Story Writing & Modeling Clay Figures

Similar documents
Art of Ancient Times, Studio 1 5

Illustrated Art Lessons

Illustrated Art Lessons

Illustrated Art Lessons

COLORED PENCIL WITH MIXED MEDIA with Sarah Becktel

Mon 1/13/14 AB1 & AB5 Painting II

TEMPLATE (FORM) PROCEDURE:

Makes Sense SCIENCE GRADE LEVEL KINDERGARTEN FIRST MATERIALS

Visual Self-Portraits in the Style of Jaune Quick-to-See Smith

Monster Marionette ART GRADE LEVEL FOURTH FIFTH MATERIALS

SAMSON IN THE SNOW. by Philip C. Stead Ages 4 8

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

Appropriation: Haystacks

Egyptian Jewelry. Goal (Terminal Objective): Students will be able to create jewelry in the style of the ancient Egyptians and learn about their art.

The Polish Art of Pisanki

Jewelry Making Techniques

Dr. Seuss Printable Activities

CUBIST NAME DESIGNS. Materials: Paper, pencils, markers, rulers, and examples of patterns!

Pueblos. Teacher-created example

Kindergarten Supply List

Treasures First Grade Art Integrated Projects Theme 2 Our Families, Our Neighbors

PRE-K Standards Mobile Lab School Creative Thinking and Creative Arts Bus Workshop

Snowman Gift Box Tower Designed By: Amanda Corbet December 2011

GIMP (GNU Image Manipulation Program) MANUAL

Lesson: Beautiful Fallen Leaves Approximate Time Frame: 3 Periods Essential Questions Enduring Understandings

THE CONNECTION SCHOOL SCHOOL SUPPLY LIST PAGE 1

Year at a Glance Pacing Guide Art- Grade Kindergarten

Welcome to our Wee Work section that will provide you and your child. with a learning activity that will engage their senses and emerging

Transfer an Image to Drawing Paper

North Hudson Elementary School Kindergarten Supply List Please do not label items

Snowy Winter Landscape

3D Discovery First Grade Integrated Visit

Painting Techniques: Ways of Painting

SCHOOL SUPPLY LIST SPRINGVILLE K 8 *Individual classrooms may have additional wish list items that are not shown below*

Learn How to Draw. Animals. Created exclusively for Craftsy by Antonella Avogadro

ABBLE K-2. North Ridge Elementary School Supply List. 1 Composition book primary Journal draw top lines bottom

6th Grade Art. Access the SAS content at: Unit: Color and Design Duration: 15 Sessions. Suggested Activities. Instructional Materials

2 nd Grade Melting Popsicles


Kindergarten Supply/Wish List School Year. While not mandatory, these items are highly recommended

Backpacks: Students may carry any style backpack (no character backpacks please).

Costume Rendering Tips and Tricks By: Billy Wilburn South Dakota State University

A Colorful World Illustrated Art Lessons

Art Progression of Skills Key Stage 1

Curve Fur Around Canine Forms

REALISTIC DRAWING WITH CHARCOAL with Kirsty Partridge

Successful Art Lessons

ELEMENTARY SUPPLY LIST

SA Additional Projects

EASY WATERCOLOR TECHNIQUES CFE 3235V

Millefiori Made Easy

COLORED PENCIL WITH MIXED MEDIA with Sarah Becktel

Shapes and Spaces at the Circus

Gradations. Blend and Burnish. Shade and Burnish a Vertical Gradation

ART PRINCIPLES: Pattern Rhythm/movement x Proportion/Scale Balance Unity Emphasis

Unit: Handbuilding Techniques Lesson: Coil Grade Level: High School. Introduction: Clay has been used for many things throughout human history:

Hubble Space Telescope Paper Model Directions Downloads, patterns, and other information at:

Kindergarten Supply List - Bluffdale Kindergarten Wish List

Silver Lake Elementary School Kindergarten

Your texture pattern may be slightly different, but should now resemble the sample shown here to the right.

7th Grade Art. Access the SAS content at: Unit: Color and Design Duration: 15 Sessions. Suggested Activities

How to Draw Bob the Minion

JOHN WETTEN ELEMENTARY SUPPLY LIST

Football Silhouettes Project Sheet 1 of 2: Classic Beads

PRAIRIE VIEW ELEMENTARY SCHOOL SUPPLY LIST (Continued)

Simple Thanksgiving Day Crafts

Dylon Starr Curricular Material Development 9 Art Unit Plan Unit Name: Fraction/Ratio Art

THORPE HESLEY PRIMARY SCHOOL TOPIC PLANNING. YR: Mixed ½ and Y2 SUBJECT: Art TERM: Summer 2

Wayside: REAL Learning Academy School Supply List for

HIGGINS ELEMENTARY STUDENT SUPPLY LIST

COLORED PENCIL BASICS. Draw along with me!

Kindergarten Supply/Wish List School Year. While not mandatory, these items are highly recommended

3K ITEM DESCRIPTION PER STUDENT

Island Park School District. Pre-K Art Education Curriculum Guide

MIXED-MEDIA LINKS. With three different paisley-shaped links and four ways to embellish. Combine woven wire and polymer clay to make bold links.

Course Title: Art 2 Topic/Concept: Advance color wheel Time Allotment: 3 weeks Unit Sequence: 1 Major Concepts to be learned:

SAINT LOUIS ARCHDIOCESE

Modified on 4/29/11 Page 1. ED 101 Educational Technology Lab Spring 2011 Boston University School of Education LESSON PLAN

COLORED PENCIL WITH MIXED MEDIA with Sarah Becktel

75 points D. Homework 50 points E. Critiques 10 point F. Total: 150 points

School Supplies Lists Grades K-5

pen doodle MODERN TIMES pendant

Hardware Cloth Wire Forming Tutorial By Beverly Walker of

Kindergarten. 2 4 Pack Expo2 Low Odor Dry Erase Markers, Chisel Tip. 1 Box of Reclosable Gallon Bags (20 Ct). GIRLS ONLY

Pre-assessment: Students should have basic drawing skills and be able to recognize that artists use different techniques to create shading effects.

Art. Unit Plan: Knot Exploration. March / April Education Janice Rahn. Unit by: Jodi Joly. Unit Plan: Knot Exploration

* TEACHER HAS SUPPLIES PARENTS PURCHASE SEPARATELY

$60.00 $60.00 $75.00 $75.00 $70.00 $75.00 $75.00 $75.00 $75.00

Shading and Form: How to render the illusion of 2 dimensional form on a flat page

NORTH RANCH ELEMENTARY 2016/2017 SCHOOL SUPPLY LIST KINDERGARTEN

FINE ART ADVANCED ART COURSE SYLLABUS. Instructor: Ms. Martin. Course Description:

BALDWIN SCHOOL ELEMENTARY SCHOOL SUPPLIES LIST FIRST GRADE

Lesson Plan: Acrylic Painting Techniques Grades: 6 th -HS Art

CRAFTS. London Double Decker Bus Craft

* TEACHER HAS SUPPLIES PARENTS PLEASE PURCHASE SEPARATELY:

COURSE TITLE: ART GRADE 7 LENGTH: FULL YEAR SCHOOLS: PIERREPONT SCHOOL UNION SCHOOL RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY DATE:

Junior Drawing Artist

SCHOOL SUPPLY LISTS FOR KINDERGARTEN GRADE

Haiku Scrolls. Target Grades: 5-8

East Penn School District Elementary Curriculum

Transcription:

Story Writing & Modeling Clay Figures Optional Introduction: Read to the students the Russian Folktale Clay Boy by Mirra Ginsburg Clay Boy Mouse at Food Bowl by Hope Target Grade: Fourth Grade Goal (Terminal Objective): Students will learn how to model figures using modeling clay for a story they write. Objectives: 1. Students will write a story that includes a main character, a plot, and a setting. 2. Students will create a main character for their story. 3. Students will develop a plot for the story: Who did what, where, when, and why. 4. Students will form the figure/figures in their story using modeling clay. 5. Students will learn that clay animation is used to form motion pictures by manipulating the clay forms from pose to pose, a series of pictures is taken, then run together at a fast pace, frame by frame, to produce an animated film. National Standards: Visual Arts Grades K-4 Content Standard #1: Understanding and applying media, techniques, and processes Visual Arts Grades K-4 Content Standard #3: Choosing and evaluating a range of subject mater, symbols, and ideas Visual Arts Grades K -4 Content Standard #6: Making connections between visual arts and other disciplines (Cross-Curriculum Connection between writing and the visual arts; folklore and the visual arts) Purpose: Students will write a short story about a character that they create. Students will illustrate their story using watercolor pencils. Students will create a threedimensional form of their character using modeling clay. 1

New Vocabulary: Literary Terms: main character, plot, who, did what, where, when, and why, author, and illustrator, folktale Art Terms: two-dimensional, three-dimensional, texture, pattern, foreground, middle ground, background, additive process, armature Materials: heavy drawing paper, pencils, erasers, Sharpie markers, Sargent Paintbrushes, Sargent Watercolor Pencils, Sargent Modeling Clay in assorted colors, clay tools or toothpicks, heavy gauge sculpture wire, cardboard for bases Brush Set 12-ct. Watercolor Pencils #56-6010 #22-7204 Modeling Clay 22-40xx Time: Five fifty-minute classes: two classes to write their stories, one class to draw their illustrations, one class to color and paint their illustrations, and one class to model their clay figures. Introduction and Motivation (Set): Read to students Clay Boy. Tell students they are going to write and illustrate their own story. Explain to students that the story of clay boy is a Russian folktale that is passed down from generation to generation by parents to their children. Discuss with students the elements of a story. Assist students in writing a story of their own in class. Instruction: 1. Have students draw a picture illustrating one part of their story. Assist students with drawing specific images by drawing them on the front board. This will allow other students to learn to draw images they may also want to draw for their story but don t know how to begin. 2. Demonstrate to students how to color using the watercolor pencils. I suggest having students draw simple shapes like a circle, square, rectangle, and cone. Demonstrate how to layer the pencils on top of one another to produce different values. Explain which colors blend well together: Example: yellow and orange, yellow and green, yellow and 2

red, blue and red, and blue and yellow. Explain to students that value is the lightness or darkness of a color. If something is red, and you want to produce a shadow on it, then you can add a light layer of blue along the edge, which will produce a darker value on one side. Value helps give form to objects. Demonstrate how to color in one direction, so their colors look neat. Demonstrate how to color along something to give it form circular coloring of a circle, will help it appear round. 3. Demonstrate to students how to form simple shapes using the modeling clay. Demonstrate how to blend colors together to make them stick together. Demonstrate to students how to use one color of clay to form an armature underneath the color of clay they want to use. For example, there might not be enough of red to make a huge ball, so students can make the ball in another color, flatten out the red clay, and wrap that around the ball, (see photograph). Use your finger to blend one part into another part you are attaching to your sculpture. By adding pieces together, students are using the additive process of sculpture building. Show students how to add texture to their figures by using clay tools to make indentations onto the surface of their clay bodies. If no clay tools are available, and end of a pencil can be used, or toothpicks work well too. Texture can be used to show hair on their figures, or patterns on a character s shirt, and for facial features. Form simple shapes for body parts. Use scrap clay as armature balls. Flatten out the color the student wants to use as the main color, and wrap the scrap clay with it. For example, I wanted the peach color for my clay boy s body parts, but I didn t have enough of it. So I used another color as my base armature, flattened out the peach color, and wrapped my ball with it. I did this for the head, trunk, and short forms. 3

Finished wrapped head form. The legs were wrapped with a coil before the simple short form was blended onto the leg tops. The form for the shorts was made using The forms are stacked Coils were rolled for the scrap clay, then wrapped with a thin layer and blended together. suspenders. Balls were rolled and of red clay. pushed on for buttons. A clay tool was used to make the indentations for the eyes and mouth. This is what Clay Boy looks like in the illustrations for the Clay Boy book read to the students. Activities: (1) Guided Practice: 1. Assist students in writing their short stories. You may want to work with their classroom teacher on this as a collaboration assignment between writing in their classroom, while you work strictly on the art part in your classroom. 2. Students will illustrate a part of their story. Students will draw with pencil and include a foreground, middle ground, and background for their illustration. Explain to students how illustrators accomplish this. Objects drawn in the foreground are drawn at or near the bottom of the page, and are larger than objects 4

drawn in the middle ground of their paper. Objects in the middle ground of their paper are drawn slightly smaller than objects in the foreground, and are placed near the middle part of their paper or above the objects in the foreground of their paper. Objects in the background are drawn the smallest and are drawn behind the middle ground objects on their paper or above the middle ground objects on their paper. 3. Students will use watercolor pencils to color in the drawing they illustrated for their short story. Students will apply water using a paintbrush on top of the areas they colored, which will turn their pigment into paint. 4. Students will use simple shapes to form the character from their story using modeling clay. Students will add texture to their characters, fur, hair, patterns, etc. using clay tools, the end of a pencil, or a toothpick. (2) Independent Practice and Check for Understanding: Teacher will ask questions to students as they work on their project, review literary terms, art vocabulary. Teacher will facilitate students in drawing illustrations that include a foreground, middle ground, and background. Teacher will assist students in drawing images they don t know how to draw. (3) Closure: Students can share their stories and illustrations with the rest of the class. Suggestion: Allow students one fifty-minute period to circle around the room, read each other s stories, and view each student s sculpture(s). Evaluation: Level One -- Student s story is excellent! The story makes sense and has all the elements of a story. Student has rendered a watercolor pencil painting of one scene from their story. Student has included a foreground, middle ground, and background in their drawing. Student has layered more than one color on top of another to produce different values in their drawing. Student has crafted a model of their main character using modeling clay. Student has used texture to embellish their clay model. The model resembles the character in their drawing and story. Level Two -- Student s story is very good. Student has rendered a watercolor pencil painting of one scene from their story, but did not include a foreground, middle ground, and background in their drawing. Student has crafted a model of their main character using modeling clay. Student has used texture to embellish their clay model. The model resembles the character in their drawing and story. Level Three -- Student s story is o.k. One or more of the elements of a story may be absent. Student completed a watercolor pencil drawing of their story, but did not complete the painting part of the assignment. (No water and paintbrush used to go over the watercolor pencil to turn it into paint.) Student has crafted a model of their main character using modeling clay, but it lacks any detail. The model somewhat resembles the character in their drawing and story. Level Four -- Student s story is poor. Little or no thought went into creating the story. Student completed a pencil drawing of their story, but didn t finish coloring their 5

drawing. Student crafted a model of their main character using modeling clay, but the figure is poorly formed, lacks detail, and needs improvement. Tips: 1. Save scrap clay to form base armature balls to be used underneath thin layers of solid colors. 2. If the sculpture is top heavy, a little sculpture armature wire may be inserted into the legs to help give it support and enable the sculpture to stand. 3. Use a piece of cardboard for students to model their sculptures on. Students can blend their bases down onto the cardboard for stability and it will allow them to quickly transport the sculptures to a storage area should an extra class be needed for students to finish their project. Extension: Students can use small note pads and create flip books to show how cartoon figures are animated. Resources: Clay Boy by Mirra Ginsburg BY KRISTI WATSON Art Consultant www.sargentart.com 12/050/2008 6