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			 This was Sunday's fourth year leading the visual art 
			session of the three summer camps available to school-age kids in 
			Atlanta. She was assisted by her friend Jayne Kindred and four 
			helpers who were former visual arts campers who aged-out of the 
			summer program. Atlanta kids from kindergarten through fifth grade 
			can enroll in the art session. 
			
			
			  
			 
			“It is a lot of work to come up with the camp structure,” said Mary 
			Sunday. Not a day goes by during the year when she does not think 
			about what the theme will be for the next summer’s camp. “I want to 
			introduce new concepts and artists to the campers every summer so 
			they will get a full range of what is available in visual arts,” she 
			said.  
			
			
			  
			
			This year she chose Paul Klee and Gustav Klimt as the artists that 
			were the focus of the camp. Klee and Klimt have unique subjects that 
			identify their work.  
			 
			Just before camp week, Mary Sunday gets together with her team to 
			have an arts day at the Atlanta Public Library. They go over every 
			aspect of the week to come, preparing for the twenty-six kids who 
			come to have fun and learn. The campers are divided into two 
			sections according to age. 
			
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			Friday evening is always set aside for an art show so 
			that parents, relatives and friends can see what their youngsters 
			have been creating all week. It is their first glimpse of the art 
			fashioned in class.   
			
			
			  
			 
			People filled the Union Hall space for the first ever unveiling of 
			this years artists camp projects. Everyone was excited by the 
			results. The walls and tables were covered with the finished 
			products, attesting that it had been a busy week for the young 
			artists.  
			 
			Some first time campers were already asking their parents about 
			signing up for next year. Mary Sunday is already thinking about 
			summer 2018, and what artists she wants to present.  
			 
			[Curtis Fox] 
			
			
			  
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