SeeSaw Studios gives back to young locals


By John Hamlin

Shana Tucker plays guitar and sings at SeeSaw’s 12th-birthday fundraiser on Saturday, Jan. 29, 2011. She discovered the charity late last year while shopping for a T-shirt design.

UNC Staff Writer
the Durham VOICE
thedurhamvoice@gmail.com

Shana Tucker didn’t just get an outstanding T-shirt design at SeeSaw Studio — she enabled senior Kimani Hall to bolster his application to N.C. State University. When the after-school design and entrepreneurship program marked its 12th year with a fundraiser, Tucker gladly lent her musical talent.

The celebration drew about 210 supporters who donated $2,503 at Fullsteam Brewery on Saturday, Jan. 29. The live music, gourmet food and in-house beer had guests dancing by the end of the night.

The affair was as much a birthday party for SeeSaw as it was for Executive Director Michelle Gonzales. “There was a Soul-Train line,” she said. “They played some songs and, all of a sudden, a bunch of people just started making lines and dancing down the middle.”

The name SeeSaw, like the charity itself, serves double duty, said Gonzales. While expressing the design concept of seeing something and making it, it also illustrates the practical, financial need to balance creativity and business. “Our mission is to prepare them for careers, to prepare them for college, to take their god-given talent and help them to use it at their best capacity so that they can create the most opportunity for their future as adults,” said Gonzales. “That’s what makes SeeSaw unique: We are not just a nice arts program. We are a program that also brings in business mentors to help them with business plans, logos, taglines and marketing.”

But SeeSaw can only afford to serve 30 teens, leaving many budding, young designers on the waiting list. “We are at capacity, but that’s not from a lack of space; it’s from a lack of funding,” she said.
“The board’s goal this year is to double our funding base so we can serve twice as many kids next year.”

Executive Director Michelle Gonzales accepts birthday flowers in between musical acts at the SeeSaw 12th-anniversary fundraiser. The event, which raised $2,503, was as much a birthday party for Michelle as the charity.

Tucker, who recently commissioned SeeSaw to design a T-shirt promoting her new album, said the teens deliver exceptional service and quality. “It’s perfect. It’s perfect in so many ways,” Tucker said. “These T-shirts are limited edition, but I absolutely want them to design my merch stuff.”

SeeSaw gets money from contracts like Tucker’s and some grants, but the program relies mostly on individual donations for support. To keep operating costs low, Gonzales is the only full-time employee, so the charity relies heavily on volunteer labor. Some volunteers are program graduates who continue to benefit from association with the program, recent SeeSaw alumnus Anthony Lashley said. “It’s basically a win-win situation where I get to learn new processes and also teach them to other people,” the 19-year-old said.

Based on Tucker’s own experience in graphic-design education, she said SeeSaw’s dedication to marketable skills sets it apart from expensive schools. “The goal is not that you’re as creative as possible; the goal is that your creativity fits your clients’ needs,” she said. “A lot of designers will come out of a university and be hit with the reality that the stuff that was wonderful in school — there’s no place for it in real life.”

Another hallmark of the program is its success in unifying a diverse group of teens while still addressing specific needs, said Kitty Moses, mother of SeeSaw alumna Julie. “Michelle’s incredible about seeing the value in every single person, absolutely no questions asked, and…what they need,” Moses said.

The program’s diversity helped Julie avoid teenagers’ tendency to label each other and break into cliques, Moses said. “You go through high school and things tend to get kind of segregated, and stereotypes start kicking in,” she said. “Then, working with some of these kids, the stereotypes got kicked to the side, and she’s back to where she started, which is seeing people for who they are.

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