Doodle 4 Google art contest for kids kicks off - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

Doodle 4 Google art contest for kids kicks off

Share via

Doodle 4 Google, the contest for kids that puts one young artist’s work on the Google homepage for a day, kicked off on Tuesday. It’s the seventh year for the doodle contest for artists in kindergarten through 12th grade.

Grand prize is a $30,000 college scholarship and $50,000 to the winner’s school to create a technology lab. And for this year’s contest there’s a new twist.

The Google Doodles, if you’re not familiar, are those works that incorporate the Google logo and pop up frequently at Google.com. They’re primarily created by a team of artists at the search engine giant’s Mountain View, Calif., headquarters. Since the inception of the doodle -- a stick figure created in 1998 by company founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin -- the doodles have grown in artistry and complexity. Animation, interactivity and even short films have been featured.

Advertisement

IMAGES: Google Doodles of 2014

This year, Google will pay for all 50 state winners of the contest to visit company headquarters for workshops and other activities. Then the doodle team and the top winner will animate the winning doodle.

Here’s how the contest works: Doodles are judged by age groups. A panel of Google employees chooses 250 from across the country. The theme this year: “If I Could Invent One Thing to Make the World a Better Place ...” Then guest judges and the doodle team pick 50, one from each state. Guest judges this year include astronaut Ron Garan; author Rick Riordan (Percy Jackson series); “The Lego Movie” directors Phil Lord and Christopher Miller; and Astro Teller, one of the brains behind the sort-of secret Google X facility and its Moonshots projects that pursue far-reaching techie ideas like Google Glass, a self-driving car etc.

Advertisement

Entries for the contest will be accepted through March 20, and the winning doodle will be featured on the homepage at a to-be-determined date in June, a Google spokeswoman told the L.A. Times. More information about entering at the Google 4 Doodle site.

Love doodles? Me too. Follow me at @AmyTheHub

Advertisement