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I run the room like a children's museum with lots of objects
to touch and combine, blocks, touching tables, tubs filled
with oatmeal and red beans and rice, microscope and binoculars.
I want the children to experience an aesthetic moment. I'm
not interested in making little artists. What I want to create
is an atmosphere that encourages tolerance of different artistic
expressions and promotes experiences of beauty by looking
and doing....more
Art Rules
How am I graded in Art?
Art Talk Handout (requires
Adobe
Acrobat Reader to view)
Course
Descriptions -1-5
REVIEW
OF ART CLASSES March 2008-May 2008
First Grade – The class just finished working on a crayon
resist drawing of trees. They were brought outside to draw
a large tree by Middle School and were told to really look
at the tree before them. It wasn’t brown and it didn’t have
a ball on top. It was stressed to the students to draw the
horizon line so the grass came up to the horizon line and
the sky came down to the line. This was an introduction to
the visual element of space using foreground, middle- ground
and background.
The class worked with clay and learned to make pinched pots
and coiled pots. They worked on free form sculptures and were
encouraged to experiment with pulling and adding clay for
details. They also worked on warm up drawings and were told
that drawing was a skill that needed lots of practice. The
students saw videos on Da Vinci and Michelangelo.
Second Grade – The class just finished working on a crayon
resist drawing of trees. They were brought outside to draw
a large tree by Middle School and were told to really look
at the tree before them. It wasn’t brown and it didn’t have
a ball on top. Also, they drew horizon lines that gave the
drawings a sense of depth. Other projects involved drawing,
working with the six visual elements and daily warm up exercises.
The students saw videos on Da Vinci and Michelangelo.
The class worked with clay and learned to make pinched pots
and coiled pots. They worked on free form sculptures and were
encouraged to experiment with pulling and adding clay for
details.
Fourth Grade - This active and enthusiastic class was a joy
to work with. Each student expressed a positive attitude to
all of the projects and created solutions when problems arose.
The children developed high relief and free standing sculptures
using papier mache. These sculptures were expressions of each
child’s unique personality and it was wonderful to watch the
development of ideas.
The students began the quarter with graphite pencils and used
values to create the illusion of three dimensions, such as,
cubes and spheres on flat paper. They worked in class on weekly
homework assignments based on the six visual elements of line,
shape/form, values, texture, space and color. The class learned
to draw the human portrait in scale and proportion. They created
a warm up folder for drawing exercises that taught the children
drawing skills through repetitive drawings that became more
complicated as we progressed through the quarter.
Fifth Grade – This class helped design some props for the
Lower School play by making action painting marks on large
sheets of cardboard. They also created plaster masks and painted
them with acrylic paint. The students helped design a large
drawing in the VPAC multi-use area for Grandparents Day using
pipe cleaners and paper-folded pinwheels to create a giant
portrait. Finally, the class developed acrylic paintings on
canvas based on fine art reproductions.
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