Weaving herself a new career

Published: Thursday, Nov. 5, 2009 10:56 a.m. MST
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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Ann Robinson will always be an educator at heart.

Last summer, however, she had to ask herself a question all too familiar to people with long careers that come to an unexpected end: "Now what am I going to do?"

Robinson, 64, became a statistic of the teaching community. After 40-plus years teaching linguistics on campuses including the University of Wisconsin and Stanford, she found herself without a classroom — a victim of budget cuts at the University of California, Davis, and Sacramento City College.

"I'm originally from Berkeley, with two grandfathers who served on the faculty," she says. "There's this built-in institutional loyalty. Teaching was my life."

A year later, Robinson answered her own question by rediscovering her "artsy" side — and a latent love for dyeing and working with hand-woven textiles.

In a twist, the artist's scarves and wall hangings — all made from natural fibers such as cotton, silk, bamboo, even soy — have become teaching tools.

"When the economy didn't rebound after the first of the year, I started volunteer work at the Women's Wisdom Project in (Sacramento's) Oak Park," Robinson says.

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The program, offered through the Sacramento Food Bank & Family Services, offers free classes to women to bolster their self-esteem.

Robinson had the teaching skills, and the program didn't have a weaving class. In May, the teacher-turned-artist held her first weekly class at Women's Wisdom; the number of students varies, with 10 to 12 on average. (She now teaches two days a week.)

"I'm really offering the basics because I'm still learning myself," Robinson says. "And I like that I'm helping women who've been shattered by poverty or abuse, working with them through the medium of art to get them feeling good and confident and back on their feet.

"That's my driving force."

Robinson says the women in her classes have created small woven squares (20 total). The squares were sewn onto three 1-by-6-foot panels to create one piece that's 3 <0x00BD>-by-6 feet. The artwork will be shown Nov. 14-15 at the Sacramento Center for Textile Arts exhibit at the Shepard Garden & Arts Center in McKinley Park.

Helen Plenert is program manager for the Women's Wisdom Project. She says volunteers like Robinson bring something special to the women who come to the center.

"Some are sculptors or painters. Ann is the first to teach weaving," Plenert says. "Helping others through art is the goal we share."

Patricia Bechtold, a life coach and personal counselor with her own Sacramento business, Bechtold LifeWork Strategies, says women like Robinson are having to expand their definition of "career."

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Autumn Cruz, MCT

Ann Robinson weaves a scarf in her Sacramento home.

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