The Getty Previous
J. Paul Getty Trust

July 2009

Getty Museum Education

Share with a friend

N E W    L E S S O N S

New Lessons Added to Historical Witness, Social Messaging Curriculum

Search Lesson Plans

Learn how art can provoke dialogue about the costs and consequences of significant events in U.S. and world history. Our Historical Witness, Social Messaging curriculum has recently been updated with new lessons that explore works of art depicting aspects of social injustice, propaganda, war, and unfair labor practices.

Selected lessons include audio clips with curator interviews and special features that allow you to zoom in on details of featured works of art.

View the curriculum Historical Witness, Social Messaging.

Engage students with works of art that explore social, environmental, and political issues.
Engage students with works of art that explore social, environmental, and political issues.

S C H O O L   V I S I T S

School Visits for the Getty Center and the Getty Villa Are Available!

2009–2010 Tours Available!

School Visits

Its time to schedule your 2009–2010 school visits to the Getty Center and the Getty Villa!
Apply in one of two ways:

• Fill out our online request form for the Getty Center or the Getty Villa.

• Download, print, and send in a PDF request form for the Getty Center or the Getty Villa.

See you at the Getty!

Visit the School Visit section of our Web site for updates and more information.

Elementary students on a school visit contmeplate decorative arts at Getty Center.
Elementary students on a school visit contmeplate decorative arts at Getty Center.

C U R R I C U L A R   C O N N E C T I O N S

Design Then and Now

Current Exhibitions

The exhibition Taking Shape: Finding Sculpture in the Decorative Arts takes a fresh look at the decorative arts, works of functional art that combine ingenuity with utility. Featuring richly ornamented furniture, candlestands, tables, lights, statuettes, clocks, and other exuberant objects made in the 1600s and 1700s from the collections of the J. Paul Getty Museum and Temple Newsam House in Yorkshire, England, Taking Shape removes decorative objects from their period settings to showcase their sculptural power.

Use images from the exhibition and adapt the lesson "Makers of Nothing, Sellers of Everything" to discuss the form and function of objects with students in grades 6–8. Students will imagine that they are 18th-century marchand-merciers, or salespeople, and will write a persuasive letter to sell richly ornamented furniture, along with other bedroom furnishings, for a client.

View the lesson "Makers of Nothing, Sellers of Everything."

Learn more about the exhibition Taking Shape: Finding Sculpture in the Decorative Arts, on view at the Getty Center through July 5, 2009.

Side Table / attributed to Schor
Having no practical function, this table was conceived as a sculpture and probably served as pure decoration. Work with your students to create a persuasive letter to sell this object to a client.

Side Table, attributed to Johann Paul Schor, about 1670.

S C H O O L  V I S I T S

Changes in the Galleries

Getty Bookmarks

Did you know that works of art at the Getty Museum are often moved to new locations? Before you bring your class to the Getty, make sure all the artworks you want to visit are on view. Here are two changes:

The Getty Center
Self- portrait / Degas

On View
Self-portrait by Edgar Degas is back on view in the West Pavilion, Gallery W201.

Four studies of a Male Head / Rubens Workshop

On View
Four Studies of a Male Head by the workshop of Peter Paul Rubens is back on view in the East Pavilion, Gallery E206.

Find the location of a work of art by using Getty Bookmarks. Register for an account and you'll always know the most current location of your bookmarked artworks. For the most up-to-date information, be sure to check Getty Bookmarks on the day of, or the night before, your visit.

Register for Getty Bookmarks now!

Search or browse the Getty Museum's collections online.

www.getty.edu

CONTACT US
Getty Teacher Update feedback: teacherupdate@getty.edu
Subscribe to this newsletter.

THE GETTY CENTER
1200 Getty Center Drive
Los Angeles, CA 90049
(310) 440-7300

THE GETTY VILLA
17985 Pacific Coast Highway
Pacific Palisades, CA 90272
(310) 440-7300

Admission to the Getty is FREE. Admission to the Getty Villa requires an advance, timed ticket. Parking is $15, but FREE after 5:00 p.m. for Saturday evening hours at the Getty Center and for evening events at both locations.
Get details about visiting the Getty Center and the Getty Villa.

C O P Y R I G H T © 2009 J. Paul Getty Trust | Privacy Policy

Back to Top
The J. Paul Getty Trust
The J. Paul Getty Trust
© J. Paul Getty Trust | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use