12-30-93 OHIO STATE AND KING ARTS COMPLEX OFFER ART CLASSES OHIO STATE AND KING ARTS COMPLEX OFFER ARTS INSTRUCTION Children who live in the immediate neighborhoods surrounding the Martin Luther King Jr. Performing and Cultural Arts Complex, 867 Mt. Vernon Ave., are encouraged to participate in a citywide program of free music and arts instruction after school. Parents who have children enrolled in either elementary or middle school can register their children for the Martin Luther King Jr. Institute of the Arts, which is housed in the King Arts Complex. "We are tying to get kids who live in the immediate area of the King Arts Complex to participate in the program," said Farrell J. Foreman, institute coordinator. Founded in 1990, the Martin Luther King Jr. Institute of the Arts is a joint project between The Ohio State University's College of the Arts and the King Arts Complex. The program provides multicultural arts instruction for urban youngsters who live in the Columbus area. About 150 young people currently are enrolled. Classes are offered in the visual arts, jazz and modern dance, theater, instrumental music and basic musicianship using electronic keyboards and the latest technology. The classes are taught by graduate students in the College of the Arts. "The goal of this program is to train teachers who will go out and teach in multicultural settings in our schools," said Don Harris, dean of the College of the Arts. "This can only be done at the level where it is important, that's with our children." The youngsters are selected for the program based on their talents and interests and the recommendations of their elementary and middle school teachers. Transportation is provided for students from their home schools to the King Arts Complex. Parents, however, must provide transportation home at the end of each class session. "We are constantly recruiting kids," explains Foreman. "There are plenty of kids in this neighborhood, but it's a matter of letting them know what we do, what we offer. These are kids I want to reach." Foreman, who was named institute coordinator last May, holds a Master of Fine Arts degree in theater from the University of California-San Diego and a bachelor's degree in elementary education from Antioch University in Philadelphia. He has directed university and community theater productions and has written screen plays, short stories and poetry. Foreman's spouse, Sandra M. Sidney, came with him to Columbus where she holds an appointment as adjunct faculty member in the Department of Theatre at Ohio State. Ohio State recently received the Keeper of the Culture Award, one of the prestigous Dream Awards presented by the King Arts Complex. The university was recognized for activities in three programs: the College of the Arts' involvement with the Martin Luther King Jr. Institute of the Arts, the Wexner Center for the Arts and the Frank W. Hale Jr. Black Culture Center. The King Arts Complex is a cultural institution with a multi-faceted approach to exploring the African-American experience through performing arts productions, visual arts exhibits, and culturally-based educational activities. For more information on the Martin Luther King Jr. Institute of the Arts, contact Farrell Foreman at 292-5171 or 252-5464. # Written by Reggie Anglen. [Submitted by: STERRETT (sterrett@ccgate.ucomm.ohio-state.edu) Thu, 30 Dec 1993 16:48:56 -0500 (EST)] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.