August 25, 2020

UCF ‘retires’ mascot; no fall sports

As anticipated, the Unionville High School Indian mascot is no more. The school board Monday night voted unanimously to retire the logo and the nickname. A mascot selection panel of students, staff, alumni, and the community will be established to be to come up with a new mascot to be announced in 2021.

It was also announced during the Aug. 24 meeting that there would be no regular fall sports this year.

A committee will be established to come up with a new mascot and logo.

Patrick Crater, supervisor of athletics at UHS, made the announcement regarding the cancelation of sports, saying the district opted to follow the guidelines of Gov. Tom Wolf’s administration and the Chester County Health Department to have no interscholastic sports before the end of the year. There will, however, be voluntary intra-squad activities, during which the athletes and coaches will observe the health and safety plan the School Board approved on Aug. 3.

Superintendent of Schools John Sanville said that since the district is following the Health Department’s recommendation to open schools with only online instruction, it should follow the department’s guidelines on athletics as well.

The decision to retire the mascot has been long anticipated. The nickname “Indians” was dropped, and the original logo of a stylized Indian head in a full feathered headdress was removed several years ago, replaced with a capital “U” and a feather.

The use of the Indian as mascot and logo was initially a reference to the Lenape Tribe. However, that has since been deemed inappropriate as racist and insulting to the Lenape people.

Crater made a presentation to the board last week saying he had spoken with several Lenape leaders, including Chief Robert Redhawk Ruth, leader of the Lenape Nation of Pennsylvania, and Dennis Coker, the Lenape leader in Delaware. Both of whom, Crater said, had the same message: “We are not a mascot.”

During Crater’s presentation, he said the district would honor the Lenape by incorporating its history and culture into the curriculum and incorporating native gardens on campus.

Older sports uniforms and equipment with the old logo will be replaced and the gym floor will be re-sanded.

He added that the use of the Lenape as fighters and warriors was not fitting and did not reflect the people’s nature. While they would defend themselves if necessary, Crater said he learned that the Lenape were known as negotiators and peacekeepers who worked to resolve conflict.

Crater also told the Wawa story that Ruth related to him. Wawa is the Lenape word for wild geese.

“Fly high and free and be in be in balance with the world around us,” Crater said. The flock flies faster, higher as a group with each member doing its part. Each bird’s flapping makes it easier for the ones behind it. In the V formation, the flock has a 71 percent greater flying range than a single bird.

“The lesson here is that people who share a common direction and sense of community can get where they’re going quicker and easier because they’re traveling on the strength of one another,” he said.

The lead goose rotates back into formation when tired and another takes the point. The lesson, he said is that “It pays to take turns doing the hard tasks.”

If one bird gets sick or is shot, two others follow it to the ground and stay with it until it’s able to fly again.

“If we have as much sense as the geese, we, too, will stay together in difficult times, as well as when we are strong,” Crater said in his virtual presentation. “I hope we will take this wisdom from the Lenape.”

Crater endorsed the administration’s decision to remove the Indian as the district’s mascot. The Lenape “are not to be considered relics or figments of history used for Halloween costumes or mascots. They are people with a rich culture, which should be honored and respected. They are people who are here today, living in a contemporary culture, brimming with the beauty and the pain of being indigenous.”

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Art Live: Home, farm and beyond

Artists are busy these days as they prep for the Chester County Studio Tour. Sure, there’s more to think about this year given the concerns around health safety, but folks are confident things will go smoothly. This year is Downingtown artist Joanne Orth’s first time participating and despite the obvious concern, she is getting excited about the tour. Her realistic works will be Pam McKee’s Studio in Downingtown, Studio -#11 on the map.

“Colonial Flag” by Joanne Orth

Orth will be showing a wide selection of her work; many of which were done recently. “My paintings often focus on subjects from Chester County, frequently including interesting older structures and animals in their natural surroundings. I work mostly in acrylic or pastel, two mediums I enjoy equally. Most of my paintings share a common thread, a focus on contrasts – light and shadow – that define the subject and can help create a mood.” Orth’s peaceful settings evoke quiet contemplation.

Her studio is in her home, so spending a lot of time there in quarantine provided her with new opportunities. “With more free time, art publications that tend to accumulate are getting read, and I have more time to think about my goals.  I’ve also spent more time looking at the work of other artists, examining approaches and materials I’ve never had time to try.”

Joanne Orth working at her easel

Asked about generating interest in her work during a pandemic, Orth said, “I’ve always availed myself of social media and other online resources to promote my work, but during this unusual time these avenues have become more important. I moved into a new community just before the pandemic began, so I’ve opened my studio to my new neighbors – with precautions – and used our online community presence to generate interest in my work and in Chester County art in general.”  Orth also donated several paintings to a local women’s shelter for an online auction for which she used online resources to promote the event and the group’s work in the community.

Sunset at the Marina by Joanne Orth

She doesn’t think sales via virtual viewing will ever replace seeing art in person, but during quarantine, online resources have helped keep art in the forefront. “I do believe that it’s opened a new avenue to help support public interest in art, making it easy to see original pieces.” However, after participating in several online shows, she is looking forward to a live event, not just to show work but also to catch up with fellow artists and friends. “This is the aspect of art presentation that I personally miss the most – chatting with people about how I approach a subject and seeing how they respond to the resulting painting.” Orth has been represented by Hardcastle Gallery in DE and has been featured at Darlington Fine Arts Center in Garnet Valley, PA. For more on her work, visit her website here.

“The Charlotte Inn” by Lin Webber

Glenmoore artist Lin Webber, also a realist painter, uses watercolors to capture landscapes, seascapes, still life, and flowers. Webber is fond of painting farmsteads of the Brandywine Valley. She is also captivated by wood sailing vessels and unassuming buildings lining the shore of New England. Webber, who is also showing at Studio #11, spent her time during quarantine trying out new techniques and subject matter, including painting portraits for the very first time. Interestingly, she used a neighborhood yard sale event to share her work, displaying it in her garage.

Webber is a founding member of The Artists Circle, a group in the Philadelphia area who have been painting together for over 25 years. She is also a frequent contributor to Healing Art Works, a non-profit committed to improving the well-being of patients by placing donated artworks in medical centers and outpatient facilities. Both Orth and Webber are members of Flying Colors, a group of women Chester County artists who paint and exhibit together.

Both Orth and Webber have shown their work at various local venues including Historic Yellow Springs and Malvern Retreat House. For more details about Chester County Studio Tour, being held on September 19th and 20th, visit here.

Kambel Smith with his work – photo courtesy Jessica Griffin with Philadelphia Inquirer

Other events worth checking out: In Philadelphia, see “Touching from a Distance”, a group show opening at Fleisher/Ollman Gallery on September 17th. This exhibition, the gallery’s first in its new space at 915 Spring Garden St., will feature work by 20 artists including eye popping fiber pieces by Jesse Harrod, paintings by Becky Suss, who garnered well deserved attention when she created a series of vigorous paintings based on Wharton Esherick’s house/museum’s interiors in 2018 and incredible works by Kambel Smith, who also received quite a bit of attention in 2019 for his constructions of iconic Philadelphia landmarks. Visit fleisherollman.com for all the details.

Whatever you do this week, support the arts!!

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