Showing posts with label markers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label markers. Show all posts

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Op art cube

What do you need?
  • white drawing sheet 21 by 29 cm
  • pencil
  • ruler
  • markers
  • scissors 
  • glue
Give students a copied print of a cube or let them make their own. I did it with a guided instruction.


What do you need?
1. Lay the sheet in front of you with the small side up.
2. Draw dots on top and bottom of the sheet on 7 and 14 cm.
3. Connect the lines from top to bottom.
4. Draw dots on the left and right site of the sheet on 7, 14, 21 and 28 cm 
5. starting at the top of the sheet.
6. Connect the dots. You have 12 squares and 3 small rectangles on the bottom.

 

7. Number the squares from left to right. 
8. Draw a cross in square 1, 3, 4, 6, 10 en 12.


9. Draw strips of 1 cm on the sides of square 2 and 5. 
10. Draw strips on the 3 sides of square 11. 

11. Draw a cross in the remaining narrow strips at the bottom of the sheet. 
12. Draw optical illusions in square 2, 5, 7, 8, 9 and 11. 
13. Color with markers and outline with fine black marker.
14. Cut the cube and paste the sides together. 

All artworks made by students of grade 6.

Thursday, April 9, 2026

Dutch flower bulb fields

What do you need?

  • drawing sheet 20 by 10 cm
  • color markers
  • fine black marker
  • ruler
  • pencil
Situated less than 30 miles from Amsterdam, the town of Lisse is widely regarded as the center of Holland's bulb district. Each spring the area turn into a sprawling blanket of fantastic color as millions of Dutch tulip, hyacinth and daffodil bulbs emerge in perfect rows. 

Show pictures of Dutch bulb fields like these and talk about perspective. 

What should you do?
  1. Draw a horizon line about 2 cm from the upper edge. 
  2. Put a dot in the middle of this line, the vanishing point. 
  3. Draw lines from the bottom and sides towards that vanishing point.
  4. Color the bulb fields with bright colours. 
  5. Color walkways between the bulb fields. 
  6. Color the sky. 
  7. Draw with a fine black marker some buildings on the horizon, like farms, windmills etc.
Artworks made by students of grade 4. 

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Valentine's day (with Jim Dine)

Because of upcoming Valentine's day a lesson about hearts today! Basic colors are red and white (and making pink of these of course).

What do you need? 
  • drawing sheet 20 by 20 cm
  • cardboard 10 by 10 cm
  • pencil and ruler
  • scissors and glue
  • colored pencils
  • markers
  • oil pastel crayons
  • chalk pastel
  • tempera paint + brushes
  • different types of colored paper (ribbed cardboard, tissue paper, crepe paper etc.)
  • watercolor paint + brushes
  • red or pink paper for background
Jim Dine
Jim Dine (Cincinatti, 1935) is a sculptor and popart artist. Hearts, ties and tools are recurrent themes in his art. 
Show his artworks and talk about them. 

Organisation 
Divide the different coloring supplies on several tables. Stimulate students to experiment. How can I make my heart pop up from the paper? Can I combine chalk pastel and oilpastel? What happens when I sprinkle water on tissuepaper? 
Students have to color their hearts and backgrounds by using as many supplies and techniques as possible. They may walk around in the classroom to choose the place with the art supplies of their choice. The only restriction is: are all chairs occupied, choose another supply first. 
What should you do? 
  1. Divide the sheet in four sqaures of 10 by 10 cm. 
  2. Fold the cardboard, draw a half heart against the fold and cut out. 
  3. Trace this heart in the four squares. 
  4. Color the hearts with different coloring supplies. 
  5. Paste the 4 hearts on a red or pink sheet. 

Works of art made by students of grade 5/6. 

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Valentine's hearts like Burton Morris

This is one of the most visited (and most copied 😉) posts of my blog: Valentine's hearts like Burton Morris.
In 2011 I received an email of the artist: he had googled himself and came across my lesson! How cool is that! 
During our USA trip in 2009, I visited the Coca-Cola Company in Atlanta  and saw the artwork of Burton Morris for the first time: five paintings of cola bottles in pop-art style surrounded by light blue bubbles. So beautiful! Now I found a way to do this in school. And I think I'm the first blogger with a Morris lesson! 


About the artist
Burton Morris (Pittsburgh, 1964) is an American pop-art artist. He is influenced by artists from the 60's and 70's, like Warhol, Lichtenstein and Haring. Morris's work shows a contemporary twist to traditional pop-art. His characteristic lines with the bright colors give his work a fantastic energy. Morris's work is known of tv-series like Friends and also appears in major advertising campaigns by U.S. companies like AT & T, Pepsi and Heinz.


What do you need?
  • construction paper several colors
  • black cardboard 20 by 20 cm
  • colored sheet 20 by 20 cm
  • scissors
  • glue
  • black marker

Before
Show artwork of Morris and discuss the features: bright colors, black outlines, little detail, movement by little lines, white lines that suggest light and the distinctive black star shape in or around much of his work. 

What should you do?
1. Take two colors cardboard: black for the rug and one for the background. 
2. Cut the edges of the background cardboard in a wavy shape, creating a kind of rug. 
3. Cut a large heart from colored construction paper. 
4. Cut some smaller hearts from several colors of construction paper. 
5. Cut white 'light lines' and paste them on the small hearts, all on the same side.
6. Paste the big heart on the cardboard rug. 
7. Paste the light lines on and around the heart.
8. Cut long triangles from the sides of the rug, the 'flashy stripes'. 
9. Paste the rug on the black cardboard.
 
10. Paste the small hearts around the big heart. 
11. Outline the hearts with a black marker.
12. Cut the black background away, leaving about 2 mm on the edges.
13. Paste the work on a colored sheet and cut it into a square.
Also like Burton Morris is this lesson about pumpkins.
Works of art made by students of grade 5 and 6.  

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Winter mittens and cap

What do you need?
  • colored construction paper
  • markers
  • white sheet
  • glue
  • scissors
  • oil pastel
What should you do?
  1. Draw a face and color it with oil pastels. Be sure the eyes are not on top of the head, but in the middle. The space between the two eyes is as wide as an eye.
  2. Cut mittens and a hat from colored paper (or trace templates first and cut them). 
  3. Draw patterns on hat and mittens with a marker. The patterns on both mittens should be similar, as well as the patterns on the hat.
  4. Paste hat and mittens on the drawing. Make sure the thumbs point to each other!
Drawings made by students of grade 2. 

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Silver and white Xmas tree

What do you need?
  • green construction paper
  • silver marker
  • white pencil
What should you do?
  1. Draw the trunk of a tree in the middle of the sheet, starting at the bottom and ending about 2 inches from the top. 
  2. Color the trunk with silver marker. 
  3. Draw lines from the trunk to the right and left. Don't use a ruler! The lines become shorter to create a triangle.  
  4. Draw Xmas decorations on the branches with a white pencil. 
Works of art made by students of grade 6. 

Monday, November 24, 2025

Colorful Christmas trees


This lesson is seen more than 145,000 times since the first day I posted it in 2010. If you use it on your own website, please mention your source: kidsartists.blogspot.com
And if you want to make money out of this lesson, realise it's my work. 
So ask me before sending it to Teachers pay teachers, Twinkle and all that other sites. 

What do you need?
  • two white drawing sheets A4 size
  • water color paint
  • brushes
  • jar with water
  • tissue paper
  • scissors and glue
  • ruler
  • pencil
  • gold or silver marker
  • white correction marker
  • glitter
What should you do?
  1. Paint a background on the first white sheet with water color paint. Use different colors and let them blend into each other. Use plenty of water for nice bright colors.
  2. Choose three colors tissue paper. Fold the sheets several times and cut triangles. 
  3. Wet the second white sheet with a brush. 
  4. Place the triangles on it and leave it to dry. 
  5. Cut long triangles. You may use the schedule. Cut a piece from the bottom of the triangles if you want trees of various heights. Cut some smaller triangles from the left overs if you want more trees.
  6. Paste the triangles with overlap on the colored background. 
  7. Outline with silver or gold marker and draw a simple branche stucture.
  8. Draw snowflakes with a white marker or use chips from the hole punch. 
  9. Sprinkle some glitter on the forest floor.
  10. Paste the artwork on a colored background.
Works of art made by students of grade 7. 

Friday, November 7, 2025

Ow ow ... owls!

What do you need?
  • white drawing sheet 
  • black markers in different sizes
  • yellow or orange marker
  • liquid watercolor
  • brushes
  • black construction paper
  • photographs of owls

Watching owls
Show photo's of owls.
Owls are nocturnal animals. They sleep during the day and hunt at night. Their face is round and flattened. The eyes are large, allowing them to see well at a distance, even at night. An owl can turn his head 270 degrees and can thus look in all directions. Owls have a hooked beak and powerful claws. Two claws are directed forward and two backward. You cannot see the ears, they are holes that are sometimes covered with an ear cover. Ears should not be confused with the ear tufts above the eyes, that, for example, the long-eared owl has.
Most owls have a mix of brown, black, white and grey feathers. These colors provide camouflage, so owls can easily hide.

What should you do?

  1. Sketch an owl on a branch with pencil, considering the characteristics from owls as discussed. 
  2. Draw patterns on the body parts of the owl with black markers in various thicknesses. By drawing different patterns you will recognize individual body parts of the owl. Make parts darker by drawing patterns closer together. 
  3. Color the eyes and beak yellow or orange.
  4. Paint the background yellow with liquid watercolor paint. Make sure you don't touch the drawing, to avoid the ink will bleed. Therefore stay about a half a centimeter away from the owl. 
  5. Paste your work on black background.

Artworks made by students of grade 5.

Friday, October 24, 2025

Which witch is this?


You need:

  • drawing sheet 
  • pencil
  • markers
  • white or silver pencil 
  • black paper for background

Before
Start the lesson with a class discussion about witches. How do you recognize a witch? What things belong to a witch? What can you tell about the clothing of a witch?

What to do?

  1. Draw with pencil the lower half of the body of a witch: skirt and legs. 
  2. Draw things that belong to witches. 
  3. Draw a horizon line at 1/3 from the bottom. 
  4. Color the drawing with markers. 
  5. Color the background with markers or chalk pastel. 
  6. Paste the artwork on a black background and decorate the rim with theme-related little drawings in white or silver pencil.

Works of art made by students of grade 5.

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Pumpkins like Yayoi Kusama

What do you need?

  • black construction paper
  • colored paper
  • black marker 
  • black fineliner
  • scissors and glue
  • white pencil
About the artist
Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama (1929) creates paintings, sculptures and large installations with mirrors and lots of light, symbolizing infinity. All her artworks have one thing in common: polka dots. That's why she's affectionately known as 'the princess of polka dots'. 
From an early age Kusama wanted to make art, but her traditional Japanese parents didn't like this. That's why Kusama left for NewYork and joined artists there, including Andy Warhol. 

By adding all-over marks and dots to her paintings, drawings, objects and clothes she feels as if she is making them (and herself) melt into, and become part of, the bigger universe. She said:

‘Our earth is only one polka dot among a million stars in the cosmos. Polka dots are a way to infinity. When we obliterate nature and our bodies with polka dots, we become part of the unity of our environment’.

View and discuss artwork of Kusama. 
  • use of large and small polka dots 
  • backgrounds are often filled with triangles
  • use of bright colors
  • her installations suggest infinity
What to do?
  1. Draw three pumpkins on the colored sheets and cut them.
  2. Draw bigger and smaller dots on the segments using black markers.
  3. Draw triangles on the black sheet with a white pencil - start with a zigzag line.
  4. Paste the pumpkins on the black sheet.
Works of art are made by students of grade 4. 

Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Whirling leaves

What do you need?
  • white drawing sheet 
  • watercolor paint
  • brushes
  • jar with water
  • small and thick black marker
  • construction paper for background
  • glue

Before
Ask students to take flat dried leaves. 

What should you do?

  1. Chooses a leave and outline it several times with a pencil. Let them whirl down from the tree. Make sure some leaves go over the edge; these will later be finished on the background.
  2. Paint the leaves with watercolor paint. Use water to dillute the paint less or more. Choose warm fall colors and try to make transitions in the colors by using wet in wet technique.
  3. Paint the background blue. Use again the wet in wet technique, and/or choose for wet on dry. You don't have to paint exactly against the leaves, they will be outlined later.
  4. Leave the work to dry and paste it on a colored background. 
  5. Outline the leaves with a thick black marker. Use the fine marker for the veins. Don't stop with outlining and drawing veins when you reach the background, but go on with it there.

Works of arde made by students of grade 6.

Saturday, August 23, 2025

Stained glass, like Theo van Doesburg

 What do you need?
  • sturdy white drawing sheet  
  • ruler
  • pencil
  • color marers
  • waterproof black marker 
  • salad oil
  • brush 
  • paper towels

About the artist
Theo van Doesburg (1883-1931) was a Dutch painter, architect and writer. He was charmed by the abstract art of Kandinsky and Picasso's cubistic work. In 1917 he founded the magazine De Stijl, in which he and other artists could publish their innovative ideas about art. Famous Dutch artists who belong to the Stijl are Piet Mondriaan, Bart van der Leck and Gerrit Rietveld. 

Theo van Doesburg, abstraction of a cow (1918)

Van Doesburg also designed stained glass windows. Abstract art thus became a functional part of a building. 
For this lesson I used his stained glass window Composition VIII. It was designed as an upper window for the front doors of houses built in 1918 in Rotterdam. During the restoration of the houses in 1989, the windows were removed and a number of them were purchased by museums. 


Composition VIII

Discuss what stands out:
  • only rectangles and squares 
  • rectangles can stand or lie
  • maximum 3 colors plus white
  • never two of the same colors next to each other  
  • black outlines 
  • a long horizontal line through the center  
What should you do?
Step 1
Use a ruler and pencil to draw a horizontal line through the center of the drawing sheet. Then draw rectangles and squares. Measure carefully to be sure your shapes are really symmetrical.  

Step 2
Choose 3 colors of markers and color the shapes. You can use white too, by leaving shapes white. No two of the same colors next to each other. Trace the dividing lines with black permanent marker; use a ruler! Draw thickenings at the intersections of the lines, just like in stained glass windows.   

 
Step 3
Place your work on a newspaper and oil on it. Spread it with a brush. 
Step 4
Remove excess oil with a paper towel. Let the work dry. This can take some time!  

Elements of art: color, shape, line.
Techniques: measuring, working with a ruler, coloring. 

Thursday, August 14, 2025

A day at the beach

What do you need?
  • drawing sheet 
  • white drawing sheets
  • tempera paint
  • brushes
  • scissors
  • markers and/or pencils
  • glue
Before
Talk about a day at the beach: things (to do) on the sand, things (to do) in the water and things (to do) in the air. Talk about people standing in the water: they seem to have half legs!

Cover four tables with newspaper and put three containers with paint on it:
  • yellow and a little brown besides (beach) + two big brushes
  • blue and a little green (seawater) + two big brushes
  • blue and white (air) + two big brushes 
  • white (surf) + two brushes to stamp
Instruction
Show how to paint the beach: a lot of yellow on the brush and a little brown for the beach (do not mix!). Do the same with blue and white for the air, and blue with green for the sea. Make wavy motions with the brush to accentuate the water. Finish with a white stamping brush for the surf.
While four students are painting, the others can start with the drawing part of this lesson

What should you do?
  1. Paint the beach and let dry. 
  2. Draw people and things you see on the beach.
  3. Color with markers or color pencils.
  4. Cut your drawings and paste them on the beach, in the water or the air.
Artworks made by students of grade 5.