Thursday, September 22, 2011

Some more 2nd grade Pigasso and Mootisse drawings















Carolyn J. Braden
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Two sides to every story by Anonymous

Since the fourth graders are about to create their own Picasso inspired portraits, I thought I'd try out one too. I love the website www.picassohead.com. Go there and try to make your own Picasso-like creation!

Two sides to every story by Anonymous: Picassohead

Thursday, September 8, 2011

First Grade Rainbow Fish: Coloring!

These are looking fantastic! Students are using primary, secondary, warm or cool colors for their fish.














Carolyn J. Braden
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Kindergarten Shape Mosaics

Almost finished! We are learning about shades, tints, shapes and more!















Carolyn J. Braden
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Upcoming Projects: Fall 2011

Currently all my students are working diligently on projects that will soon be finished. Here's what each grade level is working on:

4th and 5th Grade:
PTA Reflections Contest. The theme this year is "Diversity means....." Students in these grades are truly making their ideas of what diversity means to them translate into picture form amazingly. I will be picking some student work to represent our school in the PTA Reflections Contest. Judging of the entries takes place in October.

3rd Grade: 
Georgia O'Keeffe Beautiful Flowers. I do a guided drawing of an O'Keeffe flower and students have the choice of creating an organic/realistic or a geometric/abstract flower. If you see your student drawing a flower, this is where they got the idea. Some students told me they have been drawing the flower on their own all week. That is so wonderful to hear!

2nd Grade:
When Pigasso Met Mootisse is a book we read in order to understand abstract and realistic portraits. Students are drawing their choice of either Pigasso in abstract style or Mootisse in realistic style. Students are also learning about the friendship between Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse, color groups, shape and line types, background, foreground, middle ground and so much more!

1st Grade:
The Rainbow Fish. By reading this book, students learned the concept of sharing and making friends. We are learning to make our own fish friends through a guided drawing. The fish are looking truly beautiful!

Kindergarten:
Students are creating shape mosaics. We are learning how to collage, glue and trace. We are also learning about the vocabulary terms negative space, overlap, outline, tint, shade, dark, light, shape and line.

Next Steps: Upcoming Projects
Like a student, I often get bored if I am not challenged. While it takes a little extra time and work to develop new projects to try with students, sometimes we all need a good change. I recently researched some brand new ideas to add to my portfolio of projects I want to try with my students.

NEW*****
5th Grade: Leapin' Lizards! Chalk Pastel Drawings. I plan to relate the ideas of patterns and shapes in African art to patterns on snake and lizard skins. Students will learn to draw a large lizard and design geometric patterns for the skin. They will learn all about chalk pastel techniques and how to use the color groups to enhance their pattern design. (Idea adapted from www.deepspacesparkle.com)

4th Grade: Pablo Picasso Crazy Self-Portraits. While some students know how to draw their face in realistic style, many aren't aware that they can add interest by mixing it up a bit. Students will use many lines, shapes and patterns to create a crazy mixed-up, abstract self-portrait. Pablo Picasso looked to African art for inspiration and we will do the same. (Idea adapted from a 7th grade unit I did when I taught middle school).

Kindergarten: Bright Lights, Big City. Students will look to the ideas of Vincent VanGogh to create a water color curvy, swirly sky. Then students will create a dark cityscape with lit windows in the foreground of their paintings. They will collage it all together for a spectacular skyline. (Idea adapted from www.deepspacesparkle.com).

Oldies But Goodies
These are projects I've done in the past, but they have a beautiful result so I thought I'd keep them going.

1st Grade: 
African Magical Masks. Students will draw one half of an African style mask that contains geometric shapes and many line types. Students will say a magic spell to have their mask jump from one side of the paper to the other in order to make it symmetrical.

2nd Grade:
Fish and Butterfly Weavings. Students will learn the concept of how colonial artists had to make many things by hand due to not having stores all around as we do today. Students will create paper weavings and turn them into beautiful butterflies or fish.


3rd Grade: 
Rainforest Mixed Media. Students will create a textured background by painting with watercolor tissue paper. The background will serve as a scene for their textured trees and creepy crawly critters. They will learn how important the rainforests are to the world and how African patterns show up in many rainforest creatures skin.