literally waited my entire life to be this person. It was never a dream that I thought was accomplishable. So like, I’m giddy just imagining being in a space as this version of myself and being ready to be with kids. And I’m just really, really excited to see how my students receive me, and my excitement. I’m excited for it all”. 

Yaz Williams is a multi-disciplinary artist from Raleigh, North Carolina who is Black, AFAB, and queer and as such, their work is centered in Black and Afro-centric standpoints. Some of their practices are graphic novels, storytelling, prints, and stickers. Yaz moved to Seattle in 2022 as a Montessori school teacher and has since worked with South End Stories and LAUNCH. They got a BA in Child Adolescent Psychology from the HBCU, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in order to learn what techniques were historically created as marginalization tools, how to move away from them, and how to better serve BIPOC students. As an artist and a person, they are interested in sustainability, third spaces such as libraries and tool workshops, learning different communication styles, and cultural education. They want to increase their own cultural knowledge and that of others in order to help build a better sense of community. They enjoy visiting new places and sitting in parks.

Read More

Alum Spotlight: Jordon

Jordon is a student-now-turned-alum who participated in our Interagency program for the last couple of years, including our Print 4 Life class with Teaching Artist Greg. In her time with us she has created multiple screen print designs, both for commissions and to sell at the Columbia City Farmers’ Market, and she has shown her work at Arts Corps’ galleries at ACT and at Windermere Mt. Baker. Recently, one of her pieces was displayed at the Seattle Art Museum. Jordon graduated from our program this spring and is now getting ready to start her undergraduate studies in art. We’re so thankful to have her share a little about herself before continuing on her journey!

You’ve participated in Arts Corps programs for the last couple of years. Can you share a little about your experience?
I came to Interagency High School in late 2022. I was extremely excited and nervous to be back in an educational setting following many years of attending school on and off. The only thing I was truly confident in was that I knew how to draw; I was sure I’d be able to at least rack up art credits. On my first day, I happened to meet Mr. Greg. We talked idly about Townes Van Zandt and other pop cultural nonsense. I’d identified myself as a “good draw-er” and showed him some of my drawings, and he told me about screen printing, something I’d firmly associated with Andy Warhol. Over the 11th-grade year, I changed a bit, becoming more confident—I’d credit that to screen printing. I had a pretty good mentor-student relationship with Greg; I learned I could make money and make connections with art, and I had a lot of really great opportunities to just learn. I guess the best part about the last (almost) two years has been that I’ve felt like I’ve become a better artist, like I’ve gotten advanced and I’m ready to take it farther.

When creating art where do you get your inspiration for your work?
Well, I’m not sure what that means. I just do it because it’s all I can do.

How did you feel about seeing your artwork up at the Seattle Art Museum?
It was cool. I had never been to SAM before, I’d only ever driven by it. When I was little, I’d look at the hammering man sculpture outside and wonder what was inside and sure enough, the first time I went in, I found my own work in there. 

What is the thing you are most proud of that you have accomplished?
Well, I’m going to college pretty soon—for drawing. That’s crazy to think about, the idea that I’m taking this whole art thing further and deciding to get an actual education in it feels like a huge milestone. It makes me really just… excited, but in a way, I’m also scared I won’t do well or have the skills necessary—but then I remind myself that I’m there to learn, no pressure. I’m proud of myself for getting this far, really. 

What are the biggest challenges you face?
Biggest challenge, well… I’m kind of on a roll right now. I’ve had a good last couple of years, and I’m hoping to have a good many more, so I’m not so focused on the challenging stuff. I’d say… I’m kind of scared for the future, but isn’t everyone at 19?

What is something being an artist helped you overcome?
Mmm…I don’t know, man, it’s a skill but it isn’t a superpower, it didn’t save me from a real life or death scenario, but it’s just always been something I was confident in. If somebody was mean to me and I couldn’t really come up with a good comeback, all I had to do was just draw a good, mean caricature of that person and my point was made, you know? It was the one thing I felt I couldn’t fail at, being an artist.

Give us a list of five people or things that have influence you and why?
It’s awful if I don’t give the first spot to a family member, so
1. Mom and Dad, I’m grouping them together because they’re pretty equally great – my father taught me how to draw in the first place, it was his sketchbooks that I was flipping through, he was the greatest visual influence from my early life – and my mother has always been the dominating force in my life, and their opinions are the only ones that genuinely matter to me.
2. Orson Welles, not to sound big-headed but I just relate very much to his perfectionist nature and work ethic. I don’t think I could make anything as good as Citizen Kane, really, but I like to think I could have a good career.
3. Kurt Cobain, does it even need to be said at this point? It feels redundant to say, but of course he’s a huge inspiration, his influence is everywhere.
4. Andy Warhol – because no matter how lazy I feel, I’ll never be Warholian lazy.
5. Mr. Greg. He’s the… Well, he’s taught me a ton, I guess he’s the Warhol to my Basquiat (hahahaha) and likely the most honest teacher I’ve ever had.

Pastel painting of a blue sky and desert, with a cutout pen drawing of a masked figure on a horse

Pastel drawing of a green space needle with colorful mountains and outlines of skyscrapers, with "Pearl Jam" at top

"Interagency Southeast" in bold letters around drawing of a wolf's head

"Youthgrow Interagency" in bold letters, with drawings of an apple, a strawberry, peas, and a tomato, all happy Screen print of "Hank Williams" in black serif, with a image of Hank Williams made from white negative space in black square

Screen print of a photo of Kurt Cobain on a white t-shirt

 

Read More

Staff Spotlight: Antonesha Jackson

Headshot of Antonesha, a black woman with hair in a top bun, posing against a brick wall, smiling

We’re so excited to welcome Antonesha Jackson as our new Director of Development and Communications!

Antonesha has a great combination of skills, experience, and passion for our community. We look forward to everything her new perspective and ideas will bring. Get to know her a little through some Q&As: 

You have a background as a STEM educator. What do you see as the intersection between arts education and STEM education? 
STEM is a vital part of the current world we live in, and much of STEM is about being creative which directly relates to art education. Engineering is a technical aspect of many art mediums, as not only physical but virtual materials are used. I never thought of myself as a creative until I learned how to code and create my own applications based on my own ideas. 
 
Another part of your background is that you attended Howard University. What was the value of this experience?
Going to an HBCU was a pivotal part of my educational journey. Experiencing education in a system ran by African Americans and focused on our success was new for me since I was coming from a majority-white system here in the Pacific Northwest. Howard University is the mecca of HBCUs, founded in1867 in the heart of D.C., which is formally known as chocolate city because of its large black population. Being so close to the Whitehouse, I was able to see and hear first-hand the contributions my community has made in the United States. The value is unmeasurable. As an alum, it’s my goal to continuously uplift not only Howard but all HBCUs to the world.

With so much varied experience, what made you decide to go into Development?
Being an educator, it was frustrating dealing with administration, and lack of funding and parental support. Having worked with non-profits, I saw what changes can be made when you have supporters on the ground. I transitioned into event-planning in order to increase funds and community connections and then into development to grow funder bases and programs.
 
What is something you are excited for in your new role as Director of Development and Communications at Arts Corps? 
I’m so excited to work with Arts Corps as a Director of Development and Communications. I think my unique work and travel experiences has blessed me to see and experience a variety of art and I would like to share that with the world and our students. Seattle has such a variety of art, people, and cultures that are not always highlighted. It is my goal to open our students to mediums they may have never tried and make them lifetime learners and creators. 
 
You’re a Seattleite, born and raised. What are some of your favorite art spots in the city? 
This city has gone through so many changes during my lifetime, it’s really cool to hear about the history of Seattle through the eyes of my parents and grandparents. As a third-generation Seattleite, I got to see my community once redlined and forced to live in certain areas then be gentrified and forced to move out. My favorite parts of Seattle are mostly located in the central area because that’s where my family is from. I love walking up and down Jackson, down Jazz alley to Chinatown, siting by Lake Washington, or eating at my favorite spots on Union.

Antonesha Jackson is a third generation Seattle native. A proud graduate from Howard University Computer Information Systems with an MBA from American University. Formally the interim Director of Development at United Negro College Fund Pacific NW, she is now the current Development and Communications Director at Arts Corps. Inspired to pursue a career in STEM Education and nonprofit business analytics after college and living in Los Angeles, she is also a small business owner and lover of travel.

Read More

Staff Spotlight: Saeko Keller

Saeko, a Japanese woman, holding a gray bird close to her face, a bush with pink flowers behind her

Saeko has been a crucial part of our team since 2020 and has done a lot of work behind the scene to keep us running and keep us improving, not to mention she’s helped create many fun and sweet moments. She will be leaving at the end of the fiscal year, but before she goes, we wanted everyone to have the chance to learn more about her. 

When did you start at Arts Corps?
I started working for ArtsCorps as a Bookkeeper in November 2020.

What do you do? What do you like about it?
I was promoted to Financial Manager in July 2022 and have been serving Arts Corps mission from that same position until now. I like to keep things in order, and by extension I like working in Bookkeeping. I get a lot of joy out of closing out the month by reconciling the numbers in the books each month.

Why is arts education important to you?
We all have at least one or two art forms that we are good at or prefer. They enrich our lives. Various forms of art allow us to express our inner feelings. They influence us, resonate with us, and play an important role in cultivating sensitivity and new ideas. I believe that art is an important element in our growth and evolution.

Has there been a piece of art which has had a positive impact in your life?
When I think what has impacted my life, I immediately think of Sayonara Galaxy Express 999, which I watched as a child.

What are some creative practices you like to do?
I find great joy in leaning and practicing interior design, gardening, and landscaping. I love to decorate my home space and the outside of my home according to the season and theme.

What is a positive memory you’ve made at Arts Corps?
The warmth of my Arts Corps colleagues is what I treasure most about Arts Corps. I love the laughter and cheerfulness of everyone when we get together. A few months, ago we had a board game day where we played Jenga and another game popular in Japan, and it was so much fun to see how seriously everyone took it. It’s fun and refreshing to get away from our normal work roles and play together like kids.

Saeko was born in Tokyo, and first visited the US at 17 as part of a high school study abroad program. She has worked in accounting for over ten years. She moved to the US permanently in 2015, when her husband retired from the Air Force. During her time off, she enjoys painting, interior design, and relaxing with her Shiba Inu.

 

Read More

Faculty Spotlight: Cecelia DeLeon

Headshot of Cecelia DeLeon, a Chicana woman with curly black hair wearing heart-shaped sunglasses

Earlier this month, we hosted our paid Art 4 Life Digital internship. It was a great week, and one of the people responsible for this was the program’s co-Teaching Artist Cecelia DeLeon! We thought you should get to know a little more about her. 

What made you decide to become a teaching artist? 
I dropped out of an art college, stopped doing art for years after that, and bounced job to job. Doing art always brought me back to a therapeutic place and reminded me that when I did it, I was doing something I loved. Many random jobs and unhappiness later, I was googling “art teacher seattle”, or something along the lines of that, and after looking at the results, arts corps came up. I reached out, was hired as a Classroom Assistant and the rest is history! Being a Teaching Artist is cool because I can show up authentically as myself and I can teach my youth how to bring out their inner artist.

What do you like about Art 4 Life digital in particular?
There is a huge gap in this type of digital programming for our youth and Art 4 Life is creating the bridge of access for our most marginalized population. The way digital art is taking over the art scene right now is crazy! I think it’s cool that Art 4 Life can bring young artists together so that they can learn Procreate and how to create art digitally. This internship is teaching them a skill so that they can keep up with the art trends and which is a really useful tool to have.

What was one of your favorite moments of the internship?
Besides getting to know the students and seeing their artwork, I think one of my favorite moments would be when one of our students gave me instructions on how to use the Symmetry tool. You could tell she was really enjoying the class and was paying attention because she gave me clear instructions and guided me on what I needed to select within the menu to use the tool.

What is a message that you like to impart onto your students?
Don’t be afraid to do things on your own and learn new things! Always ask questions! Get connected with other artists in your community!

What are some of your own creative practices?
Sometimes I’ll switch it up from analog to digital because I like to do it all, I enjoy painting murals and creating illustrations on Procreate. I like cutting up paper and making collages or bringing out the gouache and just going to town! 

Do you have any projects coming up that you’d like to share?
I am currently finishing up a mural for Washington Health Plan Finder that will be installed in Granger, WA and I am doing a couple of illustration commissions for clients that I am pretty excited about because I am using Procreate to do them. 

Seattle-born, White Center raised, Cecelia DeLeon is a multidisciplinary public artist working under the alias Mousy DeVilla. Often switching back from digital works using Procreate, Adobe Software to acrylic paintings, mixed media arts, and collage artworks. She draws inspiration from the neighborhoods and cities she’s lived in and continues to serve her community as a Teaching Artist. The social justice themes explored in her bold and colorful work weave in the conversation around welcoming immigrants, uplifting BIPOC communities, and paying homage to Washington where she was born, while celebrating her identity as “Chicana”, the hyphen in Mexican-American. She’s created artwork for traffic boxes around King County, a mural for Food Lifeline, and has had work shown at the Tacoma Art Museum.

 

Read More