'inventing language' school project Quillan, France 2008
here are some of the results of an ongoing art project with school children in Quillan, France. After presenting them with diverse examples of languages (hieroglyphics, sanskrit, japanese, pictograms etc) I invited them to design their own alternative to each letter in the alphabet, thus making their own personal code.
What a wonderful project Garth! Reminds me of making up rune alphabets with friends at school - I can still remember em. And lovely to see your work on the web.
Thanks for your comments tam, I've really enjoyed the school projects. I find the children are much more open and engaged than their parents..usually. We did a joint exhibition at the end of the project, and the children were so happy to face each piece of work of mine as if it were a puzzle. They could openly confront the 'not-knowing' we all experience when we engage in something challenging without resorting to defense mechanisms of mistrust, boredom etc. I love the playfulness of children...
I agree this was a wonderful project. It reminds me of the reinventions of language some writers have attempted eg. Rimbaud's sonnet ascribing colours and characteristics to each of the vowels; Joyce's made-up vocabulary in Finnegans Wake. Children and poets both believe in the tactile opacity of language; in words, letters and alphabets as concrete things to be played with and enjoyed beyond their functional sense.
What a wonderful project Garth! Reminds me of making up rune alphabets with friends at school - I can still remember em. And lovely to see your work on the web.
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ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments tam, I've really enjoyed the school projects. I find the children are much more open and engaged than their parents..usually. We did a joint exhibition at the end of the project, and the children were so happy to face each piece of work of mine as if it were a puzzle. They could openly confront the 'not-knowing' we all experience when we engage in something challenging without resorting to defense mechanisms of mistrust, boredom etc. I love the playfulness of children...
ReplyDeleteI agree this was a wonderful project. It reminds me of the reinventions of language some writers have attempted eg. Rimbaud's sonnet ascribing colours and characteristics to each of the vowels; Joyce's made-up vocabulary in Finnegans Wake. Children and poets both believe in the tactile opacity of language; in words, letters and alphabets as concrete things to be played with and enjoyed beyond their functional sense.
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