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THE MISSING PEACE: ARTISTS CONSIDER THE DALAI LAMA

The Missing Peace Project

The Missing Peace: Artists Consider the Dalai Lama is a major art exhibition that presents art as a lens through which to see our common humanity and explore the many meanings of peace. It features works from 88 artists representing more than 25 countries and began its global tour in 2006. More

The Dalai Lama Foundation is developing a values-oriented curriculum for middle school (approximately ages 10 to 13) and high school (ages 14 to 18) to accompany the exhibition. The purpose is to provide a framework for young people to move from inspiration to continued study and engagement.

The Missing Peace Curriculum

Phase 1 of the curriculum was made available in conjunction with the exhibition's launch at the UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History on June 11, 2006. It includes an Educator’s Guide and two activity modules. If you are an educator or parent, we invite you to download the middle school or high school curriculum materials below and adapt them for use in your classroom.

We will continue to develop The Missing Peace Curriculum as the exhibition travels to cities around the world over the next three years. We are developing additional modules, and adding state standards as we go.

The materials were developed for US students and curriculum standards, but can be used worldwide.

We welcome your advice and participation! Please share your experiences with us by sending email to curriculum@dlfound.org or participating in our online educators' activities.

This summer we will begin hosting online areas where middle school and high school students who have had experience with the curriculum can share their reactions and ideas.

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Middle School Curriculum Materials (for grades 6-8, ages 11-13)

Notes for downloaders: The Guides are provided as both PDF and Microsoft Word documents. Each poster-based exercise is provided as a 5-page booklet, with 8.5"x11" pages (standard US letter-size), and also in a 17"x22" full-size poster format. The full-size poster files are large, ranging from 5mB to 20mB in size.

These documents are distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share-Alike 2.5 license, which permits you to modify, use and distribute the documents provided you do this on a non-profit basis and give credit to the originator.

Title Description Download

Educator’s Guide A general guide for the middle school teacher, including a complete lesson plan for the module Pathways to Empathy, with background information, description of all activities, discussion questions, and vocabulary words.

Middle-School Guide
PDF
MS Word


The Future in Your Hands An introduction to art-making techniques, interpretation of motive and meaning in art, and the process of artistic creation, in the form of a poster of The Future in Your Hands (2004). Includes a dialog with artist Ichi Ikeda.
5-page booklet
PDF
Full-size poster
PDF

 

 


Naturally We An introduction to art making techniques, interpretation of motive and meaning in art, and the process of artistic creation, in the form of a poster of Naturally We (2005). Includes a dialog with artist Squeak Carnwath.
5-page booklet
PDF
Full-size poster
PDF

Signs of the Times An introduction to art making techniques, interpretation of motive and meaning in art, and the process of artistic creation, in the form of a poster of Signs of the Times (2005). Includes a dialog with artist Seyed Alavi.
5-page booklet
PDF
Full-size poster
PDF

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High School Curriculum Materials (for ages 14-18)

Title Description Download

Educator’s Guide A general guide for the high school teacher, including a complete lesson plan for the module Pathways to Empathy, with background information, description of all activities, discussion questions, and vocabulary words.
High School Guide
PDF
MS Word


Signs of the Times An introduction to art making techniques, interpretation of motive and meaning in art, and the process of artistic creation, in the form of a poster of Signs of the Times (2005). Includes a dialog with artist Seyed Alavi.
Download PDF 5-page booklet
PDF
Download PDF Full-size poster
PDF

Meditation on Universal Compassion An introduction to art making techniques, interpretation of motive and meaning in art, and the process of artistic creation, in the form of a poster of Meditation on Universal Compassion (2005). Includes a dialog with artist Binh Danh.
Download PDF 5-page booklet
PDF
Download PDF Full-size poster
PDF

 

 


The Future in Your Hands An introduction to art making techniques, interpretation of motive and meaning in art, and the process of artistic creation, in the form of a poster of The Future in Your Hands (2004). Includes a dialog with artist Ichi Ikeda.
Download PDF 5-page booklet
PDF
Download PDF Full-size poster
PDF

 

 


Naturally We An introduction to art making techniques, interpretation of motive and meaning in art, and the process of artistic creation, in the form of a poster of Naturally We (2005). Includes a dialog with artist Sqeak Carnwath.
Download PDF 5-page booklet
PDF
Download PDF Full-size poster
PDF

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Background on The Missing Peace Project

The Missing Peace: Artists Consider the Dalai Lama is the result of a collaboration between the Committee of 100 for Tibet and the Dalai Lama Foundation. In the words of Project Director Darlene Markovich,

We see this project as a unique opportunity to explore the idea of art as an interpretation of, and a catalyst for, peace. The project and exhibition title is an play on words — peace may always be elusive, or missing, in our world, but the Dalai Lama consistently shows that dedicating oneself to peace is anything but pointless.

A total of 88 artists have been selected to participate, including Laurie Anderson, Ken Aptekar, Richard Avedon, Guy Buffet, Adam Fuss, Jenny Holzer, Michael Rovner, Bill Viola and Katarina Wong. Many of the artists have created new work for the exhibition in a wide variety of media, including photography, painting, textiles, animation, sculpture, video, and installation works.

The only instruction given the artists was to create a work of art inspired by the life and message of the Dalai Lama. The artists responded, each in his or her own unique way, with a wide range of works that indicate the many dimensions of the Dalai Lama’s life and message, the power of art to allow us to see our common humanity in new ways, and the freedom of the artistic imagination.

Through the work of the featured artists, we hope to broaden appreciation for the principles the Dalai Lama has exemplified throughout his lifetime of service, and to inspire people around the world to make their own irreplaceable contributions to a more peaceful world.

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You'll need (the free) Adobe Acrobat Reader to read the PDF documents.

If you download the MS Word versions of our documents, you can modify the materials to suit your own classroom, organizational or home education needs. You will need to own Microsoft Word or the free OpenOffice (for Linux users) to open and use these documents.These documents are distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share-Alike 2.5 license, which permits you to modify, use and distribute the documents provided you do this on a non-profit basis and give credit to the originator.

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