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I. Title: Fall Leaves Change Colors II. Objectives: The students will Create and share personal works of art with others. (VA.K.C.1.1) Explore art processes and media to produce artworks. (VA.K.S.1.1) Practice skills to develop craftsmanship. (VA.K.S.3.2) Experiment with art media for personal satisfaction and perceptual awareness. (VA.K.F.1.1) III. Recommended Instructional Time: Three (3) 40 minute sessions IV. Vocabulary: blending, colors, primary colors: red, blue and yellow. V. Curricular Connections: English Language Arts SL.K.3 Ask and answer questions in order to seek help, get information, or clarify something that is not understood. SL.K.5 Add drawings or other visual displays to descriptions as desired to provide additional detail. Mathematics K.G.A.1 Describe objects in the environment using names of shapes, and describe the relative positions of these objects using terms such as above, below, beside, in front of, behind, and next to. VI. Key Artists: Georgia O Keefe VII. Materials/Set-Up: Session I: 9 x 12 white drawing paper (3) per student; liquid tempera or acrylic paint; red, yellow and blue paint brushes; palettes or paper plates for mixing the paint, water dishes; paper towels; newspapers, artwork of Georgia O Keefe, brown paper bags, and fall leaves. (NOTE: Print visuals in color and as large as possible or print several copies for the students to view up close. Explain to the students that these are reproductions and not the original work of art. Green Option: Project images on an LCD projector). Session II: Artwork of Georgia O Keefe, fall leaves visual, pencils or crayons, scissors. Session III: 1

Georgia O Keefe painting of a tree, student made colorful leaves, brown paper bags or craft butcher paper, glue. VIII. Lesson Procedures Teacher will introduce vocabulary and display visuals of Georgia O Keeffe s artwork. Session I: 1. The teacher will show the class a picture of fall leaves and discuss how leaves change colors and why they change colors. 2. The teacher will show the class the artwork of Georgia O Keefe and then, ask the students to compare the colors in all three of the leaf pictures. 3. The teacher will define primary colors; red, blue and yellow. The teacher will explain how these colors can be mixed to make other colors. 4. The teacher will explain that primary colors cannot be made by mixing other colors. They are the first colors. 5. The teacher will have students experiment on a paper mixing primary colors to make new colors. NOTE: Ask students to write their names on all three papers and paint as much of the paper as possible. 6. The teacher will direct students to mix yellow and red to make orange. Start with the yellow paint (the lighter of the two colors) and add red. Try adding more red, what happens? How many different oranges can you make? 7. The teacher will give each student a new piece of paper. Mix yellow and blue. Start with yellow (the lighter of the two colors) and add blue. Add more blue, what happens? How many different greens can you make? 8. The teacher will give each student a new piece of paper. Mix red and blue. Start with red (the lighter of the two colors) and add blue. Add more blue, what happens? How many different violets or purples can you make? 9. Students will set their papers to dry. Session II: 1. The teacher will review colors. 2. The teacher will show the artwork of Georgia O Keefe and ask students to look at and identify the shape of various leaves. 3. The teacher will pass back dried painted papers. 4. The students will draw large organic leaf shapes on the back of the painted papers. NOTE: 3-4 leaves per page. 5. The students will cut out colorful leaves from the dried papers. Session III: 2

1. The teacher will show the tree painting by Georgia O Keefe and ask students to look at the shape of the tree and the branches. 2. The students will cut and crunch brown paper bags to create one large tree trunk and branches. 3. Students can add their colorful leaves to the tree trunk created from paper bags. Each student should cut at least twelve (12) leaves from the painted papers. NOTE: This lesson can be taught as one large classroom tree or individual tree by each student. IX. Assessment: Final Product-Tree X. Resources: Color Artists use colors to make their artwork look interesting. The primary colors are red, yellow, and blue. They are very special because no other colors can be mixed to make them. These colors create the foundation of the color wheel. Blending Artists blend in artwork, to merge colors applied to a surface. To blend they can use a brush, crayon, colored pencil, or other medium. This is sometimes called feathering. Georgia O Keefe Georgia O'Keeffe is known for her brilliantly colored paintings with confident shapes and simple patterns. She painted a great many floral paintings which were large pieces with the flower exaggerated and enlarged to completely fill the canvas, then stylized to their most essential forms. She is also known for her Southwest paintings which include adobe buildings, desert mountain panoramas or floating cow skulls against rich blue skies. The emphasis on the simplest aspects of the shapes created a surrealistic dynamic that is captivating. O'Keeffe was born on November 15, 1887 in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin. She knew from a young age that she would be an artist when she grew up. She studied first at the Art Institute of Chicago. http://www.biography.com/articles/georgia-o%27keeffe-9427684 3

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