Field Guide X Noguchi: Green Spaces: Plant Terrarium with Sol Aramendi
Saturday, May 16 | 11 – 1pm (Registration opens May 1)
Free with RSVP here.
Registration (max 25 people), RSVP here.

Explore Socrates Sculpture Park with an Educator from The Noguchi Museum. In this collaborative partnership program with Field Guide at Socrates Sculpture Park, use natural materials such as soil, air plants, and succulents to build your own green space terrarium. Participants will consider how Isamu Noguchi combined materials in his abstract sculptures to express the forces of nature. Children under the age of 18 must be accompanied by an adult. Pre-registration is highly recommended; groups are limited to 25 participants. All participants will be given a free pass to visit The Noguchi Museum (located across the street from the Park at 9-01 33rd Rd, Queens, NY 11106) after the program.

About The Noguchi Museum’s Education Department
The Noguchi Museum’s Education Department prioritizes a co-creation model of programming that supports visitors of all ages, identities, and abilities as they establish personally meaningful connections with the art and legacy of Isamu Noguchi (1904–1988). The Noguchi Museum was founded in 1985, and was the first museum in the United States to be established, designed, and installed by a living artist to show their own work. Located in Long Island City, Queens, the Museum itself is widely viewed as among the artist’s greatest achievements. For more information on their education programs please visit their website.

ABOUT SOL ARAMENDI
Sol Aramendi is a socially engaged artist working with immigrant communities throughout New York City. Her participatory practice promotes change around fairer labor and immigration conditions. She is the founder of Project Luz, a nomadic program that uses art as a tool of empowerment. Project Luz has taken place at The Noguchi Museum since 2011.