Hot and Cold in the water!

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4 th Edition December 2014 By: Gabrielle Doll, Visual Arts Teacher Support / Art Specialist for SRSD Welcome everyone, to Art is the Word, the divisional newsletter that focuses on the art happenings in our schools. We are already into December, and it is now time to get caught up on the fabulous artistic achievements of our students and teachers from the beginning of this year! In the art workshop program, teachers learn specific art elements and principles that will be used in the classroom. We begin with topics that scaffold off each other. The first element is Value lightness and darkness. We use different media to create a 3-dimensional effect. After creating an object in a three dimensional form, we need to know where to place it, so following value is perspective. Perspective gives us placement, space, and that ever important horizon line! Color comes next, and the sky is the limit with how we use it. We create form, we create light, we use warm against cool. Many teachers have taken the liberty of inventing wonderful new art projects that combine learned art elements with the curriculum. Hot and Cold in the water! A wonderful example of blending curriculum with art elements. Cool and warm colors at workplus learning about animals fish, amphibians, etc. We began by painting backgrounds (water) using only cool colors in tempera. Paper was taped to give a border and keep it lying flat on the table. Students had been studying fish color, habitat, even the direction of their scales. Fish are usually a warm color! On a separate paper, students drew their chosen fish and colored well, using oil pastels in warm colors. Fish were then cut out and placed on their cool backgrounds. DTS grade two students proudly display their work!

At ELI, students were studying Egypt. They created beautiful Egyptian themed tiles from clay. All pieces were carved into and had clay added on to give texture. Designs were intricate and well thought out. Final glazing made these pieces spectacular!! Getting messy with clay is always a wonderful experience as students carefully plan and execute their tiles (above). Tiles prior to drying and firing (above center). Finally, after a thorough glazing of carefully selected colors and final firing: the It s all about the shadow A solid art foundation begins with learning important elements such as value. Students of all ages embarked on creating images in charcoal, paying special attention to dark and light and how shadows create form and depth. In some instances, we studied a still life of an egg form, to notice these subtle but important shadows. After learning the shadow and form, we incorporated these shapes in a creative experimental picture. The egg shape is a natural precursor for portraiture. Teachers prac ced this at the value workshop (right). EIDC s K/1 s (le ) understood the concept very well!

A little more on the value of portraits Portraiture always yields itself to wonderful creations. All kinds of themes and ideas can be included once there is the basic format. We experimented with bright color on dark paper, we included different themes based on color. Students and teachers alike had an opportunity to use their imaginations and get fabulous results! At right, teachers experiment with portraiture in different colors. For example, different greens could include a leafy / plant-like theme for the face. Work of LSS students Using light, medium, and dark colors in the same family (analogous on the color wheel), can create exquisite effects especially on dark paper. ESAI students proudly show off their electric portraiture Students all over the division experimented with what I dubbed electric portraiture - Named for the electric eye popping result of the color combinations. When creating these images, students had to pay close attention to shadow and light, especially blending the soft pastel from light to dark in a smooth transition. See beautiful work of ESAS students (right & above).

A time for everything Many times, the time of the year has an influence on our art. When September trees began to change their colors, and it just so happened that many classes were studying trees, what better way to learn about trees than through art? These gorgeous clay les were created by middle year s students @ EIDC and glazed extraordinarily well with special a en on to Fall colors and our environment. LBC and ESAI students also enjoyed crea ng the tree le. PLS grade one students took on the crea ve task of making trees using oil pastel and did it beau fully! (above & below) Pumpkins O Plenty! October lent itself to being a perfect me for early years to prac ce their pumpkin crea ng skills. Students from RCH, ARB, ESNI, and EIDC all created the pumpkin using color to create value. We began with yellow, mixed in a li le orange, and added reds and browns to literally round it off. Vines and other details were added as each ar st gave their drawings an original touch.

Time for a Winter Scene! Brrrr As the weather gets colder, our scenes change from warm fall colors, to the coolness of a snowy landscape. At ESAS, students painted a wintery scene incorporating a horizon line of a snowy landscape complete with blue shadows to show three dimensionality. All this was painted with acrylic on a box to be used for a gift for the holidays. Teacher example Student s work More on the horizon line Learning about this ever important part of perspective is both interesting and fun. How many ways can the sky touch the Earth? How many landscapes are there? Can we invent our own landscape and create fantasy pictures? All these questions to be explored with different mediums; paint, oil pastel, pencil, etc., all the while keeping in mind using what we have learned already about value to make our scenes really pop. Beau ful work from the grade 4 s at ARB! Also at ARB, another instance of including an art lesson with a curriculum lesson, in the form of a planet study! Matching up the planet colors to the image on the Ipad using only primary colors.

The Art of Modelling Clay and the Aboriginal At LaSalle School we created beau ful modelling clay pain ngs with a Seven Sacred Teachings theme. Students chose the animal / virtue that they would like to depict in a plas cine pain ng and put a lot of effort into showing the habitat through excellent color combina ons. It was a lot of hard work to smear the plas cine in place, but the results really speak for themselves! The Art of the Flower There are many ar s c ways to create something beau ful, incorporate learned art elements, have holiday / me of the year in mind, and s ll be crea ve and original Check out these beau ful floral pain ngs by early years ARB students! Students begin the floral pain ng lesson by learning about primary colors and pain ng techniques. Then they are shown how to make a petal incorpora ng value to add realism to even invented flowers! They then complete their pictures originally & crea vely! A Final Word on the Newsletter. If you have any art news, art input or comments, please send it my way to: gdoll@srsd.ca Remember