Serpentine Education redefines the role of the arts during periods of transition and social change. We connect communities, artists and activists to generate responses to pressing social issues.
The programme is guided by four questions:
How can we work in solidarity with those facing struggles around racism and migration?
How do we care in times of austerity?
How can we survive an increasingly competitive schools system?
How do we navigate an increasingly surveilled and gentrified city?
Serpentine Education redefines the role of the arts during periods of transition and social change. We connect communities, artists and activists to generate responses to pressing social issues.
The programme is guided by four questions:
How can we work in solidarity with those facing struggles around racism and migration?
How do we care in times of austerity?
How can we survive an increasingly competitive schools system?
How do we navigate an increasingly surveilled and gentrified city?
This resource by artist Jade de Montserrat resource supports art teachers working with young people to consider the impact gender, race, class, religion, disability, culture, and politics has on our sense of self.
What is it to be Oneself? delves into Afrofuturism and digital culture, using the process of collage to normalise fluid exploratory approaches to the formation, deconstruction and reformation of identity. It offers ways we might imagine liberated futures where everyone can live freely and thrive.
‘Collage is a way to draw together a multitude of materials found in our daily lives. The process of layering and remixing mirrors our fluctuating, ever evolving identities, allowing us to experience them as both fragmented and unified. Collage enables us to time travel, to collect archival material and place it alongside contemporary imagery. It can also be a metaphor for repair and healing.’
– Dr. Jade de Montserrat
The resource features critical questions, creative exercises, sources of support and a short story by Alexis Pauline Gumbs. It folds out into a poster designed by Jade de Montserrat which combines a quote from the 19th century abolitionist Sojourner Truth with the Progress Pride flag. This juxtaposition stresses how historical struggles can provide sustenance for contemporary campaigns.
You can download a pdf version below or email jemmae@serpentinegalleries.org to request an A2 printed version that opens out to form a poster that can be displayed in your classroom.
Cracks in the Curriculum is a multi-part series that addresses themes missing from or misrepresented in the UK school curriculum. It brings together artists, educators and organisers to ask how we can use creativity to collectively address pressing social issues.
Octavia Poetry Collective‘s Poetry from the Personal, is an invitation for English teachers at primary, secondary and beyond to re-think conventional understandings of poetry and build strategies for identifying all of ourselves in literature. It leads out of current discourse around migration, movement and identity, exploring the potential of poetry to address diverse personal histories.
The resource features a series of questions for critical discussion, activities for the classroom and a reading list for further study. On the reverse is a collective poem produced by Octavia, alongside a photograph by Amaal Said.
How can we encourage our students to write from the personal to create art that includes and reflects them; art which allows them to delve into themselves and find validation from and within their truths?
What can we do as educators to live by the tenet that every story and person is valid, and how can we make space for this within the classroom?
What are the benefits of a group/class/gathering of minds and ideas?
How can writing from personal experience help students find their own place within existing curriculum poems?
If English is not a first language, how can we promote a ‘third tongue’ within creative writing?
You can download a pdf version below or email jemmae@serpentinegalleries.org to request an A2 printed version that opens out to form a poster that can be displayed in your classroom.
Cracks in the Curriculum is a workshop series and publishing platform for teachers, which aims to bring artists and educators together to think about how to address pressing social issues in the classroom.
The Cracks in the Curriculum series explores key questions and themes that run through the Serpentine Education, Exhibition and Live programmes. The content for each resource emerges from workshops with artists, activists and educators.
Octavia Poetry Collective for women of colour led by Rachel Long and housed at Southbank Centre. Octavia was created so that women of colour could come together to read beyond the canon, write without fear of condemnation or exoticisation, share openly without censorship and support each other. There are seventeen members of Octavia, they are poets as well as educators, dancers and astrophysicists, making their collective voice zoetic and nuanced. Octavia have performed at Southbank Centre’s Women of the World and London Literature Festivals. They’ve featured in the Guardian and on the BBC World Service’s Cultural Frontline show. Octavia have run workshops at Oxford University and for Africa Writes.
Octavia are: Amaal Said, Sunayana Bhargava, Amina Jama, Belinda Zhawi, Zahrah Sheikh, Anjali Barot, Ankita Saxena, Josette Joseph, Rachel Long, Raheela Suleman, Rhonda Rhiannon, Tania Nwachukwu, Theresa Lola, Victoria-Anne Bulley, Sarah Lasoye, Virginia Joseph, Hibaq Osman and Anita Barton-Williams.