You need:
- drawing sheets
- pencil
- markers
- water color paint
- brush
- jar with water
- chalk pastels
A site with school-tested lessons for the Arts.
You need:
You need:
Draw at least four sunflowers. Be sure three of them are over the edges. Color them with oilpastels. Paint the backgrond with liquid water color paint.
Neil's drawing is torn in pieces. Those pieces have been re-glued for a spatial effect. Before tearing check which side of the paper is best. One side gives nice white tear lines, the other side does not.
Lyan and Jurre have pasted black strips over their artword, creating a window through which you look outside.
Benodigdheden:
Explain the one-point perspective: objects that are further away appear smaller. If we draw a street towards the horizon, it narrows and trees get smaller.
In one-point perspective you draw all lines parallel to the viewing direction to one point. You literally put a dot on the horizon.
What to do?
Art work made by students of grade 4.
Who is Matisse?
Matisse (1869 –1954) was a French artist, known for both his use of colour and his fluid and original draughtsmanship. He was primarily known as a painter.
Matisse didn't care if stones were blue, he just chose the colors he liked. Some people thought is art was very ugly: someone who paints blue faces and green noses is a fool and Matisse was called 'Fauve', which means: wild. This is how the word Fauvism came into being for this art movement, art with bold colors.
After a surgery Matisse spent the rest of his life in a wheelchair. He wasn't able to paint anymore, but could still paint with his scissors.
View various artworks of Matisse.
You need:
Source: Laatmaarleren.nl
You need:
Show these two paintings. What do you see? Where are the dark parts, where the light ones? Why is that? What's the artists goal? What do you feel when you see these paintings?
Students sit in pairs facing each other and create a portrait of each other using hatching and swiping techniques. Of course the background is dark, the face light.
You need:
Typical for Impressionists: