Oops, I was lazy with the camera and didn't get many pics of our Desert Art.
But since knowing how the smallest image can inspire you educators to create something interesting & fabulous with your students - I'm posting anyways.....
Showing posts with label art lesson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art lesson. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Friday, October 16, 2009
Mondrian Art
Image via Wikipedia
Piet Mondrian, Netherlands 1872-1944
Materials: white paper, thin strips of black paper, paint, glue.
First - We glued the black strips onto the white paper.
Second - We drew the design on a scratch piece of paper, and placed Y's, B's, R's, and W's in the shapes we wanted to be Yellow, Blue, Red, and White.
(It was very fun watching students puzzle over the decisions of where they wanted their colors. Erasing and rearranging. Seeing brains ticking makes me giddy.)
Third - We painted the shapes.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Giraffes
This giraffe project was inspired by a lesson found at http://www.princetonol.com/groups/iad/lessons/lessons.html. The lesson was Submitted by: Tracy Albert May, Lesson Idea: It's a Jungle Out There (Henri Rousseau) .
For our version of the project, we did not use the black ink for the batik effect because we didn't have time.
First make a frame for the picture.
Outline with black marker and add jungle leaves, etc. and border decorations.
We colored ours with pastels. The pastels really pop on colored construction paper.
We colored ours with pastels. The pastels really pop on colored construction paper.
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Nature Sketchbook
Image by cobalt123 via Flickr
Nature Sketchbook Lesson:We started by talking about shadows and looking for an object's shadow when placed on white paper. We discovered that the shadow is darkest at the point where it touches the object and the shadow gets lighter the farther away it is from the object. Then we experimented shading, hatch and cross-hatch lines for shadows. Nature objects were given to each table group. We make a big deal about respecting the objects because they're real and fragile. (By the way, the lizard below is dead. I live in the country and flat dead lizards are surprisingly easy to come by??? The boys love them along with the bird and gopher skulls. I also make a point of sharing with the students that I never "steal" a nest or an egg. All my objects have been found on the ground and obviously abandoned.)
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Kandinsky Art Lesson
Image via Wikipedia
Wassily Kandinsky 1866-1944
I usually have kids use black crayons for tracing, which provides a black resist line when using watercolor paints. (Black crayons are easier on the budget too in a 25+ classroom.) But this time, with fewer kids, we used sharpie markers. Some painted with watercolors, while others used tempera.
Trace lines and shapes.
Trace lines and shapes.
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