children looking at art (3)

Thoughtful talk with a noticing adult can open a door to deeper looking for child visitors to exhibitions.

In the previous post, I wrote about letting the child lead the visit. It’s the adult, though, who leads the talk, taking a dual focus - on the child and on the painting. Older children can tell you why they stopped at this particular painting. With a very young child like Naya, I have to guess what attracted her attention, and then I can offer it back to her with more talk.

The conversation starts from the child’s interest, and takes it further. Here’s an early Patrick Heron painting I saw in St Ives last spring and some imagined child-friendly talk around it.

Patrick Heron, St Ives Window with Sandbar. As seen as Tate St Ives, May 2018.

Patrick Heron, St Ives Window with Sandbar. As seen as Tate St Ives, May 2018.

Did you see the fish? Yes, there’s two, on the white table. Can you see another one?

can you find a chair in the painting?

It’s called St Ives Window - what can you see through the window?

Perhaps the painter was sitting inside looking out through the window like we did yesterday when it was raining.

look at the blue - here, and her, and here. So many different blues!

and there’s a bright red line. Let’s find some more red lines. Some down here and some up there.

It’s like a square, isn’t it? Do you think that’s the window? Or maybe these black lines are the window frame?

There are lines going up and down, and lines going across.

Look, here’s another painting through a window…

Here’s a list of some of the many things adults can talk about with the child:

details and stories to connect the painting to our lives

what the painting shows us

o   objects and landscapes

o   colours and change of colour

o   shapes

o   scale

o   light and shade

o   lines and diagonals

the title of the painting and what it might suggest

the making of the painting and how it shows on the surface

o   brush marks

o   how lines cross or avoid each other or create distance

o   how colours overlap or merge

o   what happens at the edges

o   unpainted areas

our responses to the painting

o   where it takes us (metaphorically)

o   how it makes us feel

o   the parts that ‘speak’ to us and the parts that don’t

o   what might happen beyond the painting frame

how the painting connects to others, in the exhibition or remembered

·       tbc

 © Lynne Cameron 2019 

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Children looking at art

Back in May when I was sitting looking at Patrick Heron paintings in the Tate St Ives, I couldn’t help overhearing some of the things adults said to their children:

Which one do you like? 

What colour is that? 

Can you see the ball in the picture?

That picture is bigger than you, isn’t it? 

This started me thinking more about why we take children into art galleries and what we expect them to get from their experience. These questions lead the children to think about their emotional response, to look for something they recognise, to name and label, to see paintings as objects. While any of these might be fun or interesting, they could be asked in the shopping mall or playground. How do we help children look more deeply at artworks?

Naya, aged 9 months, with her father, looking at Here they come, acrylic on canvas, Lynne Cameron.

Naya, aged 9 months, with her father, looking at Here they come, acrylic on canvas, Lynne Cameron.

Naya is now 21 months and has been looking at this painting of mine since she was a tiny baby. She passes it on the stairs and greets in the morning, says good night to it on the way to bed.

When I carry her, we stop by it, and I talk about it, trying to extend her looking at the abstract painting in terms of colour / shape and movement / light and dark – and how it makes us feel.

Do you like that green circle?

Look, here’s another green circle. A little one. And here’s a big big one, going off the edge.

And what’s in the middle? Yes, it’s blue.

Where’s the pink? The pink goes all the way to the edge… into that dark shadow.

I like this white dotty part Which bit do you like?

The aim is for Naya to experience a combination of interest, growing familiarity, and deepening attention that is a great start to her looking at art.

tbc

The tulip project (2016)

Almost exactly three years ago, I bought a bunch of tulips at the Winterfeldplatz market in Berlin. The tulips made art in several ways. As tulips will, they shaped and reshaped themselves over the next week. They cast intriguing shadows in my studio/kitchen. They began to die and became even more beautiful as the petals fell. I put together the photos of their living and dying: