Students at John Paul II Catholic Secondary School put their talents to work for Children’s Hospital
In early 2022, John Paull II Catholic Secondary School art teacher Christine Mancini received a text from her friend Ashley Stephen, a nurse in the Paediatric Inpatient Unit at Children’s Hospital. Ashley had a question for Christine: would her students be interested in creating some fun murals for the unit?
“Our previous walls were white, cream or green and just not as child focused as it could be for a children’s hospital, especially when looking at what other hospitals had done,” Ashley explains.
Christine didn’t hesitate. As an art teacher, she saw a clear opportunity to engage her students with a rewarding project. Many of her students are in the school’s Specialist High Skills Major (SHSM) Arts and Culture program, which provides opportunities for specialized training to students with a keen interest in visual and media arts.
“I told her that this would be a fantastic project for our students and a wonderful way for them to share their artistic talents and to make a meaningful contribution to the community,” Christine says.
The Paediatric Inpatient Unit staff collaborated on developing themes for the murals. Everybody had a chance to provide input, and as they worked, they sent vision panels to Christine.
From there, the development was open to interpretation. “We wanted the students to feel like they had the artistic ability to create what they felt was fitting,” Ashley explains.
There are 10 murals altogether: a desert scene, two farm scenes, an underwater Arctic scene, a Northern Lights Arctic scene, a rainforest scene, a safari scene, woodland scenes and a more general welcome mural.
Ashley says that the welcome mural was the one she felt most certain that the floor needed. “We receive so many patients not only from all over Ontario, but all over the world,” she explains. “My hope was that they would see this particular mural and feel welcome and included, even if we may not all speak the same language.”
In total, over 80 students volunteered their time for the project, building panels at the direction of construction teacher Olindo Rizzolo and designing and painting the 10 murals under Christine’s tutelage.
Contributions from community donors included lumber from Home Hardware Dundas East to create the mural panels, and Home Depot Clarke Road donated some of the paints the students worked with.
The process took about 16 months from start to finish, with students working through lunch hours and staying after class to bring the designs to life.
With donated transportation help from London International Airport, the murals were installed in the summer of 2023 and since then, the mood in the Paediatric Inpatient Unit has noticeably brightened, Ashley says.
“We have some patients on our unit for a long time, or ones who are admitted often, and they were so excited for them,” she says. “We have gotten so many kind words about them from families, as well as staff. Staff as a whole have said they are stunning and they brighten up a once-dull space. We use them for therapy, having patients walk to the safari picture, or play Eye Spy. It’s been great.”