Our exhibition was filled with video games, plays, and an art gallery. Since the math part of the exhibition didn't tie into what we did for humanities or art, our exhibition didn't have a name.
Hair Stories |
Social Enlightenment Art |
Starlogo Nova |
Hair stories was the overall name of the plays we were doing. The plays that we wrote and acted in were based off of a true story that one of the group members expirienced. The stories were about a time that the writer was a vicitm, or a bully themself. Then when we put into groups, they were read, and only one from the group was chosen to create a play out of it.
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For the art part of the exhibition, we created art pieces inspired from other artist's social justice. My partner and I created an art piece we found on the internet that dealt with police brutality. We wanted to bring the art piece to life, and to make it interactive, so we took the painted butterflies and created new butterflies out of tissue paper and hung them from the cieling. This made it so that people were able to walk through the art to get a better visual of what it meant. We painted a police man holding a bat, and he/she looked as if he/she were going to hit something. In this case, that would be the butterflies. The butterflies are meant to symbolize innocent lives that are being murdered by modern police.
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For math class, we were able to experience a highly glitchy and laggy programming website made to create video games. In this case, we created a video game with a partner (or individually) that dealt with probabilty. My partner and I created a parody of Hungry Hungry Hippos, and called it Starving Starving Raccoons. There are up to four players, and the point is to eat as many balls as you can, and not get touched by the poop. The poop was actually just a carrot that brought down your score to a random number between 1 and 20.
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