Schools
Towson Child Care Center Contributes To Inauguration Day Art Project
Students at the Towson University Child Care Center made art that will be on display around the inauguration.

Press release from Towson University: By Rebecca Kirkman on January 15, 2021
TU Child Care Center students draw a rangoli while learning about Diwali in November
2020.
During Inauguration Day on Jan. 20, artwork created by Towson University Child Care Center students and families will be part of a collaborative project on display near the
U.S. Capitol.
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From Maryland-based artist Shanthi Chandrasekar, “Inauguration Kolam 2021” brings together work by hundreds of artists, school children and community groups
to welcome new leadership into the White House and honor Vice President-elect Kamala
Harris’ Indian heritage.
An Indian art form made up of geometric patterns, kolams are used as a sign of welcome.
Made of dots and lines, the designs are traditionally hand-drawn with rice flour on
the ground outside homes to provide a sense of joy and calm to all who enter.
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With a small team of volunteers, Chandrasekar will assemble hundreds of kolam tiles
together in a quilt-like pattern near the U.S. Capitol ahead of the presidential inauguration.
The finished installation will cover approximately 2,500 square feet.
Kolam tiles created by Child Care Center students.
TU Child Care Center students and families contributed 32 tiles to the project.
“Our families were sent home over winter break with background information, templates
and instructions,” says Child Care Center Director Nicole Vasanth, who worked with
Assistant Director Emma Auffarth to make the project a reality. “Students and families
were encouraged to be as creative as possible when decorating their circle shapes.”
The kolam activity built on Child Care students’ prior celebration of Diwali, the
Hindu festival of lights in November. While learning about Diwali, students drew rangolis,
a type of kolam created during Diwali and other holidays, with chalk on the playground
sidewalk.
“We’re always trying to highlight the diversity in our community, and what our students
and their families can bring to the table culturally,” says Vasanth, who celebrates
Diwali with her own family. Other students have shared their own cultural and religious
traditions, including one family’s recent celebration of Three Kings’ Day.
The project offered the chance to engage students and their entire families during
a time when they aren’t able to come into the center in person due to COVID-19 safety
restrictions. “It’s a perfect opportunity to tie their work into something authentic,”
says Vasanth, whose own children, ages 5 and 8, participated in the project. “We were
already learning about Diwali, it ties into what’s happening in the world right now,
and it brings us all together.”
Working on the project at home provided families an opportunity to talk about current
events with their children.
“We loved the project,” says Christina Yeager Pelatti, an associate professor of speech-language
pathology at TU whose children attend the Child Care Center. “This provided an excellent
opportunity for us to talk about the inauguration and democratic process in general.
The kids had a lot of questions, and it was amazing to see them ‘get it’ based on
the discussion.”
This story is one of several related to President Kim Schatzel’s priorities for Towson University: TU Matters to Maryland and Diverse and Inclusive Campus.
This press release was produced by Towson University. The views expressed here are the author’s own.