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For more information
about IHOBF-Los Angeles
please contact:
IHOBF-Los Angeles
Anne-Marie Gregg
Program Director
6255 Sunset Blvd.
18th Floor
Hollywood, CA 90028
323.769.4622
email:
ihobflosangeles@hob.com















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Promoting Cultural
Understanding and Creative Expression Through Music and Art
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Blues Ambassador
Scholarships
Blues SchoolHouse -
a multimedia classroom where students learn about American
culture and social history through an exploration of
blues music and folk art
Make An Impression
Guitar, Drum, Percussion, & Art Programs -
hands-on opportunities for students to play music and
create art
Moving Blues
SchoolHouse - off-site Blues SchoolHouse program,
music component only
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Since its inception in 1995, IHOBF-Los
Angeles has reached tens of thousands of local students
with the Blues SchoolHouse program and awarded 2 Blues Ambassador
Scholarships annually to Los Angeles area high school students.
In 2002, IHOBF-Los Angeles expanded its Make An Impression
program to include drum, guitar, drum circle and visual
arts programs. IHOBF-Los Angeles hosts numerous community-building
functions throughout the year and in 2002 was awarded the
John Anson Ford Award by Los Angeles County for effective
human relations programs. IHOBF-Los Angeles has developed
partnerships with the Los Angeles Unified School District-Arts
Education Branch, the UCLA World Arts and Culture Internship
Program and the Los Angeles County Commission on Human Relations
Youth Initiative &Youth Education campaign.
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Stephens Middle School student participants in the IHOBF-Los Angeles
Make An Impression Drum Circle Program performed during a special
Blues SchoolHouse program in February 2003. The students were
awarded certificates of achievement for learning to both play
percussion instruments and work together to create music within
a drum circle.
As part of an IHOBF-Los Angeles Make An Impression
Art Program and in partnership with the Village, students from
Alliance Community Day School in Inglewood, CA honored legendary
bluesman Clarence Gatemouth Brown by creating an 8-foot
tile mosaic likeness of him. Mr. Brown, along with a participating
student, IHOBF-Los Angeles Program Coordinator Karama Carter and
local artist Ramsees (who directed this project) are pictured
above (from left to right) with the artwork, which is currently
on display at the House of Blues-Sunset Strip.
In connection with the annual IHOBF-Los Angeles
Dr. Martin Luther King. Jr. Living the Dream program,
students at Washington Preparatory High School worked for four
weeks under the direction of local artist Ramsees to complete
a 4 x 8 foot mosaic image of Dr. King. The mosaic was unveiled
during the Living the Dream program at the House of
Blues-Sunset Strip and later mounted at the school.
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