Pablo Picasso : painting without paint -- Carlo Carrá : back to the future -- Marcel Duchamp : mind over matter -- Raoul Hausmann : measuring up -- Joseph Cornell : boxed in -- Robert Rauschenberg : thinking outside the square -- Jean Tinguely : the art of destruction -- Tom Wesselmann : popular in pink -- Rebecca Horn : suspended animation -- Christian Boltanski : fact or fiction? -- Tony Cragg : compulsive colours -- Fiona Hall : poetically political -- Lauren Berkowitz : waste not, want not -- Shona Wilson : sticks and stones and broken bones -- Adam Hill : stolen or borrowed?
Summary
A beautiful non-fiction book which aims to inspire children to think about art made from recycled material. In the early 1900s the way art was created changed. Pablo Picasso used cardboard instead of paint. Marcel Duchamp called a bicycle wheel art and Raoul Hausemann made a sculpture out of an old shopkeeper's dummy. Instead of using traditional materials such as paint, more and more artists started using found materials like newspapers, old photographs and bits of furniture. And they are still doing it today. Find out how these artists, using found materials, changed the art world. Be inspired to create your own masterpieces!
Notes
Includes glossary
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (page 45) and index