woensdag 22 oktober 2025

Pumpkins like Yayoi Kusama

 You need:

  1. black construction paper
  2. colored paper
  3. black marker
  4. black fineliner
  5. scissors and glue
  6. white pencil
About the artist
Yayoi Kusama (1929) is a Japanese artist. She 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. 

zondag 19 oktober 2025

Catching leaves

You need:
  1. white drawing sheet A3 size
  2. oil pastels
  3. liquid water color paint
  4. brushes
What should you do?
  • Trace your hand (thumbs point to each other) on the bottom of the sheet.
  • Color them with oil pastels. 
  • Draw some swirling autumn leaves above the hands and color them with oil pastels. 
  • Paint the background with diluted liquid water color paint leaving some space on the edges.
  • Variant: choose real autumn leaves instead of drawn ones. Stick them on the drawing AFTER painting and drying the background.
Works of art made by students of grade 3. 

vrijdag 17 oktober 2025

Autumn leaves with tissue paper

You need:
  1. white drawing 
  2. tissue paper in autumn colors
  3. brush
  4. jar with water
  5. white crayons
What should you do?
  • Show different shapes of autumn leaves. Discuss shapes and colors. 
  • Draw different leaves on the sheet with white crayon. 
  • Tear parts of tissue paper (not too small). Use warm autumn colors. 
  • Stick the pieces by wetting the sheet part by part and laying them in it. Watch out: no two same colour pieces next to each other. Be sure the tissue paper is wet enough to bleed.

  • Let the artwork dry a little. When it's still moist a bit, pull of the tissue paper.
Works of art made by students of grade 3. 

donderdag 9 oktober 2025

Autumn leaves in cubist style


You need:
  1. white drawing paper A4 size
  2. pencil
  3. ruler
  4. tempera paint
  5. brushes
  6. gold color marker

Ask students to take autumn leaves. Watch them together, paying particular attention to the shape: heart-shaped, oval, round, oblong, etc. The composition of the leaves may vary: a leave can be single or composed of several leaflets (pinnate or palmately).

What to do?

  1. Draw several leaves, they may not overlap. Draw half leaves against the edges. Draw only the outer form of the leaves, so no veins. 
  2. If the is largely filled, draw diagonal lines using a pencil and ruler: two from left to right and two from top to bottom. Make sure these lines pass through the leaves. 
  3. Paint the drawing with four warm colors tempera: two colors for the leaves and two for the background. Paint the leave parts within a shape in one color and the background in a different one. Paint the leaves in the next square in a third color and the background with color four. 
  4. Trace contour lines of the leaves and the diagonal lines with a gold marker.

Works of art made by students of grade 6.

woensdag 8 oktober 2025

Whirling leaves

You need:
  1. white drawing sheet A4 size
  2. watercolor paint
  3. brushes
  4. jar with water
  5. small and broad black marker
  6. colored construction paper for background
  7. glue

Ask students to take some flat dried leaves. Every student chooses one of his own leaves and outlines it several times with a pencil. Remember to draw not all the leaves in the same way on the paper, because they whirl down from the tree. Make sure some leaves go over the edge; these will later be finished on the background.

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.

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, because they will be outlined later.

Leave the work to dry and paste in on a colored background. Outline the leaves with a thick black marker. Use a fine black marker for the veins, while observing carefully the real leaves. 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.

zondag 21 september 2025

Autumn leaves mandala


You need:
  1. white drawing sheet A4 size
  2. compasses
  3. pencil
  4. oil pastels
Draw a circle with a diameter of 20 cm. Draw within about 1 cm another circle (the edge of the mandala). Cut out and fold into 8 pieces. Draw against one of the folds half of an autumn leaf using black oil pastel.


Fold the sheet and press firmly with the hands to get a print of the leaf on the other side of the fold. Trace this half with black oilpastel. Repeat this and draw the other three leaves. Colour the leaves and background with oil pastels in warm colours. Colour the edge with a nice pattern.

All works of art made by students of grade 6.

It's warm blanket time!

Days are getting shorter, nights are getting colder. 
Time for a warm blanket!

What do you need:
  1. colored paper for background
  2. brown paper 
  3. leftovers of colored and white paper 
  4. quare white paper
  5. watercolor paint + brushes
  6. crayons
  7. black marker
  8. scissors and glue
Divide this lesson over more moments. Consider in advance whether you will give students a template of the bear's head or whether they' ll have to draw it themselves. 
Folding and painting: 
For the blanket: fold the white sheet into 16 squares. Paint each square in a different color. Let dry. Draw stripes with a crayon on the folds of the squares just like on a patchwork blanket. 

Cutting:
  • draw a bear's head on brown  paper and cut out or trace the template and cut out. 
  • legs: cut four ovals out of brown paper. 
  • snout: cut a circle out of colored paper. 
  • ears: cut two half circles out of colored paper. 
  • eyes: cut two small circles out of white paper. 
Pasting and drawing:
  • stick the hind legs on the colored sheet. 
  • stick the blanket so that legs come out from underneath.
  • stick the head halfway on the blanket and the front legs underneath.  
  • stick snout, eyes and ears on the head.
  • draw nose, whiskers and pupils with a black marker. 

Works of art made by students of grade 1.  
Techniques: folding 16 squares, cutting shapes, pasting. 
Elements of art: shape, color.