Grade 1/2 Monster Hands

Tracing a Hand Can Make a Monster

The grade 1/2’s are a big class, full of enthusiasm and energy. The idea that they could draw their own creatures/monsters using the outline of their hand as a starting point caused more than a few faces to light up with ideas.  I demonstrated how the hand could be in different positions to make the monster and suggested that they add details from there.

This was a simple and fun project using pencil crayon; thanks to Briargrove Elementary Art Page for this idea!  I think many of them are simply … wonderful.

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Grade 3/4: Line Drawings go 3D!

Fall 2010 / Manipulated Line Drawings

Session 1:   We talked about lines and doodles and graffiti and patterns … and then we got to work!  The students started with covering their large piece of white paper with swirling lines, done while standing to allow arm movement, and with Sharpie markers so they could not fuss over them by erasing.

With some examples of lines and doodles on the board and their own shared imaginations, they began filling in the resulting sections with doodles, still keeping to the black Sharpie.  I directed them to keep some area white, to be left that way or to be coloured in single blocks of  bright colour.  They really enjoyed the freedom of these choices,  and we encouraged some of them to go further than they would have by filling in and varying their doodles.

Session 2:  I came back to them with their drawings laminated, and a smaller piece of black bristol board.  They were curious as to what was next, and happy to see their work so bright and shiny …  Then I told them to cut into their drawings, following along the lines already made, turning it to do so all the way around.  They were a little horrified that they would be cutting up their own drawings, until they learned that they had to keep it as one piece, rather like an orange peel that remains a single strand – cutting in toward the center, but never all the way through.

The next step was to mount the cut drawing on the black board using a stapler, and bunching up some sections and tucking others under,  intersecting and winding on themselves.  There was an audible “Aaaah!” when we got to that part.  Finally, they had to name their piece and write a tag for it to hang in the hallway gallery.  You can tell by the titles (one boy named his “The Mona Lisa”) how highly they thought of their work.  A favourite, this one!

Thanks to the Incredible Art Department.  Check it out and more, at www.incredibleart.org

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Grade 3/4 Ted Harrison Project

Fall 2010 / In the Style of Ted Harrison

I showed the students some examples of Ted Harrison’s work,  the way he divides the areas and shapes in his paintings, simplifying elements.  We then went onto a discussion about perspective and relative size according to distance:  foreground, middle ground, and background.

We set the project as a Canadian winter scene, and the kids enjoyed coming up with their own ideas about what that might look like.  There was some frustration in the process, as some students tried for finer detail than the crayons and oil pastels would allow.  The skies were rendered in cut paper to contrast the other materials.

This project was very popular with the class – the teacher even had smaller colour copies made onto cardstock, and the class sold packages of the cards at Christmas as a fundraiser!

 

 

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Grade 2/3 Portraits

Student Portraits

Using cardboard, not brushes

In conjunction with some self-reflective writing they were doing at the time, I had the grade 2/3’s do ‘head shot’ portraits of a partner in class.  I started things off by demonstrating with a portrait of their teacher, Mrs. Pyle (making observances of her features as I went – and a few jokes shared between us).

Instead of brushes as tools, we gave them pieces of cardboard, and directed them to use the edges; applying the black paint by stamping rather than dragging the cardboard pieces across the page.  They could bend the cardboard, or cut it into different sizes.

I suggested that they keep more areas of the page white because there would be a part two that I would tell them about later.  After the black dried with the able use of the hair dryer in one delighted student’s hands, I gave them choice of 2 fluorescent finger paints and access to several stamp letter sets.

They were to stamp 2 things: the person’s name they were drawing and one word to describe them.  The words could be stamped in sequence, or scattered about the page to make the reading of it more mysterious.

The results are big and graphic, and (sometimes) rather a mix of Tim Burton’s Christmas and Edgar Allen Poe.  Neither reference was given to the class – a little too dark for them, I think.

The kids enjoyed the process, and I loved the ways they tackled this one!  (One class, double period)  The idea came from one of the blogs I visited – when I find it again, I’ll give credit.

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Welcome to ArtHereandThere.com

Here is a showcase for children’s art in Niagara, Ontario.

This website has been created to give a place for parents, students, and others to take a look at what has been happening in some of the Elementary Art classes with Mrs. Godwin.  At this point, that includes four schools in the Niagara region, though mostly at Parliament Oak in Niagara-on-the-Lake.

I invite you to make comments and make this an interactive place for creativity to grow – we can learn from each other!   Ideas, experiences and reflections are welcome.

Be sure to visit the projects section to see some of the work the students have created in the past, and watch for steady updates throughout the year.  I have enjoyed working as a volunteer parent with many students over the past 4 years  – and I am looking forward to what we come up with next!  Many thanks to all those great blogs that I visit late at night, which give me many of the ideas I bring forth to do with the classes in our area.  I will try to give credit to them specifically when I post … then you can find them, too.  It all works toward making art and creativity happen in Niagara.

Not to mention all the stuff  I drag in to do it with.

 

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