Monday, 28 October 2013

BRIEF 04:MUSEUM OF CHILDHOOD//EXHIBITION RESEARCH//OUGD603

exhibition research.
These are the exhibitions that are on at the moment at the Museum of Childhood, this information will be included in some of the designs, either on a poster calendar or individual promotional posters/material for the museum.

recent exhibitions and displays.
war games.
until 9th march

playing at war

War Games explores the fascinating relationship between conflict and children's play, providing an insight into the ways toys have been influenced by warfare from 1800 to the present day.
With toys and games including Risk, GI Joe and classic Britain's toy soldiers, as well as photographs and archive documents, War Games represents differing sides of conflicts from around the world. This thought-provoking exhibition reveals the sometimes surprising links between play and wider attitudes towards warfare, and delves into the secret history of toys as tools of propaganda and espionage.
War play is an enduring aspect of children's imaginative play. It can be physical, or children can use strategy to beat an opponent.
War play is controversial. It is actively discouraged by many parents and teachers, as it is thought to encourage aggression. But aggressive play, a type of active play, is not the same as real aggression, in which a child intends to harm.
Research questioning whether war play and aggression are linked is inconclusive. Fears that they are may come from personal beliefs and assumptions influenced by the pacifist and feminist movements of the last fifty years. War play can also bring benefits. It can help children to distinguish good from bad and right from wrong. And it can help them to explore their feelings and understanding of an often violent adult world.
Like real wars, many see war play as being highly gendered, and revealing differences between boys and girls. But to what extent is this true? And what is the role of biology and the influence of society in this?
on the battlefield.
Toys have mirrored the developments of weapons technology, the geographies of new war zones and the creation of new armies for emerging nations.
Changing attitudes to warfare have mirrored a varying appetite for war toys. In more militaristic periods, like the lead up to the First World War, war toys were viewed positively as a part of a child's broader education. But during conflicts such as Vietnam, widespread anti-war sentiment led to a decline in realistic war toys.
During the 19th century, toy manufacturers used printed images from illustrated news reports to quickly and accurately portray contemporary battles with tin and paper soldiers. 20th century manufacturers such as Corgi dealt directly with the military to produce accurately scaled toy military vehicles.
But war toys carry stronger messages beyond that of accuracy, and can communicate changes in social and political beliefs. Ideas of militarism, nationalism, imperialism and patriotism have all been instilled through toys, games, books and comics.
from reality to fantasy.
Ideas of futuristic weapons and machinery date back to the 19th century with writers such as HG Wells and Jules Verne. But it was from 1945, in a new atomic age, that science fiction reached a new height in popularity within the material culture of childhood.
Despite growing opposition to the use of nuclear weapons, toy makers and comic publishers harnessed the public's fascination and fear of the atomic age and the space race. Superheroes, aliens and monsters replaced human soldiers to fight in fantastical battles of good against evil. These were produced for a largely Western market and often strongly alluded to the Cold War.
Protests against the brutal war in Vietnam also saw toy companies shift their attentions away from representing current conflicts. Instead they looked back in time for inspiration to historic wars and battles that were seen as more palatable.
In this period, many toys were made that glorified events as recent as the Second World War, or as far back as those fought by medieval knights on horseback.
secret weapons.
Toys have been used in different ways in and around times of conflict.
Although toys are often thought of as innocent playthings for children, this is not necessarily the case. Toys have been used in warfare in secret, shocking and surprising ways - to train and to influence, to comfort, to heal and even to aid escape.
afro supa hero.
until 9th february
Afro Supa Hero is a snapshot of a childhood and journey to adulthood, shown through a personal collection of pop cultural heroes and heroines of the African diaspora. Jon Daniel’s action figures, comic books and games offer an insight into the experience of a boy of African Caribbean heritage growing up in 1960s and 1970s Britain, in search of his identity.
Born in East Sheen in southwest London and as the child of Caribbean parents, Jon Daniel found his positive black role models in the West Indian culture of his family and the African-American culture of the US. In his late twenties, Jon began collecting primarily 1970s action figures, feeling that they most strongly embodied the era of his childhood. In the display Meteor Man, Mr T and Lieutenant Uhura stand alongside real-life icons Muhammad Ali, Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela. Also on show are games, and comics including Black Lightning, The Falcon and Lobo, one of a two-issue series featuring the first leading African American character in the genre.
Afro Supa Hero is part of Black History Month in October 2013. 
are you sitting comfortably.
until 1st june
An exploration of design at the chalkface. This exhibition looks at some of the effects of environment and design on teaching and learning from the formality of the Victorian classroom to the outdoors self–directed learning of a wood school.
In collaboration with Cazenove Architects, specialists in educational design and the University of East London, the Museum has set a series of design challenges. Pupils from Gayhurst Primary and Clapton Girls’ Academy, Hackney, worked on developing furniture design solutions. Architecture students from the UEL have designed a willow structure for Paupers Wood School, Manchester. A choir from St Paul’s Way Trust School, Tower Hamlets, has developed a calming acoustic installation with musicians Jason Sigh and Laura Howe. 
The exhibition also features examples of school furniture from the Museum's collection, contemporary furniture by school suppliers and samples of school design by Cazenove Architects. Plus a film by the Paupers Wood School.
With special thanks to Lee Valley Regional Park.

confiscations cabinet.
until 1st june
Artist Guy Tarrant's display cabinets show artefacts gleaned from 150 different London primary and secondary schools over three decades. These objects include homemade games, keepsakes, cult toys, peculiar adornments, weapons and other forbidden objects which characterise the flotsam and jetsam of contemporary school children. 
Since qualifying as a teacher, Guy Tarrant has investigated pupil interaction, play and resistant behaviour. The objects in the cabinets highlight mischievous and distracted behaviour played out in the controlled school setting where children spend much of their time. These confiscated items are evidence of the pupils' playful and impulsive activities and how they may reject or evade rules.

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