Helen Lucas. Biography of the Artist. The Art Style of Helen Lucas

Similar documents
Textile Museum of Canada 55 Centre Avenue (416) Toronto, Ontario Canada M5G 2H5

Printmaking Lesson: Positive and Negative Prints

EXA 0-02a, EXA 1-02a, EXA 2-02a, EXA 3-02a.

TECHNIQUES AND INSPIRATION. Daily Visual Journal KELLY DARKE

Artsy Painted Birds. Sign up for the free newsletter at

CUTTING PAPER. instruction page. "Learning to use scissors is one of the important ego-building achievements of early childhood.

Art of Work Roles People Play Utah Museum of Fine Arts Educator Resources and Lesson Plans Fall 2016

Monotype Printmaking

Pressed Flowers. Materials: Directions: Pressed flowers Heavyweight paper Picture frame Craft glue Small paint brush Tweezers

Printmaking Unit. Art 3200

Sponsored Educational Materials Grades 7 12 IGNITE INSPIRATION! Lesson: Stenciling With Collage

Lesson Overview. Focus Artist: Georgia O Keeffe Focus Elements: Focus Principles:

January Instructions Willem van Aelst Study 2008 David Jansen. For the Video Link, Please see Page 3

Printmaking / Monoprinting. Art Explorations WSRHS

Collaborative Weaving

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

Building the Gothic Church

Makes Sense SCIENCE GRADE LEVEL KINDERGARTEN FIRST MATERIALS

Sectioned Drawing. Purpose: Children will use their creativity and imagination to create four drawings within one work of art.

MANCHESTER AND ORCHARD HEIGHTS ELEMENTARY TEXT FOR STUDENT DISPLAYS, 2012 FOCUS ON CONCEPTS AND STUDENT LEARNING TARGETS

Snowy Winter Landscape

Triumvirate Kenojuak Ashevak. Beaverbrook Art Gallery Art EduKit. Kenojuak Ashevak (Canadian/Inuit b. 1927)

Printmaking Work! Lesson Plans!!

About Scanning, printing, and image-editing programmes Note: page 16 in the book will refer you to this page on our website.

WHAT TO DO WITH STOCKROOM MATERIAL LEFTOVERS.

TOOLS AND MATERIALS USED HOW TO MAKE A MOTTE AND BAILEY CASTLE

LINOLEUM BLOCK PRINTING ANDY WARHOL REVISITED ANIMAL PRINTS

Enchanting Venus table decorations

First Semester Exam Review If packet is 100% complete and turned in the day of the exam, you can earn 10pts extra credit on your exam grade.

Snakes Alive! Kathy Grajek K-12 Art Valley R-6 Schools

The EzyShaid Easter Bouquet

Katsushika Hokusai ( ) The Lake at Hakone in Sagami Province (circa 1830) Woodblock Print Ink and Color on Paper, 10 x 15

Preschool Themes Newsletter September 2017

Choose appropriate paintbrushes

Lesson Plans 10/14/13 10/18/13. Art 1: Notan Project Painting II: Acrylic Technique & Animal Drawing II: Charcoal 3D Block Still Life

Art Masterpiece: Blue Atmosphere, 1963 by Helen Frankenthaler

Architecture and Colour

Native American Heritage Day: Friday, November 25, 2016 Printmaking Honoring history and story through symbolism

ART NOUVEAU. Ms. Kolendowicz ART II

Title: Animal Impressions. Author: Megan Hagerty, adapted from Cool Art Teacher Blog and Jessie McCormick. Grade Levels: High School, Grades 9-12

GRADE 1, 3 LESSON PLAN FLOWER VASE / PLANT POTTER CLAY SCULPTING

Sponsored Educational Materials Grades 7 12 IGNITE INSPIRATION! Lesson: Illustrating Characters

FUTURISTIC FORMS. Materials 2 Artwork 3 Explore: Draw 3D forms 4 Discover: Forms in buildings 6

Tips & Tricks using Part 2

A Colorful World Illustrated Art Lessons

Poppies. Principles of design: repetition, variety, movement, contrast, unity, balance.

Illustrated Art Lessons

MAKE IT YOURS. Digital Photo Decoupage Art. How-2 instruction books for cool projects you can make your own.

Archdiocese of Washington Catholic Schools Academic Standards Visual Arts

Mixed Media. A piece of art can also be created with ink, chalk, crayon, fabric, metal or many other materials.

Space Landscape Grade: 3 rd Grade

GRADE 1, 2, 3 LESSON PLAN PLAYGROUND ARCHITECT WOODWORKING

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

Skull Party Favors. Instructions:

AVI20 ELEMENTS OF DESIGN COLLABORATIVE POSTER

Building the Circular Tower

Poured Paint. Create with Yarn and. Use yarn and poured paint to create a vibrant folk-art style painting

Expressive features mood, how does it make you feel, dynamic state (sense of movement, tension, conflict, relaxation)

SAINT LOUIS ARCHDIOCESE

Spring Quilling. By Eileen Walters. Materials Required: To Make The Card: Daffodils:

Art-Drawing-Painting. 3-D or 3 dimensional when all 3 dimensions: length, height, and width can be touched and felt.

GRADES K-5. Form Introduce form as an element of design.

Bob Boyer - Pattern and Design By Monique Martin Georges Vanier School Saskatoon

Did you know that the numbers on a limited edition print actually mean something?

The Art Of Printmaking

Techniques and ideas. by Marie Browning

Art Masterpiece-The Great Wave at Kanagawa (from a Series of Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji) by Katsushika Hokusai

ARTFUL LANGUAGE Creating with Crayola

** Please Note ** Artist s biography can be glued to back of white construction paper ahead of time.

CARBORUNDUM MEZZOTYPE dark field & reductive techniques

Lesson Two MY EVERYDAY HERO COLLAGE

Turn Beautiful Artist's Paper into a Book

Norval Morriseau. We must be child-like, Simplicity of Spirit date unknown. Beaverbrook Art Gallery Art EduKit

COLORED PENCIL WITH MIXED MEDIA with Sarah Becktel

Freehand Back-Filling: Polymer Clay and Resin Tutorial

Paste-up Yearbook Guidelines

Drop Spine Box. Tricia Morris. Design by: 2006 Craft TV Weekly, Inc.

Getting Started. 1. Double click on the eye con. 2. Single click on File, then new, then OK. Click here.

Paint with Texture. Use Impasto to. Create a richly textured painting with tissue paper and a painting knife

Beyond Rubber: Unique Techniques Your Own Stamps

Transfer an Image to Drawing Paper

DO-IT-YOURSELF DISNEY-INSPIRED GIFT WRAP DISNEY

HK- 2 -Gargoyle Moodboard

MEMORIAL SCULPTURES. Here are some examples of some Holocaust Memorials from around the world. Perhaps you could find others.

Archdiocese of Washington Catholic Schools Academic Standards Visual Arts

The Essential Guide to Embossing.

Mandala (Symmetrical Geometric Palace) with specific color Schemes. State Curriculum Content Standards, Indicators, Objectives:

Grade 5 Portraits of Emotions. Color

Focus, as you work, on getting many gradations of dark and light in your piece to guarantee something that is super interesting to the eyes.

Fairy Tale #5 The Twelve Brothers. Fairy Tale #5: Mixed Media. The Twelve Brothers

Gels, Pastes, Liquid Mediums & Additives

polymer clay. by Jill Erickson

Mediums Guide. For more product information visit our website at

Session Key Objective from skills listed above (What is it that you want the children to learn?)

Lithographs. Boy on Zebra - Graciela Rodo Boulanger Jester Marc Chagall Composition - Joan Miro

mermaid Social Artworking Instruction Sheet

Lesson Objective: Students will practice addition and subtraction through the art of mosaics. 21st Century Skills: Content Standards:

Teaching and Assessing 21 st Century Skills. Kate Baker

JELLYFISH KITE LESSON PLAN

Football Silhouettes Project Sheet 1 of 2: Classic Beads

Transcription:

Helen Lucas Biography of the Artist Helen Lucas was born in Weyburn, Saskatchewan in 1931. Her parents had emigrated from Greece. When she was six weeks old, her family moved to Saskatoon to operate the Ritz Hotel. Helen was not encouraged to paint. Art was not considered important by her family. Helen persisted. At the age of 17, after her father died, she convinced her mother to let her attend the Ontario College of Art in Toronto. Her childhood and her strict, traditional upbringing had an enormous impact on her art. Today, Helen lives in Bibury, near Toronto. The Art Style of Helen Lucas The art of Helen Lucas is bright, bold, and often of large-scale flowers. She paints what flowers mean to her and does so with an amazing use of colour. She paints her pieces on raw canvas, not gessoed or prepared in any way. (Gesso is a type of paint that raw canvas is treated with before adding coloured pigment.) Helen Lucas uses a staining process. Using acrylic paint she waters down the paint and stains the canvas resulting in little or no texture. This transparency in the paint makes her work unique.

Art Lesson / Helen Lucas 1 / Chine-colle, Composition, and Colour In this lesson, the use of colour is emphasized by creating work with the Chine-colle technique as a guide. Helen Lucas DOES NOT create prints, however this lesson focuses on her choices of colour and composition. Students use a printmaking technique called Chine-colle. Student objectives Students will inspired by the life and art of Helen Lucas. Students will create an art piece using the technique of chine-colle. Students will learn about the different types of compositions; balanced, rule of thirds and extreme placement of subject. Students will learn the terms symmetrical, asymmetrical, and radial. Students will learn about colour and the effective use of colour. Materials Photocopy the Helen Lucas Artist Study and Chine-colle Instruction chart, enlarging to 11 x17. Display on the wall for the students to see. You will also need: Pencils Flowers and images of prairie wild flowers Coloured tissue paper Styrofoam meat trays Unisource Product #072154 (931-8004) Saskatoon, SK Printmaking rollers Printmaking ink black, white, silver/gold (optional) White tag paper Blank newsprint White glue and water mixture Paintbrushes Web Links For examples of the latest works of Helen Lucas: www.helenlucas.com. For more information on the elements of composition:

http://www.goshen.edu/art/ed/compose.htm#principles

Procedure Have students view some of the work of Helen Lucas on the Internet. See Web Links. Emphasize the balance of colour, the composition, and the various shapes of the flowers in her work. Review the John Perret Art Lesson on composition. Day 1 Bring real flowers to school: plan the unit for the 1 st week back to school and you will have a wide variety of flowers when you ask the students to bring them. Display images of prairie wildflowers. Florists discard the flowers they don t sell. They are in good enough condition for this project. Contact a local florist and ask them about their old flowers. Students sketch the various shapes of flowers. Day 2 Explain to students the technique of Chine-colle. Chine-collé is a technique in printmaking where the image is transferred to a surface that is bonded to a heavier support in the printing process. Printing on a much more delicate surface is possible, such as rice paper or linen, which pulls finer details off the plate. During printing, a glue is applied to the back of the paper (a paste made of rice flour and water being traditional), and then the heavier support (typically, the heavy printmaking paper) is placed on top. In the pressure of the press, the lighter surface is glued to the support simultaneously with the image printing on it. Adhere tissue paper to the white tag paper using a watered down glue solution and brushes. Be sure that the tissue paper lays flat and smooth. Cover most of the paper with coloured tissue. Emphasize that the tissue must be very flat. The process is: glue on paper, then tissue, glue overtop. Ask students to repeat this many times Glue, tissue, glue, repeat. Day 3 1. Students draw their favourite flowers from their sketches onto the Styrofoam tray (bottom). If you order the product listed in this resource, the inside area of the tray is smooth. The sketches can be transferred by placing the newsprint over the Styrofoam tray, taping it and tracing over the lines. Drag a pencil on the lines and a small dent will appear on the foam when the paper is removed.

2. The flower needs to be an outline, not a solid flower. To achieve this, draw double lines around the edges of the petals. The insides of the petals are pushed down. (Anything pushed down will show the colour of the paper that is behind it). 3. The negative space round the flower also needs to be pushed down or cut off using an Exacta-knife. When drawing lines on the Styrofoam always drag the pencil DO NOT push it. Pushing will snag the Styrofoam. 4. Students create a test print on a piece of newsprint. The newsprint and the Styrofoam are displayed when complete. 5. Put the paint onto a rolling surface. Roll the roller over the ink. Ink the Styrofoam tray (flower) in two directions, so that the ink covers well. 6. Place the Styrofoam tray on the paper, ink side down. Press down; the ink will stick to the paper. 7. Flip the paper over and rub evenly on the back. Turn paper over and carefully remove the Styrofoam tray. 8. Students then apply the ink to the tissue paper background prepared the day before. 9. Students decide on their composition, selecting from the displayed examples from the group. They can start with their own flowers and then add the flowers of the group s to the composition as needed. Review the compositional rules. See the John Perret Art Lesson. 10. It is best if the composition has an odd number of flowers rather than an even number (great math link- display odd numbers on the chalk board). Use one colour of ink for all flower prints, as the composition is more cohesive this way. 11. Students will create a collaborative bouquet. The selecting of classmates flowers and the creation of the collaborative bouquet was great fun for the students. 12. Title each piece. 13. If displaying the artwork for parents or the rest of the school, include the Instruction Chart. Your viewers will be interested in the process. 14. Some tips on creating good prints using a roller a. Floor tiles make excellent rolling trays. Be sure to use the correct amount of ink; too much fills the cracks, too little tears the

Styrofoam. The correct amount of ink sounds like wet tires on pavement. b. Place new ink on the Styrofoam tray well above where the roller is moving. Bring in new ink only as needed. Diagram c. Be sure that the roller rotates fully on the tray to have even distribution of ink, like rolling the paint on a wall, you want even distribution. d. Take a little ink when needed on the roller and then move roller to center of tray. Adaptation for Middle Years Older students can create more than one Styrofoam piece. Emphasis is placed on the repetition of shape and placement of shape based on compositional ideas.

Helen Lucas Artist Study 1 / Chine-colle

Student Art / Helen Lucas 1 / Chine-colle Mary Marciniak, Grade Seven Kirk Wylie, Grade One

Student Art / Helen Lucas 1 / Chine-colle Madison Monks, Grade Seven Patrick Hunchak, Grade Two

Art Lesson / Helen Lucas 2 / Painting Large Flowers without a Brush In this lesson, younger students will enjoy painting with a tool other than a paintbrush. This is an extremely simple project that allows all young art students to be successful. It is great for small children as it allows them to work on their fine motor skills with a new type of tool. Student Objectives Students will be inspired by the life and art of Helen Lucas. Students will create an art piece using paint with a non-traditional painting tool. Students will be inspired by the life and art of Helen Lucas. Students will discover texture in paint. Materials Photocopy the Helen Lucas Artist Study and Painting Large Flowers Without a Brush instruction chart found in this resource, enlarging to 11 x17. Display on the wall for the students to see. Web Links You will also need: Liquid tempera paint of many colours Small chunks of mat board, cut to sizes 4 cm x 4 cm Large white drawing paper Images of flowers Real flowers Lots of low sided containers to hold tempera paint For examples of the latest works of Helen Lucas: www.helenlucas.com. For the elements of composition: http://www.goshen.edu/art/ed/compose.htm#principles

Procedure 1. To begin the lesson, students practice basic drawing. Students draw the simple outline of the flowers on the paper. Talk about cropping and composition. 2. Encourage students not to place the flowers directly in the middle of the paper and to create interesting negative spaces between the petals and the edge of the paper, negative space being the space that is not the object. 3. Using the mat board chunks as paintbrushes, fill in the areas with paint. Drag the mat board on the paper. Place small yogurt containers in the centre of the table with a different colour in each. This keeps the colours relatively clean. 4. Use the corners of the mat board to create dots and the edges of the cardboard touched down to make thin lines. Drag the boards in various ways to create interesting textures. 5. Fill in the negative space last. 6. Students title their pieces. 7. If displaying the artwork for parents or the rest of the school, include the Instruction Chart. Your viewers will be interested in the process.