Tuesday, March 17, 2015
Sneaky Art Crafty Surprises to Hide in Plain Sight
Ideas for what to make and where to display the finished projects abound. Make a fractured face out of sticky notes and facial features snipped from old magazines and arrange them on a parking meter. Float a cheerful styrofoam boat in a public fountain. Click a flock of bright red bird silhouettes on a tree branch or a grocery store cart.
Many of these good-natured projects are designed to bring a smile to a viewers face, like "Lucky Penny," in which kids glue a penny to a cardboard shape and then compose a cheerful message. The penny can be slipped into a friends backpack or left on the sidewalk for a stranger to find.
Throughout the book, Jocelyn stresses the playful, surprising nature of sneaky art and cautions against creating anything that will damage property or cause hurt feelings. Sneaky art isnt permanent, something kids may have trouble wrapping their heads around. But as Jocelyn points out, "although its hard to leave behind a treasure that youre proud of, you can always make another work of art."
If youd like to check out some sample crafts from the book, including "Lucky Penny," click here.
Sneaky Art: Crafty Surprises to Hide in Plain Sight
by Marthe Jocelyn
Candlewick Press, 64 pages
Published: March 2013
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