Thursday, December 4, 2008

Visit Three: NEW WAYS OF SEEING

Some works of art are innovative because the artist uses everyday things and encourages us to see them in a new or different way. Artist Joan Miró arranged objects he found around his studio to create the sculpture Caress of a Bird, and artist James Turrell uses light to change the way we see the sky in Tending, (Blue).

TRY THIS AT HOME: Ordinary to Extraordinary

You can turn things you find around the house into inspiration for drawings.
First, look for things around the house that are smaller than a sheet of paper, such as scissors, bottles, or keys.
Next, set one or more of your objects on a sheet of paper and trace around it with a pencil.
Finally, draw on and around the outline to turn it into something new! Show your drawing to a friend or family member and see if they can guess what you traced.

PHOTOS




See the rest of the photos here



About to enter James Turrell's Skyspace, Tending, (Blue)


Looking up at the sky in Tending, (Blue)


Creating a human timeline of artist Joan Miró's life


Creating found-object collages based on the work of Joan Miró


















Making self portraits out of air-dry clay




Tending, (Blue)
looked very different after dark!


1 comment:

Shay said...

My daughter Lamoyah really enjoyed the time she spent with Girls Inc at the Nasher Sculpture Center. I thinks every child should go out and visit the the center. Thanks Nasher employees and Girls Inc for letting my daughter be apart of the Nasher 3:01 Club. The Nasher Sculpture center is free to the public every 1st Saturday from 10:00AM-2:00PM. I'm planning to take my family again during the Christmas break.