Art from a pizza box

LAKEVILLE — The lower campus at Indian Mountain School is full of pizza boxes.

No, this is not an innovative nutritional program. It’s about art and recycling.

As part of a general “Project Earth†theme for the year, students in Amy Jenkins’ art classes, using the pizza box as a canvas and the work of Joseph Cornell for inspiration, have created a wide range of pieces, using recyclable materials.

It’s amazing what can be done with packing materials, box tops, sushi trays, scrap paper, buttons, and odd scraps of fabric.

(Deano’s in Lakeville is the official pizza provider, by the way.)

Kim Notin from the Cary Institute of Ecosystems Studies in Millbrook, N.Y., was on hand last week. Working with each grade (pre-kindergarten through four) she has been teaching the students about wetlands in the schoolyard; weighing and classifying waste from the lunchroom into seven different categories; demonstrating where food comes from; how much water — and of what quality — people use; and the impact of energy choices.

“We look at how the school is connected to the environment,†she said.

The students also made a trip to the Salisbury-Sharon transfer station, where Manager Brian Bartram showed them the nuts and bolts of recycling.

Thus inspired, the students drastically reduced waste in the lunchroom, and set up a composting regimen.

The pizza box art is on display at the lower campus building at 204 Interlaken Road. Call 860-435-2855 to check on viewing hours, or go online to indianmountain.org for more information.

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