Animals in Art | Tate (2024)

Teaching Resource

Discover animal artworks and fun activities to use in your classroom

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Animals in Art | Tate (1)

Animals and nature have always been a source of inspiration for artists. With a world of textures, colours and shapes around us to explore, we can discover new ways of seeing animals and connecting to our local environments through artwork.

On this page, you can find a selection of artworks in the Tate collection that explore our relationships with wildlife and nature, as well as discussion points and activities that offer useful prompts for your classroom.

Drawing with light

This activity invites your students to play with light and shapes. It will take 5-10 minutes and can be adapted to meet your students’ needs.

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Artist Chila Kumari Singh Burman works with light to make giant sculptures that tell stories. Have a look at her sculpture of a tiger, which was displayed outside Tate Britain.

You will need

  • A few torches
  • A camera

Instructions

  • In small groups, take turns drawing an animal in the air using a torch. Can you guess what everyone is drawing?
  • While someone is drawing, the rest of the group could trace the movements and make the shapes with your bodies or make a line drawing of what you see.
  • Instead of guessing the animal’s name, the group could make animal sounds that match the animal being drawn with the torch. If you don’t know what sound to make, could you invent one?
  • What happens if you try to take a photo of the light drawing?

You can try this activity with any material you have to hand. You could use wool, fabric, whiteboard pens, paint, signs and gestures, movement, or more! Encourage your students to play and recognise their action as art-making, while sharing their favourite animals with their classmates.

This activity can also be done in a dark space or a sensory room, wherever your students are most comfortable.

Animals in our everyday

We all share our everyday lives with more animals than we could ever know! From the pets sharing our homes to the wildlife in our local environments, we can understand our relationships with animals and nature through artworks that depict them.

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Artists Rivane Neuenschwander and Cao Guimarães explore these ideas in Quarta-Feira de Cinzas / Epilogue (2006). In this film, many red and black ants carry shiny, colourful confetti across the rainforest floor in Brazil.

  • Why are the ants carrying confetti? Where do you think they are going?
  • Have you ever seen animals doing something unexpected like these ants?

This film has a very particular soundtrack, made using recordings of the ants and music played with matchsticks.

  • What sounds do you think ants would make, if you could hear them?
  • What do you think the ants would say to each other while carrying the confetti?
  • Could you create an ant soundtrack of your ownusing objects in your classroom?

Discover more everyday animals in the Tate Collection through the links below:

  • What other animals might we find in our everyday?
  • How did they get there?
  • What stories might these animals tell?
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Making with natural materials

This activity invites your students to think about ways to be imaginative with natural materials and the importance of caring for our local environment. It will take around 20-30 minutes.

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Natural materials are a key feature of many artworks at Tate. Artists often consider the connections between us and our environments by using materials like clay, sticks, rocks, even feathers and animal bones! Have a look through the artworks shown above and think about what they tell us about animals and their homes.

You will need

  • Natural materials such as twigs, leaves, rocks, tree bark, shells or feathers
  • A camera to record your work, or paper and pens to make drawings

Instructions

  • As a group, explore the local area around your school. Are there any green spaces nearby, somewhere where you might find plants, rocks, or other spaces where wildlife might live?
  • Once you’ve found a good place, work together in pairs or small groups to collect natural material such as twigs, leaves, rocks, tree bark, shells, or feathers. Be careful of yourself and the environment as you go!
  • In your groups, make a sculpture with your found material in the shape of an animal (real or imagined). What material could you use as fur, scales, or teeth?
  • Leave your animal in its new home for someone else to find. How might the weather change them over time?
  • You could make drawings or take photographs of your sculptures to take back to your classroom.
  • Back at school, you can write stories or make more artwork inspired by your creations!

This activity does not need your students to be walking or moving independently. Some options to further adapt it could include:

  • For young people who may find the outdoors challenging, you could bring natural material into the classroom to play with.
  • Using assistive tools - such as an extendable grabber or adapted gardening tools - where needed when collecting the materials.
  • Working in pairs, small groups, and/or with a carer to collect the materials and build the sculptures.
  • Having conversations through sign or communication cards about natural materials and animals.

How could you invite your students to explore their environments in ways that are accessible to them?

Animals in stories

What do animals mean to us? What can they mean in artworks?

Artworks often have many layers of meaning within them. Artists can use familiar images and ideas to tell specific stories through their work. Sometimes they are trying to make us see things in a particular way. Where do these meanings come from? What changes in an artwork if we don’t know this background?

We can learn a lot about an artwork by looking closely at the symbols the artist has chosen. Follow the links below to bring two example artworks into your classroom. Share them on your interactive whiteboard and ask your students to discuss them in small groups or pairs.

Marmaduke Cradock’s painting A Peaco*ck and Other Birds in a Landscape has many native British birds surrounding a peaco*ck, a bird from South Asia.

  • Why do you think all of these birds are in this painting? What could their stories be?
  • Why do you think the artist chose to make the peaco*ck the focus of the painting and its title?
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In Michael Armitage’s The Promised Land, we can see a monkey sitting under a tree in the middle of the painting, surrounded by crowds of people.

  • What do you think the monkey is doing there?
  • How do you think the monkey is feeling?
  • What stories can you find in this painting?

More prompt questions

  • What do you think is happening in these artworks?
  • What do you think the animals would say to you or to each other if they could talk?
  • Do you think the animals like the painting they are in?
  • Do you think the artist has given the animals a job to do in the paintings? What are they there to say to you or make you think about?
  • If the animals were acting in a play, what story would they be telling?

Animal collage

This activity invites your students to make their own artwork using found images of animals and the environment. It will take around 20-30 minutes.

Collaging is a technique that artists use to create art out of existing materials. By combining lots of different images and textures, you can tell new and exciting stories through art. Click the links below to explore three collage artworks from Tate's collection for inspiration.

  • Which of the three collages are you most excited by? Why do you think this is?
  • Where are your eyes drawn to in each artwork? Which materials are these bits made out of?
  • What story is each collage trying to tell you?

Now make your own collage!

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You will need

  • A selection of printed pictures from newspapers, magazines etc – encourage your students to bring in their own
  • Glue and safety scissors
  • Coloured and/or plain paper
  • Drawing materials (pens, paints, crayons, glitter, or anything else you might have in your classroom)
  • Natural material (feathers, tree bark, shells, flowers)

Instructions

  • Look through the printed material that everyone has brought in and find an image of an animal that you like.
  • Imagine a story about your chosen animal. Where does it live? What food does it eat? What does it get up to?
  • Look for images of other animals, habitats, natural material, people, or buildings that can help you tell this story.
  • Cut them out and make a collage of your story onto a sheet of paper.
  • Use any extra paper you have, as well as colourful material or natural objects, to add to your artwork – can you make animals out of them too? What exciting creatures could you create?
  • Share your stories with the rest of your class – could some of your animals talk to each other? What would happen if they met?

If collage isn’t accessible for your students, how else could they tell stories about animals? Some options could include:

  • Using drawing, painting, or another art-making technique they are already familiar with to create animal stories.
  • Adding a soundtrack to their stories by talking, singing, making sounds with instruments or objects, audio recording, making animal sounds, and more.
  • Acting out their stories with signs or gestures.
  • Pointing to images, looking through books and other printed material together.
  • Playing with animal-shaped toys (if available in your classroom).
Animals in Art | Tate (2024)

FAQs

How are animals used in art? ›

As well as providing the perfect means to explore and represent nature, animals are often imbued with symbolism of both real and imagined meanings. This viewing room explores the different ways that animals are used in art; from the humorous, to the aesthetic, to the political.

What animals naturally make art? ›

Some animals create visually impressive displays as part of their mating behaviours, which have been described as artistic. These include bowers constructed by bowerbirds and geometric circles created by white-spotted pufferfish.

Why do artists draw animals? ›

Drawing animals, plants, rocks and other fellow inhabitants of this world may help develop a more empathetic relationship with them and artists and writers have historically shown that it is sometimes easier to develop alternative narratives by having them acted out by non humans.

What do animals symbolize in art and culture? ›

Often what we see in an individual animal is obvious: ants often symbolize teamwork and discipline; the deer, grace and sensitivity; the snake, because of its ability to shed its skin, regeneration; and the rabbit, quickness.

Which animal symbolizes creativity? ›

Animals Commonly Associated with Creativity

Octopus: Capable of disguising itself and with its graceful movements, it stands for flexibility and the power to form imaginatively. Raven: Being smart and good at problem-solving, they feature in many myths worldwide as symbols of creative thinking and art.

Is it okay to use animals in art? ›

No work of art should, in the course of its creation, cause physical or psychological pain, suffering, or distress to an animal. CAA recommends that any user of animals in art pose these three questions before beginning the work of art: Can you make the same point by replacing the animal?

What do cats symbolize in art? ›

Throughout art history, cats have been imbued with symbolism and superstition. In medieval Europe, they were associated with witchcraft and often portrayed alongside witches or as familiars. However, they also represented independence, mystery, and agility.

What do dogs symbolize in art? ›

Generally, dogs symbolize faith and loyalty. A dog, when included in an allegorical painting, portrays the attribute of fidelity personified. In a portrait of a married couple, a dog placed in a woman's lap or at her feet can represent marital fidelity.

Do animals have a concept of art? ›

Elephants, chimpanzees, seals, parrots, and many other animals have created their own art inside zoos. Still, experts are unsure of the effect art has on the animals' brains—and whether they enjoy it. Some individual animals certainly seem to like creating art.

Are animals considered still life in art? ›

Common still life objects include things like flowers, fruits, vegetables, and other foods and beverages. Dead animals (like wild game and fish) can also be included in a still life drawing... objects that were once alive can be included in a still life as long as they are dead in the picture!

What is a really easy animal to draw? ›

When you're learning how to draw animals, your beloved pet dog is a good place to begin. Dogs are easy to draw once you understand the basic technique, but bear in mind that different dog breeds have different physical features.

What do animals represent in paintings? ›

Artists frequently use animals as subject matter in their art. ... Animals are also symbolic. Many cultures through the ages have regarded specific animals as representing gods, power, the supernatural, and in the cases of Native Americans, used in names.

What is animal drawing in art? ›

Animal Drawing emphasizes developing an understanding of the anatomy of wildlife and domestic animals. Students will learn to construct quadruped skeletons as well as rendering fur and reptilian skin. Furthermore, there is an exploration of form and perspective with an analysis of gestures and expressions.

What do different types of animals symbolize? ›

What Do the Different Animals Represent?
DogLoyalty, noble, a true and loyal friend
DolphinTrust, loyalty, spirit of friendship
DuckSpirits of those who have passed on
EagleCreator, teacher, loyalty, integrity, spiritual connection to the great divine
44 more rows

What animal symbolizes peace in art? ›

Dove. The Dove's white body and gentle nature makes it one of the universal peace, innocence, and purity symbols.

What does a cat represent in art? ›

Artists paint cats because of what they represent spiritually – Protection, independence, curiosity, spontaneity and magic (amongst other things).

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