You need:
- grey construction paper A4 size
- black shiny paper
- white wallpaper
- glue
- white tempera
- q-tips
- leftovers of coloured paper
- fleece fabric
A site with school-tested lessons for the Arts.
You need:
Wrapping like Christo
Tell the students some days before the lesson, 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
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.