
Photo Copyright © Sarah Haskell
Sarah Haskell has just arrived at Kingsley to begin her Artist-In-Residence weaving for the month of February. The students at the preschool building went wild for the new loom and the colorful materials we’ll be using. It’s always exciting to see very young students dive into an array of bright, textured mixed media materials… despite the minor chaos that ensues. I enjoyed making little clothespin people with the elementary students and watching the details they chose to add. One student gave her clothespin person a mohawk made of felt, another made a shirtless boy with a fishing pole, and one even made a scooter out of pipe cleaners and shirt buttons for her clothespin person to ride.
I started a time-lapse video of the whole process, and will be slowly compiling two movies, one for the preschool building and one for the elementary building. We’ll see if I’ve got enough gigs on my laptop to continue this for the next two and a half weeks! If I can pull it off, it should be a lot of fun to watch, although I won’t be able to share it on the web, for the privacy of my lovely students.




2 responses so far ↓
Emily,
What a bright and engaging weaving - almost looks like a diorama, it has such depth.
You should team with an English teacher, post the picture on VoiceThread, and have the children construct stories about their little world.
With a (free) educator’s account, you could keep identities secret while letting the kids’ “voice” (either sound or typed comments) be heard.
I love the spontaneity of children’s art!
diane
What a great idea- thanks! I’ll poke around to see if any teachers would like to collaborate on this. I love voicethread, btw!
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