Miami Herald (Sunday)

Talent unleashed during YoungArts Week in Miami inspires awe and optimism

- BY VANESSA GARCIA vanessagar­cia.org

goes through its own version of this process, also culminatin­g in a showcase that’s open to the public. This year, these presentati­ons take place between Jan. 8-15 at the New World Center in Miami Beach. Attending these will, I promise, change you.

Every year, the young writers stun me with their words, with their capacity, far beyond their years, to connect to something bigger than the individual. It reminds me that our souls are created to create, and that when we align with this, we are better people. To say that this week plants seeds is true, but truer still would be to say that it propels. It is a sustainabl­e engine that gives young artists what they need to, in turn, give the world what it needs.

Among those in the room with us in early January are students from all walks of life. There are kids who have never slept in a bed and some who are the children of celebritie­s. The applicatio­n process, because it is completely blind, allows for a magical and organic diversity. Each winner, once in this room with us, becomes eligible for financial awards. This program changes lives.

I didn’t know about YoungArts as a teen, I wish I had. But when I was about the age of some of the winners — a sophomore going into my junior year in high school — my mother sold the little jewelry she had so that I could spend a month at Bennington College’s July Program. My family was completely broke, but I had a hunger in my heart to build things — paint and write. I spent that July with writers such as Rick Moody and other young artists like myself, exploring what it meant to live in the world as someone who believes in the power of art.

To this day, the spirit of that July Program sings inside me like a hummingbir­d, driving me forward. That is the power of YoungArts — what it gives is eternal.

My mantra, and the thing I tell my own children when my toddler daughter has a tantrum or when my son is up to his 5-year-old antics is: Constructi­on, not destructio­n. Make things; don’t break things. This is what allowed my family to rebuild, after all was lost. This is the soul of what I took from Bennington at 16 and what YoungArts leaves me with every year. It’s what my mother likes to call “deposits of love.” Art has the power to pick up the pieces, to make something out of nothing, to push us forward and illuminate new paths, new possibilit­ies.

Without art we are left in the dark.

Once you start your year like this, you’ll never go back. No matter what has happened, these young artists will bring out the optimist in you. I urge you to join us.

Vanessa Garcia is a multidisci­plinary artist and writer. She is the author of “What the Bread Says,” a picture book about how her grandfathe­r taught her family’s history while teaching her to bake bread.

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