Teenage artist using drawings to tell patients' stories at BC Children's Hospital
What started as passion for art turned into a desire to help patients at BC Children's Hospital.
"I really love art, I really love drawing and I really love animation too," said 17-year-old Raphael Chong, the founder of Make it Up.
The teen gathered a group of artists to spend months speaking with patients at the hospital, listening to their stories about living with scoliosis or leukemia.
Then, they put pen to paper.
"Their stories aren't being told through a medium that would reach young children, like my age. That's why we want to use art to bridge the gap," he said. "We want to tell their stories through these mediums that they help us work with to create stories that can really humanize it."
The idea was sparked by a school project, says Daryl Weaver, the principal at Vancouver College. But now, it's stretched far beyond the classroom walls.
"A typical BC Children's Hospital advertisement is meant to evoke emotions obviously," said Weaver. "He (Chong) said, that's not who that kid really is, I really want to find out who that kid is and how they've got personalities, traits, talents."
According to Chong's mother, her son has only been drawing for three years.
"We're very glad to see that he's putting his passion into something that he can give back to the society," Annie Lee said.
Chong's goal is to raise $12,000 with the animations, in order to buy a surgical telescope for the hospital.
The grade 12 student says he has big plans for using his talent after high school.
"I would like to do this as a side hobby and use by hobbies and art to create something better for the world."
His goal doesn't appear too far fetched for a teenager who already appears to be making a difference with his drawings.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Canada summons Chinese ambassador over high-altitude surveillance balloon
Canada announced that it had called China's ambassador onto the carpet as Ottawa and Washington expressed their disapproval Friday over a high-altitude balloon found to have been hovering over sensitive sites in the United States.

Liberals withdraw controversial amendment to guns bill
The federal Liberals are withdrawing an amendment to their guns bill that introduced a controversial new definition of an assault-style weapon. The amendment would have defined what kind of firearms should be banned in Canada and added dozens of new semi-automatic rifles and shotguns to the list.
Canadian COVID-19 vaccine manufacturer Medicago Inc. shutting down
Medicago Inc., the Quebec-based drug manufacturer of a Canadian COVID-19 vaccine and other plant-based drugs, is being shut down by parent company Mitsubishi Chemical Group.
China: Balloon over U.S. skies is for research, wind pushed it
China said Friday that a balloon spotted over American airspace was used for weather research and was blown off course, despite U.S. suspicion it was spying. The discovery further strained already tense relations between Beijing and Washington.
Federal department fires 49 employees for claiming CERB while employed
A federal government department has fired 49 employees who received the Canada Emergency Response Benefit while they were employed.
BREAKING | First-year university student from northern Ontario wins $48M in lottery, making history
Canada's newest millionaire, an 18-year-old university freshman from northern Ontario, has achieved a lot of firsts with a recent lottery win. Here is her story.
'Bobi is special': Portuguese pooch breaks record for oldest living dog ever
A Portuguese dog named Bobi has been named the world’s oldest living dog by Guinness World Records, which claims the pooch is also the oldest canine ever recorded.
Airlines ask Supreme Court to hear case on passenger bill of rights
A group of airlines is asking the Supreme Court of Canada to hear their case after a lower court largely upheld the validity of Canada's air passenger bill of rights.
Prominent Quebecers plead for federal anti-Islamophobia rep to be given a chance
A letter of support signed by 30 prominent Quebecers, including academics, activists, and community leaders, is asking that Amira Elghawaby be given the chance to fulfil her mandate as Canada's first special representative on combating Islamophobia.