Masterpiece: The Banjo Lesson, 1893 by Henry Tanner

Similar documents
Mary Cassatt Impressionism

EMPHASIS STILL LIFE. Milito Art II

Masterpiece: The Cradle Artist: Berthe Morisot. Concept or Style: Impressionism Lesson: Pearlized Painting

Updated: 12/31/10 Page: 1 of 1. Bradley J Scherzer Cool & Warm Landscapes by Bradley J Scherzer. All rights reserved

Meet the Masters February Program

Art Glossary Studio Art Course

abstract art in which the artist changes the way something looks so that it doesn t look like the real object it represents.

2. A painting of fruit, flowers or insects is called. 3. Paintings made from millions of tiny coloured dots are typical of the style.

These lessons are very thorough. I like how each detail is explained, making art accessible to any level of artist (even me)!

Masterpiece: The Sunflower Quilting Bee at Arles, 1991 by Faith Ringgold

DEFINING THE FOCAL POINT

Moment of Beauty: William Rush and His Model. Wood carver William Rush was a subject of several paintings and studies made by

Plein Air Painting: Utah s Plein Air Painters

Learning Plan. My Story Portrait Inspired by the Art of Mary Cassatt. Schedule: , Grades K-5, one class period of approximately 60 min.

Art Masterpiece-Frieze of Dancers, 1895 by Edgar Degas

The Art and Life of William H. Johnson Brinille E. Ellis. Johannes Larsen Museum Kerteminde, Denmark September 26, 2014

DEEP SPACE 60-MINUTE ART SESSION. Impressionist WATERSCAPE

4 th Grade: March Lesson 5: Landscape Chalk Pastel

Art Masterpiece: The CIRCUS, by Georges Seurat

Creating your own photo shoot. 4 key elements Compose & shoot Due: Wednesday, November 8, 2017

Warm colors vs. Cool Colors: These are warm colors. These are cool colors. Quiet vs. Loud Colors Suggested Activity: Color and Emotion

Visual Art Grade 5 Term 1

Liberty Pines Academy Russell Sampson Rd. Saint Johns, Fl 32259

(Alden - My sons hand prints )

Target: Thinks critically. Criteria: Asks clarifying questions, uses evidence to question or explain creative choices, constructs meaning.

Meet the Masters February Program

visual literacy exploring visual literacy

Art Masterpiece: Blue Atmosphere, 1963 by Helen Frankenthaler

Year 8 Art Homework Booklet Term 1

Albert Handell compares painting to

Fraction Mobile 3 Sessions 90 minutes each

Year 7 Art Homework Booklet 1

Grade 2 Snowmen at Night. Value

Masterpiece: Poppies Artist: Georgia O Keeffe. Concept: Nature Lesson: Close-Up Flower Painting

Warren County Public Schools 1 st Grade Art

Edgar Degas ( ) Impressionist

5th Grade Art Scope and Sequence

Second Grade Art Print. Christina s World - by Andrew Wyeth

U nde rw ater Pho to

Painting and Drawing Portraits

Time of project: 2 weeks. Supplies: 12x18" white paper, pencil, visuals (glass container), flowers, oil pastels, cooking oil, and Q-tips

Content Skills Assessments Lessons

Shapes All Around Us Grade 3 Lesson 4 (Art Connections, Level 3, pgs )

Unit 5: Henri Matisse, Icarus

Lesson Overview. Value: lightness or darkness of color Texture: how an actual object feels or how a 2-demensional object appears to feel.

The Color Wheel. The color wheel shows relationships between the colors.

Art and Design knowledge organiser. Year 7

DANIEL ORTEGA PHOTO DESIGN

Grade 5 Portraits of Emotions. Color

Horace A picture is worth a thousand words. Napoleon Bonaparte A work of art is the unique result of a unique

Junior Drawing Artist

Painting 2 Unit Plan


4 HUMAN FIGURE. Practical Guidelines (Secondary Level) Human Figure. Notes

Joy and suffering. Light and shade. Blood and sand.

Art Curriculum Overview More than one skill may be covered under one learning objective- Addressed in the success criteria

Step 1 - Beginning Lesson

Expressionism with Kandinsky s Circles

Expand on and use appropriate art vocabulary.

Step 1 - Introducing the Edgar Degas Slideshow Guide

surround us. We are breaking them into the components that create beautiful images.

CONTENTS. FORGET THE RULES Forget: The Rule of Thirds Forget: Focus Forget: Exposure Forget: Framing Forget: Lighting Forget: Active Space

Vocabulary Glossary Visual Arts K-4

III. Recommended Instructional Time: Two (2) 40 minute sessions

Cut out magazine body parts, animals, sports, flowers, games, any item to help the students create their collage.

The Elements of Art line color value texture shape form space

Acrylic Painting Techniques: How To Master The Medium Of Our Age PDF

Curriculum Map for Visual Arts. St. Cyril School Teacher: Quinta Peterson

the COMPOSITION SQUASH on black shine on some LIGHT APPLE and oil light on a PUMPKIN COLORFUL fruit FILM transfer OUTLINE your art

Name Tutor Group. Year 8. Extra Challenge PROJECT WORK

Instruction Manual for Historian

Liberty Pines Academy Russell Sampson Rd. Saint Johns, Fl 32259

Course Overview: VISUAL ART Project Specialist: Taintor Davis Child

Step 1 - Introducing the Rembrandt van Rijn Slideshow Guide

Step 1 - Introducing the Georgia O Keeffe Slideshow Guide

Summer Art Homework Assignment (MANDATORY) Tenth Grade (Going into 11 th Grade) INSTRUCTIONS

DEEP SPACE 40-MINUTES PA U L K L E E. DEEP SPACE SPARKLE/PATTY PALMER All Rights Reserved.

Hue, Value, and Intensity are are the three main characteristics of COLOR. Hue: Refers to the name of the color, such as Red.

With every painting I find myself completely. absorbed in my work. I love the challenge. and excitement of starting a new piece,

ART LESSONS IN THE CLASSROOM SIXTH GRADE LESSON 2

Art Room Update! West Salem Elementary Ms. Vesperman and Mrs. Hemker Issue: 1

"Beasts of the Sea" Lesson: Henri Matisse Created by Art in Action

PASTELS DEMONSTRATION

Review Questions for Design Final Exam Correct answers are highlighted in RED

What influences colour and what does colour influence?

Objectives: Students will learn to mix primary and secondary colors Students will create a landscape with a variety of surprising colors

Liberty Pines Academy Russell Sampson Rd. Saint Johns, Fl 32259

Lines Grade 1 Lesson 1 (Art Connections, Level 1, pgs A) Big Idea Lines can have different qualities thick, thin, rough, smooth, solid, broken.

Art Masterpiece: Persistence of Memory, 1931 by Salvador Dali

Time Required: Three 45-minute class periods DAY ONE

Wednesday October 19, 2016

Studio Art Classes & Workshops Fall 2010

CURRICULUM MAPPING. Subject: Art Grade: Fifth Grade. I. Unit - Drawing. A. Content/Essential Questions

AP Studio Art 2D and Drawing Summer Assignments

Make a charcoal self portrait using your black and white photograph

Art Through the Year. Lesson 8 : Perspective & Portraiture with Pastels. with Sharon Jeffus

CLAY BLACKMORE S POSING GUIDE

Mix Rich Blacks. with Acrylic Paint. Choose Color Combinations. Mix your own luscious black tones to create more depth and interest in your painting

2 Back then, did you ever practice something specifically, until you got good at it (or better)?

Grade 7 - Visual Arts Term 4. Life Drawing

Transcription:

Masterpiece: The Banjo Lesson, 1893 by Henry Tanner Keywords: Grade: Month: Activity: Mood, Light and Composition, Portrait 3 rd Grade February Family Portraits Meet the Artist: Henry Ossawa Tanner was born in 1859 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. His father was a minister in the Methodist Church. He was an African American artist best known for his paintings of religious subjects, genre (everyday) scenes and portraits and was the first African American artist to gain international acclaim. At the age of 21, Tanner enrolled at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia at a time when new methods of drawing the human figure were developing such as using live models, open discussion of the male and female anatomy and dissections of cadavers to understand the human body. Although Tanner was extremely successful at the Academy and as an artist, he was not fully accepted in the art world due to racism strong Philadelphia at the time. In late 1891, Tanner left America for France and would spend the rest of his life there. He died in Paris in 1937. On one of his short trips home, he painted his most famous work, The Banjo Lesson which shows an elderly black man teaching what is assumed to be his grandson to play the banjo. Often regarded as a realist painter, Tanner skillfully portrays the people as real and not caricatures, setting the portrait apart from other images of black musicians by other artists of the time. Additionally he portrays a specific moment of human interaction that focuses on the sense of real contact, cooperation and concentration. Another painting, Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City (c.1885) is the first painting by an African American artist to enter the permanent collection of the White House.

KEY WORDS Composition is the placement, organization or arrangement of the visual elements or feature in a work of art that is distinct from the subject. See Below for Demonstration. Portrait before cameras were used to take a family portrait, a family or individual would usually pay an artist to paint their portrait in a pleasant setting like outdoors or in a beautiful room. This meant standing perfectly still for a number of hours while the painter first sketched the likeness of each individual and then finished the portrait with paint or pastel. Have the students try to keep perfectly still for a minute to see if they can do it. Mood is the general atmosphere, or state of mind and feelings, that a work of art generates. For example, the mood of a painting could be disturbing or tranquil, dark or energetic. Demonstration on Composition to help the students really see the idea of how an artist COMPOSES a painting try taking 5 children to the front of the class and have one or two student(s) stand directly in the front and remainder stand in the back surrounding the front student(s). Have the background students pose in various positions. (i.e. kneeling, arms or knees up in air, facing opposite direction) to give a frame to the front student(s). Talk about how we can still see all 5 students, but the front student(s) is/are the most dominant and while the other students can still be seen, they are secondary to the overall picture and are organized to add interest or composition. Possible Questions: Who are the people in this painting? How do you think they feel about each other? Are they poor or wealthy? What are the colors that you see? Are they mostly cool colors or warm? Where is the light coming from? (The figures are illuminated by two separate and varying light sources; a natural white/blue glow from an outside window is on the left while the warm light from a fireplace is apparent on the right.) How does this painting make you feel?

Activity: Family Portraits Materials needed: 1. 9 x 12 White construction paper 2. Oil Pastels 3. Paper towels to wipe fingers after smudging Process: 1. Have the student take a moment to imagine their family members doing things they like to do. They could be doing things by themselves or with the rest of the family. They could be within an indoor or outdoor setting and should include the props. Remind them about COMPOSITION or placement of the people and their respective props. Ask the student to think about what time of the day the family is doing their favorite thing and where the LIGHT is coming from. (I.e. the sun sunrise or sunset, a fireplace, flashlight, etc.). How are they feeling about each other.what is the overall mood of the portrait? 2. Give each student a piece of construction paper and box of oil pastels. 3. Ask the student to draw a portrait of their family doing the event they imagined. As they draw, reiterate the concepts of COMPOSITION and LIGHT. Have them fill the entire paper with their family. Also, the colors used do not have to be rational. If the child imagines a yellow or purple face at sunset it doesn t matter! 4. They should sign their art in lower right corner Note about Oil Pastels: Oil pastels are not crayons. The colors can be blended and smoothed using a fingertip. Heavier coverage and blending will create unique shadows, highlights and tones. Encourage students to experiment with blending: use two solid colors next to each other and use their finger to smudge the line between the colors.

Photograph of Henry Ossawa Tanner and Other Works (1907) Sand Dunes at Sunset, Atlantic City (c. 1885) From the permanent collection of the White House

1898 Gateway, Tangier 1912