Bead Drawings
Transcription
Bead Drawings
Bead Drawings The Sea Wall – Activity Sheet 1/5 Work in Focus: Untitled (Water), Felix Gonzales-Torres Felix Gonzales-Torres often used everyday or domestic items such as lights or shelves, curtains or clocks to make his work. He tried to say serious things about his life and the world around him by using materials that people would be familiar and comfortable with. The beaded curtains you see in the gallery spaces are blue and green in colour because Felix had a lifelong love of the sea; he lived by the coast for a great deal of his life. Has the artist has created an abstract portrait of the sea? You can walk through the curtains and touch them; this is different from a lot of other artworks. How do the curtains change the gallery spaces? Inside the Gallery 1. Collect drawings sheets of Arnolfini’s gallery spaces from the Reading Room and a little packet of blue sticky dots. 2. Create your own Felix Gonzales-Torres beaded curtain, you could use the same shape of Felix’ work or you could make a new shape or pattern. Would your design have just one beaded thread or would it be a circle or star shape? Would it seperate one gallery space from another or float in the middle of the gallery space? I Chalk the Line The Sea Wall – Activity Sheet 2/5 Work in focus: Untitled (Water), Felix Gonzalez-Torres and 49.46m², Haegue Yang Think of the different ways the artworks in this exhibition relate to borders and boundaries (Things that mark the edge of spaces and show one space is different to another - a gate, a curtain, a line). Are most boundaries made or set by other people or do we sometimes create them ourselves? Are you told how you have to behave and where you go or do you choose yourself? Outside the Gallery Inside the Gallery Collect a piece of chalk from The Reading Room (on the second floor) and draw a line (just one line) on the cobbled pavement outside Arnolfini. 1. Collect drawing sheets of Felix GonzalesTorres’ work in the Arnolfini’s gallery spaces from the Reading Room and a selection of coloured pencils. 2. Take these to the gallery spaces and see if you can record what you see through the beaded curtains (People emerging, other artworks). You can also write down things you notice. Observe how this makes people behave when they encounter it: Do they walk straight over it? Do they feel wary of crossing it? Do they go around it? Record what people do and their reactions here: How Objects Make Space The Sea Wall – Activity Sheet 3/5 Work in Focus: VIP’s Union, Haegue Yang VIP’s Union is an installation made up of chairs, tables and other items of furniture To make this work Haegue has written to all the VIP’s (Very Important People like famous writers, musicians, TV personalities, politicians etc) associated with Bristol and invited them to donate a piece of furniture to the installation. What does the furniture say about the people who donated them? How are they all different? What do the choices of objects we surround ourselves with say about us? Inside the Gallery 1. Choose one piece of furniture that you can see in the VIP’s Union installation and draw it on the back of this sheet– use any style of drawing you want to (rough sketch, scribble, detailed) 2. Can you find out who it belongs to? Write this here 3. What do you think this object says about the owner and how they live? Write your thoughts down here 4. Write down a story of how this piece of furniture came to be where it is from the beginning of its life until now. Mirror Mirror The Sea Wall – Activity Sheet 4/5 Work in focus: Mirror Series, Haegue Yang Have you seen Haegue’s mirrors? They are in Gallery 4, why don’t you go and have a look? Do they behave like normal mirrors? Can you see your reflection in them? Write down the different things they do when you walk up to them… Imagine you are in control of one of the mirrors, what would you make it do when people looked at it? Draw your idea in the mirror below, you can also explain your idea further by writing notes beside it. Poetry Of Materials The Sea Wall – Activity Sheet 5/5 Artists have to think very carefully about the materials they use in their works. Haegue Yang and Felix Gonzales-Torres are known for using poetic and political themes and ideas through their use of materials. Different materials provoke different responses: consider all the materials that are used in the artworks you can see in front of you. Why do you think the artists chose those materials? 1. Write down 5 different types of materials you can find in the artworks and in the gallery space around you. 2. Add an adjective (describing word) to each material (e.g. cold metal, soft wool, light plastic) in the column below. 3. Re-organise the words you have to create a poem or word sculpture describing the environment around you. 4. Read your poem out loud or quietly in your head while you are in the space. How does it make you feel? Does it describe the gallery environment you are in? The materials you identify and words you select will mean different things to different people.