THE BUILDING OF NEILSON PARK CREATIVE CENTRE
Working Together
One reality came out
of the building committee; we’d learned to work together. And it’s not easy to
take five groups with five different bylaws, five different operating styles,
and with five very different ideas of a studio and give them common ground.
This project did it and that became the foundation for the new Board of
Directors.
Two people at the City
of Etobicoke stood staunchly by and guided us through this process: Thelma
Amos who provided prodigious support, and our
commissioner of Parks & Rec, Tom Riley, a very far-sighted man.
Taking down the
Willows was a wrenching experience. I have a flagstone in my backyard that was
a part of the back steps of The Willows, the fireplace mantle came out for
Winterfest decorating for the first ten years at NPCC. No doubt a
few other people have souvenirs. We removed all the fixtures, packed up the
bits and pieces, and put everything into storage. We buried a “time capsule” of
bits and pieces of the group’s history. Once the building came down, I visited
the site every day or so to see what progress was being made. I ‘d meet other
members of EAG who came to the site of The Willows and were mourning its
disappearance. In fact for the first few years after we moved in members kept
saying how much they missed the old building, how cosy it had been. Finally it
was just a nostalgic memory.
Moving In
In September ’92 EAG
was the first group to move in and the children’s classes were the first
activity to be up and rolling. Then as now, the children’s classes brought the
community into the Centre. Our mandate was and still is “to provide children’s
classes as needed” and for the first four years we did that
ourselves, running the classes first in Studio B and then finally in D.
When the decision was
made to hand the program over to NPCC it was a difficult one. Were we doing
what was intended in our Bylaw? Were we doing the best thing for the program?
Would the classes be run the way we wanted, with professional artists teaching
real art skills to the next generation of artists? I think that we can say yes
to all of those questions.
The transition was
successful and the Saturday program is a focus of the Centre’s activities.
Now
EAG has continued to
run it’s adult classes program independently in Studio B. The legacy of our
initial work is that we do have a home for our group. And our program has
expanded so much that its operation is a very demanding job.
That too may slowly
become a part of the Centre over time. As always there will be changes.
by Kathleen Haushalter
