Art museums for teens. Teens for art museums.
TEENS 4 a.m.
Alternative. Curate your city.
One way to tag your city is through Google Earth. Download it from the link below—it has tutorials. You can geotag your photos and create a custom tour of all the street art in your city. Share it through our blog or through our facebook page.
The New York Subway exhibits artwork. Does the subway in your city host art exhibits too? Blog or facebook us and tell us about it.
The Brooklyn to Manhattan train hosts stop motion animation. Take a look out the window!
Many airports have permanent and changing art exhibitions that are open to the public in either or both the ticketed and non-ticketed areas of the airport. Does your city's airport have galleries? Blog/facebook us!
Some museums will bring their exhibits to your school—in a suitcase! Why don't you suggest it to your art museum? Or better yet, curate your own exhibit that would fit into a suitcase.
Art galleries do not have to be confined to urban areas or man-made structues. Artists take control of not only their art,but the presentation as well when they create art out in the environment. Robert Smithson's "Spiral Jetty" is just one example of an earthwork artist. Blog or share with us other artists you discover!
Louise Lawler juxtaposes unlikely and everyday objects next to works of art that make us think of how the museum stages artworks. Do you have similar photos to share on our blog and facebook page?
Well, this is one way of taking art for a ride!
Pepón Osorio created the idea of the "Home Visits" for his artwork. The home becomes a temporary gallery as the artwork visits each house before moving to the next house. The idea is about sharing artwork. In this context the gallery becomes many galleries.