Culture Magazine

Take One Picture – Creatve Inspiration for Schoolchildren at The National Gallery

By Janeslondon
My last post was about the Degas exhibition at the National Gallery. If you do go to see that, or even if you don't, walk through the adjacent gift shop where some excellent and competitively-priced Degas-themed merchandise is available, to a room full of art made my schoolchildren.
When visiting the National gallery I often see groups of small uniformed people sat in front of a painting listening to a teacher or drawing, and I wonder what they are up to. Well, now I understand what's going on; it appears children are shown a painting, this year it's A Roman Triumph by Peter Paul Rubens, and are then encouraged to write about and/or create some kind of art based on their observations. 

Take One Picture – creatve inspiration for schoolchildren at The National Gallery

Marvellous artwork across the ages. I especially love the elephants and the white ceramics. Bottom right is from a video where children are performing a play inspired by the sacrifice and slaughter depicted in Rubens' painting.

The cross-section of results shown in this room is delightful and shows we have some great future artists running around our playgrounds.
Take One Picture was launched in 1995, yet stumbling on this room last week was the first I knew about it. Probably because I don't have children. I wish similar things were available when I was a child. I'd have been proverbial pig in the dirty stuff.
Lots more educational stuff in the Learning section of the National Gallery's website.

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