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Showing posts with label puppets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label puppets. Show all posts

Sunday, 2 August 2015

Giant Fishes: St. Bede's Puppet Workshops

Giant Fish!

Back at the end of June/start of July I worked at St. Bede's Primary School (where I'd been working on the Seven Stories Project) with Year 5 making some puppets for this years Puppet Parade which is part of Carlisle's Pageant celebrations. As we did last year Prism Arts are running a summer school as well as working with schools to create puppets for the parade.

Fish head designs

Fish head designs

Fish head designs

The theme this year is the Jacobites (and more specifically the second Jacobite rebellion) so we've been looking at Jacobean embroideries and carvings for inspiration. Carlisle has a strong connection to the Jacobites and Bonny Prince Charlie so there is lots to inspire us in and around the city.

Building up the features with newspaper

Building up the features with newspaper

Building up the features with newspaper


Jacobean embroideries are characterised by large, stylised natural motifs, in particular floral motifs but birds and animals also feature. For the school workshops we chose to make fish because the shape means even with limited time and experience we can create puppets with big impact for the pageant.

Paper mache!

Paper mache!

Paper mache!

The fish puppets are created from large milk bottles which we covered with paper-mache and painted and the bodies are made from embroidery hoops joined together with strips of fabric. This gives them an articulated body which can be used to great effect when parading.

Fish heads on the windowsill
Drying out

It was really interesting working with a different class, having worked with Year 4 for so long I'd got to know them well and had a good idea how they would respond to different activities. Working with Year 5 was quite different, the class as a whole were less confident with creative activities and some of the things I thought they would find easy they really struggled with. For example, tearing the strips of fabric to make the fish bodies seemed to present them with quite a lot of difficulties.

Joining the rings together for the body

Choosing and cutting fabric

Cutting strips

I started the workshops off by asking the students to design their fish heads, the class already had sketchbooks so I got them to work in these. Some of the students got stuck in straight away whilst others really struggled and were very worried about getting it wrong, despite my reassurances that these were just ideas and didn't need to be master pieces. With a bit of encouragement they came up with some great ideas and designs. Then came the first major challenge...

Colour designs

Painting

Painting

The class was split up into groups of three to make their fish and the next part of the process was to amalgamate their designs into one. Some of the groups worked really well, taking a bit from each child's design and coming up with a design that used all their ideas. For other groups this was really difficult, with some students finding it difficult to let go of their ideas and accept other peoples. During the two days I was with this class I did a lot of mediating!

Building up the bodies

Ripping fabric

Working on the bodies

Once the designs were agreed (more or less) we used newspaper and masking tape to build up the shapes of the fish heads. Again, some of the students worked really well and created some great structures while others struggled with working in 3D. Once we'd built up the heads we covered them in paper mache. Again, team working was a bit of an issue for some of the children and I had to rescue some of the paper sculpting they'd done as they kept pulling it apart all trying to do something different at once! However, by the end of the morning we had seven fish heads all covered with paper mache.

Finished Fish

Finished Fish

We then moved on to making the bodies. I had thought that this would be the easier bit but again some of the children found it difficult to compromise and respect others choices and they also struggled with the practical side. We used the tables as a measure for how long the strips should be but still ended up with quite a variety of lengths! In contrast, some of the groups worked really well, organising themselves so that one person selected fabric, another cut it and the third person tied it to the rings. By the end of the first day all the fish had partial bodies and I was ready for a cup of tea!

Cat Fish

Cat Fish

Finished Fish

The second session was much easier, partly I think because the students knew what to expect a bit more and partly because they could see how it was all going to work. We began by working in sketchbooks again, this time looking at colours for the fish heads, before moving onto painting the now dry and tough fish heads. Most of the groups came up with really imaginative and quirky designs. Despite my best efforts a minion did make it through the net, so to speak, but it was better than them doing nothing!

Finished Fish

Shane the Rainbow Shark

Finished Fish (check out his eyebrows!)

There were similar team work issues to the first week but with a bit of perseverance these were overcome. Once the heads were dry we worked on finishing the bodies. I then took the heads and bodies home and attached them together.

Minion Fish

Despite it's challenges this was a good project to work on. I think that working together is really important so although they may not have liked it much I think it was good for the students and the sense of satisfaction when they saw the finished pieces I hope made up for the stresses. Most of them also enjoyed the chance to experiment a bit and get messy and many of them were really keen to come down and join the pageant so hopefully I'll see a lot of them on the 22nd for the parade.

All the fish on my bed!

Monday, 1 September 2014

Summer School: Carlisle Puppet Pageant 2014

Lady Margaret Balfour Puppet ready to parade 

Those of you who have been following me for a while will know that the beginning of August can mean only one thing; the insanity of a summer project. This year was a little bit different (don't worry, there was plenty of insanity) as rather than a full on everyone we can think of doing everything we can think of two weeks of madness leading to an extravaganza event kind of affair Prism Arts ran a two week summer school. The summer school focused specifically on the making of several puppets, including two giants, and a small musical and theatrical performance that formed part of Carlisle's Pageant Parade. Last year our summer project focused on a large puppet parade to celebrate the start of Carlisle's pageant week. As the parade was a success the council wanted it to happen again this year and were one of the funders for the summer school.

Making appliqué fish for umbrellas (props for dancers)

Making appliqué fish for umbrellas (props for dancers)

Making appliqué panels for fire serpents

It was a full on and very busy two weeks but was also a lot of fun with everyone working hard and producing some fantastic work. We made giant puppets complete with costume, costumes for quadrille dancers and fire serpents, fire serpents, fish umbrellas and hats and a greyhound puppet called Elvis (complete with blue suede shoes.) We sewed, printed, constructed, decorated, rehearsed and generally worked very hard to produce our puppets and performance and then we took to the streets. Despite it being a bit chilly and somewhat breezy (something of a challenge when in control of a ten foot giant) the parade went really well and everyone had a great time.

I ran some free machine embroidery sessions

Free machine embroidery on one of the hat fish

Detail of embroidery

The theme of the parade was the Tudors so we started with the Salkeld Screen in Carlisle Cathedral as our inspiration point. Part of the council commission and funding was to make two giant puppets so we chose to make Lady Margaret Balfour (Henry VIII's grandmother and local mover and shaker) and Septimus Severus. Now, a couple of things about Septic, as we affectionately named him, that you should know; he's the only known black Roman Emperor and he was the original instigator of Hadrian's Wall, up until the 1800's the wall was known locally as Severus's wall. The more astute amongst you will have picked up that being a Roman Emperor he can't, really, have been a Tudor. However, the council specifically requested him and he does feature on the Salkeld Screen, which was good enough for us.

I also ran some printing sessions, preparing fabric for the giant puppets costumes

Printing using stencils

Block printing

Detail of block print

Block printed fabric for Lady M's skirt

We also put together a small musical and dance piece featuring the 'pramelan' (which is essentially the Gamelan, a beautiful Javanese percussive orchestra, mounted on prams) and a quadrille dance. All the dancers and musicians were costumed and were accompanied by fire serpents, inspired by the carvings on the Salkeld Screen.

Lady Margaret and Elvis Puppets

Elvis detail

Lady Margaret's Costume

My main involvement was working on the costumes for both the performers and for the giant Lady Margaret puppet. Both had their own challenges but I think that making a dress for a ten foot woman is probably one of the more difficult pieces of costuming that I've undertaken. However, I'm really pleased with how it's all worked out. I actually took over Lady Margaret's costume after the end of the first week as the artist who had started it and drafted most the pattern pieces could only be with us for one week. I had to alter her designs quite a bit but I think that between us we made a pretty good job.


Another of our crazy puppet creations

Severus's Head

Attached to his body

Saturday, 5 April 2014

Puppet Making Workshop

Circus Ring Master

Kangaroo/Monkey/Rabbit!

Creature

I had a great day at Tullie House last Saturday running a puppet making workshop for Creative Futures. They have been running an animation project in five Carlisle primary schools and on Saturday they held screenings of the animations at Tullie House. I was asked to do a drop in workshop that would tie in with the project and with the Mechanical Circus exhibition. I thought that simple puppets would be good as they would be fun to animate and they could be based on characters from the exhibition.

Beautiful colours

Cutting and colouring

More colouring

I created some templates and examples and then enjoyed seeing what ideas the children came up with. They created everything from cats, to snow leopards, to kangaroo-monkeys, to button monsters to pop stars. Seeing people take my ideas and develop them into their own individual projects is one of the things I love about my work.

Fire breathing Dragon

Fluffy the super collaged cat

Sleepy Surfer

We used split pins to attach limbs so that the puppets would be pose-able and it was great seeing people playing with their finished puppets and making them interact with each other. The workshop was for the children involved in the animation project who were aged 9 and 10 but as a lot of them had younger siblings they joined in as well. With a bit of help with the cutting for the younger ones they all were able to make their own puppets.

Lovely lion

My examples

My examples