- white drawing sheet A4 size
- masking tape
- scissors
- tempera paint
- stencil brushes
- bubble wrap
- sponge strips
Friday, June 24, 2011
Flowers behind fence
Saturday, June 18, 2011
Group work like Keith Haring
You need:
- drawing sheet A1 size
- pieces of cardboard 10 by 15 cm
- pencil
- scissors
- glue
- colour markers
- permanent black marker
Each student draws a figure on a piece of cardboard in the style of Keith Haring: no details, movement, a figure like in a comic. Cut the figures and trace them several times on the big sheet. Working together is required!
- Do not draw twice the same figure next to each other.
- Choose one colour per person and colour the areas with these five colours.

Monday, June 13, 2011
Connected shells
- white drawing sheet 20 by 20 cm
- colour markers
- fine black marker
- pencil
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Wavy weaving
You need:
- paper strips in two colours, 4 x about 50 cm
- black cardbaord
- scissors
- glue
- printed grid of 5 by 5 squares, each square is 4 by 4 cm
3. Paste the fold edges exactly along the lines of the squares. Use two different colours alternately. Paste the arcs from bottom to top and from left to right, alternately. Cut a piece of the strip if it's too long. You may paste small squares to the ends of the rows as a finishing touch.
Friday, May 13, 2011
MOMA
- drawing sheet A4 size
- colour pencils
- ruler
Students draw a square in the middle of their sheet and draw four lines from the corners to the middle, see schedule. These are the floor and ceiling lines. Draw two lines from both short sides to the middle. Between these two lines the paintings has to be drawn. Draw lines from the bottom to the middle for tiles or parquet. It's nice to draw artworks that students have made this schoolyear or to choose for artworks of famous painters.
Colour with colour pencils.
Saturday, May 7, 2011
Puzzle drawing
- white drawing sheet A4 size
- markers
- black construction paper
- glue
Monday, May 2, 2011
Painting while listening to classical music
- cd's with classical music
- cd-players
- drawing sheet A2 size
- brushes
- tempera paint
- jar with water
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Printed birds
- white drawing sheet A4 size
- two potatoes, middle and small size
- knife
- sauzer
- tempera paint
- piece of corrugated box cardboard
- paper towel
- fine black marker
- brush
- watercolour paint
Cut the small potato in half and stamp the faces of the birds.
Clean this half potato with a tissue and cut it in two. Stamp the wings.
Paint beaks, eyes and legs. Leave the work to dry. Paint the background with watercolour paint. Outline the birds with a fine black marker.
To make spring art work, you can add leaves by stamping them, cutting them out of green paper, using real dried leaves or .....use Paint shop pro, like I did!
Monday, April 25, 2011
Fantastic felines like Laurel Burch
You need:
- pink or purple constrution paper A3 size
- oilpastels
- tempera paint
- brushes
- gold and silver markers
- glitter
- glue
Laurel Burch (1945 – 2007) was an American artist, designer and businesswoman. As a 20-year-old single mother she found metal in junkyards to hammer into jewelry to support her two children, and went on to launch her business, now called Laurel Burch Artworks, in the late 1960s with the help of a small staff that worked out of her house. She began making paintings and was commissioned by restaurants, businesses and private collectors. Burch designed, among other things, beads, jewelry, paintings, T-shirts, scarves, coffee mugs and tote bags, but 90% of her designs derived from her original paintings.
Especially Burch's cats are recognizable. Few some of her paintings on the website of Laurel Burch and discuss the salient features: bright colours, bold pattersn, eyes and nose are drawn out of one line. use of silver and gold.
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Easter eggs with lines
You need:
- cardboard egg shape 10 cm high
- pencil
- white drawing sheet
- several colour materials, like markers, colour pencils, crayons, chalk pastel
- coloured paper 20 by 14 cm
- gekleurd papier 14 cm hoog, 20 cm breed
- glue
- scissors
- fine black marker
Students have to make four Easter eggs. Ouline the template with a pencil. Draw straight lines in the first egg, curved lines in the second one and zig-zag lines in the third one. The fourth egg may is made with lines of their own choice. Trace the lines with a fine black marker. Colour them with four different materials: colour pencils, markers, chalk pastel and crayons. Cut the eggs and paste them on a coloured sheet.
Made by students of grade 3
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Printed tulips
- cardboard of a box
- scissors
- block printing ink
- flat piece of glass
- linoleum roller
- white or coloured sheets A4 size
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Red white and blue - Like Jean Dubuffet
You need:
- drawing sheet A4 size
- pencil
- thick markers in red, blue and black
- fine markers in red, blue and black
Towards the end of the 1960s he turned increasingly to sculpture, producing works in polystyrene which he then painted with vinyl colour paint.
Look at artwork of Dubuffet, especially AllƩes et venues. Discuss the salient features: colours (mostly red, blue, white, black), recognizable and unrecognizable shapes, curved lines, hatched areas and the whole sheet is full.
| Doodling wavy lines |
Friday, April 8, 2011
Scenes from a fairy tale
- piece of linoleum of 15 by 15 cm
- drawing sheets A4 size
- lino knives
- block printing ink
- flat piece of glass
- linoleum roller
- lino press
- white paper A2 size
- scissors
- glue
I got the idea for this lesson from Artlessons from Belgium. This is a group assignment for four students. Every group of students chooses a fairytale that has to be represented in images. They discuss the most important parts and each students cuts one scene out of linoleum. After printing the scenes, they paste them in the right order to create a fairytale cartoon. Use letter stamps to print the name of the story above.
I chose to let all students print their part of the fairytale four times. The best print is for yourself. Each student gets one print of the other three group members, so every student has his own cartoon.
Saturday, April 2, 2011
Fairy tale comic
Hansel and Gretel
- white drawing sheet A5 size
- pencil
- markers or colour pencils
- fine black marker
Divide the sheet into four sections. Draw four scenes and use speech bubbles if you want to. Colour the drawings with markers or colour pencils. Outline them with a fine black marker. You can choose to colour the drawings completely, but also a black and white strip with a single accent colour is nice.
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Rapunzel
- drawing sheet A4 size
- fine black marker, waterproof
- watercolour paint
- brushes
- jar with water
- wool
- cutter
- cutting mat
- scissors
- magazine
- glue
In the tale, an enchantress separates Rapunzel from her parents and puts her away in a room at the top of a tower in a remote part of a forest. The tower has no door or stairs and only a window. The enchantress would climb Rapunzel's long braid of golden hair to visit her. The enchatress would call out to Rapunzel saying: "Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let down your hair, so that I may climb the golden stair". One day a prince hears Rapunzel's beautiful singing voice and wants to meet her. He secretly observes how the enchantress is able to visit Rapunzel in the tower. The prince climbs in the tower, meets Rapunzel and they fall in love. The wicked enchantress attempts to separate them, but eventually they reunite, and live happily ever after.
After telling the fairy tale, students start to make Rapunzel's braid of wool threads. Then they draw a tower with a top hatch, using a waterproof fine black marker. Colour it with waterpaint colour. Cut the sides of the hatch (teacher has to do this!!) and fold them. Cut a picture of a woman of girl out of a magazine and paste it on a piece of paper. Paste the braid on the head. Paste the piece of paper behind the hatch, looking carefully to get the woman's head in the middle of it and hanging the braid through the hatch.
Saturday, March 26, 2011
The princess and the pea
- coloured construction paper
- fabrics
- a pea
- glue
- scissors
- scraps of construction paper, including gold and silver
- markers and/or colour pencils
Made by students of grade 1
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Greek pottery
- brown paper bag or wrapping paper
- black markers (different sizes)
- coloured paper for background
- glue
- scissors
View images of Greek pottery. Discuss several forms:
amphora - jug with a handle on both sides so it could be easily lifted. Amphora's were used to store liquids and solids.
crater - mixing vessel for wine and water. The Greeks always mixed their wine with water and sometimes they added spices to change the flavour. kylix - bowl, flat or on an ornate base with two horizontal handles to pass the scale easily.
Discuss the different designs on the vases: animals, plants, people, flowers, triangles, spirals, mythical creatures etc.
The students fold a piece of brown wrapping paper in half and draw one half of a Greek vase of their choice against the fold. Cut the vase and draw figures and patterns on it using black sharpies. Paste the vase on a coloured sheet.
Made by students of grade 5
Saturday, March 19, 2011
Fairy tale caste
- white drawing sheet A4 size
- indian ink
- dip pen
- watercolour paint
- brushes
- jar with water
See some pictures of castles and talk about the several parts: battlements, high thick walls, drawbridge, towers, schietgaten, portcullis etc. Talk about the location of a castle: often a high point, so oversee the area. Show that many castles were surrounded by a moat and discuss why this was.
Students draw their castle directly with indian ink on ther sheet. Add details like shutters, torches or flags. Draw the background, the surrounding of the castle. Colour the drawing with watercolour paint. The combination of indian ink and watercolour paint will give a perfect aged feeling.
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Baby and blanket, like Gustav Klimt
Made by Debbie, 11 years old
You need:- white drawing sheet A4 size
- pencil
- colour markers
- chalk pastel
Gustav Klimt (Austria, 1862 – 1918) was born near Vienna. In 1876 Klimt was awarded a scholarship to the Vienna School of Arts and Crafts . His work consists of paintings of mostly women, but also wallpaintings, drawings and collages. Klimt is much praised for the use of gold in his paintings.
Show some artwork of Klimt, and especially the painting 'Baby'. Discuss the distinctive features in the work: different patterns in the blanket, many colours, the blanket is more important than the baby, wavy lines verschillende patronen in de deken, veel kleuren, de deken is belangrijker dan de baby, wavy lines to express the folds of the blanket.
Students draw a baby in its bed, covered by a patchwork blanket. The blanket has to be divided into sloping surfaces. All different patterns should be coloured with markers. Drawing little black stripes at the edges of the fabrics, will make the patchwork blanket look more real. Use chalk pastel for the a wallpaper behind the bed.
Saturday, March 5, 2011
Rainbow fish
Made by students of grade 3
You need:
- drawing sheet A5 size
- ruler
- pencil
- colour markers
The students put the sheet in the width and draw from top to bottom pencil lines 1 cm apart. Good to practice measure skills!
Draw a fish and a sea bottom line. Colour the fish with markers keeping the same sequence of colors. We chose the order of the colours as they were in the box. Fins, background and bottom should be coloured in the same order, but of course the colours here are staggered to those of the fish.











































