You need:
- light blue construction paper
- dark transperant glossy paper
- glue
- flour
- colour pencils
- scissors
A site with school-tested lessons for the Arts.
You need:
When ready, put a flower pot on the drawing and draw a circle. Cut this circle. Fix your artwork with hairspray and let it dry for a few seconds. Then lay the circle face down on the table. Colour along the outer edge of the back of the circle a circle of about one centimeter. Put the circle in the middle of a new sheet of black paper. Smudge the chalk with your fingers on the new sheet, taking care the work won't move. Finally turn the circle and paste it in the black circle of your latest sheet. Sprinkle a little glitter in small dots of glue.
You need:
You need:
What should you do?
This work can also be done as a group work. All trees (or groups of trees) have to be glued then on a large background of music paper.
Wrapping like Christo
Ask students to take an object from home that:
Discuss with the children why people wrap things: to protect, to surprise (presents), to ship. Why has Christo wrapped things? What is the effect of the wrapped objects? Look at some Christo projects and discuss them.
A wrapped easel
You need:
A wrapped Christmas decoration
Lesson and photo's received from Linda Vroemisse
I found this lesson on Artsonia. Start in a corner and draw ONE line, the longest line: curved, straight, zigzag, with angles etc. The line has to fill the whole sheet and you may not pick up your marker from the sheet! The line may not hit or cross itself. And, the most important: the line has to end at the point it started. So be sure you're back in the beginning in time!
When ready, draw with a pencil three or four geometric shapes on your sheet. Choose three colours marker per shape and colour them. Outline your shapes with the black fineliner.