Summer Exhibition 2015

Similar documents
Summer Exhibition 2014

Art Detectives Summer Exhibition 2018

Art Detectives Anselm Kiefer

Art Detectives A guide for young visitors. Art Detectives are supported by the Flow Foundation. Ai Weiwei. You will need a pencil to write and draw

Art Detectives A guide for young visitors

Action Art. Finding Colours. Finding Shapes. Foundation Key Stage 1 Art & DEsign

Fallbrook Art Association Gallery Monthly Show Rules and Information

Clare Caulfield

Grayson Perry: The Most Popular Art Exhibition Ever! School and Teacher s Guide

Coming Home: Art and The Great Hunger

Britain Teachers Resource

MCA Kids Adventure Trail

SOL LEWITT. a d a m. e: 24 CORK STREET LONDON W1S 3NJ t:

Portraits. Mona Lisa. Girl With a Pearl Earring

LAUNCH EVENT CATALOGUE. breaking boundaries. 21st May - 1st July. Tel:

HK- 2 -Gargoyle Moodboard

Art Detectives A guide for young visitors

Williamsville C.U.S.D. #15 Fine Arts Curriculum

Art Whole School Unit Overview and Key Skills Checklist. Essential Learning Objectives:

ART SHOW RULES, DEFINITIONS & CATEGORIES

Williamsville C.U.S.D. #15 Fine Arts Curriculum

What is Sculpture? WALKER

Art Overview Breadth of Study. Autumn Spring Summer

Practice Exam 4. ART Written examination Day, Date 2012 Reading time: 15 minutes Writing time: 1 hour 30 minutes

Williamsville C.U.S.D. #15 Fine Arts Curriculum

Teachers Pack Whitechapel Gallery. British Council Collection: Great Early Buys. 5 April June whitechapelgallery.

Dale Chihuly: Beyond the Object

Visual Art. Forms of Art - Watercolor 187 words. Forms of Art - African Sculpture 201 words. Forms of Art - Abstract Art 233 words

Explore Cloud Land with

Portrait Proportions: An Art & Math Discovery Lesson

GXGALLERY 43 Denmark Hill London SE5 8RS T: +44 (0)

The Development of Creative Development 0 6 yrs

FREA BUCKLER: ON FOCUS, LIGHT, POSITIVITY AND POSSIBILITY

Reuben Colley Fine Art Summer Exhibition. 4 July 5 September 2015

Williamsville C.U.S.D. #15 Fine Arts Curriculum

found guy du toit and pat mautloa

Liberty Pines Academy Russell Sampson Rd. Saint Johns, Fl 32259

Masterpiece: The Sunflower Quilting Bee at Arles, 1991 by Faith Ringgold

Wendy McMurdo, Girl with Bears, Royal Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh.1999 Wendy McMurdo. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2017.

Art Overview Breadth of Study. Autumn Spring Summer

Thirty-Minute Essay Questions from Earlier AP Exams

Plaster Studio: Mixed-Media Techniques For Painting, Casting And Carving By Stephanie Lee, Judy Wise

Tania Visits An Art Exhibition

Classroom Ideas (Instructional Strategies) What is texture? or object in art. demonstrate

Through the Looking Glass

Artful Adventures. France. 19th. Century. An interactive guide for families 56. Your French Adventure Awaits You! See inside for details

Homework: Students who fall behind need to come in during lunch to finish. Teacher Procedures: What Teacher Does

Norfolk Contemporary Art Society Mannington Hall Summer 2017 Martin Battye Annie Brundrit Rose Davies Bridget Heriz Rupert Mallin

THE SUMMER EXHIBITION

Lesson 5 (March): Patterns in Art Grade: 1

Lighting Artwork. Lighting Design Lighting Control Lighting Supply Project Management

Understanding Contemporary Art

Art and Design Curriculum Overview

Visual Arts Curriculum Standards Early Elementary: Grades K-2. State Goal 25 Know the language of the arts.

PRISM Contemporary Glass

Assignment 4 The one you didn t do before

PAIRED

Artwork. Marilyn, 1964 Silkscreen on canvas x 101.6cm

Pocket guide to Newstead Open Studios & March

Year 1 Autumn 1 Autumn 2 Spring 1 Spring 2 Summer 1 Summer 2. Where in the world? Printing- seasonal pictures

Welcome to the Art Department. A level Art and Design Fine Art AQA 7202

ART APPRECIATION a supplemental lesson packet

Pangaea: New Art from Africa and South America. Activity Pack

CLAY BLACKMORE S POSING GUIDE

WEDNESDAY, 5 JUNE 1.00 PM 2.30 PM

Reading. 1 Read the text quickly. Then answer the questions. / 0.4 point. a. What is The Thinker? b. Who is Rodin?

HIGHER SCHOOL CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION VISUAL ARTS 3 UNIT (ADDITIONAL) STUDYING IMAGES AND OBJECTS

WELCOME TO TATE BRITAIN

Name Tutor Group. Year 8. Extra Challenge PROJECT WORK

Highly Recommended: Emerging Sculptors

ART 70 (1) - Syllabus Drawing Session A UCLA Summer Art Institute 2017

June 22-25, 2017 PO Box Main Street - Pekin, ND Hours: Thurs.- Sat. 10:00AM to 7:00PM Sunday 10:00AM to 4:00PM

Year 5/6: Miss San s Class Spring Term 2016

Nature in Art s Activity Days 2019

Challenge and Fun Badges For All Occasions Supporting Scouting and Guiding

The Exhibit: September 14 to October 14, Opening Reception: Friday, September 14th, 6:30 to 8:30 PM. Call for Artists

POP ART PORTRAITS: TEACHERS NOTES

People and Portraits. Teachers notes. FREE ENTRY liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/ladylever

Gallery of California Art

Branding with impact

Letter Figures Words ART. Written examination. Friday 14 November 2008

New City Primary School Curriculum 2017/18. Year 2- History Medium Term Plans

UNDERSTANDING CULTURAL VOCABULARY KNOWLEDGE Children will learn to Children will learn that Children will learn to

REGISTRATION FORM Fall Art Show Houston Art Society (HAS) LSAG Open Judged Show November 8, 2014

A Sense of Time, Place & Storytelling

vase Phonemic Awareness: Multisensory Activities:

GCSE Bitesize revision audio scripts

2017 SUMMER CAMP PLAN

Piet Mondrian

THIS IS WHAT YOU WILL BE WORKING ON THIS NEXT YEAR FOR THE AP 3D PORTFOLIO. Compilation of 22 works of 3-D art that completes the three sections of

Art Glossary Studio Art Course

Art Exploration! A Self-Guided Tour through the Hallie Ford Museum of Art

Grade 7 Visual Art Term 1

Art at Cox Green Curriculum Plan. Key Stage 4 Year 9 Term I Term 2 Term 3 Term 4 Term 5 Term 6

Years 3 and 4- Visual and Media Arts. Student Resource

SCULPTURE January to 22 February 2014

Works of Art in the Churchill Dining Room

Categories of acceptable media are:

Draw Perry Wood! Perry Wood covers 2 hilltops and you can see for miles around! .. especially if you climb up high to the wooden Pulpit!

Duke & Duchess of. Windsor. I S S U E Q u a r t e r l y. Historical Society. A new Edward VIII oil painting is commissioned

Transcription:

Art Detectives A guide for young visitors Art Detectives are supported by the Flow Foundation Summer Exhibition 2015 You will need a pencil to write and draw

Introduction Welcome to the Summer Exhibition 2015! This year s exhibition has been coordinated by artist Michael Craig-Martin RA. His vision for the show was a summer of colour, and he s certainly achieved that! Look out for brightly painted galleries, and don t miss the mindblowing multi-coloured main staircase, decorated by artist Jim Lambie. This year you ll find over 1100 works bursting out of our galleries everything from paintings and prints to sculptures, photography and film. All the work on display is new or recent art (known as contemporary art ), being made by artists all over the country right now! It s a rare and exciting snapshot of what is happening in the art world today. Anyone can enter their work, from famous artists to people dabbling in painting at home, and everything in the show has been chosen by a group of artists known as the Royal Academicians. Let s explore

Section 1. Start in the Wohl Central Hall Find number 18: Matthew Darbyshire, Captcha No.11 (Doryphoros), Multiwall polycarbonate and stainless steel This piece is based on one of the most famous sculptures in Ancient Greece the Doryphoros or Spear- Bearer by Polykleitos, made in about 440 BCE. The original classical sculpture would have been cast in bronze and then marble copies were made later. What do you think this version is made of? Why do you think the artist has recreated this sculpture using modern materials? Does the sculpture change as you walk around it? How?

Section 1. (continued) Find number 17: Liam Gillick, Applied Projection Rig, Anodised aluminium and plexi-glass As well as hanging on the walls and covering the staircase, there is art above you at this year s Summer Exhibition! Look up at Liam Gillick s colourful panels. What effect do they have on the room and the rest of the artworks? Do the coloured panels make you look more closely at the colours in the paintings, or are they distracting? Tell us what you think!

Section 2. Turn left into Gallery III Here we are in another brightly painted gallery this time pink! While you look at the paintings in this room, think about what effect the pink walls have on the way you look at the artworks. We have taken some close-up snapshots of pieces of art in this room! Can you work out which image each detail comes from? Write its number underneath the snapshot!

Section 3. Turn left into Gallery II Find number 170: David Nash RA, Cork Dome, Cork David Nash RA is one of the leading sculptors in British art. His work is usually made of natural elements like unseasoned wood, which changes over time as it dries. Other works of his have also been exposed to fire and water. Look closely at the texture and variety of colour in the cork dome. Choose some words from the selection below that best describe how this sculpture looks to you: Welcoming Man-made Soft Hard Natural Fragile Section 4. Turn left into Gallery I Find number 254: Grayson Perry RA, Julie and Rob, Tapestry This tapestry by artist Grayson Perry RA is of a couple called Julie and Rob. While they are fictional, Perry has actually built the house he imagined they live in, manufactured with the architectural company FAT. What do you think the artist is trying to tell us about these people (for example, their likes and interests) through the way he has shown them here?

Section 4. (continued) Find number 254: Grayson Perry RA, Julie and Rob, Tapestry Grayson Perry has made these fi gures seem very realistic through his use of detail and colour. How many colours can you count on the man s face? Does the artist use any unusual colours for skin tones or hair?

Section 4. (continued) Find number 286: Ivor Abrahams RA, Hedge and Entrance, Wood, fl ock fi bre, mixed media Ivor Abrahams, who died earlier this year, was a British sculptor and printmaker. He made his reputation with colourful sculptures of hedges and garden walls. How has the artist created a sense of the feel and weight of the greenery of the hedge? Would you call this a sculpture or a painting? Tell us why

Section 4. (continued) This room is hung high with a lot of different pictures. If you look closely, you ll fi nd many birds peeking out from within the frames How many pictures can you spot? Write their numbers in the space below.

Section 5. Head back to the Large Weston Room Find number 428: Karl Singporewala, Franklin s Morals of Chess (Jade), Translucent acrylic The Morals of Chess was an essay written by the philosopher Benjamin Franklin. In it, he compared the game of chess to life, and writes that we can learn foresight and caution from the game. This chessboard is made up of famous buildings in London (instead of normal chess pieces like castles, pawns and queens)! Can you fi nd: The Shard The Tower of London St Paul s Cathedral Are there any others that you recognise? In this work, do you think that the buildings of London look like they might be at war with each other? Why or why not?

Section 5. (continued) Draw your favourite building (in London or elsewhere) in the box below!

Section 7. Keep on going into the Small Weston Room Find number 480: William Kentridge Hon RA, Remembering the Treason Trial, Lithograph All the works in this room are by the South African artist William Kentridge Hon RA. His work is often concerned with the political upheaval of South Africa. This 63-panel piece refers to Nelson Mandela s trial of the 1950s. It s printed on pages from an encyclopedia. Why do you think the artist has chosen to use an encyclopedia as the basis for this work? You might want to think about where paper comes from, and how this relates to the images in the room. Read the sentences on this artwork. Where do you think the artist has got these from? His imagination, or from real life, like a book or newspaper? What do you think they might refer to?

Section 7. Double back to Gallery IV Find number 548: Lisa Milroy RA, One-to-One, Acrylic on hand sewn fabric, hand-painted gloves, wood, clay, coat hanger and nail Throughout her career, artist Lisa Milroy has been interested in painting clothes. Would you describe this as a sculpture? Why or why not?

Section 7. Turn right into Gallery V Find number 702: Mychael Barratt, London Map of Days, Etching and aquatint This work features 366 datespecific references to events or people throughout the history of London. Here are some examples of dates the artist has picked out: 25 May 1850: the fi rst hippopotamus in Europe since the Romans arrives at London Zoo 18 May 1873: Vincent van Gogh arrives in Brixton where he lives for a year 11 April 1633: the fi rst bananas are sold in London at a shop in Snow Hill Look closely at the picture. Can you spot: The Beatles Grayson Perry RA Winnie the Pooh Guy Fawkes Sherlock Holmes King Henry VIII Queen Victoria

Section 8. Walk through to Gallery VI Find number 741: Sir Anish Kapoor RA, Untitled, Acrylic This sculpture has been described as on the border of something that is manufactured and something that is imagined. Choose some words from the selection below that best describe how this sculpture looks to you: Light Natural Scientific Magical Confusing Section 9. Walk through to Gallery VII Find number 834: Chris Orr RA, Moonlight Sonata (While the Mice are Away the Cats will Play), Lithograph and screenprint These naughty cats are getting into all kinds of trouble! Can you fi nd: A cat covered in paint A cat in the fridge A cat with a jug on his head

Section 10. Walk through to Gallery VIII Find number 933: David Mach RA, Buddha, Coat hangers and gold leaf David Mach RA has been making incredible sculptures out of unusual materials for many years. For example, he created a series called Matchheads, made from wooden matchsticks. How many coat hangers do you think the artist used to create this sculpture? Why do you think the artist has used a material like coat hangers to make this sculpture?

Section 10. Walk through to Gallery IX Find number 962: Elizabeth Zeschin, Sadie and the Bird, Archival giclée print This striking photograph is of a young lady holding a dead bird in her hands. Can you imagine what this girl might be thinking? Describe her thoughts here.

Section 11. Walk through to the Lecture Room Find number 1100: Tim Shaw RA, Erebus (Man on Fire Version II), Painted foam, polythene and steel This sculpture was originally a proposal for a design for the fourth plinth in Trafalgar Square. This large sculpture takes up a big space in the room. Does size affect the way you notice it? How does this sculpture make you feel?

Section 12. Double back into Gallery X Find number 1111: Tom Phillips RA, A Humument, Artist s book This gallery has only one work on display A Humument by Tom Phillips RA. In 1966 he found an old book and altered every page by drawing over it. Can you fi nd on the pages: A rose A light bulb A cricketer

4 5 6 7 8 Central Lecture 3 Hall Room 9 2 1 Vestibule Shop 10 Weston Rooms Written by the Learning Department Royal Academy of Arts Designed by Kathrin Jacobsen Keep us up to date with what you discover, tweeting your photos @royalacademy using #RASummer If you would like to see your drawings on the RA website, please hand in your completed Art Detective at the Reception Desk. Alternatively, if you would like to work on your picture at home and send it to us later, you can post it to: Learning Department Royal Academy of Arts Burlington House London WIJ OBD