Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Skaters in Dutch landschape

What do you need?

  • light blue construction paper
  • dark glossy paper
  • white sheet
  • glue
  • flour
  • color pencils
  • scissors
Before
Beautiful photographs of Dutch landscapes and skaters on frozen water are the inspiration for this lesson. Show some of these pictures and discuss them. 

What should you do?
  1. Take the light blue sheet and stick black glossy paper on it below the center; this is the ice.  
  2. Cut out a circle from a white sheet and stick the remaining part of the sheet on the blue one. 
  3. Make white streaks on the ice by sprinkling flour in glue stripes. 
  4. Draw a Dutch landschape above the ice and color it. 
  5. Draw and color some skaters on a separate sheet, cut them and paste on the ice.

Made by students from grade 5. 

Monday, December 28, 2009

Splattering fireworks

You need:
  1. black construction paper
  2. toothbrush
  3. tempera paint
  4. spoon
  5. straw
  6. photo of a building or skyline
  7. scissors
Choose an internet photograph of a famous building or skyline. Print it and cut it out carefully. Put the picture or a black sheet of paper. Dilute white tempera paint with water so it is fluid. Dip the toothbrush in the paint and knock the adhering drops off. Take a teaspoon in your writing hand and the toothbrush in the other. Scrape with the spoon on the hairs of the toothbrush in your own direction. This way the hairs of the toothbrush will spring back, while they release splashes of paint. Practice this first on a scrap sheet. Now splash around your image. Near the image you splash closer, further away you splash thinner.

When you are finished, gently take the image away. You'll see the silhouette of the building.Let your work dry before you do the second step. Dilute some tempera paint on a saucer with water so it is thinner. Leave one or two drops of diluted tempera on your artwork, but not on the silhouette. drupjes verf op je werkstuk vallen, maar niet op het silhouet (put your image back to the sheet if necessary). Blow through the straw at the paint drops in different directions, so you'll get fireworks. Do this as often as you like. Be careful, there should not be coloured paint on your silhouette. Paste your work finally on a coloured background.
This lesson is origanally from Art Attack.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Polish folkart Christmas tree

What do you need?
  • white, red and green sheet 
  • scissors
  • glue

What should you do?

  1. Put the red and white sheet together and fold them lengthwise. 
  2. Draw half a Christmas tree against the fold and cut out. 
  3. Take the white tree and fold it again. 
  4. Cut some of the edges and cut patterns from the fold towards the edges (just like snowflakes). 
  5. Glue the white tree on the red one and glue the complete tree on a green sheet.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Christmas trees collage

By Silke, 10 years old
I found this idea on Artsonia a collage of Christmas trees coloured with different materials on music paper. You need:
  1. white drawing paper A4 size
  2. different colouring materials, like crayons, oilpastel, watercolour paint, tempera, colour pencils, markers, aquarelle pencils etc.
  3. music paper
  4. chalk pastel
  5. green paper for background
  6. scissors
  7. glue
  8. black marker
Divide different colour materials in your classroom. One place with paint (water paint and tempera paint), one place with crayons and oil pastel, one place with pencils and markers. Children draw three overlapping triangles on a white sheet, the Christmas trees. These trees have to be coloured with different materials and patterns. The only colour they may use is green, in all its nuances. To colour, children have to take place at the table where the material of their choice is. When finished, the trees and patterns have to be outlined with a black marker. The trees (with the black outline) must be cut out. Then kids have to tear pieces of music paper and paste them on a new white sheet. Colour the background with light blue chalk pastel. Do not colour the music paper, just rub the edges with the chalk pastel. Paste the trees on the blue sheet and paste this work on a green background.

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.

By children of 10-11 years old

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Christmas quilt

By Charmaine, 11 years old
You need:
  1. white drawing sheet from 20 by 20 cm
  2. ruler
  3. pencil
  4. finepointed black marker
  5. red or green marker
  6. black construction paper
  7. white marker
  8. glue
Children divide their sheet with ruler and pencil in 16 squares from 5 by 5 cm. In each square they draw a Christmas figure: tree, candy, snowman, skates, mitten, sock, candle etc. These figures have to be coloured , just like a checkerboard: alternately the background is red or the figure is red (or green). When ready, outline all figures, details and squares with a black finepointed marker. Paste the drawing on a black sheet and outline it with a white marker.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Cubist Christmas tree

You need:
  1. white drawing sheet A4 size
  2. ruler
  3. tempera paint
  4. brushes
  5. gold and silver marker
Children draw a simplified Christmas tree: a big triangle. Measure it from the middle line. After this, draw lines across the drawing sheet: from top to bottom, from left to right, from top or bottom to the sides etc.
The tree has to be painted with different green colours (mix them!). The background has to be painted with warm mixed colours. If dry, the lines in the tree have to be drawn with a silver marker, the lines from the background with a gold marker.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Stained glass in Mondriaan style

You need:
  1. black construction paper 20 by 20 cm
  2. tissue paper in green, red and white
  3. white pencil
  4. ruler
  5. cutting blade
  6. cutting mat
  7. glue
Discuss stained glass. How did the craftspeople of yesterday make stained glass? How do they make it today? Show some paintings of Mondriaan. What colours did he use? What forms do you see? Children are going to make a little square or round stained glas window out of paper. The style must be like Mondriaan, colours must be like Christmas. Give each student one sheet of black construction paper. First children must choose their form. When they choose a round form, they have to draw a circle with compasses. Cut this out. Draw another circle about 1,5 cm out of the edges; this is the frame. Children who chose the square, draw also a line about 1,5 out of the edges. This is the frame. Draw squares and/or rectangles in your window using ruler and a white pencil. The lines must be 1 cm wide. When ready, draw crosses in the rectangles that have to be cut out.
Cut away the forms with the crosses. Cut carefully and use an iron ruler. Use your black window as a template to draw the forms of squares and rectangles on the three different colours of tissuepaper. Cut the forms out of the tissue paper with 0,5 cm extra for the adhesive border. Paste the colours alternately on the backside of your window.