
Linarang Art Museum
Description
Book Introduction
What can a mother, who has been carrying a baby in her womb for ten months and is experiencing everything for the first time in the world, and who has experienced pregnancy and childbirth and is now raising a child for the first time, do at an art museum?
Both mother and child are too young to be given the educational value that various parishes and media talk about.
This is just a time to become familiar with the art museum.
I went through a lot of trial and error before going to the art museum.
Since I didn't insist on going to an art museum from the beginning, going to an art museum with my child wasn't easy for me either.
After wandering around amusement parks, department stores, and cultural centers, I finally settled down in an art museum.
I wonder what we were like.
-In the text
What should I do when visiting an art museum with a child? I need a guide to visiting art museums tailored to my country's circumstances!
The Korea Arts & Culture Education Service created a program to support at least one curator in charge of education, called an “educator,” in public and private art galleries and museums.
The establishment of a five-day workweek and the general public's interest in culture and the arts began to attract people to art galleries and museums that had previously been neglected, and large-scale special exhibitions and children's art exhibitions became very popular.
With these social influences and the development of social media, there is an increasing trend of people going to art galleries to enjoy cultural activities or take so-called certification shots to create memories with their children.
A woman who majored in art education and worked in related fields experienced postpartum depression one day when she became a mother.
I was wondering what to do with my daughter, who had a particularly difficult time raising due to atopic dermatitis, so I took the stroller and went on a date to an art museum with her.
Having observed and watched countless people while visiting art museums, my mother felt that while the threshold for art museums has become much lower than before, the efforts of the institution and the efforts of parents as visitors still need to grow together.
Mothers around me say they want to raise their children to be able to go to art museums and enjoy looking at paintings, but mothers themselves still find art museums difficult.
You are too far away to be near, the art museum.
How can I make museum visits easy and fun with my child?
Both mother and child are too young to be given the educational value that various parishes and media talk about.
This is just a time to become familiar with the art museum.
I went through a lot of trial and error before going to the art museum.
Since I didn't insist on going to an art museum from the beginning, going to an art museum with my child wasn't easy for me either.
After wandering around amusement parks, department stores, and cultural centers, I finally settled down in an art museum.
I wonder what we were like.
-In the text
What should I do when visiting an art museum with a child? I need a guide to visiting art museums tailored to my country's circumstances!
The Korea Arts & Culture Education Service created a program to support at least one curator in charge of education, called an “educator,” in public and private art galleries and museums.
The establishment of a five-day workweek and the general public's interest in culture and the arts began to attract people to art galleries and museums that had previously been neglected, and large-scale special exhibitions and children's art exhibitions became very popular.
With these social influences and the development of social media, there is an increasing trend of people going to art galleries to enjoy cultural activities or take so-called certification shots to create memories with their children.
A woman who majored in art education and worked in related fields experienced postpartum depression one day when she became a mother.
I was wondering what to do with my daughter, who had a particularly difficult time raising due to atopic dermatitis, so I took the stroller and went on a date to an art museum with her.
Having observed and watched countless people while visiting art museums, my mother felt that while the threshold for art museums has become much lower than before, the efforts of the institution and the efforts of parents as visitors still need to grow together.
Mothers around me say they want to raise their children to be able to go to art museums and enjoy looking at paintings, but mothers themselves still find art museums difficult.
You are too far away to be near, the art museum.
How can I make museum visits easy and fun with my child?
- You can preview some of the book's contents.
Preview
index
04 Prologue
1 Why a New Mom Went to the Art Museum
10 Me Becoming a 'Mom'
14 The Beginning of an Art Museum Date
18 What does an art gallery mean to me?
20 Art Museum Opens Its First Doors
From one to ten years old, it's your first time, and mine too!
30 0~4 years old
32 Mom's Gum
40 Don't expect too much, go to an art gallery instead of a department store to get some fresh air.
43 Taking pictures in an art gallery?
47 Start walking.
Finding an art gallery that you can run to
51 The art museum also needs a lounge and a cafe.
57 It doesn't have to be an art museum.
62 Exhibitions for Children
74 5~7 years old
76 Hidden Picture Puzzle
81 Observational Habits: Mothers Help Their Children Observe
92 Size change
96 Nature and Play
106 Anything can be a material!
110 The moment a work becomes play
113 Infinite Expansion of Space and Time - Installation Art
116 Until the sketch becomes a work of art
118 8~10 years old
120 Wait
125 I want to go to the art museum
129 I want to draw too
132 Soothing the Afterglow of Exhibition
137 How did you come up with this idea?
139 I don't want to make you feel confused like your mom
143 There is no right or wrong.
There are only differences
3 Art museums, which one should I go to?
152 Art museums in Seoul and other regions
236 Jeju Art Museum
4. The Future of Children Changed by Art Museums in Everyday Life
278 11 years old - present
312 Epilogue
Index
1 Why a New Mom Went to the Art Museum
10 Me Becoming a 'Mom'
14 The Beginning of an Art Museum Date
18 What does an art gallery mean to me?
20 Art Museum Opens Its First Doors
From one to ten years old, it's your first time, and mine too!
30 0~4 years old
32 Mom's Gum
40 Don't expect too much, go to an art gallery instead of a department store to get some fresh air.
43 Taking pictures in an art gallery?
47 Start walking.
Finding an art gallery that you can run to
51 The art museum also needs a lounge and a cafe.
57 It doesn't have to be an art museum.
62 Exhibitions for Children
74 5~7 years old
76 Hidden Picture Puzzle
81 Observational Habits: Mothers Help Their Children Observe
92 Size change
96 Nature and Play
106 Anything can be a material!
110 The moment a work becomes play
113 Infinite Expansion of Space and Time - Installation Art
116 Until the sketch becomes a work of art
118 8~10 years old
120 Wait
125 I want to go to the art museum
129 I want to draw too
132 Soothing the Afterglow of Exhibition
137 How did you come up with this idea?
139 I don't want to make you feel confused like your mom
143 There is no right or wrong.
There are only differences
3 Art museums, which one should I go to?
152 Art museums in Seoul and other regions
236 Jeju Art Museum
4. The Future of Children Changed by Art Museums in Everyday Life
278 11 years old - present
312 Epilogue
Index
Detailed image

Publisher's Review
A personalized museum tour guide tailored to your child's needs, allowing them to experience and enjoy art with their heart, rather than just through a formal museum tour.
There are many books on the market about art galleries and museums, but they are all more like specialized books and the content is difficult for mothers to approach lightly.
The most common form of cultural and artistic education currently being implemented is to send students to art galleries and museums by sending them to a group of teachers with the same intention, much like sending a child to a math academy, or to go on group tours at school.
However, it is not easy to understand culture and art from an academic perspective, and uniform education conducted in groups is also useless in front of works of art that reflect the sensibilities of each individual.
The emotional education we often talk about is most effective when it is developed through discussions with the person closest to us and who knows us best (mom or dad). This is because even the same work of art can be perceived differently by children depending on the given situation, and art is much more tolerant of this acceptance than other disciplines.
This book is based on the records of the mother who has been regularly visiting art galleries since the main character, Lina, was a baby and now that she is sixteen years old.
I share stories from my own experiences about how I used to visit art galleries when my child was young, what they needed, what I could give my child while there, and which art galleries are easy to take my child to.
It also provides advice on how to utilize art galleries and museums in the country, and what to talk about and try with children when looking at paintings.
In addition, it introduces impressive art museums located throughout the country, art museums that children often visit, and looks at how the same work of art is perceived differently at different ages and what memories they have, from the perspective of a child, drawing empathy from mothers with children of the same age.
"Lina and the Art Museum" is a story about an era where we communicate through social media and are surrounded by an abundance of photos.
This is an easy-to-follow parenting guide for parents who find it difficult to visit art museums, and a book that helps them realize that art can always be with their children.
There are many books on the market about art galleries and museums, but they are all more like specialized books and the content is difficult for mothers to approach lightly.
The most common form of cultural and artistic education currently being implemented is to send students to art galleries and museums by sending them to a group of teachers with the same intention, much like sending a child to a math academy, or to go on group tours at school.
However, it is not easy to understand culture and art from an academic perspective, and uniform education conducted in groups is also useless in front of works of art that reflect the sensibilities of each individual.
The emotional education we often talk about is most effective when it is developed through discussions with the person closest to us and who knows us best (mom or dad). This is because even the same work of art can be perceived differently by children depending on the given situation, and art is much more tolerant of this acceptance than other disciplines.
This book is based on the records of the mother who has been regularly visiting art galleries since the main character, Lina, was a baby and now that she is sixteen years old.
I share stories from my own experiences about how I used to visit art galleries when my child was young, what they needed, what I could give my child while there, and which art galleries are easy to take my child to.
It also provides advice on how to utilize art galleries and museums in the country, and what to talk about and try with children when looking at paintings.
In addition, it introduces impressive art museums located throughout the country, art museums that children often visit, and looks at how the same work of art is perceived differently at different ages and what memories they have, from the perspective of a child, drawing empathy from mothers with children of the same age.
"Lina and the Art Museum" is a story about an era where we communicate through social media and are surrounded by an abundance of photos.
This is an easy-to-follow parenting guide for parents who find it difficult to visit art museums, and a book that helps them realize that art can always be with their children.
GOODS SPECIFICS
- Date of issue: August 15, 2025
- Page count, weight, size: 324 pages | 135*210*30mm
- ISBN13: 9791197839221
- ISBN10: 1197839224
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카테고리
korean
korean