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Samurai: Design Your Own Symbol
The imagery on a samurai’s armor expresses that samurai’s identity and source of inspiration or empowerment. Is there an image you connect with most?
Jeff Byers, a storyteller at the Asian Art Museum, tells a Japanese story about a badger and a magic fan in front of the museum's tearoom.
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The imagery on a samurai’s armor expresses that samurai’s identity and source of inspiration or empowerment. Is there an image you connect with most?
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In this activity, you will create your own “space sculpture” out of found objects, light, and shadow.
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Make your own torn-paper collages inspired by the images created in the teamLab experience.
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In this activity, create your own weaving loom with cardboard and then weave your own textile project. As you construct your loom and learn the labor-intensive process of weaving, you might begin to wonder how Sekimachi was able to create her famous three-dimensional structures.
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Create your own paper lantern and retell “The Girl Who Used Her Wits.”
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Students will draw their favorite unlikely, small hero from the Philippine folk tale “Odon the Giant.”
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The story “Tiger and Puppy” is about a village with five families, where a mischievous tiger would eat all the food. An unlikely hero, a small puppy, comes to the rescue and helps the villagers capture the tiger. Create your own paper plate animals to retell this Korean folktale.
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In this activity, you will simply use black construction paper, sunlight, and everyday objects from your house or yard.
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