Our theme for the fall DragonWing Arts session was Discover! My five students (two 3rd graders, one 4th grader, one 5th grader, and one 6th grader) did three projects - the first was the creation of a treasure map.
And the second was a papier-mache project. (I'll tell you about the third project later.) I asked the kids what they'd like to build with papier-mache - perhaps a newly 'discovered' creature, a box of buried treasure, something from outer space, a discovery under the microscope or deep in the sea, etc. My five students unanimously said "We want to make TREASURE CHESTS!" So we did.
We began by constructing the boxes and their curved covers, out of cardboard (from shipping cartons). We covered them with a coat of papier-mache, and when dried, we gave them a base coat of black acrylic.
The students painted their treasure chests and bedazzled them with some jewels. They used a colorful air-dry clay and made some tentacles and such to be emerging from the their treasure chests, and also added felt and more jewels and strings of beads as desired. We cut 'hinges' out of sparkly felt and such, and I hot glued them together for the kids. I think they came out great!
For the treasure maps, I had experimented with dark brews of tea and coffee to stain the paper, but it just didn't 'take' the way I wanted, so we used liquid watercolors. I mixed brown with green, with orange, with yellow, and with black, and after they had torn the edges of their paper, they painted them with the watercolors, blotting and wetting as desired to get the effect they wanted. They discovered that dripping water on the papers looked really cool.
The kids learned how to make a simple 'compass rose', and also how to make a scroll for a key on their maps. I printed out sheets of typical map symbols and then let them go to work making their maps truly their own inventions. The started with pencil, and then used a combination of fine-tip black markers and India ink with dip pens. They loved working with the pen and ink!! Afterward they used tiny amounts of red, white, and gold acrylic ink to embellish.
Somehow I forgot to take pics of the third project, so here's some more views of the treasure chests!
Showing posts with label elementary art lessons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elementary art lessons. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 7, 2020
Wednesday, November 20, 2019
Sunshine Collages
Last April I blogged here about how my DragonWing Arts students had made painted paper in warm and cool colors, to use in some sunshine collages we were making. I never posted the finished products. As it was, we ran out of time and had to take some short cuts in putting together the final pieces, but I still liked them a lot. I almost forgot to take pics, so I shot these in a hurry in very poor lighting.
The kids had designed patterns on tracing paper for their suns, and were using them with their painted paper to cut and put together like puzzles. But their ideas were WAY too complicated, so in the end, with no time left, we ditched the patterns, threw caution to the wind, and just started cutting and assembling!
It was a challenge, but the kids were enthusiastic nevertheless!
Here are the (somewhat) completed pieces.
The aftermath!
Thursday, April 11, 2019
Warm and cool colors for painted paper!
My DragonWing Arts students have been making painted paper, to use in sunshine collages we will be creating during late April or early May. Everybody painted 4 sections of an 18x24" sheet of paper, so there will be lots of choices to use for the sun and its rays.
We painted with brushes, scratched lines with the back of the brushes, stamped with foam circle stampers and also with slices of pool noodles cut in half, among other things.
We also painted smaller pieces of paper (12"x18") with cool colors, to use for our skies. We used the same methods and tools.
I found a rubbery waffle place-mat at the dollar store, and cut it in pieces. The kids enjoyed using them for stamping texture onto their papers. It was especially fun because their hands got so messy in the process.
Stay tuned; next month I'll post the process of putting together the collages and the final product. I've got some fun ideas for them - hopefully they'll be great!
We painted with brushes, scratched lines with the back of the brushes, stamped with foam circle stampers and also with slices of pool noodles cut in half, among other things.
We also painted smaller pieces of paper (12"x18") with cool colors, to use for our skies. We used the same methods and tools.
I found a rubbery waffle place-mat at the dollar store, and cut it in pieces. The kids enjoyed using them for stamping texture onto their papers. It was especially fun because their hands got so messy in the process.
Stay tuned; next month I'll post the process of putting together the collages and the final product. I've got some fun ideas for them - hopefully they'll be great!
Monday, April 1, 2019
Keepin' it Easy: Thumbprint Pussywillows!
I was out for a walk today by a local pond and wetland area, and discovered some pussywillows growing, which, at least around here, are the predecessor of all other spring growth. They are a favorite of mine, and made me recall a favorite one-class art project that I did annually with my kindergartners until I retired.
I think it is important to remember that a good art project doesn't have to be complex and take a long time to do to be worth doing. There's a lot of value in the simplicity of this project.
Each year, I'd bring a batch of pussywillows in to the art room. I would give my kindergartners time to touch them, feel their softness, and stroke their cheeks with them. Then we'd look at the shapes of the branches, and how the little soft pussywillows grow along the stems. The kids would also observe the dark little seed pods at the base of each fuzzy bud.
Then I lightly mixed a blend of white paint with some silver and a touch of black, that I placed in a shallow dish on each table. The kindergartners used their thumbs as stampers to stamp pussywillow buds on top of the seed pods. And that's it! Cleanup is as easy as a wipe of the thumb with a baby wipe! Easy-peasy observational project that can be completed in one class period!
I did a similar annual one-class project with my first graders, when the lilac tree in my backyard bloomed each year. Again, we looked at the flowers (and of course we sniffed them, too!). We noted how they grow in clumps, and we looked at the shape of the lilac leaves. We drew vases, this time including a table surface, and again we drew stems, adding leaves as well. I mixed a selection of lilac colors, using varying amounts of white, purple, magenta, and blue, and the students used cotton swabs to paint their flowers. Disposable paintbrushes = easy cleanup! For more info, and much better photos than those below, check out this post from June 2016.
Wednesday, March 27, 2019
NAEA Boston - my 2 workshops
I taught 2 workshops at this year's NAEA convention - Get Deep Relief with Totally Terrific Tooling Foil and Using the Unexpected.
The first, Get Deep Relief with Totally Terrific Tooling Foil, was a 1 hour and 50 minute ticketed studio workshop. I'm amazed that the attendees were able to complete such fabulous pieces in the time allotted. The time seemed to fly by very quickly!
I believe the attendee who made the adorable sheep (or is it a lamb?) below plans to add color to help identify his eyes. I think it will be really cool!
Some attendees didn't have time to do the 'antiquing' process, using ink and steel wool. I hope that they will send me pics of their pieces when they are complete!
I'm not going to go into process details here, because they are posted previously on this blog. You can find my video tutorials for working with tooling foil HERE, and you can find a link to a handout called "Oh What a Relief" on my Document Weblinks tab, HERE. To see pics from last year's tooling foil workshop at NAEA, go HERE.
My second workshop, Using the Unexpected, was a slide presentation, where I talked about using materials such as toothpaste for an imitation batik resist (example in the pic below), roofing felt as a painting surface, Sheetrock for relief carving, sand as a textural medium for paint, shaving cream for marbling, and more.
It was a nice big room with most of the seats filled. I didn't count, but based on the number of rows of chairs, I think there were about 150 people there!! To access the handout and a PDF of my slide presentation, you can again find them on my Documents Weblinks tab on this blog, HERE.
I really enjoyed teaching the workshops this year, and I think my attendees were mostly quite happy! But unfortunately there is always a downside, and I want to share that with you as well. In my tooling foil workshop, during the hectic closing minutes, some visitors stopped in and looked around, and took some pictures. I should have chased them out, but I thought perhaps they had friends in the workshop. Unfortunately, I learned the next day that one of them had stolen the kit of materials from one of my attendees. How awful! With 6 or 7 thousand art teachers at the convention, there'd be no way to ever find or identify them.
Then, the next day, someone placed a recording device on the front table in my workshop, to record my presentation, and forgot to pick it up at the end. It's usually me that leaves things behind and loses them at conventions, so I feel very badly for the gentleman who was recording my presentation to bring back to the rest of his department. I hope he is able to recover it!
The first, Get Deep Relief with Totally Terrific Tooling Foil, was a 1 hour and 50 minute ticketed studio workshop. I'm amazed that the attendees were able to complete such fabulous pieces in the time allotted. The time seemed to fly by very quickly!
I believe the attendee who made the adorable sheep (or is it a lamb?) below plans to add color to help identify his eyes. I think it will be really cool!
Here is the class, learning the basics, and getting started.
The pic below is someone looking at some of my samples.
And a few more fabulous pieces made by attendees.
I'm not going to go into process details here, because they are posted previously on this blog. You can find my video tutorials for working with tooling foil HERE, and you can find a link to a handout called "Oh What a Relief" on my Document Weblinks tab, HERE. To see pics from last year's tooling foil workshop at NAEA, go HERE.
Tons of samples / examples!
My second workshop, Using the Unexpected, was a slide presentation, where I talked about using materials such as toothpaste for an imitation batik resist (example in the pic below), roofing felt as a painting surface, Sheetrock for relief carving, sand as a textural medium for paint, shaving cream for marbling, and more.
It was a nice big room with most of the seats filled. I didn't count, but based on the number of rows of chairs, I think there were about 150 people there!! To access the handout and a PDF of my slide presentation, you can again find them on my Documents Weblinks tab on this blog, HERE.
I really enjoyed teaching the workshops this year, and I think my attendees were mostly quite happy! But unfortunately there is always a downside, and I want to share that with you as well. In my tooling foil workshop, during the hectic closing minutes, some visitors stopped in and looked around, and took some pictures. I should have chased them out, but I thought perhaps they had friends in the workshop. Unfortunately, I learned the next day that one of them had stolen the kit of materials from one of my attendees. How awful! With 6 or 7 thousand art teachers at the convention, there'd be no way to ever find or identify them.
Then, the next day, someone placed a recording device on the front table in my workshop, to record my presentation, and forgot to pick it up at the end. It's usually me that leaves things behind and loses them at conventions, so I feel very badly for the gentleman who was recording my presentation to bring back to the rest of his department. I hope he is able to recover it!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)