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Cooper Hewitt Education Department

Smithsonian Staff

Cooper Hewitt Education Department's collections

 

Faith Ringgold: Posters & Protest

<p>Analyze political posters designed by artist, author, and activist Faith Ringgold, and design your own protest poster about a civil rights issue today.</p> <p>Grades:9-12</p> <p>Subjects: Civil Rights History, Visual Arts</p>
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July: Participation

<p><a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/july-participation/">JULY: PARTICIPATION</a></p> <p><strong>Age: Middle School, Highschool</strong></p> <p>In her public installations, Es Devlin often transforms audiences from viewers to participants, inviting us to become protagonists in a work. To achieve this, she might present audiences with a short film projected onto a screen that splits apart. Upon passing through the screen, we enter an unfolding narrative as a participant. Devlin might also invite audiences to navigate a mirrored maze, or she might harness the power of collective poetry, asking us to donate words to artificial intelligence algorithms that generate poems in public spaces. For Devlin, participation becomes a transformative act that deepens our encounter with an idea. </p> <p>We engage with participation by asking our audiences to actively take part in a work. By directly engaging with a concept, we strengthen its connection with other lived experiences in our minds. Participation might also materialize in our creative practices as we become more mindful of our encounters and actions in the world around us, transforming our connections to one another and our planet. The materials on this page invite you to explore participation in your creative practice. You will find examples of what participation looks like in the work of others, as well as prompts and exercises that encourage your own participation by consciously connecting with your daily life and community. </p>
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June: Perspective Shift

<p><a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/june-perspective-shift/">JUNE: PERSPECTIVE SHIFT </a></p> <p>Es Devlin’s public installations often transform viewers into active participants. She believes that part of her role as an artist is to create transformative experiences between audiences and artwork. Several of her sculptural installations address complex issues such as endangered species or languages. In these works, she uses visuals, sound, and performance to deepen how an audience understands and experiences a story. She hopes that these experiences shift audience perspectives and strengthen their connections to each other and to the planet. </p> <p>In our own creative practices, shifting perspectives can open new ways into thinking about the world and how we experience it. The neighborhoods we live in might feel less familiar if we try to imagine them from the perspective of a pigeon or even a tulip in full bloom. The exercises and materials on this page invite you to explore some new perspectives to foster creative thinking. </p>
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March: Creative Collaboration

<p><a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/march-creative-collaboration/"></a><a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/march-creative-collaboration/">MARCH: CREATIVE COLLABORATION | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum</a><a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/march-creative-collaboration/"></a></p> <p><strong>Age: Middle School, Highschool</strong> </p> <p>Collaboration is essential to Es Devlin’s artistic practice. Directors, studio associates, lighting designers, production managers, musicians, video designers, writers, fabricators, and more enrich her work and make it possible at such a grand scale. Some collaborations might last a few months while others endure for many years. All of them unfold over a continued conversation. No one person always has the best idea, and exchanging ideas fosters stronger outcomes. </p> <p>While Devlin’s collaborations often have an end goal, much of the richness of working with others comes from the places you explore together along the way—the dead ends, the abandoned ideas, the miscommunications, the fresh starts. Working with someone offers a chance to consider new ways of thinking, and that exchange can inspire new directions for creative work. The exercises and materials on this page offer some ways to kickstart or reflect on collaboration in your own life. What might you learn from one collaboration that you apply to the next? </p>
Cooper Hewitt Education Department
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February: Texts

<p><a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/february-texts/">FEBRUARY: TEXTS | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum</a></p> <p><strong>Age: Middle School, High school </strong></p> <p>The act of reading is central to Es Devlin’s process for translating plays, operas, or song lyrics to stage designs or stadium tours. While reading, she underlines important passages and makes sketches in the margins of books. She returns to these notes as she considers the form of a stage sculpture or the narrative journey through an installation. </p> <p>Reading provides us an opportunity to immerse ourselves in someone else’s thoughts. We imagine a world built by their words. On its own, reading can expand our thinking and open us to new understanding. But texts can also help spark our own creative ideas. The materials on this page encourage you to explore new ways to engage with texts as part of a creative practice. </p>
Cooper Hewitt Education Department
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January: Drawing

<p></p> <p><a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/january-drawing/">JANUARY: DRAWING | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum</a></p> <p><strong>Age: Middle School, High school </strong></p> <p>Drawing is essential to Es Devlin’s creative practice. She draws every day, making quick, rough sketches and longer, more detailed studies. Her thousands of drawings capture the seeds of imagined ideas for stage designs and sculptural installations. But drawing also helps Devlin to study and relate to the world around her. When we draw from life, our hands and eyes connect, providing a different way for us to see and understand an object, place, or person. </p> <p>Many of us think we can’t draw or that we’re bad at it. It can be difficult to even attempt a drawing when we’re afraid of failing at it. But instead of focusing on the end product, we encourage you to explore what you might learn, experience, or feel while drawing. The process of drawing can be a kind of meditation. It can provide a rare moment to slow down and look closely. The prompts, readings, and programs on this page provide ways to explore drawing as a tool and to consider how it might support other aspects of a creative life. </p> <p></p>
Cooper Hewitt Education Department
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