- white drawing sheet A4 size
- watercolour paint
- tempera paint
- indian ink
- q-tips
- straws
- black construction paper
woensdag 25 november 2009
Blowing trees
maandag 23 november 2009
Wrapped art, like Christo
Wrapping like Christo
Ask students to take an object from home that:
- is larger than a soda can;
- fits on a table;
- is not breakable;
- is not expensive;
- may stay in school for some days;
- has a particular form (not just a box)
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:
- an object for each kid
- big fabrics, pieces of plastic, garbage bags, wrapping papier, toilet paper, aluminum foil and plastic wrap
- materials to tie, like rope, yarn, tape, wire, fishing line, painter tape and fabric strips
- materials to decorate, like feathers, paint, markers, coloured paper, textile markers, glitter glue, buttons etc.
A wrapped Christmas decoration
Lesson and photo's received from Linda Vroemisse
zondag 22 november 2009
Dutch December skyline
You need:
- construction paper A4 size in dark blue, yellow and black
- paperclips
- scissors
- knives
- cutting blade
- glue
Draw the skyline of a street on the black paper. Add a tree if you want to, or draw a black pete near the chimney.
Put the black sheet on the yellow one and attach them to each other with four paperclips. Cut out the skyline; you'll cut two sheets at the same time. When ready, remove the paperclips and cut some windows out of the black sheet.
Cut a moon out of the rest of the yellow sheet. Stick the black and yellow skyline together and shift the black sheet one millimeter to emerge the yellow one. Look carefully to the position of the moon: you'll see the yellow edges there were the moon shines. Glue the moon on the blue sheet and glue the skyline below. Your December skyline is finished!
dinsdag 17 november 2009
Owl in moonlight
You need:
- white drawing paper A4 size
- oil pastel
- blue ink
- brush
- dish with water
- scouring pad
See the moon shining through the trees... and in the moonlight everything looks blue.
Children scetch a winter tree, so there will be no leaves. Show them that the branches at the end always be thinner. Scetch a moon between the branches. Draw a cat or an owl on one of those branches.
The tree has to be coloured with blue oil pastel. Color difference can be made by pressing harder or softer, or by using a little black or white through that blue for the feathers. Colour the owl or cat blue too. Use black to draw eyes, ears and beak. The moon is white-yellow and becomes darker yellow to the outside.When colouring is ready, everything has to be outlined with white oil pastel; even the smallest branches have to be outlined. This is a difficult chore, because you barely see the white and you run the risk that the white crayon will get blue (scrape it then!).
The background will be painted with ink, water and a scouring pad (watch your clothes!). The white lines will resist the ink. Put undiluted blue ink on a dish and dip the soft side of the scouring pad in it. Stamp with the pad along the outer edges of the drawing. Add water to the ink when you're nearer at the moon. The blue will be lighter then. Make a great light blue circle around the moon.
dinsdag 10 november 2009
Explosion at the bottle factory
- black construction paper
- scissors and glue
- coloured paper
- ruler and pencil
maandag 9 november 2009
The longest line
- white drawing sheet 15 by 15 cm
- black fineliner
- markers
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.
dinsdag 3 november 2009
Greetings from ... Holland!
- white drawing sheet from 20 by 10 cm
- markers
- fineliner
- ruler
- pencil
zondag 1 november 2009
Find it!
- white drawing paper A4 size
- watercolour paint or tempera
- marker or fineliner
Tempera with marker
vrijdag 30 oktober 2009
Leaves pattern
You need:
- white drawing sheet 21 by 25 cm
- markers
woensdag 28 oktober 2009
In the style of René Magritte
Made by Nikki, 11 years old
Rene Magritte is born in 1898 in Belgium. When Magritte is 13 years old, his mother commits suicide. She jumps in the river Samber and is found with her dress covering her face. This image has been suggested as the source of several paintings from Magritte: people hiding their faces with several objects.
In 1924 Magritte became friends with members of a surrealism group in Brussels: André Breton, Joan Miró and Salvador Dalí. These artists influence Magritte's work. In the end Magritte became famous with surrealistic paintings.
Magritte gave his paintings a realistic effect of surrealism. He painted simple objects, like a shoe, an apple, a pipe or a tree. Magritte took these things out of their ordinary environment and placed them in a special surrounding.
One of Magritte's most famous works is "La Trahison des Images" (The Treachery of Images). This is a very realistic painting from a pipe, with the text: Ceci n'est pas une pipe (This is not a pipe). The painting is not a pipe, but rather an image of a pipe. As Magritte himself commented: "The famous pipe. How people reproached me for it! And yet, could you stuff my pipe? No, it's just a representation, is it not? So if I had written on my picture 'This is a pipe,' I'd have been lying!"
By putting us constantly on the wrong track, Magritte forces us to think about art. Magritte thought it the task of an artist to place reality in a different context.
Nikki working on her version of Magritte
You need:- drawing sheets A3 size
- brushes and water containers
- old newspapers
- tempera paint
- (black markers)
Made by Kiki, 11 years old
Children sketch a portrait, just like Magritte did. It doesn't have to be someone special, just a person. Instead of an apple, they choose a present-day object to cover the face. This object has to be about as large as a face, so a piano or a coin can't be used! Options: an Ipod, cell phone, candy or something. When sketching is finished, the drawing has to be painted. When necessary, students can outline the covering object with a fineliner.
Made by Jetse, 12 years old
Happy Halloween
- orange construction paper
- black construction paper
- black fineliner
- black marker
- correction fluid
- scissors and glue
zaterdag 24 oktober 2009
Puzzle trees
- black paper A4 size
- black paper 23 by 32 cm
- oilpastel crayons
- scissors and glue
When colouring is finished, turn around the sheet. Draw a tree on the back, with five branches: one tho the right, one to the right edge of the paper, one to the middle above, one to the left edge of the sheet and one to the left. Branches have to be small at the end and wide near to the trunk. You've got six puzzlepieces now. Cut them out and place them on the larger black sheet. Use the cut tree to check if your pieces lie well. Pate all parts on the black sheet, exept the tree of course. Maybe you can do something fun with it?
woensdag 21 oktober 2009
Spider web
You need:
- white drawing paper from 20 by 20 cm
- oil pastel crayons
- black paint
- brushes
- toothpicks
- coloured construction paper
dinsdag 20 oktober 2009
Haunted houses
- white drawing paper A4 size
- tissue paper in two colours
- brush and water
- black markers
- white chalk pastel
- hairspray
- black construction paper for background
Made by students of 10-11 years old
maandag 19 oktober 2009
Wacky witches
- charcoal
- chalk pastels
- white drawing paper A4 size
- black construction paper for background
- hairspray
How do you recognize a withc? What animals or things do you associate with a witch? What does an angry witch look like? Think of characteristis like mouth, eyes and eyebrows.
Tell children to practice first in drawing with charcoal. Explain how differences in colours have to be made. Tell them to use an eraser to erase the charcoal lines, and a tissue or your fingers to sweep out the colour.
The instruction is: draw an angry witch with charcoal and use a cold colour for the face. Draw the contours of the face first with charcoal. Then colour the face with chalk pastel. After this mouth, eyes and nose can be drawn with charcoal. Finish the drawing with charcoal. Make sure you add some typical witchy things like a cat, a bat, a spiderweb etc.
woensdag 14 oktober 2009
Take a walk with a line
You need:
- white drawing sheet A4 size
- markers
- fineliner
Start with a thick black marker and draw an interesting line horizontally across the paper. Repeat your line with rainbow colors to show emphasis and repetition. Fill your paper up with interesting line patterns in the background. Use a black fineliner. When ready it seems the coloured line looks like jumping off the page. This could also be a nice group project. Children have to discuss with eachother about the places their lines will come together and continuing the patterns.
dinsdag 13 oktober 2009
Autumn prints
- pieces of linoleum from 15 x 15 cm
- lino knife
- mat
- block printing ink
- flat piece of plexiglass
- linoleum roller
- construction paper
- lino press
Draw a leave or mushroom on your linoleum. Remember what you cut away will not print. It is not important to carve deeply into linoleum, just enough so that carved area is lower than the linoleum surface. Always carve away from your hand, always keep your hand behind the back edge of linoleum. When you want to check your printing block, place a piece of paper on the linoleum and rub over the paper with a crayon. This will create a “rubbing” and will give you an idea of what the final print will look like. Squeeze out “toothpaste” amount of ink on plexiglass. Roll ink out. Ink is ready when lines appear. Ink should look wet. If ink starts to look velvety/dry, sprinkle a little bit of water over the ink and add more ink. Put your linoleum block on a newspaper. Roll ink onto linoleum printing block, working quickly to cover all areas. Lay the block on a sheet in the printing press and press. Take away the block and your print is ready.
To make a group work, all kids have to cut out their prints. Ask some students to make a collage of all autumn leaves.
maandag 12 oktober 2009
Polka dots from Staphorst, Holland
Part of the table cloth
zaterdag 10 oktober 2009
Building sandwiches
- half a piece of coloured card board A3 size
- leftovers coloured paper
- ribbed cardboard
- noodles in different shapes
- seeds or tealeaves
- crepe paper
- glue
- scissors
- yarn
- pieces of cotton
Children create a table cloth from leftovers of cotton or paper. A plate has to be cut and glued on the table. The sandwich is made of ribbed cardboard. Now building can start!
Discuss with the kids what kind of food they like on their sandwich and how to represent this with the materials they have. Examples: yellow paper with holes in it will represent cheese; red yarn can be ketchup and am enrolled piece of pink cotton represents a slice of ham.
The artwork must partly be 3-D. Don't glue everything just flat, but try to work spatial and let things overlap. Make sure kids do this by showing three dimensional glueing before kids start working.
When there is enough food on the sandwich, it has to be closed with the top of a sandwich out of ribbed cardboard.
dinsdag 6 oktober 2009
Ghosts in the air
- black construction paper A4 size
- leftover cardboard
- scissors
- white chalk pastel
- hairspray
- white pencil