art ed digested

Entries Tagged as 'artists'

David Shrigley

March 7th, 2008 · No Comments

ignore this building

© David Shrigley

I love this guy.
Simple, clever, funny. There should be more artists like him.

hotdog

© David Shrigley

Tags: artists

Paper animation techniques

February 24th, 2008 · No Comments


via Metafilter

Javan Ivey, a student at Pratt Institute, created this video using the “Stratastencil” technique, which seems like a great, yet challenging, project to do with a high school group. Unfortunately, difficult is an understatement for elementary students; a ton of X-Acto knife blades in the hands of reckless 12 year-olds, strict attention to detail, and the patience to continue without instant gratification. Who am I kidding? These are problems that I’d have doing this, too.

Ivey explains the process in great detail on his website, amongst many other projects to get inspiration from. (BTW-The audio track on that particular video is not kid-safe due to language)

There is no end to my longing for a computer lab in my school. Oh, the magnificent things we could create! I should research the grants available for this…

Tags: artists · media · video

One more week to go!

February 23rd, 2008 · 2 Comments

On Friday, February 29th, I’ll be hosting the One-Drawing-A-Day Challenge Exhibition, hopefully with a packed house! My students get to see their artwork on the walls of our school twice a year, but I like the idea of this show including parents and teachers too. It’s important to me that they see art as an activity that will continue after “art class” ends. I’m curious about the work that has been made, and I hope everyone will decide to display what they’ve been making!

Here are a few more sketches of mine:
handsselfportjames

Tags: artists · one drawing a day

First Drawing-a-Day, now Skull-a-Day!

February 13th, 2008 · No Comments

This video has some great ideas for using non-art materials to create something unexpected and wonderful.

Yesterday, I experimented with two upper elementary students to make drawing tools out of things we found laying around. Some of the most useful tools were:

  • feathers, their plumes uses as brushes/stamps, their quills used as pens
  • beads glued to string and dragged across paper
  • hot chocolate as ink
  • long dowels attached to just about anything
  • burlap dipped in ink
  • paper rolled in tubes and used as brushes
  • our feet!

I’m still going strong on my drawing-a-day challenge, and will post some new images soon to prove it! My students and colleagues are doing a great job keeping up on their own challenges too, I feel quite proud.

Tags: artists · education · media · one drawing a day · video

Weaving with a community

February 11th, 2008 · 2 Comments

weaving
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.

Tags: artists · education · students

Self-Portraiture and Children

February 8th, 2008 · No Comments

I have a problem.

I love to paint self-portraits, obsessively, as a form of introspection, a way to express what I want the world to see, almost a dissection of my face. Great, you say, so what’s the problem?

As an art teacher the subject has to seep it’s way into what I teach sooner or later, and can have mixed results. Most notably, it is difficult to draw the face, and HARDER to make it look like someone in particular. I struggle with getting a likeness of my face that I’ve been drawing for over 20 years. How do I share this love of self-portraiture with students who can be unsure of their abilities, and more importantly, how can I give them a successful experience when some students would rather not look at themselves in the first place?

Self-portraiture is inextricably linked with our egos and how we feel about ourselves, so the lesson becomes more about self-acceptance than mere proportions, observation and drawing techniques. I begin to share what I think are my own flaws with the students, laying it all out on the carpet in front of them and then I twist it around into a positive.

honesty

When I taught an 8th grade self-portraiture class, a student could not begin. He had become overwhelmed by staring at the acne he saw in his reflection. I sat down next to him and I wiped off the concealer on my face. “Everyone has pimples” I said. And he began working.

As teachers, I hope we’re all showing our students our proverbial pimples. They need to see them once in a while.

Tags: artists · education · lesson planning · practice

An argument for color

January 30th, 2008 · No Comments

We have just completed our Hundertwasser Illuminated Landscape project, in which students abstracted the forms of a landscape drawing to warp and twist it into something dream-like and surreal. They then applied their knowledge of color theory to working the drawing in oil pastels, finally using gold paint to add small areas of emphasis.

I love introducing Hundertwasser to students who have never seen his work before.  Without fail there are awed “ooohs” and “ahhhhs” throughout the room.  These oil pastels, however, give me the same emotion.
HundertwasserHundertwasser

HundertwasserHundertwasser

I love looking at these, the combination of saturated color, black background and gold highlights is so rich!

For full sized images, check out the flickr gallery.

Tags: artists · painting · students

A sneak-peak of new work!

January 25th, 2008 · No Comments

Andy Goldsworthy Inspired Image

Check the flickr link to the right for more work!

Tags: artists · students

A belated post for a new year, and a challenge

January 23rd, 2008 · No Comments

I am deeply into my second year at Kingsley, and loving every minute of it. It is especially nice to finally work with my co-teacher back from maternity leave!

I’ve neglected this blog for a few reasons, the main reason being that it’s tedious to record your progress and ideas to a seemingly empty audience. So, instead I focused myself on making a kick-ass curriculum and pushing our art students in ways they never expected. I am excited by the work we are creating together, and now I feel the urge to share with the world again, whether or not it is listening.

On January 31st our entire school community- students, parents, faculty and administration - are invited to challenge themselves to be creative for 15 minutes each day for a month. This can be keeping a sketchbook, writing in a journal, making a collage, or any other artistic endeavor that can be collected throughout the challenge. At the end of the month, anyone who chose to participate can show their work at an exhibition to celebrate.

I’ve chosen to keep a small sketchbook and do observational studies on my subway commute home from work, which has been an interesting project so far! A student has already approached me to mention she they will be making a crocheted rose each day, and at the end of the month piece them together to make an assembled garment. A colleague mentioned that he will be taking a photograph each day. It is energizing to get immediate and enthusiastic responses from so many here at my school.

(Here’s a link to a great list of prompts for those who need a little help acquiring inspiration.)

Tags: artists · practice

Tape Sculptures!

July 2nd, 2007 · No Comments

tape sculpture
One of my last art lessons of the year was creating a Tape Sculpture with the upper elementary students. There are some very clever installation possibilities for these sculptures, and I hope to introduce more students to this technique next year and install our sculptures around the city!

Tags: artists · education · lesson planning

First Grade Kandinsky Watercolors

April 6th, 2007 · No Comments

And now, as promised, some wonderful paintings by my first graders:


Tags: artists · painting · students

Stop-motion demo

April 4th, 2007 · No Comments

Our third graders started their stop-motion preparations today, making backdrops, creating storyboards and dance moves for their puppets. Here’s a very quick example that using one of the student puppets and my demo puppet:

(includes what not to do- my hands make too many cameos! must practice more!)

Tags: Uncategorized · artists · education · media · music · silly · students · video

In the Zone

April 3rd, 2007 · No Comments

Our first day back from a two-week long Spring Break, and the first lesson I pull out of my hat with the first graders is a smashing success!

I discussed Kandinsky, abstract art, color theory and composition, then let them go straight to a canvas with fine-tipped sharpies.  After they had put down some designs in black, we painted an underpainting in watercolors, being careful to keep the colors saturated and bright, inspired by the patches of color used by Kandinsky.

Next week, we’ll try some gradations in semi-opaque acrylics and I’ll post some examples!

Tags: artists · painting

Art vs. Craft?

December 21st, 2006 · No Comments

I have been taught, throughout my art education, that art and craft are separate entities- and for a long time I believed this to be true.  Lately, perhaps due to a near obsessive knitting jag, I have begun to question the validity of craft as “high art.”

Sure, many of the pieces made in the guise of “arts and crafts” are meant as decoration, nothing more- but as I see artists and craftsters alike displaying and selling their subversive crafty work, I notice they are playing with many of the same issues any artist, tucked away in their ivory tower, would.

Places like etsy and craftster, whose motto is “no tea cozies without irony,” seem well aware of the stigma that the word craft has put on what is just another form of intelligent creation.  I see these sites as a great source of inspiration and motivation to create, and to have a sense of humor. To take yourself too seriously just saps all the fun out of creation.

Will knitting now become my preferred medium? Stay tuned…

Tags: artists · media