Wreck This Journal: To Create is to Destroy, Now With Even More Ways to Wreck!
Notes
Through a series of creatively and quirkily illustrated prompts, Smith encourages journalers to engage in “destructive” acts – poking holes through pages, adding photos and defacing them, painting with coffee, colouring outside the lines, and more – in order to experience the true creative process.
Part of the Study Room Guide on Live Art and Kids (P3091).
Artist / Author | Keri Smith |
---|---|
Publisher | Penguin |
ISBN | 978-0141976143 |
Reference | P3093 |
Date | 2013 |
Type | Publication |
Keywords
Similar items
The Maternal in Creative Work: Intergenerational Discussions on Motherhood and Art
The Maternal in Creative Work examines the interrelation between art, creativity and maternal experience, inviting international artists, theorists and cultural workers to discuss their approaches to the central feminist question of the relation between maternity, generation and creativity.
A Good Love Story
This story is a product of lockdown, of not being able to create gatherings and experiences with, and for, other people. It is an account of intensely personal histories and experiences, that usually stay behind the screens. It is also a document of the Heteraclub project and the safe space created there, in which hundreds of women shared their stories of love and pleasure.
Restock, Rethink, Reflect 4 closing event
Documentation of the event marking the end of Restock, Reflect, Rethink Four, a project about Live Art and Cultural Privilege.
Through the Prism of the Senses
An Apartment on Uranus
Recounts Preciado’s transformation from Beatriz into Paul B., and examines other processes of political, cultural and sexual transition.
Joshua Sofaer: Performance | Objects | Participation
Analyses the artist’s oeuvre in the contexts of liveness, visual art and participatory practices.
KAPUTT: The Academy of Destruction
Documentation from the collaboration between LADA, Sibylle Peters of Theatre of Research and Tate Families & Early Years. 26 to 29 October 2017.
Unicorn: The Memoir of a Muslim Drag Queen
From a god-fearing Muslim boy enraptured with their mother, to a vocal, queer drag queen estranged from their family, this is a heart-breaking and hilarious memoir about the author’s fight to be true to themself.
Part of the Library of Performing Rights (P3041).
No One Is Too Small to Make a Difference
The book brings Greta in her own words, collecting her speeches that have made history.
Imaginative Bodies: Dialogues in Performance Practices
Reaffirms the central position of the body in various artistic practices through in-depth conversations with choreographers, composers, visual artists, hip hop artists, dramaturges, a light designer and a puppeteer.
This is (Not) the Ageing Body in Dance
On Tino Sehgal’s Ann Lee and the robotisation of the ageing body.
Love Motel for Insects
Public installations designed to construct interactions between humans and arthropods such as moths, beetles, caddisflies, ants and lacewings.
Part of Life Art Library at MIF 2019: Animals of Manchester; Saturday 20 and Sunday 21 July 2019.