After talking about VVG and his passion for
(This was great timing for our first day of this project--a few minutes were spent to introduce the project, kiddos glossed their coil pots, and then did this background portion.)
On the second day, students entered the art room to find some lovely (fake) sunflowers decorating their tables. These flowers served as inspiration for adding vases and flowers. Miss Caruso did a great demo showing how to twist and turn the brush to manipulate the paint into petals and leaves. Kiddos painted in this order:
1. Paint a vase and give it two values, VVG style:
2. Use a pencil to draw the brown centers of each flower you intend to paint:
3. Use the penciled centers as a guide to show where to paint the petals:
4. Once petals are done, go back and paint those centers (doing it in this order prevents a lot of "AHHH MY PETALS TURNED BROWN" panic attacks on the part of the 9-year-olds)
5. Go to town adding leaves, values, details, and the like!
6. Sit back and admire your work whilst telling your art teacher and student teacher how beautiful they look today amidst the field of sunflowers in the art room:
7. Clean up your mess, wash yo' hands, and tell your art teacher to stop using her iPhone to take pictures of your awesome artwork 'cause the lighting is all kinds of funky with this neon paint.
They're beautiful! Thanks for sharing the lesson! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for the shout-out! I'm always glad to know when my oddball hints may be of some help to someone. But wait, did you chop off all those white borders? Where did they go on the finished pieces?
ReplyDeleteThe sunflowers look great, by the way!
Oooo don't get mad! Yes, I cut them off this time. Most of my kids finished this as part of their last art class so we didn't have time to jazz up the borders at all. And since this was our first time using this method, many of them were quite messy and I felt better cutting them off. I have ideas on how to use them for the future!
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