Monday, September 28, 2015

Sketchbook Club Kick-off...Day one of our Sketchbook design.

I tried something new and different for my second year of 3rd and 4th grade Sketchbook Club. We used some recycle cardboard circles to create designs for the front and back covers on canvas board. Then we painted the Sharpie designs with tempera. The boards will be cut on the paper cutter and used for the front and back covers of the wire bound sketchbooks. They look so cool I just had to share a few. We will finish painting them next week and then attach them to the sketchbooks with glue and some very fancy tape. The kids LOVED this simple overlapping method and it was so fun to create! I will post more on the contraction as we finish them! There are some specks below.
 Here are some specks for you...The canvas boards are 9x12 (pack of five is about $8 at Micheals). They will fit a 5 1/2 x 9 inch sketchbook. I cut them on the paper cutter. (I know I will look like one of those people from the skittles commercial with one giant arm, but it is worth it!) The paint is premium Blick Tempera Paint. I will probably toss a clear coat on them to seal them when they are finished. Day one! Pretty Awesome!


Thursday, September 17, 2015

Oceans of fun with painted paper!

 Painted paper has OCEANS of applications!! This summer, right before we went back to school (the first week of August which is still summer!!) I taught this fun painted paper/collage lesson with our on-site extended day program (Tiger Club). I painted the ocean wall years ago, when I had all that free time before kids and marriage. It is kind of a landmark in our building, but it was designed to be an interactive wall several versions of the curriculum ago and we created sea creatures and added them every year when 1st grade studied the ocean. I decided to revive a new version for some summer art fun!


SO...after I wrapped up a week at the Tennessee Arts Academy, I was so fired up about painted paper I couldn't wait to try it out. Here is a picture of Laura Lohmann in action at TAA!!


My "Tiger Club" kiddos are always willing to be my lab rats so I headed over there to test the waters! Here is what we did...
First we painted two papers each, some did more until the paint was gone. No water just mats to clean the brushes on...it was awesome!!
 

Aren't they awesome!!

 

The next day, we created our amazing fish! Cutting and gluing and sharing all the beautiful papers. No one even freaked out about not having THEIR paper.  Once they finished I had made "water" with craft paper. The dow rods I had fit perfectly into the plastic ceiling hooks so I made a pocket of folded paper at the top of the craft paper with the rod through it. The kiddos brought their finished fish straight to the paper for display. Once they were all finished and layer out on the papers I taped them in place and snapped the rods into the ceiling hooks in about five minutes! They looked pretty awesome!





Friday, September 11, 2015

Mirror, Mirror in my hand...a Frida Kahlo inspired self portrait.

 I love using oil pastels over paint, it is one of my favorite ways to create self-portraits with my students, especially young ones. These are 2nd grade portraits inspired by Frida. Students learned about her live and art before creating their portraits using mirrors. Then we framed them on paper that is shaped like a hand held mirror. (Thanks Phil from There's a Dragon in my Art Room for that idea!) Using crayons they added some motifs that are common in Mexican folk art as well as some symbols that are personal to each artist to decorate their symmetrical mirror shaped picture frame. They look almost as serious as Frida herself!



 This is a quick paint before the artist intro. We whip up the skin color for the head, neck and shoulders, adding the hair last and whisking it away to the drying rack before breaking out the idea books to learn about Frida Kahlo and practicing some front-view facial proportions!
 This way the paint is dry before we add the oil pastel the next week. Day three includes cutting out the portrait, gluing the three papers together and adding the designs on the mirror. You can see more on our Percy Priest Elementary Artsonia.com art gallery!

Monday, September 7, 2015

Our school year is in bloom with radial flowers by 3rd grade!

 We are off to an amazing start this year so I wanted to show off some of these amazing flowers created by 3rd grade artists. This is one of the lessons that I learned from Laura Lohmann (Painted Paper) at the Tennessee Arts Academy (or as my husband calls it "Art Teacher Art Camp").  After learning about radial symmetry and learning how to paint without water, they created these amazing flowers. I love how very different each one turned out, just like the artists that created them!




Thursday, August 20, 2015

Rock-it Baby with that leftover table paper!!

So every year I cover my color-coded tables with the corresponding paper color. It is incredible how challenging it is for my very smallest students to remember what color table they sit at when all the tables are brown! But after a week or two, the paper gets kinda nasty so I usually just roll it up and toss it in recycle.  But not this year....Here is the before picture!


And this is what my tables looked like after everyone had been through the art room for the first day of art!
The second graders are adding some "circle painting" inspired backgrounds to these six rocket ships. Our theme is "Soar to Success" so rockets are the big thing. The fourth graders came in and detailed the rockets and now they are hanging all over the school! This is the fastest I have every managed to get student work up! They're so awesome and I heard not less then three times that it was "The best art class ever!" I Rocked-it, (haha)and suddenly I hear Def Leopard in my head, don't you...Rocket, yeah, Satellite of love! Rock-it Baby! Come on!!






Sunday, August 9, 2015

The first week of school...





For most art teachers, the first week of school is very, VERY tedious. Perhaps it is just me, but having to repeat the same thing five times a day for five days wears me out. By the third class, I can't remember who I told what and my excitable students matched by my tendency to ramble excitedly make it impossible for me to keep my pacing so everyone gets in and out of the art room on time. So here is my solution...
iMovie!! 
That's right folks, I can cover the room tour as well as some procedures that we will practice in 5 minutes or less and I know every class is getting the same information. 
Click on the link below and have a look for yourself!


I am not a professional movie maker, which is something my film-industry-husband was quick to point out, but it is quick and gets the job done! I love to see the students looking around the room to locate things seen in the video. They are excited by the "behind the scenes" elements such as the kiln room and storage closet!! They are mesmerized by my virtual wizardry and because the viewing is so quick, we have time to read a book, set up our Idea books, draw a first-day-self-portrait, and write an artist statement!!

How did I do it you ask...

I used an iPad. I like this tool because it limits my choices. Without those limitations I would spend days obsessing over transitions and audio. Any recording device will due and you can do this in Microsoft Movie Maker as well as many other programs, I'm sure, but this is how I did it with and iPad 2. 
  • First I walked around my room and took video and still pictures of everything I thought was important, the doors, special areas, bulletin boards and so on. I even took footage of the feet (haha-get it!) on which the classes are to stop and wait when they arrive. (The iPad let me jump up and take more footage as needed too because it automatically supplies the video to the app).
  • Next, open iMovie and choose a style. This will give you a standard transition style (that is the way you transition from clip to clip, like fade in and out). Tap on the video and they will drop down into the movie track.
  • Tap the track to get a yellow highlight so you can spit or shorten the clip. The boxes between the clips will show you the transition styles and if you leave it a -  (minus sigh) you will have a hop between cuts. Kissing triangles will fade in and out, where the star will give you the themed style.
  • Tap each clip to highlight and then touch audio. Turn the volume on each clip to 0. Now you won't have any background garble when you do the voice over. 
  • Now, find a quiet place so you can talk through your video. You are going to be watching the video as you speak so that makes it kind of easy. Just remember to your fun-teacher/announcer voice. The first time I did it, I didn't do that and my video could cure insomnia around the globe!!
  • Once the audio is to your liking (this is the part for me that sometimes take the longest) you may need to go back and adjust some of the clips to hit your audio cues, make video clips a little longer or shorter or add more footage.
  • Finally, I like to add a soundtrack. In Audio mode, select add a song and pick from your library or the stock stuff. Click on the audio tracks to highlight and then adjust the volume. I turn the voice up to 165 and the music down to 60 so that it is not distracting from the content. The music will get louder when there is not voiceover, the song will loop automatically and you can set up a fade at the end to end the clip. 
  • My video is not perfect. There are lots of things I would change, but I gave myself deadline and after an hour of editing, voicing-over and sound-track laying, the results suited my needs and I called it. I upload to the iMovie theater so I could play it from my desktop, but you can also send it to YouTube and put a link on your computer like I did here.
  • Have fun and enjoy the process. If the movie is not done in time for the first day, do it the old fashion way, or just test it on your older peeps who have been with you longer. 
Working with the iPad is great for me because I can just tap and tap and tap. It is all out there to find, no hidden drop-down menus. It's not as complicated as it may sound and it is a great teaching tool for that first week!
Have a great first week...whenever it starts!








Monday, August 3, 2015

Exploring Enduring Themes in Indianapolis!

Last week I spent two days with the Arts teachers in the Indianapolis Public School system for some summer PD before they headed back into the trenches for another year of growing people. They experienced a unit using the enduring theme of Identity and explored several student growth indicators, then discussed how to shift their teaching focus from studio to students. We grow people, that is what we do! They made a personal work of art and did a little planning. They talked, planned, problem solved, and collaborated. It was a personally inspiring experience to see the change in the room from 9:00AM Tuesday to 11:30AM Wednesday.





James Stephens (Music for All), Ila Nicholson, Linda Friend, Tina Atkinson, David Neman(IPS VAPA Instructional Coach)