Points of Light Foundation Award
Announcement
Washington, D.C. December 21, 2006
CHRISTIAN THOMAS LEE
Daily Point of Light No. 3361
December 21, 2006



Honoring
those who have made a commitment to secure for all
Americans
- especially young people -
the fundamental resources needed to lead a
productive life
Award Number 3361 - December 21, 2006
presented to
CHRISTIAN THOMAS LEE
In 1996
Christian Thomas Lee established the Art In Schools
program to directly benefit and inspire children in
rural and inner city schools. Through this unique
and one-of-a-kind program, Christian has reached
thousands of children across the United States by
bringing original works of art into the classroom
for children to see, study, and even hold in their
hands. These original works of art include pieces
by Pablo Picasso, Peter Carl Faberge, Giovanni
Battista Pasqualini, and many others, acquired by
Christian, from the great auction houses of the
world including: Sotheby's New York, Sotheby's
London, and Wilnitsky Fine Art, Vienna,
Austria.
This privately owned collection of
fine art is believed to be the only collection of
original, museum quality art collected and used
solely for the inspirational benefit of children in
America's classrooms. In recent years, school
districts all over the United States have
experienced an increasing shortage in available
funding, as the student population continues to
dramatically increase, thereby stressing school
budgets. Superintendents and school boards, in an
attempt to maintain balanced budgets and provide
the best education for America's children have been
forced to make painful cuts. More often than not,
these cuts are in the areas of the fine
arts.
As
a result, many schools today, and especially rural
and poorer inner city schools, have no fine arts
programs. Christian Thomas Lee, as a private
collector of art, responded to this community need
and began making his remarkable personal art
collection available to schools. To date, it is
estimated over 50,000 school aged children across
America have experienced the joy and the reward of
the fine arts through Art In Schools. Art In
Schools is not a 'show-and-tell' approach to art.
Rather, it is an intensive effort with the art
collection visiting a single school for up to one
week. During that time, Christian teaches upwards
to 25 art master classes to groups of no more than
25 children. These small size groups allow the
children to be close to the works of art and even
handle and touch certain pieces.
During the week while Christian is
teaching art master classes, teachers in the school
will borrow certain pieces from the visiting
collection and use them in their own classrooms as
a teaching tool. As an example, many teachers have
borrowed the royal and presidential documents and
used them to teach history. The collection is also
used to demonstrate to children the value of
staying in school, working hard and not becoming
involved in drugs. By demonstrating first hand the
creativity of some of the greatest artists in human
history, Christian has inspired thousands of
children to awaken their own creative abilities and
to express those abilities in a constructive
way.
Due
to Art In Schools, dozens of schools have been
reintroducing fine arts back into the school
curriculum. In most cases, the schools pay only the
travel costs included in the project. No school is
ever turned away for lack of funding, and Christian
does not accept donations for his work.
In
the last ten years, it is estimated that Art In
Schools has reached upwards of 50,000 children
between first and twelfth grade from schools in
Florida, Georgia, Virginia, Illinois, Ohio,
Maryland, Washington DC, California, Washington,
Arizona, and Texas.
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