• Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
  • Flickr
  • eNews
  • qaggoma app

Children's Art Centre Exhibitions

GOMA_ContemporaryAustraliaWomen_20120410_msherwood_038.jpg

Fiona Hall | Australia b.1953 | Visitors enjoying the Children's Art Centre project 'Fly Away Home' 2012 | Supported by the Tim Fairfax Family Foundation | Photograph: QAGOMA Photography

GOMA_ContemporaryAustraliaWomen_20120410_msherwood_016.jpg

Fiona Hall | Australia b.1953 | Installation view of the Children's Art Centre project 'Fly Away Home' 2012 | Supported by the Tim Fairfax Family Foundation | Photograph: QAGOMA Photography

Exhibitions

The Children's Art Centre's Park Level Gallery will be open from 7 April 2012 (Easter Saturday) with leading contemporary artist Fiona Hall's 'Fly Away Home, a major artwork created especially for children and families,  as part of the exhibition 'Contemporary Australia: Women’.

For more information about programs such as Toddler Tuesday click here and online games and activities click here.

Now Open!

Fiona Hall 'Fly Away Home'

Until 16 September 2012 ǀ GOMA

As part of ‘Contemporary Australia: Women’, the Gallery presents ‘Fly Away Home’, a large-scale art work for children and families by leading Australian artist Fiona Hall, developed in collaboration with the Children’s Art Centre.

‘Fly Away Home’ opens up young imaginations to the wonders of the world inhabited by both humans and birds, while also introducing important issues of our time – human migration and the need to protect the environment. Fiona Hall invites children to explore these ideas from a bird’s perspective as they make a bird and nest using paper money she has especially developed for ‘Fly Away Home’.

Many of Fiona’s works feature real banknotes. For her art work Tender 2003–06, in the Gallery’s Collection, Fiona shredded thousands of US one dollar bills and wove the shreds into birds’ nests, each resembling that of a different bird species. For this art work, Fiona created the nests out of actual money to suggest that people’s interest in making money as a way of improving their lifestyle can negatively impact – even destroy – natural habitats.

For ‘Fly Away Home’, she has designed paper money that children can use to make their own bird species. Some of the banknotes feature migratory birds. People often migrate for similar reasons to birds – they make new homes where the weather is warmer, perhaps in a place with the right environment for raising a family. Fiona says,

There are parallels between humans and birds. Both groups of ‘animals’ – after all, that is what humans are! – display migratory behaviour: a number of bird species are seasonal migrants and humans have, since earliest times, been on the move. I’ve heard that some species adapt or change over time to live in an environment that suits their needs. Perhaps we humans are similar – searching for some part of the world where we can make a home and feel secure.

Fiona encourages ‘Fly Away Home’ visitors to consider their own experience – and the experiences of their friends and families – of moving away and starting over in a new location.

‘Fly Away Home’ was first commissioned by the Children’s Art Centre for ‘21st Century: Art in the First Decade’ 2010 and supported by the Tim Fairfax Family Foundation.