
Camila Lauriola (installation - partial view)
It all started out in 2008, when the first twinning with the mid-level school in Cayar, the fishing village north of the Senegalese capital, caught the attention of the youngsters. It led to a joint exhibition at the celebrations in the occasion of the European School's 50th anniversary. Since then, other activities led to meeting of works, though not yet of the youngsters directly, such as in the case of the larger international exhibition in Amsterdam 'Sustainable seas through the eyes of art'. Meanwhile, those involved at the European School and in Cayar left with their bacalaureat or other certificate giving way to a new generation of pupils. In the occasion of this year's project of interdisciplinary work across three classes of arts, philosophy and biology respectively there were moments of continuity and innovation.

Installation by Matilda Elena Tramacere - state of the oceans?
As an intermediary step, the philosophy class guided by François Jourde participated in a Pecha Kucha night on 24 March. Here, in one of the Crosstalk events organised by the Free University of Brussels, they managed to capture the public's attention.
The Pecha Kucha format involves telling a story in 20 slides each showing for 20 seconds. Naturally, this requires very good planning, lots of rehearsals and discipline in execution. The pupils transformed the inputs received from the Mundus maris talk on overfishing and their own research in a quite outstanding way. The video of their performance is available here.
With this boost to their confidence they approached the long run to the school party exhibition and close of the school year.
The pictures on this page can only provide a glimpse of the diverse paintings and installations, while the accompanying philosophy texts and biological comments leading up to the specific articulation can not be represented at all. Contributing youth at the European School are, among others, from Italy, France, Spain and Finland.
Unfortunately, some of the particularly interesting installations are too fragile or big to travel to the SeeArt youth exhibition in Hilden, but several will be shown together with artistic work of other youth from 10 countries.
A video sequence shows moments of the preparations, many of the individual pieces on display and the emotions at the exhibition itself. Click here to see it.