Rhythmic Patterns with Wooden Moulds

Pera Kids
Ages 7-12

  • January 25, 2025 / 10:30

Children visiting Calculations and Coincidences with a guide use wooden printing blocks carved with geometric shapes and organic forms. They apply repeating and symmetrical patterns with these wooden blocks and create rhythmic designs by painting the same motif in different colors. After completing their printwork on paper, the children transfer their favorite designs onto fabric tote bags.

Capacity: 12 people
Duration: 75 minutes
Fee per workshop: 300 TL

The event will take place at the Pera Museum.

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History of a Khanjar

History of a Khanjar

Henryk Weyssenhoff, author of landscapes, prints, and illustrations, devoted much of his creative energies to realistic vistas of Belorussia, Lithuania, and Samogitia. A descendant of an ancient noble family which moved east to the newly Polonised Inflanty in the 17th century, the young Henryk was raised to cherish Polish national traditions.

The Search for Form

The Search for Form

A series of small and rather similar nudes Bedri Rahmi Eyüboğlu and Eren Eyüboğlu produced in the early 1930s almost resemble a ‘visual conversation’ that focus on a pictorial search. It is also possible to find the visual reflections of this earlier search in the synthesis Bedri Rahmi Eyüboğlu reached with his stylistic abstractions in the 1950s.

The First Nudes

The First Nudes

Men were the first nudes in Turkish painting. The majority of these paintings were academic studies executed in oil paint; they were part of the education of artists that had finally attained the opportunity to work from the live model. The gender of the models constituted an obstacle in the way of characterizing these paintings as ‘nudes’.