"I think that's why I'm still living today, because I've gotten so much from young people."
That's Jimmie Sutton's take on what it's like to teach art to kids who don't have an art program at their middle school in Roper, NC.
As part of the Artist Innovation Mentorship program at the North Carolina Museum of Art, the 80-year-old retired art teacher is now working with sixth-graders who don't have an art program at their school, the Charlotte Observer reports.
"I think that's why I'm still living today, because I've gotten so much from young people," Sutton says.
The NCMA, the North Carolina Arts Council, and the Washington County Board of Education came up with the idea to connect local artists with kids who live in areas without an art program.
The six-week after-school programs will be held in multiple counties in the region.
"The museum feels really strongly about increasing access to creative expression, no matter where it is," Angela Lombardi, director of outreach and audience engagement at the NCMA, tells the Observer.
"It gives an avenue for self expression, and while it gives an avenue for self expression, it also helps develop
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