![]() ![]() ![]() If you’re going to be hanging it up, you will want to use cardstock or cardboard. For the Creativity Challenge this week, we’re going to give ourselves some supernatural, story-telling hair!įind a background for your artwork. Our hair can be a very personal thing, and it can tell different stories about us throughout our lives. But did you know Maui also lassoed the sun with magic lassoes made of his sister’s hair? In the Travelling Planetarium, we often tell the story of the Polynesian demigod Maui, whose magic fish hook is in the sky. In the Daphne Cockwell Gallery dedicated to First Peoples art & culture, you can find a carved narwhal tusk showing Sedna or Nuliajuk, mother of the sea animals, whose hair could catch them up when she was angry and leave hunters’ nets empty. One example of supernatural hair you can find in the Gallery of Greece is Medusa, whose hair was made of snakes and could turn people to stone. There are many examples of this in the ROM galleries, but did you know you can also find examples of supernatural magical hair? In Hair Love, Zuri’s hair can do its own sort of magic tricks thanks to her beautiful natural curls. ![]()
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