Show.me.uk - the children's section of the 24 Hour Museum.
Pick a topic
News
Games and Fun
Places to go
show and tell
Get in touch
Parents
Teachers
About Us
The Big Draw

  Webby Awards Nominee logo

  The British Academy Award is based on a design by Mitzi Cunliffe
Show.me.uk - the children's section of the 24 Hour Museum. Show.me.uk - the children's section of the 24 Hour Museum. September 2 2010
Accessibility | Site Map
We show you cool stuff from the UK's museums and galleries
Home > teachers > Art and Design  > Kids Make Art From Recycled Washing Machines
 

Kids Make Art From Recycled Washing Machines

December 08 2006

Kids in Sussex have been involved in an unusual project at their local museum - they made art out of old washing machines.

photo of a person looking through a washing machine door


It all happened at the Chichester District Museum.

The children, from Fordwater School, Chichester High School for Girls and Lancastrian Infants School, took apart more than 100 broken down washers and recycled parts of them to create pictures and sculptures.

© Chichester District Council


The Lancastrian Infants made a forest of trees using the copper wire inside the machines and the Chichester High School pupils created huge recycled sculptures from washers they took apart themselves.

Many of the artworks are now on display in The Eastgate Gallery in Chichester, although some of the sculptures were too big to fit in the gallery there.

Recycling old objects to use in art isn't a new thing - people have been doing it for years - although this is the first time we've heard of washing machines being taken apart for it.


One sculpture which made a lot of people think about the effects of war was called The Throne Of Weapons.

It was a big chair made out of old guns and there is lots of information about it on the British Museum's website.

© British Museum

photo of a chair made up of parts of old guns

photo of two children holding a dove shaped sculpture made up of toy guns and soldiers


These children from Pilgrims Way Primary School in London were inspired by The Throne Of Weapons to make their own peace sculpture.

Photo © Christian Aid / Jon Challicom


They made a large dove shape out of old toy guns and soldiers.

Ptolemy Elrington is an artist from Brighton who makes sculptures of animals and machines out of recycled parts of old cars and even broken shopping trolleys and vacuum cleaners.


This little chap is a water vole made from a broken shopping trolley.

© Ptolemy Elrington

photo of a model water vole made of wire

photo of a model sheep dog in a park made of old car hubcaps


Here's Mabel the sheep dog.

Ptolemy made Mabel for the Blue Peter garden where she now lives.

She's made out of recycled hubcaps - parts of the wheels of a car.

© Ptolemy Elrington


An old vacuum cleaner was used to make this Tornado jet plane.

Ptolemy cleverly used the vacuum cleaner's motor to make the model make roaring engine sounds.

© Ptolemy Elrington

photo of a jet plane made up of of parts of a vacuum cleaner


You don't need to be a trained artist or go to a workshop to create recycled art though - there are loads of things around the house that can be made into art.

Just be sure to ask first before you recycle it - you don't want to turn something new and valuable into a wacky sculpture by mistake!

We'd love to see what you come up with - send your pictures in and we'll show as many as we can.

Graham Spicer