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Made for this World: Contemporary Art and the Places We Build

Made for this world 2

Cai Guo-Qiang’s Bridge crossing – one of a series of interactives by international artists featured in the exhibition – inspired children to create their own bridge constructions from bamboo.

Made for this world 1

Featuring works by more than 20 Australian and international artists, ‘Made for this World’ encouraged children to consider the creativity at work in our built environment.

Cai Guo-Qiang’s Bridge crossing - one of a series of interactives by international artists featured in the exhibition - inspired children to create their own bridge constructions from bamboo.
Click image to enlarge

Cai Guo-Qiang’s Bridge crossing – one of a series of interactives by international artists featured in the exhibition – inspired children to create their own bridge constructions from bamboo.
 

Featuring works by more than 20 Australian and international artists, ‘Made for this World’ encouraged children to consider the creativity at work in our built environment.
Click image to enlarge

Featuring works by more than 20 Australian and international artists, ‘Made for this World’ encouraged children to consider the creativity at work in our built environment.

Made for this World: Contemporary Art and the Places We Build

26 November 2005 – 19 February 2006
Gallery 5 & 6, and Watermall, Queensland Art Gallery

‘Made for this World’ examined the constructed environments we live in – our homes, streets, buildings, suburbs and cities. Through contemporary art, children discovered new ways of seeing, making and imagining their everyday surroundings.

Presented across several major gallery spaces, the exhibition featured works on paper, installation, painting and video by more than 20 Australian and international artists from the Gallery’s Collection. Integral to the exhibition was the inclusion of four large-scale interactive art works by international contemporary artists. These works gave children plenty of hands-on opportunities to work with materials and turn their imaginative ideas into reality.

With easy-to-read labels, an activity booklet and the exhibition mascot, Kitty the Alley Cat as tour guide, children were taken on a creative journey to rediscover the familiar places where we live, work and play.

For more information, visit ‘Made for this World’.
 

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