So its been a while...I just completed my last semester and my Masters Capstone project :) Mid semester I started working part time at Great Expectations Elementary School. I will be updating all of my lessons with photos so please stay tuned.
Peace, Love and Art
Mrs.Lieb
The Art Teacher Experience
Monday, April 30, 2012
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Become An Art Master
Maumee Valley Country Day School
Become An Art Master: 5-8 grade
During this week, students learned about a few famous artists and recreated art work in the inspiration of these artist. The first artist was Vincent Van Gogh. The students picked their favorite Van Gogh image and recreated it using oil pastel. Students had to measure a wide border around the center square which became a frame for their art work. Students also learned about the texture and brush marks that Van Gogh used in his oil paintings. These (See Below) were the best recreations by my class of 5-6th graders.
The Second Artist was Jackson Pollock. Students helped make a cardboard wall to act as a barrier to keep our splatter paint in the painting area. And wearing old painting clothes we got to work. Students experimented with different kinds of splatter and drip techniques. The end result was a poster size Splatter painting in the inspiration of Pollock. We even used some recycled brown paper and used the rest of the paint to create a group splatter-drip painting. This would lead into the next project...
For this project students created frames made out of colored paper, glue and pastel. They then measured and cut up the group splatter painting to fit inside their handmade frames.
Carefully measured and framed...These completed projects turned out great!
Here is a project from the "DaVinci Notebook day." Using the back side of an old cardboard jewelry box the students glued on colored tissue paper to add color and texture. Students then added a nature drawing that was drawn in their sketch books from our previous nature walk. We talked about DaVinci and his notebooks and how many artist keep a sketch book or journal to draw and write down ideas. These were nice little colored pencil drawings and were very easy to hang using the inside edge of the box!
This project was using the inspiration of Greek pottery. Students had to come up with a story and then draw/paint this story out on the clay pot. Around the top of the pot students had to create a pattern similar to the Greek geometric patterns. The second part of the project was to create the story characters in 3-D, using model magic. This family of Lions were the main characters for a great story...
Thursday, December 15, 2011
All About Scapes
Maumee Valley Country Day School
All About Scapes Week
During this week, students have learned about the differences between landscapes and cityscapes. The first day, students picked their favorite building or cityscpape of Toledo, Ohio and recreated it using either color pencil, markers, or crayons.
Here are a few of my students hard at work.
After going on a nature walk every day and drawing sketches using their outside portable drawing boards, students picked from their favorite sketch. They were then prompted to draw their sketch at a larger size and paint it with water color. Here are a few examples of landscapes from around the school:
Students also learned about the different types of landscapes throughout Ohio. With the use of Ohio Landscapes Books they could visually see the difference of trees, farmland, swampland, grassland, hills and rivers..etc...throughout Ohio. Some students said these images were very different from what they normally see each day.
Continuing with the idea of cityscapes, we talked about Frank Lloyd Wright and his unique style of buildings. For this project students created their own style of buildings. A heavy card stock was used for the background, then their buildings were drawn on with a pencil. Students then took a glue bottle and went over each pencil mark with a line of glue. After the glue had dried, students had a choice to color their buildings with oil pastel and regular dry/chalk pastel. (As a reminder this is a 2 day project because the glue needs to dry over night.)
Kinda looks like a Dr. Seuss town....
Thursday, November 17, 2011
OAEA
OAEA in Dayton Ohio was great! If you have never been to an Art Ed. conference you need to go. Very useful with lots of ideas. And hopefully some of you will see on here with later projects. Thank you to my new friends :)
Mrs. L
Mrs. L
Sunday, October 9, 2011
Comic Book and Cartoon Hero Art: Summer 2011
Maumee Valley Country Day School: Summer Time Program
Comic Book and Cartoon Hero Art: Grades 5-8
For this class I had 15 students, with 12 boys and 3 girls. Here are student examples of Comic Trading Cards. They had to create a comic book character and draw that character on one side of the card and facts and info on the other. I found plastic slips to protect their drawings. Shown: Powerhouse and Acid Hand.Here are the completed Comic Books. I showed them a comic book lay out and how we could easily create our own. They had to use the same character that they created for their Comic Trading Cards. A story was created with drawn images and written text. Through out the week this Comic Book was used as an extra time project.
The students created a 3-d version of their Comic Cartoon Hero using colored model magic. Keeping in mind that it had to be the same character from the previous projects.
Here is a student's Cartoon Self-Portrait. This was created with the inspiration of cartoon cells. Students traced over a photograph of themselves on a clear plastic/acrylic sheet then painted the back side with crayola tempera. Next they had to create a background. The students all seemed to enjoy this project, and thought it was "cool" that the completed project looked like them just a cartoon version.
Note:
This was my first week as a "real" teacher on my own. The students were great and each project went better then expected. But there are some things I will do differently next time...but that's how we learn as Teachers right??
Mrs. L
Saturday, October 8, 2011
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Famous Artist Quote
What moves men of genius, or rather what inspires their work, is not new ideas, but their obsession with the idea that what has already been said is still not enough.
Eugene Delacroix
Eugene Delacroix
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