I NTERNATI O NAL PH O TO S CO URTE S Y O F ARTRAGE O US WI TH NATE
engineers, designers — people that are just looking at problems differently.” And, “Wherever you see creativity and innovation,” he says in an introduction video for “Artrageous,” “I’ll be there.”
STORIES TO TELL Heck, 42, is trained as an artist and an educator. From his home on the east side of Indianapolis, he says he’s
PARIS, FRANCE
more of a speaker and a storyteller.
Nate Heck visits the Louvre, the world’s largest art museum.
“I still consider myself an educator. I love storytelling. Good teaching is
“Art was a way that I didn’t feel
raised a few
good, good storytelling. I love telling
worthless,” he said. “I started doing
eyebrows. Though his students would
other people’s stories.”
local fair competitions … anything just
occasionally bring home a finished
to have a chance to have somebody
product, his classes would spend
see what I was making. Even if I didn’t
months on projects. A fifth grade class
win, I’d get some encouragement.
dissected various elements of the
Heck was the guest speaker at Indiana Electric Cooperatives’ Cooperative Calendar of Student
Sistine Chapel, for instance.
Art reception for the contest winners
“It is important,” he continued. “If it
last year. He’s been invited to be on
weren’t for these art competitions,
Another project had students building
the panel of judges for this year’s
where else are some of these kids
full-size mummies and sarcophagi
contest that concludes later this month
going to get to shine a little bit? It’s not
and turning the hallways outside
(please see page 12 for information
going to be the SAT. They’re not going
the art room into an Egyptian tomb.
about the contest). Winning works
to make the honor roll, per se. They
His students also erected a 30-foot
from the contest in all grades, K-12,
may not be the football star.”
tower of colorfully painted plastic
will illustrate the cover and the months of the 2021 wall calendar that will be made available by participating electric cooperatives around the state in the fall.
Despite his rough early start with academics, Heck went on to earn degrees in art education and telecommunications at Ball State
water bottles that looked like glass, akin to the Dale Chihuly blownglass sculpture at the Indianapolis Children’s Museum.
University. He then received a
But some parents would ask, “Where
Thinking back to his talk with the
master’s degree in educational
are the hand turkey things for
winners, Heck noted art contests like
technology from Indiana University.
Thanksgiving?”
After college, he and his wife, Jessica,
“I’m way more fascinated by the
who is a French and Spanish teacher,
process of creativity than I am whether
lived in France for a couple of years.
you make some beautiful painting,” he
In 2005, they returned to the east side
said. “I just wanted to immerse kids in
of Indianapolis where he taught high
experiences.”
the co-ops’ calendar project were important to him growing up. He was not strong in the core subjects, he noted, and even repeated third grade. But inspired by his grandfather, an artist with The Indianapolis Star, Heck began using his imagination and creating with his hands.
school and elementary art for the next 10 years. Heck’s unorthodox style of teaching
In the meantime, he had begun using his skills in videography to create
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