While data and projectors have replaced overhead, will now artists Astor Andersen and Kari Prestegaard get hold of several of the header.
In November, the two with the Cultural Rucksack in Sandefjord, and their project called Overhead .
– We have the desire to adopt old technology, play with light and shadow and allowing pupils to experience this amazing analog technology, says Prestegaard.
Students will examine, among other household plastic, and the point is to play and finding a work of art.
– Clear plastic will create shadows, and in the plastic there are some text and colors that can be very exciting when it comes up on the wall. We will create small worlds from what we find. Crumpled plastic wrap can for example be a cloud or a forest. It’s your imagination is the limit here, says Prestegaard and continues:
– We will use old technology to innovate, and show students that it is possible to do something outside of a screen.
The project ends with an exhibition in late November where kids get to show off what they’ve been through. But to achieve this, they rely on to borrow over header from schools or businesses that may not use their anymore.
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