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Tower Hamlets Residents Urged
To Draw Together
- East End Event Launches Month-Long Celebration of Drawing Across
UK -
with Quentin Blake, Posy Simmonds and Lord Foster
Explore Bio Diversity, Biomedical Science and Changing Cities
30 August 2007: World famous illustrator Quentin Blake
is calling on Tower Hamlets residents to sharpen their pencils for
The Big Draw East: Drawing Things Together, a massive day of free
drawing events across Tower Hamlets and Hackney on Sunday, 30 September.
The day is an opportunity for adults and children of all ages to discover
the joy of drawing and to explore different ways of seeing the world with
some of the UK's leading designers, illustrators, scientists, artists,
architects and engineers. The Big Draw East programme, supported
by Tower Hamlets Borough Council, is listed in full at: www.campaignfordrawing.org
The Big Draw East marks the launch of the eighth Big Draw, a free
month-long celebration of drawing at over 1,300 venues throughout the
country. More than 500,000 people are expected to take part. At 10.30am
on 30 September, Quentin Blake will launch The Big Draw 2007 by releasing
a giant flock of paper birds from the V&A Museum of Childhood.
The Big Draw East takes place at 20 venues across the East End, and over
45 separate drawing activities - every one of them free - will be held
throughout the day. They celebrate the East End's creative wealth and
rich cultural diversity. A shuttle bus will connect venues - the fare
is a drawing.
Tower Hamlets children are involved in preparations for the Big Day in
schools across the borough, where they are making artwork for banners
to be displayed at the event.
Derwent, England's only pencil manufacturer, and Tullis Russell, Scotland's
premier papermaker, are providing free, high quality materials at each
venue. Events explore exciting themes, such as sustainable design,
body culture, changing cities, and shaping the future.
Contributors include:
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Architects from top firms Future Systems,
make and Foster + Partners will lead the quest to see buildings
differently in Changing Cities (sponsored by Hammerson). |
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Dr Greg Elgar of Queen Mary, University of London,
will lift the lid on life in the lab, encouraging visitors to design
amazing 'virtual' creatures (sponsored by the Wellcome Trust). |
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Artists Adam Dant, Andrew Logan and Posy
Simmonds will be drawing on the Celebrity Frame, a huge canvas
in Museum Gardens (next to the V&A Museum of Childhood). |
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Architect-artist Narinder Sagoo and architect-engineer
Alistair Lenczner (both with Foster + Partners) will invite
participants to use special viewfinders to take a closer look at the
city, and at what happens behind its facades. |
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| Below are a few highlights of the 45 Big
Draw East activities taking place on 30 September. Plan your own perfect
Big Draw East day at www.campaignfordrawing.org. |
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Start the day as you mean to go on at Move Along
Please! At the V&A Museum of Childhood draw and build
your favourite transport - bus, bike, car or tube - with artist Patrick
Letschka. Build two model vehicles: keep one and add the other
to the museum's giant cityscape in the Education Room. Then walk 50
metres down the road to
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Shape the Future, York Hall, Bethnal Green. Invent
and fly zero carbon flying machines and design carbon neutral airfields,
with engineer Chris Wise (one of the team who created the Millennium
Bridge) and Ed McCann (presenter of TV's Engineering at
the Cutting Edge and Buildings of Britain). Catch a ride to
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Join the "Easy Graphics" campaign at Bishopsgate
Institute. Austin Williams leads RIBA workshop Condensing Complexity.
Have fun reducing over-complex everyday instructions - from fire regulations
to the Highway Code - into simple graphics, drawings and cartoon strips.
Use your drawing to get a free bus ride to
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Investigate how One Cell Made Me (funded by the
Wellcome Trust), at The Octagon, Queen Mary, University of
London. Explore human biology with genomic scientists, work with Tessa
Garland and other artists from Bow Arts Trust to uncover surprising
developmental links between humans and animals. Create and race your
own virtual creatures. Make science-inspired clothes and adornments
with the London College of Fashion to star in your own photo-shoot
and then grab the free bus and
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Why not try Changing Spaces at Ocean NDC?
Be inspired by artwork created by young artists from the Ocean Estate
and add your own drawings to the exhibition. Organised by The Building
Exploratory and Ocean New Deal for Communities. |
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End your day in style at The Big Knees Up at
Bethnal Green Working Men's Club. Cor blimey trousers, pens 'n' sing-alongs,
dancing and magic in a huge evening of musical entertainment, cabaret
and, of course, drawing with Le Gun magazine; Hunga Munga, and live
entertainment from 1927, Shekoyekh Klezmer wedding band and Top Banana
DJs. |
Covent Garden hosts Big Draw Day
The Campaign for Drawing will launch its nationwide Big Draw Day in Covent
Garden this year for the first time. Held on Saturday13 - Sunday 14 October,
celebrity drawing and art enthusiasts including broadcaster Andrew Marr,
illustrators Daisy de Villeneuve and Mishael Foreman, cartoonists Gerald
Scarfe and Posy Simmonds, plus the crème of London's art community
will come together to take part in a series of drawing games. The Covent
Garden Big Draw will offer unique workshops exploring the excitement
and magic of drawing - all for FREE!
From 1-31 October, Big Draw events take place throughout London, including:
Hackney Museum, The Design Museum, The British Museum, Sir John Soane's
Museum, London Zoo, Jerwood Space, National Portrait Gallery, Royal Armouries,
Guardian Newsroom, National Gallery, HMS Belfast to name but a few. Full
listings at www.campaignfordrawing.org.
The Big Draw, launched in 2000, has encouraged over a million people to
draw, proved that drawing can be a social activity, and notched up two
Guinness World records - for the longest drawing in the world (one kilometre)
and the greatest number of people drawing simultaneously (over 7000).
The Campaign for Drawing's initiatives are winning international recognition
and Big Draw events are now planned for New York, Washington, Boston,
Vancouver, Australia, New Zealand and Portugal.
Lord Foster, leading architect and Patron of the Campaign for Drawing,
said: "Drawing is the root of every concept and design. It is
a fundamental life skill. The Big Draw inspires people of all ages to
engage with the world we inhabit and I hope that more people will rediscover
the immediacy of the medium they relished as children."
Sue Grayson Ford MBE, Director of the Campaign for Drawing
said: "The East End is one of the densest areas of artists' studios
and creative businesses in Europe. The Big Draw East seeks to celebrate
this unique status and provide all East Enders and other Londoners with
the opportunity to experience the joy of drawing. We're lucky to have
some of the finest illustrators and creative people in the UK taking part
and are predicting that this celebration of East London's dynamic cultural
life willbe our most exciting launch event yet .. We've already brought
together 32 arts organisations, 20 schools and numerous community groups
for The Big Draw East and look forward to the big day!"
Sir Christopher Frayling, Rector, Royal College of Art, commented:
"The artist, Paul Klee, once said that drawing means taking a line
for a walk. Looked at like that, The Big Draw is a stroll on a national
scale!"
END
Photo opportunities: As part of the build-up programme for The
Big Draw East photo opportunities of children engaging in drawing workshops
exist in local schools during September.
Press Information:
http://www.kallaway.co.uk/campaign-for-drawing.htm
Kallaway
www.kallaway.co.uk
Will Kallaway
020 7221 7883
will.kallaway@kallaway.co.uk
Jo Williamson
020 7221 7883
jo.williamson@kallaway.co.uk
About The Big Draw
The Big Draw is the UK's biggest annual free celebration of visual art,
with 1,000 events and over 500,000 participants. In last year's national
Big Draw launch, 7000 participants celebrated the Amazing Spaces
of Somerset House and King's College London with a packed programme of
activities - from making watercolours of the fountains to knitting a giant
London Townhouse.
About the Campaign For Drawing
The Campaign for Drawing has a simple aim: to get everyone drawing. The
Big Draw, its annual October showpiece, proves that drawing can be a public
activity as well as a private passion. The Campaign was inspired by the
great Victorian writer and visionary, John Ruskin. His mission was not
to teach people to draw, but how to see. Each Big Draw season brings fresh
opportunities to discover how drawing can connect us to our environment
and heritage.
The Campaign's education programme turns its research findings into practical
guidance in a series of books, DVDs and other resources. These show how
learning through drawing can take place in schools, museums, galleries
and heritage sites. Its new Professional Development Programme
will be designed to change attitudes to drawing and the way it is used.
This will share the knowledge gained over the last six years with teachers
and other educators, artists, designers, scientists, technologists and
more. The Campaign for Drawing is supported by Arts Council England, the
Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, the Worshipful Company of Painter-Stainers
and Foster+Partners.
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