Showing posts with label Picasso. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Picasso. Show all posts

Saturday, February 13, 2016

3 Days, 3 Museums! Day 1: Picasso at MoMA

SO - I'm back from a fabulous visit to NYC, and had some luck and some misses with art museums. that worked out really well for us in our whirlwind three days.

Museum 1: we went to MoMA after-hours, to see the incredible Picasso sculpture exhibit.  It was the day we arrived in NYC, and the last day of the exhibit, and we already had matinee show tickets (The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime; it was incredible and I highly recommend it).  So we picked up 1/2 price after-hour tickets to see just the Picasso show, which was fine, because I have been to MoMA many, many times, and therefore didn't need to see the rest of the museum on this trip.  The Picasso exhibit was divided up by time periods and specifics of style and medium.  The sheet metal sculptures pictured above right (Woman with Child), and directly below (Head of a Woman), are from 1954-64 and my husband who you can see in both pics, did not like them.  At all.  Luckily, he enjoyed the stuff in other rooms of the exhibit, including the Head of a Woman, above left, pictured with me so you can see its monumental size.
 I have included the guitar pictured below, because of Picasso's use of a construction method that I teach my students, when we are making cardboard sculptures or using cardboard for armatures for papier-mache.  I am referring to the method of cutting tabs on the bottom of a cylindrical item.  I love showing kids that someone famous made things the same way that they do!
We left our cat home, tended by the cat-sitter, so my husband was happy when he came across this Cat sculpture!
 Below, Woman Reading
 Below left is Head of a Warrior, and though you can't tell from the photo, it is quite large.  Below right is of course Baboon and Young.  We've all seen this one before!
 This whimsical piece, Woman With Baby Carriage, pictured below, was a crowd-pleaser.  Everyone seemed to love discovering the face on the baby!
 There was SO much more to the exhibit - it was huge - so this was just a taste for you all!!  I was impressed by the scope of the show, and how it is all so easily identified as Picasso, despite its variety.

Museum 2: we went to the Whitney, the day AFTER the Stella exhibit closed, which meant one floor of the museum was closed, so the tickets were reduced price.  The Whitney relocated 9 months ago, and this was our first visit to its new location.  I have a lot to share about this museum, so I am going to wait and put it in a separate post.

Museum 3: on our last day in NYC, after walking across the Brooklyn Bridge, we were cold and needed a small museum to tour to warm up.  We  headed uptown to MAD (Museum of Art and Design).  Again, one floor closed due to a changing exhibit, and so we paid a reduced ticket price.  Our visit there was cut short because my husband wasn't feeling well (he's fine now), but I still got to see most everything.  I just didn't have time to spend money in the gift shop!   I'm leaving this museum for another post as well!!
 Instead, I'll close with a few shots from walking around NYC, including a couple to hopefully make you think!

Saturday, February 28, 2015

'Fractured Faces' - the Picasso Slip 'n Slide!

I was searching through some folders a couple of days ago, and I unexpectedly uncovered the artwork which you see on for this post.  I have been blogging for about 5 years, but I've been retired for 3 of those 5 years, and I taught for 34 years before I ever even started blogging!  So that means I have 34 years of art projects and lessons that I have never shared.  So now and then, I'd like to tell you about some of them.
These lessons were completed before I started regularly photographing student work (in the days before the ease of digital photography), so most of what I have to share with you are my personal project samples, and not student work.  The images in this post are from lessons when the students were learning about Pablo Picasso.  The students were looking at his cubist portraits.  They noticed that the models often appeared like they were looking in fractured mirrors.  And the models were often viewed from multiple angles at the same time, with front views and profiles in the same image.  And the images were frequently bright and colorful and unexpected, and had a wit and humor about them.  So out of these revelations about Picasso's work, came this lesson, Picasso Portrait Slip 'n Slides, or alternatively called Fractured Faces
To start, students drew a goofy portrait, (as shown in the image above) which could, if desired, include elements of profile and front view, with exaggerated features.  Then, using a ruler, the image was divided up by several lines.

The students then colored the face using markers, and cut the image along the  ruler lines.  Students were given slightly larger pieces of paper, and the portrait was arranged on the paper like a puzzle.  Then, before gluing, the puzzle pieces were slid in one direction or another and slightly rearranged, while still retaining enough visible elements of the face.  When the students were satisfied with their compositions, they were given the go-ahead to glue them down.
Finally, the negative space in the original image, and the new negative space that had been created when the image was moved about, were all colored as well.  The image above is a sample of student work for this project that I discovered with my samples. 

Sometimes the images were filled with colorful patterns and designs, as in the images above, and sometimes the shapes were filled with areas of solid color, as in my sample pictured below. 
You may be surprised to see me posting a lesson that uses just marker, because usually I like to have my students work with materials that they are not likely to have at home.  But sometimes, it just works.  And sometimes, if many of my other classes were working with messy materials, I would have one grade level work with something non-messy to give me time to prep and clean.  So for this project, the bold colors of markers worked great.  But you could certainly vary this lesson in many ways.

For example, see the still life below, my sample.  For this project, I looked at and drew a still life arrangement of various bottles.  The drawings were 'fractured' with ruler lines before coloring.  The drawings were then colored with oil pastels, using rich patterns.  Though this wasn't cut apart as with the portraits above, it certainly could be. 
In another variation (sadly I couldn't find a sample), students drew a simple fractured image on a small piece of paper, tracing the lines thickly with a black marker.  Then, a piece of clear acetate was taped over the drawing, and the spaces between the lines were colored thickly with oil pastels.  The lines were left uncolored.  When complete, the acetate was flipped over onto a piece of black construction paper, which showed through the clear areas of the acetate re-creating the black lines.  The results are really cool!!

Today I read a conversation on on the Facebook Art Teacher page, about whether to show students teacher examples of final products, or not.  There were concerns about students copying if they saw your completed sample.  However, I feel strongly that students need to see a finished example, so that they have an understanding of where they are going.  Certainly, once it is shown, it doesn't need to be left out where it could potentially be copied.  But I think that kids need to see something completed, to understand the level of craftsmanship you expect, and to help guide them with choices they make along the way. Just my opinion, I know.

Before I end this post, I need to give a shout-out to the wonderful Patty over at Deep Space Sparkle, who recently posted a cubism project available for purchase in her online shop. It was ironic that I unexpectedly uncovered these pieces a day after she had posted about her project, and I'm exceptionally appreciative that she gave me the go-ahead for this post despite the timing.  Thank you, Patty, you rock! 

Thursday, April 21, 2011

We have a winner!

Congratulations!

The winner of my Picasso puzzle give-away is Paper Pear, at http://projectpaperpear.blogspot.com/

She wrote: "The blogging world has saved me from pulling my hair out of my head my first 2 years of teaching!" Now hopefully you won't be pulling out your hair trying to put together a deceivingly challenging Picasso puzzle, because you are the give-away winner!

Thanks to those of you who entered the drawing. I'm amazed at having now 202 followers. I almost hope it doesn't keep growing quite so fast, because I relish the friendly conversations that we've been having, and I don't want to get to the point where I can't keep up with it all. Happy Blogging everyone!

Sunday, April 17, 2011

200 Followers!! Time for another give-away!


I started my blog early last May. Here I am, one year and 216 posts later, and today I opened my laptop to see that 200 people are now reading what I write!! Huh???!!! WOW!!!
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I'm amazed by the power of the blog. For many of us, particularly those of us who teach in small or geographically isolated districts, we do most of our planning independently, rarely getting the chance to share ideas with others in similar positions. Blogging has changed that. We share ideas back and forth, we make suggestions, we find ways to change up or improve our lessons, we offer pats on the back (that often don't happen in our home district), and I believe we find some true friends. It takes away the isolation, and I believe makes us better as teachers! Yeah blogging!!!
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So back to the give-away - the photo above is the cover of a Picasso painting puzzle, which I am sending to one lucky follower! The puzzle was purchased used, from
Piece Time Puzzles in Northwood, NH, but we recently assembled it and therefore I can guarantee that no pieces are missing. (They sell a lot of used puzzles and they are always just like new, nice and clean, and I've never gotten one with a piece missing. Great store!) Anyhow, it's a 500 piece puzzle and more challenging than I predicted.
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So - if you want to be entered in a drawing for this puzzle, leave a comment to this post, with an email address so that I can contact you if you win. Please leave your comment by midnight on Wednesday April 20th; a winner will be selected by random drawing on Thursday the 21st.

And a big thank you to all of YOU, my readers, who put up with my brags about my kid and my occasional rants!

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Picasso again - blue period, rose period

Sorry, it's not a Sunday comic (I didn't have one available today) but that guy on the left is pretty funny anyhow, isn't he? Kind of an evil smile...

Anyhow ~ Fourth graders learned about Picasso. After a BRIEF review (due to the time limitations of an impending vacation) of facial proportions etc, they drew a slip out of a bucket. Some were red, some blue. Those students who pulled a blue slip took a blue sheet of construction paper (dark, royal, or sky blue, or turquoise) and those with a red slip took a red-based sheet (I had a burgundy color, a couple of different mid-range reds, and two different pinks available to choose from). Time permitting, students began drawing a face, with a sad expression for blue period, happy for rose. These faces were "made up" - not representative of anyone in particular.

In the next class, the faces were quickly completed and traced with a black marker. After a very BRIEF demo (again, those time limitations) students began painting. Two tables were set up for blue period, two for rose period paintingts. The BLUE period students were given paints in blue, turquoise, black, white, and a silvery purplish color. The ROSE period students were given red, magenta, orange, black, white, and a silvery coppery peach color. They painted without water, sometimes wiping excess color off the brush on newspaper, remembering NOT to stir the paint when they dipped their not-so-clean brush in a new color (that way the color doesn't get "dirty"). They had just the one 40 minute art class to trace the drawing, watch the brief painting demo, and complete their painting. So if some don't look quite finished, it was the result of a student "time-management" problem!

I expected the students to be upset that they couldn't make their own choices whether to do a rose or blue period painting, but they went along with the color selection process without any arguments. Everything went GREAT - the kids mixed colors and painted enthusiastically! One student at each table was given a small bucket with some water, and they collected and cleaned the brushes for their table at the end of art, while their table-mates washed the table and put away the paintings to dry. Of course, one boy decided to spoil the perfection by offering to lick the paint if his buddies would give him money. By the time I got to the table, his tongue had a slash of deep magenta on it. Sigh... WHY?!!!!

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

More Picasso - "fractured vases" by 2nd grade


Another quick fun Picasso lesson! Someone gave me a bunch of clear acetate, and I used it for this lesson. On white paper, students sketched a vase (some added a flower too), and traced over it thickly with a black marker. Then they used a ruler to divide up the space, also with heavy black lines.
We taped a piece of acetate on top of the marker drawing, and colored on the acetate with oil pastels, leaving the black lines of the drawing showing.
Last step was to remove the original marker drawing, and flip the oil pastel picture onto a sheet of black construction paper.
I used colored duct tape to attach the acetate to the construction paper. I tried to photograph them to show you, but had trouble with the gloss of the acetate. So I ran a few through the scanner instead. The colorful borders didn't quite fit in the scanner.
Here's a few more~

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Grade 3 discovers Picasso!

I adapted this lesson from one I found I think in a School Arts magazine several years ago. It was a Picasso Halloween lesson, with two-face witches. It was a perfect way to deal with this:
The scrap box!!!
(Though since we did the lesson, it seems to be even more full...)
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And it was also a great lesson to follow up their hard work on their mirror self-portraits. This time, I said it was OK to have big black nostrils, giant teeth, purple eyeballs, and hair growing out of their ears. We had looked at the work of Picasso and decided to focus on the artwork that showed a sense of humor, heck, downright silliness, and spontaneity. Plus we didn't have a lot of time, and this project is easy.
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We used one art class to first learn about Picasso, and get started on the project. Each child took two sheets of construction paper, cut to 8"x 11" (I think). They drew an oval that touched all 4 sides of the rectangular paper. Those of you who've been reading my blog a while would know I didn't use an oval template. I do NOT want them all the same, and I want them to discover they CAN draw an oval themself. (When we did our self-portraits, we practiced drawing ovals on the table with our finger, using our whole arm.) If a child had trouble, they put a dot on each side of the paper and just made sure their oval touched each dot.
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The two papers were put together and the ovals were cut. One oval was glued on a sheet of white paper, which was maybe 12"x 15". On the other oval, the students drew an exaggerated profile line from top to bottom (we had previously practiced drawing profiles). The profile was cut, one 1/2 went into the scrap box, and the other was glued to line up the edge with the first oval.
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In the next art class, students completed glueing the ovals and profiles, and then, with just brief direction/advice they dove in, knowing this was the only class time to work on this. I put on a lively Putumayo CD, and the atmosphere was cheerful and inventive. The kids did NOT pre-draw anything before cutting; rather the Sharpies were used for added detail. They worked merrily and we took just two minutes to close up glue sticks and pick up scraps. I love my 3rd graders!

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Sunday Comics #6 - my favorite art cartoon



Just proof that a Sunday comic doesn't need to be colorful to be funny! I'm teaching Picasso later this winter and I suppose I should have saved this one till then, but no... I couldn't resist!