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DRAW AND WRITE: Fun Family Activities at SFMOMA

By Carolinearnoldtravel @CarolineSArnold

DRAW AND WRITE: Fun Family Activities at SFMOMA

Family Activity Guide at SFMOMA 


On my recent visit to SFMOMA in San Francisco to see the Diego Rivera exhibit, I picked up a free brochure at the entrance— DRAW AND WRITE--a family activity guide with suggestions for looking at the art. Each page has room to draw or write in response to the question.
  What a great way to engage children visiting the museum and encourage them to think about and interact with the art! The same activities would work well when doing a virtual visit to a museum on the internet.
Here are some examples of the activities in the brochure.

Find something you have never seen before—a color, shape, object, or message. Write what you see here.

DRAW AND WRITE: Fun Family Activities at SFMOMA

A surprise for me was to see Diego Rivera’s studies of hands—which reminded me of the assignment I had in my first life drawing class. The difference was that Diego’s hands were giant—perfect for the large figures of his murals.

Look for an artwork that was made with unexpected or everyday materials. What unexpected materials did you find?

DRAW AND WRITE: Fun Family Activities at SFMOMA

An unexpected material that I found at the museum was a stack of plastic frying pans made into an abstract vertical sculpture, showing that ordinary objects can become extraordinary.

And the most intriguing suggestion was the last:

Write a letter to a piece of art you discovered today. Tell it what you liked the most.

DRAW AND WRITE: Fun Family Activities at SFMOMA

My letter is to a painting by Joan Brown, The Golden Age: The Jaguar and the Tapir (1985).

Dear Painting,

I love your bright colors and the way the tapir and jaguar contrast with the red and green background. You remind me of one of my own pieces of art, an illustration for my book A Day and Night in the Rain Forest. I cut my animals from colored paper and glued them onto the background. That included every one of the jaguar’s spots! I think it would be much easier to paint them as your artist did. And, of course, you are much bigger than the pages of my book. I’m so glad I met you at the museum.

Sincerely, Caroline Arnold


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