Art Monsters for Kids And Teens at Te Papa
Art Monsters for Kids And Teens at Te Papa
Two monstrous new art exhibitions for the under 20s open 18 August, Toi Art at Te Papa
From scaly sea monsters, shiny dinosaurs, and ghastly goblins, to the dark brooding misfits of Tony Fomison’s paintings – two new art exhibitions exploring what lurks in the shadows will open at Te Papa, 18 August 2018.
Created with the help of local school kids, Te Papa’s first art exhibitions made especially for younger audiences are:
Curious Creatures & Marvellous
Monsters - An interactive romp for kids and their
adults through weird and wonderful creatures that have
captured artists’ imaginations and inspired fantastical
artworks.
Tony Fomison: Lost in the Dark –
For young adults, Fomison’s dark and moody works
focus on misfits, monsters and deformed figures on the
fringes of society, in an exhibition co-created with local
teenagers to explore how his work unpacks ideas of
belonging.
The two exhibitions will be unveiled in Te
Papa’s new art gallery Toi Art, which has welcomed more
than 200,000 visitors since opening in March this
year.
Charlotte Davy, Te Papa Head of Art, says that
monsters have fascinated both young people and artists for
centuries.
“From the shadows under their beds to the
loud creak downstairs, kids use monsters as a way to explain
the world around them - and so do artists” says Davy.
“So we’re exploring the weird, wonderful and sometimes
scary creatures that emerge from our
imaginations.”
“In Curious Creatures & Marvellous
Monsters, kids can actually crawl into a painting to a
goblin forest, create their own curious creatures, and
experience art through movement, touch and smell. And for
our older audiences in Tony Fomison: Lost in the Dark, they
can use art to understand and express deeper and darker
emotions.”
“With works drawn from the depths of the
national art collection, by artists including Lisa Reihana,
Bill Hammond, Len Lye, Pablo Picasso, and of course Tony
Fomison, we want to encourage kids and teens to use their
powerful imaginations to connect with great
art.”
“The aim is to create a whole new generation of
art lovers,” says Davy.
Both exhibitions are open until
early November 2018, giving young people just over two
months to explore the monsters lurking in the national
museum.
CURIOUS CREATURES & MARVELLOUS
MONSTERS
Curious Creatures & Marvellous Monsters
is an art exhibition for kids that explores the magical,
monstrous and imagined creatures drawn from the depths of Te
Papa’s art collection.
With taniwha, dragons, and
dinosaurs, unicorns, goblins, and a puking chimp, young
visitors and their grown-ups can discover a world of
fabulous monsters that have been dreamt up by artists –
and be inspired to invent their own.
Curated by Dr
Chelsea Nichols, Te Papa Curator of Modern Art, and Miri
Young, Te Papa Head of Learning Innovation, with special
help from Year 3-6 kids at Kilbirnie School, Curious
Creatures & Marvellous Monsters encourages kids to look at
art with all of their senses.
“At Te Papa, we have
collections filled with the wonderful things found in the
real world – but artists can take you into the
extraordinary world of the imaginary, to create creatures
weirder and more magical than what we already know,” says
Nichols.
The exhibition contains a mix of works from
well-known and celebrated New Zealand artists, including
Judy Darragh, Francis Upritchard, Angela Singer, Alexis
Hunter, Bill Hammond and Lisa Reihana, and new work by
Gregor Kregar, as well as renowned international artists
like Pablo Picasso and Albrecht Dürer, and historical works
dating back from the 15th century.
“We’re giving kids
important, meaty, challenging artworks from the
collection,” says Nichols. “And we’re giving them the
tools to help unpack what they might mean as they explore
their own curiosity and imagination,” says Nichols.
The
exhibition will be open until early November 2018, on Level
4 of Toi Art at Te Papa. The show will run alongside a
programme of events for kids and adults:
tepapa.nz/monsters
#CuriousCreatures
TONY FOMISON: LOST IN
THE DARK
Feeling like an outsider is a familiar
experience for many young people. In a new exhibition
co-created with teenagers from Wellington High School,
images of misfits and outcasts are explored through the
works of renowned New Zealand artist Tony
Fomison.
Curated by Dr Chelsea Nichols, Tony Fomison:
Lost in the Dark focuses on the dark, intense paintings
which Fomison produced during the early years of his career,
from 1967 to 1975.
“Fomison painted marginal figures,
finding a weird beauty in the monsters, martyrs and deformed
figures that live on the fringes of society,” says
Nichols.
“From a period of darkness in his own life,
emerged these emotive and almost brutal paintings that made
him one of the most important painters of his generation.
Despite being about outsiders, they resonate with audiences
in a way that’s really profound.”
Seventeen-year-old
Aroha Millar, Year 13 at Wellington High School and one of
the students involved the exhibition, says the themes in
Fomison’s work “always have a place in society –
especially today where so many people are outcasts from
their own countries.”
“He felt like an outsider, so
he painted this whole family of outcasts. It shows that he
was looking for people that were like him – maybe not
physically, but mentally and emotionally. His work looks at
people who don’t have a place, and helps us try to
understand what they’re going through.”
Millar says
it’s important that Te Papa is bringing the voices of
younger people into the exhibition – and the students have
been particularly focused on creating spaces for people to
share their own responses to Fomison’s paintings.
“I
want people to be able to see what other people think about
Fomison’s work. Sometimes you walk into a gallery and
it’s really one-sided, so I hope we can break that
wall.”
“You don’t have to be particularly artistic
to talk about art - it’s there for everyone to enjoy and
start a conversation,” she says.
Curator Dr Chelsea
Nichols says working with the students from Wellington High
School has hugely influenced the exhibition, and how she
sees Fomison as an artist.
“Fomison would have loved
them,” she says. “They don’t fit into stereotypes,
they believe that creative responses are a way to navigate
the scary political and social problems in the
world.”
“His work really spoke to them, and I hope this exhibition will speak to others in that same way,” she says. “It’s a really great chance to reintroduce his work to a younger generation of people, who can identify with Fomison’s frustrations against the tyranny of normality.”
The exhibition includes well-known and less
familiar works painted by Fomison, as well as
never-before-seen video footage of the artist at work, and
spaces for people to respond in conversation with the teens
working on the show.
tepapa.nz/lostinthedark
#LostInTheDark
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The two new
exhibitions will be replacing Pacific Sisters: Fashion
Activists and Lisa Walker: I want to go to my bedroom but I
can’t be bothered on Level 4 of Te Papa, in Toi
Art.
Toi Art opened in March 2018 as a spectacular new
space for art in the museum. This is the first change of
exhibitions as part of a long-term programme of art at Te
Papa.
[ENDS]