I volunteered to teach art to K-6th grade at a small private school. Here's OUR story.
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Greek vases
The 5th/6th grade was studying Greece, so I themed several art classes for them. This one involved the beautiful clay pots and vases (amphora) that the Greeks decorated with red and black graphic shapes and figures.
This allowed me to continue a theme of bold graphic elements in art as well as symmetry. I gave them a brief overview of the different shapes the Greeks used. The nitty gritty about the uses was not that important, but I did want them to get a feel for the diversity of shapes and hopefully inspire them to think creatively with their shapes.
Then I gave them orange paper and had them fold it in half so that when they cut it would be a complete vase shape.
Next I gave them a brief overview of the different athletes and gods that decorated these vessels. Of course most greek athletes are a a tiny bit underdressed, which let to the expected tittering amongst the crowd. Once the giggling settled down, I tried to get them to see that these ancient drawings were pretty basic. Almost all the different shpes were carrot-like. Legs, arms, fingers...all different elongated ovals.
Spring Butterflies
Always a crowd-pleaser, I did butterflies with the younger kids. This taught symetry, wax resist and watercolor.
I had the kids fold their paper in half and draw their butterfly on one half with oil pastel. Then they used a spoon to transfer the half-butterfly onto the other side. Some had to draw over their faint lines, but that is okay!
Then they used watercolor to fill in the blanks and the oil pastel showed through.
Celtic Crosses
To mark St. Patrick's Day, I wanted to get away from shamrocks and leprechauns (I love those, but can only do so many art projects involving those items!)
Also, since we are a Christian school, making a cross would be really cool. What made this standout was the technique: aluminum foil embossed and then aged with paint. I had envisioned using this technique for another project, but ended up using it here.
The technique involved me folding some sheets of foil into long multi-layered strips. Each kid was given one and they cut it into two. Then they had to used blunt pencil to incise/emboss lines and decoration into the soft foil. Then with a slightly damp brush they put green paint onto the foil and wiped off the excess.
The final result was either stone-like or similar to aged bronze! Really cool.
Gustav Klimt people
I use famous artists as a gateway into a weekly art lesson frequently. This week was Gustav Klimt, a turn of the century Austrian artist most famous for his highly decorative paintings/collage of people, especially using vibrant abstract patterns and backgrounds.
You may know his "The Kiss"
To translate this into soemthing that the kids could do in 30 minutes, I had them start with yellow paper, but this would be beautiful on gold paper or with gold paint.
I also had them choose a face or body from a fashion magazine as a starting point, since many of Klimt's paitings have a realistic looking head/torso and then he explodes witha riot of color and pattern. They glued this scrap on the paper.
Then they drew the body, or at least a suggestion of body/torso with flowing lines and lots of pattern. This was an interesting example of realism meets abstract art.
You may know his "The Kiss"
To translate this into soemthing that the kids could do in 30 minutes, I had them start with yellow paper, but this would be beautiful on gold paper or with gold paint.
I also had them choose a face or body from a fashion magazine as a starting point, since many of Klimt's paitings have a realistic looking head/torso and then he explodes witha riot of color and pattern. They glued this scrap on the paper.
Then they drew the body, or at least a suggestion of body/torso with flowing lines and lots of pattern. This was an interesting example of realism meets abstract art.
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Making your own coat of arms
Inspired a bit by the 5th and 6th grade study of medieval history, I had the kids make their own coat of arms. Similar to project I did two years ago having the kids make their own flag, this requires them to think about their own identity and visualize it.
To inspire them I brought in a few completes coats of arms as well as some print out of the various elements thata re common and colors.
They first folded a piece of paper in half and drew half a shield and cut it out so the result would be symetrical.
Then they had to decide on their 1-3 favorite colors, shapes and insignia. I aked them if they had a favorite animal or toy or other item taht they could easily draw. Or they could draw an animal that represented their pesonality.
Many horses, lions and Star Wars figures resulted;-)
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Chinese Scroll Painting
As a knod to Chinese New Year, I brought in some long scroll paintings that I had purchased in China in the 1990s. I was inspired by the beautiful flower plum trees, so also brought in a vase of plum branches.
I folded long white contruction paper in half so the kids had the tall canvas. Trying to emphasize the distorted perspective that is common in these paintings, I had the kids use their watercolors to make mountains and a river that stretched down from the top. If they wanted they could add some trees and houses or boats, but the main objective was the tall skinny landscape.
Then in the foreground they were to draw a tree with their black marker (the paper was still wet, so this mad ea nice wet-on-wet technique too.) For flowers they got pink tissue paper and made little balls to
glue onto the branches.
A finishing touch was a red square with their initials to mimic the "signature" stamp.
Sunday, May 1, 2011
Star Wars Collage
For those Star Wars fans in my art classes. This is for you!
Jeremy Messersmith - Tatooine from Eric Power on Vimeo.
Jeremy Messersmith - Tatooine from Eric Power on Vimeo.
Week 17: Valentines
The age-old question of what to do for Valentines Day? So many fun crafty things. This year I had the kids do "snowflake" Valentine compositions in paper. They choice a couple red, pink, white etc sheets and folded them like you would a snowflake and then cut out heart shapes. If they were lucky they would get some fun inticate shapes. If not, they would at least have 8 hearts on the table that they then could still use to make a collage. I tried to get them to layer larger pieces under and smaller on top.
4th Grade mission projects
This may be an off-topic, but related post. While this did not happen in my art class, I did want to highlight the very nicely done California Mission Models that the kids built in the 3rd/4th grade room! Not all the kids did Missions, since several did history videos, maps or ship models.
I'm a huge Mission model fan, going all the way back to my 4th grade Mission Santa Barbara. My son Devon (and I) built Mission Carmel.
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