A Family Guide to: Jockum Nordström All I Have Learned and

Transcription

A Family Guide to: Jockum Nordström All I Have Learned and
2
Jockum Nordström’s paintings often include characters
and places collaged together. When he was making
them, which do you imagine came first? The characters
or the places? Which would you draw first?
Emma Hart’s exhibition includes lots of sculptures of
tongues sticking out. What can it mean to stick out
your tongue?
Emma Hart’s exhibition reminds us that sometimes life
can be chaotic. In your world, which feels more like
normal life: a messy bedroom or a tidy bedroom?
What does that tell us about what we think is ‘normal’?
Make & Do
Sundays, 2.00 – 4.30pm
Free artist-led activities for families,
every Sunday while the exhibitions are on
Artwork: Evy Jokhova
Design: A Practice for Everyday Life
Jockum Nordström: All I Have
Learned and Forgotten Again
Emma Hart: Dirty Looks
26 July – 29 September 2013
1
In Jockum Nordström’s pictures often a person looks really big
and a building looks really little. Can you find any other big and
little things in his works? Draw your own big and little things here:
Jockum Nordström likes to make drawings and sculptures of buildings,
but sometimes they feel closed or empty. Invent a story about what you
think happens inside these buildings. You can write it here, or tell it to
your friends and family.
3
Emma Hart’s exhibition is made of body parts
and noises but without a body for them to stick
to. Can you draw a body for the parts and noises?
What kind of body feels right for this exhibition?
Some people describe Jockum Nordström’s artworks as
‘child-like’. Which aspects of his work are like children’s
art and why do you think he likes to work in this way?
4
The name of Emma Hart’s exhibition is Dirty Looks.
What is a dirty look? Can you give the exhibition
a dirty look? Try practicing (will anyone notice?)
A Family Guide to:
Jockum Nordström
All I Have Learned
and Forgotten Again
Emma Hart
Dirty Looks
Make a
p o p - up
e
collag
1.Cut out the images above.
2.Glue them into the interior scene to the right.
3.Add your own colours, characters, objects and patterns.
4.Give your collage a title.
5.Cut this sheet in half along the central dotted line.
6.Fold your image in half along the table’s edge and cut along
the dotted lines, down the sides of the table and chairs.
7. Crease the tops of the table and chairs.
8.If you fold the piece of paper the other way, the table
and chairs should pop up!