Confrontation Online Exhibition Tour

School Groups
High School

Face-to-Face

Students, who tour the Confrontation exhibition online in 3D with a guide, learn about the works in the exhibition, which poses questions on the relationship between nature and the city and on individuals and the society.  In this exhibition designed with an interdisciplinary approach, we will take a close look at the works by students at Yeditepe University Fine Arts Faculty's Plastic Arts and Painting, Graphic Design, Theater, Textile and Fashion Design, Arts and Culture Management, Gastronomy and Culinary Arts and question how arts and design tackle the contemporary.

Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 

10:00-10:30
10:45-11:15
11:30-12:00 

Online Learning Programs are free of charge for high school students.

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

Related Exhibition: Confrontation

loading ... Loading...
loading ... Loading...
loading ... Loading...
Loading ...
loading ... Loading...
loading ... Loading...
loading ... Loading...
Loading ...
loading ... Loading...
loading ... Loading...
loading ... Loading...
Loading ...

Audience with the Mad King

Audience with the Mad King

Celebrating its 10th anniversary this year, Pera Museum invites artist Benoît Hamet to reinterpret key pieces from its collections, casting a humourous eye over ‘historical’ events, both imagined and factual.

The Golden Horn

The Golden Horn

When regarding the paintings of Istanbul by western painters, Golden Horn has a distinctive place and value. This body of water that separates the Topkapı Palace and the Historical Peninsula, in which monumental edifices are located, from Galata, where westerners and foreign embassies dwell, is as though an interpenetrating boundary.

Kozbekçi Mustafa Ağa

Kozbekçi Mustafa Ağa

When Karl XII of Sweden was defeated by Tsar Peter the Great of Russia in 1709, he fled to the Ottoman Empire and settled in Bender with his entourage for five years.