The Creative Masters Project

By

published
April 20, 2025
A colorful, tilted illustration on textured paper captures a person in a dynamic, expressive dance pose with a flowing white skirt. The background is an orange surface with another sheet featuring text and a small, colorful logo—perfectly embodying the spirit of a Creative Masters project.

In The Creative Masters Project, students select a creative Spanish-speaker from any walk of life. They research the cultural and historical forces that shaped the Master and his/her work. Then they re-create or re-express the work in their own way—creative writing, spoken word, digital presentation, sculpture, etc. A written reflection accompanies the project as well, all in the target language: Español.

Teacher Reflection

The Creative Masters project exceeded my expectations. The students’ passion for the work, diversity of products, and heartfelt reflections truly shined. This project reminded me why I teach. When students are given the opportunity to express themselves uniquely, they can fly—and these kids soared.

Student Reflections

John Singer Sargent is a great artist. He gives his work feeling and liveliness. He thought that the dancer was not his best work and the world never saw it until 1985, when it was found 55 years after his death. But the dancer has a certain feel to her. She wasn’t meant to be beautiful and her dance wasn’t meant to be elegant. Her dress flows with her every move, her arms move separately from her body, she’s not smiling nor is she frowning. I chose to re-express “The Spanish Dancer” by re-creating the painting in Prismacolor colored pencils.

-James Zvetina, 9th Grade

This was a creatively complex project. I wanted to choose a sculptor from the very beginning because I had some clay at home that I hadn’t managed to use. I had never created a sculpture before, so I thought that it would be a fun new experience. I also created a PowerPoint for my presentation, a poem, and made a collage in PhotoShop.
This was one of my favorite projects so far in Spanish. I liked that I could present what I felt in many forms of art, with people understanding and feeling what I was trying to portray to them. I also felt that this project taught me about the Spanish culture while I still enjoyed doing something that I liked.

—Angelica Orlova, 9th grade

To learn more about this project and others visit the HTH Digital Commons and Tom Gaines’s digital portfolio at
https://www.hightechhigh.org/dc/ and
https://staff.hthnc.hightechhigh.org/~tgaines/

TITLE

The Creative Masters Project

written by

Media

published

April 20, 2025

appears in

tags

share this

The Creative Masters Project

By

A colorful, tilted illustration on textured paper captures a person in a dynamic, expressive dance pose with a flowing white skirt. The background is an orange surface with another sheet featuring text and a small, colorful logo—perfectly embodying the spirit of a Creative Masters project.

In The Creative Masters Project, students select a creative Spanish-speaker from any walk of life. They research the cultural and historical forces that shaped the Master and his/her work. Then they re-create or re-express the work in their own way—creative writing, spoken word, digital presentation, sculpture, etc. A written reflection accompanies the project as well, all in the target language: Español.

Teacher Reflection

The Creative Masters project exceeded my expectations. The students’ passion for the work, diversity of products, and heartfelt reflections truly shined. This project reminded me why I teach. When students are given the opportunity to express themselves uniquely, they can fly—and these kids soared.

Student Reflections

John Singer Sargent is a great artist. He gives his work feeling and liveliness. He thought that the dancer was not his best work and the world never saw it until 1985, when it was found 55 years after his death. But the dancer has a certain feel to her. She wasn’t meant to be beautiful and her dance wasn’t meant to be elegant. Her dress flows with her every move, her arms move separately from her body, she’s not smiling nor is she frowning. I chose to re-express “The Spanish Dancer” by re-creating the painting in Prismacolor colored pencils.

-James Zvetina, 9th Grade

This was a creatively complex project. I wanted to choose a sculptor from the very beginning because I had some clay at home that I hadn’t managed to use. I had never created a sculpture before, so I thought that it would be a fun new experience. I also created a PowerPoint for my presentation, a poem, and made a collage in PhotoShop.
This was one of my favorite projects so far in Spanish. I liked that I could present what I felt in many forms of art, with people understanding and feeling what I was trying to portray to them. I also felt that this project taught me about the Spanish culture while I still enjoyed doing something that I liked.

—Angelica Orlova, 9th grade

To learn more about this project and others visit the HTH Digital Commons and Tom Gaines’s digital portfolio at
https://www.hightechhigh.org/dc/ and
https://staff.hthnc.hightechhigh.org/~tgaines/

A woman with curly hair holds a yellow and red flag, smiling. Text reads: Center for Love & Justice. Join our Open Call 2025 for Partnerships in the Face of Injustice! A Get Started button sits below, inviting action. The border and accents blend vibrant orange and green tones.

More Project Cards

Skip to content