Culture24

Office 4
28 Kensington Street
Brighton
East Sussex
BN1 4AJ
England

Website

www.culture24.org.uk

www.weareculture24.org.uk

E-mail

General enquiries

info@culture24.org.uk

Newsdesk and editorial team

newsdesk@culture24.org.uk

Database and network enquiries

DDE@culture24.org.uk

Telephone

Main phone

(01273) 623266

All information is drawn or provided by the venues themselves and every effort is made to ensure it is correct. Please remember to double check opening hours with the venue concerned before making a special visit.
culture24

News, listings and features from 4,000+ museums, galleries, libraries, archives and heritage sites.

Venue Type:

Campaign or initiative, Archive

Opening hours

24 hours a day online!

Admission charges

n/a

Collection details

Archives

Exhibition details are listed below, you may need to scroll down to see them all.

Jean Tinguely: One Work

25 September 2013 — 5 January 2014

Welding scrap metal, spinning motors, celebrating chance and staging self-destructing machines, Tinguely unleashed creative forces that denied sculpture its monumental status.

This display, in our series of one-sculpture exhibitions presenting works that have laid the ground for understanding sculpture today, shows how sculpture embraces unpredictability and technology to show the labour in artwork.

Suitable for

  • Any age
  • Family friendly

Where

Gallery 4

Admission

Admission Fees

Adults £12

Concessions £10

Students £5

Under 18s £5, under 5s free

Family Ticket £26 (2 adults and 2 children)

Hoglands timed ticket supplement £5

2011 Season Pass £59 (Admits 5 people per visit)

Website

http://www.henry-moore.org/hmf/press/press-information/henry-moore-institute-leeds/2012/2013--2014-exhibition-programme-highlights

Resources listed here may include websites, bookable tours and workshops, books, loan boxes and more. You may need to scroll down or click on headers to see them all.
Digital and online resources
Paper-based and downloads

A Museum in a Classroom

http://www.24hourmuseum.org.uk/downloads/mclass.pdf

Most people collect and display something in their lives. It might be a collection of family snaps stuck into an album, or holiday souvenirs arranged on a mantlepiece, assembled and displayed without any thought of being a 'collector'. But in the past, and occasionally today, private collections have often formed the basis of new museums.
Developing a museum in the classroom - or at home - is a valuable cross-curricular project which can be linked to the National Curriculum through most subjects, and at all levels.

Resources

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