Wednesday, May 10, 2017
Weaving
Fifth grade students created these weavings on cardboard looms. They strung on the warp strings, and then used both tabby weave and checkerboard weave techniques to create their weavings. Some students even embellished their weavings with beads.

Romare Bearden Inspired Artwork
Third Grade students
looked at artwork by Romare Bearden. They discovered that he created collages
from cut up photos, paintings and other papers. He included people and places
that were important to him. They found that he loved music and grew up during
the Harlem Renaissance, so instruments are often featured in his artwork. Third
graders picked an instrument of their choice, and drew just a portion of it,
emphasizing a part of the instrument that they found interesting. They colored
their instrument with oil pastels and created a piano border with marker.
Surrealist Inspired Paintings
Fifth graders studied the art of the surrealists, especially Salvador Dali. Students watched a video clip called "Get Surreal! With Salvador Dali" to help them understand surrealism. Students used surrealist methods to come up with subject matter to create surrealist artwork. Four methods they could use are transformation, dislocation, metamorphosis and juxtaposition.
Cave Art
First grade students learned about some of the first artwork ever made;
cave paintings! When students came to art, the room had transformed into a
cave. The tables were turned on their sides, with brown paper taped to them.
Then students took a virtual tour of the cave at Lascaux ,
looked at photos of the cave paintings, and read the book, "The Cave
Painter of Lascaux" by Roberta Angeletti. Students drew their own
versions of the cave paintings and then crumpled their brown papers to make
their paper look like the cave wall.
Rotational Printmaking
Cropped Animal Drawings
2nd
Grade students used viewfinders to zoom in closely to a photograph of an
animal. They saw a demonstration of using photo-editing software to see how to
crop a photo. They learned that sometimes artists crop a photo or artwork to
show emphasis (or what the artist thinks is the most important part of the
artwork).
Los estudiantes de segundo grado usaron visores para
enfocar de cerca una fotografía de un animal. Ellos vieron una demostración del
uso de un programa para editar fotografías digitales y vieron como recortar una
foto. Aprendieron que algunas veces los artistas recortan una fotografía o una
obra de arte para hacer énfasis (o lo que el artista piense que es la parte más
importante de la obra de arte).
Los estudiantes recortaron una foto del animal que
escogieron y luego dibujaron lo que estaba en el visor, pero muy grande. Luego
escribieron pistas para ayudar a las personas a adivinar cual animal enfocaron
de cerca.
Needle Felting
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