Peter and Jane go to a modern art gallery. In one room there is an old master that has been defaced with a giant penis; in another a canvas scrawled with the words ‘Why did you f**k me and leave???’ hangs on the wall; in another there is nothing at all.

“There is nothing in the room because God is dead”, says mummy. “Oh dear,” says Peter.

It may look and sound like a Ladybird Book, but We Go to the Gallery is probably more suitable for adults. Miriam Elia, artist and comedy writer, created the spoof children’s book to poke fun at the art world.

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“I thought it would be humorous to see Mummy, Peter and Jane going to a really nihilistic modern art exhibition”, she says. Among the works confronted by the trio on their cultural outing are pastiches of Emin, Creed and Koons, through which they learn about sex, death, nothingness “and all of the debilitating, middle-class self-hatred contained in the artworks.”

Shape Created with Sketch. 'Mummy, I could have painted that' Show all 6 left Created with Sketch. right Created with Sketch. Shape Created with Sketch. 'Mummy, I could have painted that' 1/6 'I could have painted that' A page from Miriam Elia's 'We Go to the Gallery'. The book faithfully reproduces the Ladybird 1960s style Miriam Elia/Cob Gallery 2/6 'I could have painted that' Jeff Koons is one of the artists whose work is parodied in the book Miriam Elia 3/6 'I could have painted that' The book touches on sex, death, nothingness and 'all the debilitating, middle-class hatred contained in the artworks' Miriam Elia 4/6 'I could have painted that' It may well look like a Ladybird book for the under-5s, but 'We Go to the Gallery' is more suited to adults Miriam Elia 5/6 'I could have painted that' The book's author says she's not criticising people, but their work. 'That's fair game as far as I'm concerned,' she says Miriam Elia 6/6 'I could have painted that' Author Miriam Elia next hopes to do 'fundamentalist religion for the under fives' Miriam Elia 1/6 'I could have painted that' A page from Miriam Elia's 'We Go to the Gallery'. The book faithfully reproduces the Ladybird 1960s style Miriam Elia/Cob Gallery 2/6 'I could have painted that' Jeff Koons is one of the artists whose work is parodied in the book Miriam Elia 3/6 'I could have painted that' The book touches on sex, death, nothingness and 'all the debilitating, middle-class hatred contained in the artworks' Miriam Elia 4/6 'I could have painted that' It may well look like a Ladybird book for the under-5s, but 'We Go to the Gallery' is more suited to adults Miriam Elia 5/6 'I could have painted that' The book's author says she's not criticising people, but their work. 'That's fair game as far as I'm concerned,' she says Miriam Elia 6/6 'I could have painted that' Author Miriam Elia next hopes to do 'fundamentalist religion for the under fives' Miriam Elia

The book faithfully reproduces the Ladybird 1960s style down to the children’s old-fashioned outfits and “key words” on each page, “to help the child to identify the key concepts, so that they may repeat them at dinner parties and impress educated guests.”

“It’s not people I’m criticising, it’s work, and that’s fair game as far as I’m concerned”, says Elia who raised the £5000 to self publish the book through Kickstarter, “because people were scared of what Ladybird might think.”

What do they think? “Well I didn’t ask them for permission because it’s art. My take is that it’s satire so you can pretty much do anything you like.”

The book launched at London’s Cob Gallery last night. After that, Elia hopes to publish more. “I might do fundamentalist religion for the under fives next”, she says.