Showing posts with label oil pastels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil pastels. Show all posts
Friday, April 26, 2019
Big & Bold Self-Portraits by Ks and 1s
For the past two weeks the kinders and first graders have been working on their big and beautiful self-portraits using chalk and/or oil pastels. These can be very messy materials but the children have persisted - despite fingerprints, smudges, and pink, chalky shirtsleeves.
Monday, October 24, 2016
Sloths + Lambies = Too Much Cuteness
Mrs Alma kept asking me if I would do "sloths" with the lambies. Once those snakes were done she absolutely insisted - she's got a thing for sloths! I do too, they really are so adorable.
Thursday, October 13, 2016
Lambs Love Snakes?!
Who knew that the lambies would love to decorate snakes? Not me! I wanted to add to our rainforest themed mural, the current state of which is this: (which by the way really brightens up that brick wall!)
Sunday, August 16, 2015
Floral Still Lifes a la Van Gogh
This project was my favorite from the past school year! We looked at a ton of Van Gogh's flower still lifes. The students in each grade level were directed to deconstruct the images to figure out what techniques Van Gogh used to make the vases with flowers looked like they occupy a real space. They determined the following:
1. The vases had an oval for the opening, and an arc that has the same shape for the bottom.
2. The line that defines the back of the table is somewhere between the top and the bottom of the vase.
3. The stems of the flowers cross through the oval and stop at the bottom to make the flowers appear to be sitting inside of the vase.
Next, the students chose a sheet of colored construction paper, 12 x 18, and started to draw out their still life using oil pastels.
The next meeting I showed them how to create volume using white and black oil pastels blended with the color they used for the vase. These are the stunning results:
1. The vases had an oval for the opening, and an arc that has the same shape for the bottom.
2. The line that defines the back of the table is somewhere between the top and the bottom of the vase.
3. The stems of the flowers cross through the oval and stop at the bottom to make the flowers appear to be sitting inside of the vase.
Next, the students chose a sheet of colored construction paper, 12 x 18, and started to draw out their still life using oil pastels.
The next meeting I showed them how to create volume using white and black oil pastels blended with the color they used for the vase. These are the stunning results:
Monday, February 2, 2015
Modigliani Inspired Self Portraits
My middle school students worked hard on their oral presentations right before finals, so I wanted to give them art project that was engaging and fun, but also not "super challenge" as my 5-year-old would say. We looked at portraits by Modigliani and found that his style had particular traits: necks are elongated, faces are oval, eyes are almond-shaped, and noses are sometimes twisted. We used Photo Booth on my Mac to take a picture of each student which I then printed out in black and white. Students used these pictures for reference and crossed them with Modigliani's style for their final projects. They had a great time using oil pastel and exaggerating their features!
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| Aram |
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
Directed Drawing Turkeys!
I really never do directed drawing lessons, but we were done with our unit and I didn't want to start anything new before the thanksgiving holiday week, so I looked up some turkey drawing lessons and found this one to do with my first graders. They drew directly with Sharpies so that they couldn't erase or have to retrace their lines then used oil pastels to color them in. They loved it and their drawings came out so great! Thanks to Art Projects for Kids for posting!
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Kandinsky One-offs...
So we had a little extra time in several of my elementary school classes. I wanted them to do something still related to Kandinsky, since that's who we had been studying, so I showed them his Color Study Squares: Concentric Circles:
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Van Gogh's Starry Night
Our first elementary art project of the year was inspired by Van Gogh's Starry Night painting:
This is one of my all time favorite works of art, even if it is "overplayed".
This is one of my all time favorite works of art, even if it is "overplayed".
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