
Art created by almost 300 Jersey schoolchildren is on show this week.
'Paper Worlds' is the culmination of an ArtHouse Jersey project, where artists have worked alongside teachers and pupils, using paper as the core material.
The students have made sculpture, weavings, paintings, prints and collage which are on display at Capital House in St Helier until Sunday (30 March).
The Making Art Partnerships in Schools (MAPS) project commissioned eight professional artists to work alongside eight teachers, sharing their skills and passion in classrooms across the island.
The Arts charity says it was inspired by the work of Layla May Arthur, a Jersey-born paper artist who handcrafts every detail of her intricate sculptures and installations from the simplest and most accessible of materials.
280 pupils have been directly involved in experimenting with new techniques to create a piece for this week's final display.
Education Officer Anna Shipley hopes students, their family and friends, and the wider public will come and take a look:
"Each work is so unique that they will definitely be able to spot their own work.
"I think they will be really surprised to see it in a different space, outside of their classroom and their school, and see it presented in quite a different way. We hope they will be as delighted as we are with the work that is on show."
There is also the chance of people to get hands-on themselves.
"We will have a 'maker-table' in the middle of the gallery where people can come and draw and get involved - there will be materials there.
"Hopefully they will be inspired by the work of the students to get involved and make some art of their own."
The schools involved are St Peter's School, Helvetia House School, Jersey College Preparatory School, Rouge Bouillon School, Grands Vaux School, D'Auvergne School, St Saviour's School and Highland's College School of Art.
Capital House is open 12-6pm daily with the Paper Worlds exhibition running from Tuesday 25 March o Sunday 30 March.