By Biennale of Sydney
#NIRINatHome
About Exquisite Corpse
An ‘exquisite corpse’ is a drawing game developed by artists in the Surrealism movement. A drawing is passed around between a group of people, folding and hiding sections for others to complete, so that when unfolded produces a bizarre, unexpected and wacky artwork.
What you will need
Paper
Pens, pencils, coloured markers or other drawing materials
Method
1. For each player, start with your piece of paper in a vertical position and fold it equally three times, to create four horizontal drawing sections.
2. Using the fold lines as a guide, from top to bottom, each section will mark out the: leaves, branch, seed and root systems. (See image here for help.)
3. Everyone starts by drawing their version of a plant's root system. When finished, fold your paper over and pass your drawing onto the next person. Note: Before you fold your section to hide from everyone else, mark the edge of your drawing in the adjoining section (so that when unfolded the picture connects and makes sense.)
4. Continue this process until each person has drawn the seed, branch and leaves.
5. Unfold your drawings and compare the new garden of hybrid plants you've just created!
Enquiry Questions:
- What is the name of your new plant species?
- What climate does it grow in?
- What purpose is it used for? Can your plant be brewed to make tea? If you eat it, does it give you magical powers?
We’d love to see how you use these resources at home. Post your stories and photos with the hashtag #NIRINathome.
For artist Andrew Rewald, plants are the medium and subject matter for his public workshops, performances, installation and mixed media work, connecting ecological awareness with everyday activities.
Want to learn more? Explore Andrew Rewald's installation Alchemy Garden at the National Art School.