Imagining the Future through Miniatures (Middle School)

School Groups
Middle School

Face-to-Face

How would future look if it was viewed from the lens of the past? In this workshop, we will discuss traditions that have survived the test of time. Afterwards, inspired by artist Halil Altındere’s works that establish a dialogue between past and present and add contemporary aspects to traditional forms, we will imagine how our current tools of communication and transportation might change 100 years from now.

Materials
Drawing paper
Crayons

Weekday Online Learning Program for Primary-Middle School
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 

10:00-10:30
10:45-11:15
11:30-12:00 

Online guided tour and workshop participation fee per person for private schools: 6 TL
Online guided tours and workshops are free of charge for public schools.

Reservation is required for groups, which should include no less than 10 and no more than 60 participants. After confirmation of the reservation, the workshop link will be sent exclusively to the e-mail address submitted during registration.

Related Exhibition: Miniature 2.0, Miniature in Contemporary Art

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Symbols

Symbols

Pera Museum’s Cold Front from the Balkans exhibition curated by Ali Akay and Alenka Gregorič brings together contemporary artists from Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, Romania, Serbia and Slovenia.

Il Cavallo di Leonardo

Il Cavallo di Leonardo

In 1493, exactly 500 years ago, Leonardo da Vinci was finishing the preparations for casting the equestrian monument (4 times life size), which Ludovico il Moro, Duke of Milan commissioned in memory of his father some 12 years earlier. 

Marcel Duchamp’s Bicycle Wheel

Marcel Duchamp’s Bicycle Wheel

In 1998 Ben Jakober and Yannick Vu collaborated on an obvious remake of Marcel Duchamp’s Roue de Bicyclette, his first “readymade” object. Duchamp combined a bicycle wheel, a fork and a stool to create a machine which served no purpose, subverting accepted norms of art.