This ad will not display on your printed page.

Pastors

  • Send to printerSend to printer
  • |
  • Close this pageClose window
October 28, 2020
The following article is located at: https://www.christianitytoday.com/pastors/2007/fall/13.71.html
CT Pastors, October 2007
Discipleship
The Healing Arts
Patricia Paddey|postedOctober 1, 2007

The words are scrawled across the collarbone of the aged department store mannequin: "Use me or abuse me." If that invitation isn't compelling enough, a more poetic plea is written on her chest: "Let your imagination release your imprisoned possibilities." Several anonymous artists have answered the call. The mannequin is naked, wigless, chopped at the waist, and gloriously painted.

She's propped in the textile area of the 6,000-square-foot space in downtown Toronto known as Sketch. The loft is filled with collages, paintings, banners, photographs, sculptures, and paint splatters on the floor.

Billed as "a working art initiative for youth ages 15-29 who are street-involved, homeless, and at-risk," Sketch is a place where simple acts of creative play lead to healing, growth, and spiritual transformation.

"Youth who experience street life can be so heavily encumbered with hurt, shame, confusion, and the oppression of poverty, that they often first need to have a sense of safety and restoration, ...

Subscriber access only You have reached the end of this Article Preview

To continue reading, subscribe to Christianity Today magazine. Subscribers have full digital access to CT Pastors articles.

Log InSubscribe

Already a CT subscriber? Log in for full digital access.

Christianity Today

© 2020 Christianity Today