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{Stop 490 \endash Family Tour \endash Cityscape Final
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{\f28 \par
\par }{\b\f1 Kid 2: }{\f1 This bowl is interesting to look at, but I don\rquote t know how useful
it would be. \par It\rquote s too big for cereal\'85
\par \par }{\b\f1 Kid 1:}{\f1 But it might be just
right for holding popcorn while you\rquote re watching a movie at home.
\par \par }{\b\f1 Narrator: }{\f1 American artist
Jay Musler decided to take something functional like a bowl and change it into something else.
Through his artistic expression it becomes a }{\i\f1 sculpture}{\f1 that happens to look
like a bowl. \par }{\f28
\par }{\b\f1 Tina:}{\i\f1 \'93 (The artist) uses a found object, or an object
that has already been made, cuts it in half and fashions it into something entirely different.
The bowl is made out of borosilicate glass, a very hard glass that is used in industrial
application s, and in fact this piece started its life
as an industrial (Pyrex) flask.\'94 \par
\par }{\b\f1 Kid 1:}{\f1 Why would somebody make art out of something you put in the oven?
look at how the bowl was made and think about why using a very strong and hard glass might
have been a good idea. \par
\par }{\b\f1 Kid 2: }{\f1 The edge of it\rquote s kind of raggedy and not very smooth.
\par \par }{\b\f1 Kid 1: }{\f1 I guess this type
of glass could stand up to having all those cuts made around the rim of the bowl.
\par \par }{\b\f1 Narrator:}{\f1 Do the jagged
edges remind you of anything in particular? \par
\par }{\b\f1 Kid 2: }{\f1 Hey! I see it now. They look like the buildings of a city \endash
like the skyscrapers in New York! \par
\par }{\b\f1 Kid 1: }{\f1 And the way he painted the bowl with that orange-red paint makes
it look the whole city is glowing in the sunset.}{\i\f1 \par
\par (sfx: city sounds, traffic, etc) \par
\par \par }{\f28
\par }{\i\f1 \par
\par }}