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Press Releases

Please note, all press releases were published prior to the decision to review and re-assess the Artworks scheme - see this website's Homepage for details.


March 2005


CHILDREN TAKE OVER TRAFALGAR SQUARE FOR CHILDREN’S ART DAY:

(HOW OLD DO YOU HAVE TO BE TO BE AN ARTIST?)

As part of the national celebrations of Children’s Art Day, The Mayor for London has joined forces with the National Gallery, National Portrait Gallery, Creative Partnerships and Artworks to invite children and their families to take over Trafalgar Square and join in a giant open-air art workshop on Sunday 3 July.

The Trafalgar Square celebrations will be based on the theme of Friendship and will include special outdoor activities all over the Square as well as invitations to workshops and activities indoors at the National Gallery and the National Portrait Gallery. All the events are free.

Children's Art Day was founded in 2000 by the Clore Duffield Foundation as part of Artworks, its visual arts education programme. Every year, thousands of children and their families take part in special art events, activities and workshops throughout the UK on Children's Art Day in over 150 museums and galleries, schools and other venues.

This year, Children's Art Day in London will be launched at Tate Modern on Thursday 30 June with a major conference presented by Artworks with the theme ‘How Old Do You Have To Be To Be an Artist?’ Among the key participants will be artists Antony Gormley and Richard Wentworth; Camilla Batmanghelidjh, founder of Kids Company; Jonathan Fineburg, American Professor of Art History and author of seminal works on children's art; and pupils from Caol Primary School outside Fort William, who run the award winning Room 13 as an autonomous arts studio, independent of the school.

Sally Bacon, Executive Director of the Clore Duffield Foundation, said: "Children's Art Day gives us the chance to celebrate the extraordinary work being carried out by our national museums and galleries to forge creative relationships with young people in our schools. Through the Artworks programme and with the support of our many partner organisations, we have been proud to play a part in developing the best creative talent in the UK."

Channel 4 will transmit four art programmes for children in the week of Children's Art Day, featuring Damien Hirst; Vanley Burke; Olly and Suzi; and Degas.

Children's Art Day in Trafalgar Square is generously supported by Creative Partnerships, The Mayor for London, the National Gallery, National Portrait Gallery and the Clore Duffield Foundation.

For more information about Children's Art Day and the other activities supported by Artworks, visit the Artworks website: www.art-works.org

PRESS ENQUIRIES     ERICA BOLTON/JANE QUINN     020 7221 5000



1 July 2004


TRAFALGAR SQUARE JOINS CHILDREN’S ART DAY CELEBRATIONS

Tens of thousands of children, their teachers and their families will take part in the biggest ever celebration of CHILDREN'S ART DAY on Thursday 1 July, with special events taking place across the nation from Trafalgar Square to Pontypool, from Ballymena to a bus in Glasgow, from schools to galleries, museums, streets, hospitals, parks and playgrounds.

Amongst the hundreds of special events planned for the day are fairs, workshops, outdoor displays, competitions, exhibitions, drop-in activities and chances to work with artists, both locally based and internationally acclaimed. Open to the public will be hundreds of events, amongst these: a giant interactive art workshop in Trafalgar Square on Sunday 4 July; at Discover in Stratford children will build story sculptures reflecting themes of the environment and journeys; at Jorvik - The Viking City they will be reincarnated as Viking warriors and get a chance to sketch each other in their costumes; at Ruthin Gaol they will be immersed in the crime-world of the Victorian era, risking a lifetime of incarceration and creating art works inspired by their experiences.

The ARTWORKS Children's Art Day Grants Scheme has facilitated over fifty art events nationwide, including a project offering children the chance to film their own animation projects at Astley Cheetham Art Gallery in Stalybridge; setting up a 'factory' with their own radio broadcast at the Chisenhale Gallery in London; a textiles/dance collaboration with GCSE students at the Holburne Museum of Art in Bath and creating interactive 3D sculptures inspired by the Paul Ramirez exhibition at the Ikon Gallery, Birmingham. The results of many of the grants projects will be displayed in special exhibitions in galleries and museums to be viewed by the general public.

Children will also be chosen to become Art Shadows, spending the day with key art world figures including Tate Director, Nick Serota, Sandy Nairne, Director of the National Portrait Gallery, Martin Wyld, Chief Restorer at the National Gallery, Sir Timothy Clifford, Director-General, National Galleries of Scotland, and keepers of the Royal Collection.

The highlight of Children's Art Day is ARTWORKS Young Artists of the Year, the annual Awards ceremony for the UK's largest and most prestigious art awards scheme for the under 18s, which takes place at Tate Modern. Children and their teachers from winning schools throughout Britain will collect awards totalling £60,000 and a specially commissioned, limited edition, signed print by Marc Quinn.

ARTWORKS Young Artists of the Year Awards and Children's Art Day were founded in 1999 and are initiatives of the Clore Duffield Foundation, Britain's leading grant-giving trust in the field of art education. The ARTWORKS programme has developed as the most dynamic and innovative programme of advocacy, research and grant-giving in the field of visual arts education in Europe. For more information about all the projects organised by ARTWORKS go to www.art-works.org.uk

PRESS ENQUIRIES     ERICA BOLTON/JANE QUINN     020 7221 5000



For an archive of Artworks press releases see the Artworks press releases page.