Followers

9/12/09

4Th Graders Begin Working on Their Portraits with Character

This week and the coming week all 4th graders will be observing and analyzing various portraits across time and trying to pull from these images a specific message or characteristic the artist was trying to portray.

In turn, each child searched for the one singular adjective that best describes them. Their home assignment is to list various "clues" they could add to their portrait that would make the viewer clearly identify a strong characteristic within the work.






9/10/09

A HUGE Thank You To All Families Who Have Brought donations

I am absolutely in love with my parents at Murch. I put out a list of items I need and the next day families are parading in the art room with bags and BAGS of goodies. Although I cannot thank you individually I wanted to send out a HUGE thank you to these families. Your support has a direct and positive impact on the art program. See full size image





On that note, here is my current list of trash to treasure items I need for the coming weeks...

* cardboard, any size

* meat trays

* Wooden pieces (for sculptures)

* flashlights that work

* tiles

* wooden boards

* yogurt cups

* old digital camera with charger (I am aiming to have enough for a class)

* old bedsheets (solid color)

* shiny paper of any kind

* old museum catalogs/postcards/calendars

My Conversation with 5th Graders About Watercolor


We have been exploring watercolors with 5th graders this week. Next week we will look at our explorations and pull some specific qualities we notice about this particular medium. What I noticed immediately was the level of calmness in the children while they painted and it occurred to me to ask them when was the last time they used watercolors. Most said years ago.
I encouraged them to get a watercolor set and added that it's a very portable medium. All they need is a sketchbook, a bottle of water and a watercolor set. They all seemed to like the idea. Their enthusiasm has made me shift my focus to painting and perhaps taking them on some outdoor painting opportunities once they gain more confidence in their skills.
See full size image





I encourage you as a family to try watercolors. I do it at home with my 2 and 4 year old and they can go on and on for over an hour. They learn a lot about evaporation, color mixing, and it's miles better than crayons or markers.
I would love to hear about your adventures in watercolor!!!

Oh! and if you are a watercolor artist I cannot wait to get you in my room to share your craft fast enough!!! PLEASE come visit my kids.

Items Needed for Art

I have a lot of parents e-mail me asking me to clarify what their child needs for art. So here is a visual list. As a 100% visual learner I love visual anything.
1. Your child needs a large t-shirt that will used as a smock. Usually they work better than the plastic ones. These smocks stay in the child's cubby/locker and they come to art already wearing them regardless of what we are doing.

2. Each child will need to bring in 2 containers of wipes. These wipes are used to clean hands after painting, gluing, printing. If we were to wash hands we'd waste 20 minutes of our 45 minutes. These same wipes then are used to clean the tables which are often also covered in paint. They do not need be disinfecting wipes.

sketchbook

















3. your child will also need a sketchbook or a booklet of paper with no lines. Preferably with pages thicker than a composition book. We might use watercolors in them so a regular notebook might not work. make sure you heavily label this for they will be needed each time in the art studio. The older kids can bring these back and forth from home for I will be giving assignments to complete at home. A old sketchbook with at least 40 empty and usable pages will be fine too.

Compass Designs


Next week in all 2nd grade classes we will learn about color "recipes". Each child will be like a chemist and create a unique new color by mixing their own combination of the primary colors and/or white.

This week we made a wonderful design of where these new colors will be painted.
We used a compass to make designs on an 8x11 card stock. Each child created a fairly simple yet beautiful design on their paper and then traced it with sharpie.

If your child has a sketchbook and a compass you could let them create their own designs at home. You could also explain how generally compasses are used with maps and mapping out routes. The compasses are sold at pharmacies, dollar stores and office supply stores if you do not have one.

Included is a video I found that extends this idea to other creative ideas. You might want to try this at home if you have your own compass. Remember though, what we made at school was a much simpler version of this. Nevertheless, if your child is very excited about the compass as a medium for art you might want to watch this and other videos to get them hooked! I am certainly hooked myself.

This could also lead to looking at Arabic art which has a lot of geometric patterns that interlock as well. To read about Islamic art and math go here.




Would love to hear about YOUR family's adventures with the compass......

1st Grade Pull Prints from Their Stamps


First I have to thank all parents who donated all the corks and made this project possible.

As you can see the corks were used as handles for our stamps. Each class pulled about 90-120 prints in 45 minutes. Each time they made a new print your child learned a little more about whether to apply more pressure, less pressure, more ink, or less ink to make their prints more successful. Next week we will be creating a class-wide project in which everyone makes a stamp and contribute to the whole.

Parents, please make sure your child has a sketchbook next week. They will be needing them to make initial sketches of their final designs.



To get a better idea of the process we used to make these prints you can view this video below: I did not make this video. I found it on Youtube and thought you might enjoy learning about the process.



If you do this at home...I would love to see what you make!!!!

9/8/09

3rd grade: We begin our cloth collage of DC landmarks

We are using the skills gained from the last 2 weeks to now start on our cloth collage of a DC landmark. Each child found large shapes in the buildings and cut out matching and proportionate shapes. Next week we will cut out details such as windows, doors and chimneys.


This project would not be possible without all the parent donations of cloth swatches.....The kids decided they will create a pillow from their final collages.