WORLD COMMUNITY ARTS DAY 17th Feb 2009
"ART AS A CATALYST FOR CARING AND SHARING"
Join us in 2009 and be creative to raise an important issue you believe in.
PAPERBOATS
This projects is an ongoing project.

International
Child Art Foundation
The image by Scott Whitelaw, taken in 2007, is now on the front cover of a
magazine with a distribution of 200,000 world wide. With a double page
spread that tells you how to make a paperboat. This is a growing project
between Three
Harbours Art Festival and World Community Arts Day. The magazine issues
is about ephemeral arts and includes Christo, Sand Blow, Mandalas Go, Ice
and
Lego and much more.

x
Here is the history to the project:
Three Harbours Paperboats 2007 "Recreating Morisons Haven"
Following on from the successful paperboat schools project last year, where
1000 children made a paperboat,and helped us recreate the Prestonpans Harbour,
which is now filled in and not in use. We created giant paperboat sculptures
and then lit them up in a blue light. The Paperboats were made by school children
from Prestonpans Primary, St Gabriels Primary RC, Prestonpans infants Primary,
Cockenzie Primary and Lomgniddry Primary School, East Lothian, Scotland. In
the middle was a salt sculpture by Tom Ewing.
World Community
Arts Day Paperboats
The Three Harbours contribution to World Community Arts Day was to ask people
around the world to create paperboats and put a message of hope in it. As this
is
a ongoing
project. We now have examples from other parts of Scotland, USA, Mexico, Ireland,
Slovenia.
Three Harbours Paperboats 2008
We built a 2000 paqperboat exhibition and sculpture on a grass verge in the
Mining Museum site. We shall light the new batch of paperboats with creative
projections. In the boats we asked people you to write in a message of hope.
2000 Paperboats from
LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore
Jenny Turner
Kenny Munro and friends from Kolkata Bengal
Prestonpans Primary School
Longniddry Primary School
Cockenzie Primary School
St Gabriels Primary School
Prestonpans Community Centre, Afterschool Arts Club Friday
Cockenzie Brownies
The 3 harbours Arts Festival Paper boats project
World Copmmunity Arts Day 17 02 08
Rocca gutteridge at the beach at Portobello
Typoboats BA Visual Communications, Adam Smith College, Fife
Castleview Primary School, Craigmillar 1
Castleview Primary School, Craigmillar 2
Pathhead Primary School, Scotland
Rosie Haillay, Gullane
Barga Teachers, Italy
Welsh Association of Community Artists

In 2007 This 1000 boats sculpture was made by school children from Prestonpans Primary, St Gabriels Primary RC, Prestonpans infants Primary, Cockenzie Primary and Lomgniddry Primary School, East Lothian, Scotland.
How to make a paper boat sculpture.
Have you ever made a paper boat which was going to be part of a giant sculpture?
1. Make a paper boat with a message on it, your name, age and country.
2. Then send us your boat for The Three Harbours Festival opening on 30 May 2008.
Online examples
Photos
on how to make a paper boat sculpture in 9 stages.
How
to make a boat in 30 seconds!
Here is how to make your own in 9 easy stages.
1. Getting started
creating the mast of the boat
Fold an A4 sheet of paper in half across the width and press the fold down
to create a sharp, neat fold. Fold the paper in half across its width again
and press the fold down to create a sharp and neat fold.
2. To create the sails of the boat
Unfold the second fold. Make sure the first fold is facing away from you. Then
bring the right hand corner down to meet the crease down the centre of the
paper. Make a sharp neat fold. Repeat with the left corner. This will create
the sails of the boat and look like a big triangle with two flaps at the bottom
of the paper.
3. Creating the body of the boat (Port and Starboard)
Take one of the flaps and fold it up onto the triangle (mast and sails). Then
turn over the paper and fold the other flap onto the triangle (mast and sails).
4. To create a diamond shape
It should now look like a paper hat. Open it up and place your two thumbs inside
the paper hat. Pull the sides of the hat away from each other. This should
create a diamond shape.
5. Create a triangle
The magic is about to happen, but first you have to create a triangle shape.
Make sure the open flaps of the diamond are facing you. Take one flap at the
bottom and fold it up to the top of the diamond. Turn the paper over and repeat.
6. Create another diamond
This is the last stage before the magic happens! You now have a tiny triangular
hat. Put your thumbs inside the bottom of the triangle and pull out the sides.
Flatten it to create a diamond as before.
7. The magic happens
Hold the diamond shape so that the folds are vertical and you can see the small
tip of the mast inside. Pull the two triangles apart at the same time from
the tip of the diamond. You will start to see more of the mast and then your
paper boat will appear like magic!
8. Decorate your boat and put a message in it.
Decorate your boat in any way you like using water-based paint. Inside the
boat write your message of good will.
9. Make lots and lots of them.
Find a flat grassy field and pin all your paper boats into the ground and create
a giant shape like a fish or a whale or any giant shape you want.
The paper boats project is ongoing and part of
The Three Harbours Arts Festival 2007
World Community Arts Day 2008 17 02 08
The Three Harbours Arts Festival 30 May - 8 June 2008
World Community Arts Day
17 02 09
Originally concieved by
Yvonne Murphy, Jo Mawdsley, Andrew Crummy
Send your WCAD boats to: 83a High Street, Cockenzie EH32 0DG, UK