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On
May 18th, 1995, the Eli Whitney Museum will open an exhibition
of small designs submitted by professional designers, artists,
and educators…
These
designs will embody the adult expression of the craft and creativity
we foster in children.
•
the event will introduce our Leonardo
Project, a design arts curriculum for schools, funded by the
National Endowment for the Arts.
•
the exhibit, Leonardo‘s Clothespin, will explore design
as a way of thinking.
• the exhibit will support the National Endowment’s
commitment to the arts as essential education.
Leonardo
da Vinci’s Notebooks define the products and processes of
design. Leonardo explores his world with the eyes of a Scientist;
he reinvents it with the hands of an Artist. He directs students
in architecture and landscape design, in fashion and theatrical
design, in product design and graphic design: all of the creative
expressions that surround humankind.
Leonardo’s
own exercises become teaching tools to supplement regular classroom
lessons and projects.
For
example, Transformation: to make a beautiful costume, Leonardo
writes, take inexpensive cloth, coat it with lacquer, dye it,
stencil it, then sprinkle on millet to give the impression of
fine embroidery.
Our
classroom exercise:
Use common materials to transform a clothespin into a recognizable
character to support your book report.
Help
us demonstrate the possibilities of this commission: transform
a clothespin to show design at work.
• We will send you clothespins, a cigar box and further
guidelines.
• Add materials as you wish.
• Use the cigar box to frame your entry.
• Return your completed design by May 12th.
Call
777.1833 to request materials. For a $25 contribution, you will
receive a ticket to the May 18th reception, a Leonardo’s
Clothespin T- shirt, and more importantly, partnership in this
educational effort.
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