Toronto Star

YOUNG VOICES, HEARD

A Toronto Public Library magazine showcases the creative talent of the city’s youth,

- TREVOR CORKUM SPECIAL TO THE STAR

Jane Li knows all about the nerve-wracking wait to learn if your work will be accepted for publicatio­n. Last year, just before the April deadline, she submitted one of her illustrati­ons to Toronto’s celebrated Young Voices magazine. By late June, she still had no response.

The long, agonizing waiting period gave her the jitters.

Jane was already an accomplish­ed visual artist, thanks in part to a unique program that offers promising young people a chance to harness their creative talents. The Young Voices program at the Toronto Public Library — of which the Young Voices magazine is a part — helped Jane find an outlet to express herself.

“When I first got involved, I was a hopeful 12-year-old who became passionate about art from the doodles in math class,” says Jane, now 21. She discovered Young Voices while poring through a stack of back issues of the magazine at her local library.

“The program was very important in guiding me to find my own voice. Unlike school assignment­s, Young Voices allows for a wide array of creative freedom and artist licence.”

That summer, Jane would tense up whenever the telephone rang, waiting to find out if her work was among the lucky few to be chosen. She knew creators were contacted by the library early in the summer. By July, when she had still heard nothing, she steeled herself for disappoint­ment.

Finally, the call came. The news was beyond her wildest expectatio­ns. Her illustrati­on was not only accepted, it was featured on the cover of the 2016 magazine.

“When I found out I was accepted I was jumping with joy. I got the call while running some errands so I actually danced around on the street after I hung up!”

Young Voices is published each spring and features written and visual work from Toronto youth aged 12 to 19.

While the magazine’s aim is to publish high-calibre creative work, for many teens, it’s also a venue to explore and express complicate­d personal feelings in a safe space.

Amanda Murgel, for one, learned that it’s OK to feel awkward. The 15-year-old student at Bishop Allen Academy felt validated when a deeply personal poem she had written about feeling alienated and alone was selected for last year’s magazine. Reading her work in front of a crowd at the magazine’s launch, she realized for the first time that other young readers were just as nervous as she was. Her awkwardnes­s is now a point of pride, something she understand­s as a valuable part of her identity as a writer. The whole experience left her feeling more comfortabl­e in her own skin.

“It is important because it helped me express how awful I felt inside. It gave me the chance to share those feelings with others. I learned I could achieve something with my creative voice.”

The magazine also offers the opportunit­y for young writers to develop their inner editor. Benjamin Gabbay, 21, first discovered it in 2010, through the library’s Young Voices Writers Conference.

He soon joined the writers’ group at his home branch. In 2012, he began to volunteer with the Editorial Youth Advisory Group (EYAG), the editorial collective which selects and edits work for the magazine.

According to Ken Sparling, communicat­ions officer at the library, the magazine receives approximat­ely 500 to 700 submission­s each year. Of these, only 85 are selected. With so much great material, choosing work can be challengin­g.

“As EYAG volunteers, some of our most important jobs come in having to review and judge submission­s from young artists,” Gabbay says.

“I’ve learned about the things that can make a piece of writing objectivel­y good — namely, how any work that is given a high degree of attention and intelligen­t editing can stand out like a diamond in the rough.”

Gabbay is currently studying music compositio­n at the University of Toronto and remains active in the arts world. He has self-published a novel ( Wingheart: Luminous Rock) and also works as a web and graphic designer.

For Young Voices creators, this early nod of encouragem­ent can serve as a critical first step in identifyin­g their passion and pursing their art more seriously. Photograph­er Jack Burman placed a short story called “The Funeral” in the magazine’s first issue, back in 1965.

Now 67, he’s gone on to achieve notable success in the art world. His stunning photograph­s explore themes of death and dying, an interest already evident in his Young Voices piece.

He says such projects “are deeply generous and courageous in offering youth an opportunit­y to take risks with their craft, and as a means of reaching out to others.” Young Voices will accept writing and visual art from young people aged 12-19 until April 4, 2017. Copies of the magazine and submission guidelines are available at the Young Voices website: torontopub­liclibrary.typepad. com/teens/young-voices-magazine.

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 ?? CLIVE_SEWELL@TPLL/COURTESY TORONTO PUBLIC LIBRARY ??
CLIVE_SEWELL@TPLL/COURTESY TORONTO PUBLIC LIBRARY
 ??  ?? Photograph­er Jack Burman, 67, was published in Young Voices in 1965.
Photograph­er Jack Burman, 67, was published in Young Voices in 1965.
 ??  ?? Jane Li’s cover art for the 2016 Young Voices magazine.
Jane Li’s cover art for the 2016 Young Voices magazine.

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