This is the art blog for Fayston Elementary School, located in the Mad River Valley in Central Vermont. This blog is updated frequently to showcase the artwork of Fayston's students and celebrate all things creative!
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
Portraits inspired by Sandra Silberzweig
Sandra Silberzweig is a contemporary artist from Toronto. She has a condition called synesthesia, which is a crossing of the senses. This means that she may "hear" colors or "see" music.
Here is a poem she wrote called "When you are a synesthesia goddess ...... your day dreams are always in color"
I am a synesthesia goddess
I have no fear of color
It lives in my soul, dances in my heart
Spills out of my fingers flowing down a canvas
I can see your aura
Taste the color black
Feel the chill of the green wind
Smell blue butterflies
Hear the yellow rain
Life is never boring when inspiration is always around
Click here to read more about Sandra Silberzweig, the work she has done to share her experience with synesthesia and how she has turned this condition into a driving force for her creative work.
Silberzweig's paintings are bold, colorful and imaginative. She primarily paints stylized, patterned-filled portraits.
I worked with the third and fourth grade classes to create an assessment rubric for this lesson. We talked about what qualities artwork would need to get into the "Wowy-Zowy Zone." Students used this rubric to inspire revisions of their work and self-evaluate. Click here to view this rubric.
Third and fourth grade artists looked at examples of Silberzweig's artwork, then created portraits inspired by her unique style. We used chalk pastel and oil pastel and focused on choosing warm and cool color combinations and creating patterns.
Monday, December 19, 2016
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
Cardinal Collages inspired by Charley Harper
I've always loved Charley Harper's bright and bold images, particularly those of birds. When the cardinals arrive against the gray winter days of December, I find myself especially drawn to Harper's images of cardinals.
Third and fourth grade artists looked at Harper's work and identified the simple shapes he used to create his birds. We used colored paper to capture the cardinal in all four seasons.
Labels:
birds,
Cardinal,
collage,
Seasons,
Third and Fourth grades
Monday, November 28, 2016
Mexican Folk Art Amate Paintings
Amate paintings are a traditional art of the Mezcala region of Mexico. Amate refers to the type of paper the paintings are done on. It is made from processed tree bark that is boiled, sometimes dyed or bleached and pressed into paper. Amate paper was traditionally used to record data, pass along communication or for ritual purposes. Today it is used to create decorative art that the artists sell to support themselves and their families.
First and second graders watched this video about making Amate paper. We discussed reasons for making art and how an artist chooses the subject or his or her artwork. We planned Amate-inspired drawings featuring colorful birds, other animals, flowers and plants. We will paint them with brightly colored paints.
First and second graders watched this video about making Amate paper. We discussed reasons for making art and how an artist chooses the subject or his or her artwork. We planned Amate-inspired drawings featuring colorful birds, other animals, flowers and plants. We will paint them with brightly colored paints.
Labels:
Amate,
animals,
birds,
First and second grade,
flowers,
folk art,
Mexico,
paper making,
World Cultures
Wednesday, November 9, 2016
Kindergarten Transportation Collages
Kindergarten Artists listened to "The Transportation Song" (see below). Then we looked at several of our favorite books about trucks, cars, construction vehicles and more. These inspired our colorful vehicle collages.
Labels:
collage,
Kindergarten,
music,
reading connection,
transportation
Tuesday, November 8, 2016
Faux Leaves Stained Glass by Grade Three & Four
Third and fourth grade artists looked at several examples of leaf artwork, including Georgia O'Keeffe. We also examined Stained Glass Windows by Louis Comfort Tiffany. Then we went outside to collect fallen leaves to inspire our work. Artists traced their leaves on the paper to create a balanced composition. Then they traced their lines with black glue (glue+black tempera paint). When the glue dried (into a giant black puddle on my art room floor... oops!), they used warm and cool color groups to paint their leaves and backgrounds. We used liquid watercolors.
Stained Glass window by Louis C. Tiffany and Leaves by Georgia O'Keeffe.
This lesson was inspired by Crayola Lessons
Monday, October 31, 2016
Day of the Dead Sugar Skulls
Fifth and sixth grade artists learned about the Day of the Dead and the tradition of making intricately decorated Sugar Skulls. They used Sharpie Markers and colored pencil to create these unique Sugar Skulls.
Wednesday, October 12, 2016
Apple Art Inspired by Paul Cezanne's Still Life Paintings
We used yoga to calm our bodies as we pretended to be apple trees.
Then we used collage, printing and painting to explore making Apple Art.
Labels:
apples,
Cezanne,
collage,
fall,
First and second grade,
Kindergarten,
printing,
watercolor
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