Students will become familiar with the terms landscape, iconography, abstract, and will …
Students will become familiar with the terms landscape, iconography, abstract, and will revisit the terms foreground, middle ground, and background; explore how the artist's perception impacts the way he or she interprets and represents a subject.
Students will be introduced to some of the conventions of portraiture; consider …
Students will be introduced to some of the conventions of portraiture; consider how symbols can be used in a portrait to add meaning; be introduced to the technique of photomontage.
Students will be introduced to the strategy of collage; be introduced to …
Students will be introduced to the strategy of collage; be introduced to the concept of chance and how it has played a role in the production of visual art; explore how artists incorporated materials from everyday life into their works of art, including images from the mass media.
Students will be able to discuss and analyze the sculpture Sketch for …
Students will be able to discuss and analyze the sculpture Sketch for a Fireplace Overmantel by Francesco Antonio Franzoni; consider current styles of home interiors; create studies in 2-D and 3-D for a decorative overmantel for the celebrity patron of their choice; research and read about the life and style of an arts patron and create a design for an overmantel that reflects the patron's life; and articulate in writing the processes they followed to create their overmantels.
Students will be introduced to artists who developed new visual forms through …
Students will be introduced to artists who developed new visual forms through experimentation; consider artists' choices of material; introduced to the term "Constructivism."
Students will be introduced to the principles of the Bauhaus; consider the …
Students will be introduced to the principles of the Bauhaus; consider the elements of chair design; introduced to the printmaking technique of lithography; consider how technological progress affects art and design.
Students will make connections between two design objects intended for different purposes; …
Students will make connections between two design objects intended for different purposes; be introduced to the ways in which artists can affect social and political behavior through design.
Students will compare two different designs for theatrical costumes by artists Oskar …
Students will compare two different designs for theatrical costumes by artists Oskar Schlemmer and Lissitzky; consider how these artists applied their artistic ideals to theater design.
Students will be introduced to two artists, Kazimir Malevich and Piet Mondrian, …
Students will be introduced to two artists, Kazimir Malevich and Piet Mondrian, who pioneered different systems of abstract painting; consider how the two artists' use of shape, line, composition, and color reflect both similarities and differences in their artistic ideologies.
Have students brainstorm a list of adjectives to describe places. As a …
Have students brainstorm a list of adjectives to describe places. As a group, look at Schiele's Old Houses in Krumau and then, working with a partner, to match words from the list with Schiele's scene. Have students reflect on process--how they know when an artwork is finished. Ask students about the use of anthropomorphic elements in Schiele's work and their own. Have students consider the terms looking and seeing and how the two differ. Students will produce an anthropomorphic landscape from their surroundings and write down similes and metaphors comparing parts of the landscape to the human form. Students will also work together to produce a series of images inspired by each other. Students will also work with the definition of "artists".
Students will look at Egon Schiele's "Seated Couple, 1915" and compare the …
Students will look at Egon Schiele's "Seated Couple, 1915" and compare the two figures. Students will discuss how art can express feelings symbolically. Students will then consider Gustav Klimt's "The Kiss, 1908" and compare the two works noting proportions, perspective, color, decorative elements and the relationship between the figures and the environment. After a class discussion on allegory, students will create their own allegorical drawing. Students will then write a poem based on one of the works. Also, working in pairs, students will sketch each other twice making use of perspective to portray different aspects of the subject.
Students will analyze modern artists' interest in travel; discuss modern artists' radical …
Students will analyze modern artists' interest in travel; discuss modern artists' radical and unusual use of artistic materials; look at the ways in which modern artists were inspired by unusual artistic sources.
Students will compare portraits, two of which are self-portraits, focusing on artists' …
Students will compare portraits, two of which are self-portraits, focusing on artists' choices, such as medium, or the materials an artist uses to create a work of art, and composition, meaning the arrangement of different elements upon the surface of a painting, drawing, etc. Students will explore the characteristics that these portraits convey about the sitter.
Students will learn to broaden their descriptive and analytical vocabulary through comparisons …
Students will learn to broaden their descriptive and analytical vocabulary through comparisons and close analysis of works of art; discuss changes taking place in the modern world and the psychological effects on the artists discussed in this guide.
Students will study "Flamingo Capsule", a painting by James Rosenquist drawing on …
Students will study "Flamingo Capsule", a painting by James Rosenquist drawing on the Apollo 1 training disaster. Students will try to connect the painting to the event by deconstructing the painting. Students will consider Rosenquist's composition and discuss the level of success the artist reached in portraying two opposite concepts within a single work. Students will research newspaper accounts of the Apollo 1 tragedy and create their own work responding to the event. Students will also experiment with scaling-up, the technique Rosenquist used to produce very large works.
Students will compare and contrast works of art; learn observational techniques; become …
Students will compare and contrast works of art; learn observational techniques; become familiar with buildings in their community; learn the terms foreground, middle ground, and background, as well as terms for describing objects such as line, color, shape, form, and pattern.
Students will view and discuss works by Garmendia, Zabala, and Salaberria. Students …
Students will view and discuss works by Garmendia, Zabala, and Salaberria. Students will organize and construct an action sculpture, observing how objects react (how they move, sound, how the physical matter changes) if elements such as sun, water, or wind get involved. Students will use smartphones, cameras, and/or video to copy old photos and video comparing qualities of past and present. Students will also view the series "Unconscious/Conscious" and use photography and video to explore an emblematic building in their city.
Still Life, portrait, and landscape are all categories, or genres, of painting …
Still Life, portrait, and landscape are all categories, or genres, of painting which your students have probably seen examples of on their trips to the museum or when looking through an art book. But how much do they know about the genre of genre painting? What genre is Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze?s image of George Washington Crossing the Delaware from the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art? This lesson plan will help students to understand and differentiate the various genres in the visual arts, particularly in Western painting. Students will learn to identify major genres, and will learn to discriminate between a painting?s subject and its genre.
Students will be able to examine a work of art and write …
Students will be able to examine a work of art and write a descriptive analysis about it; explore the differences between objective and subjective writing about an art object; consider the context in which a work of art was created, and develop opinions about a work of art; and discuss and reflect upon the process through which their first impressions of a work of art changed, after acquiring contextual knowledge about it.
Students will be able to observe a watercolor that depicts a historical …
Students will be able to observe a watercolor that depicts a historical narrative of a landmark in a dramatic setting; practice and use various watercolor techniques; and create a watercolor of a landmark in a dramatic setting.
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