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  • NCES.P.VA.V.2.3 - Understand the relationship of creative expression to the development ...
  • NCES.P.VA.V.2.3 - Understand the relationship of creative expression to the development ...
Egon Schiele: Old Houses in Krumau, 1914
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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".

Subject:
Arts Education
Visual Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
FMGB Guggenheim Bilbao Museoa
Author:
FMGB Guggenheim Bilbao Museoa Education Staff
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Egon Schiele: Seated Couple, 1915
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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.

Subject:
Arts Education
Visual Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
FMGB Guggenheim Bilbao Museoa
Author:
FMGB Guggenheim Bilbao Museoa Education Staff
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Egon Schiele: Self-Portrait: Pulling Down an Eyelid, 1910
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Students will look at Egon Schile's "Self-Portrait: Pulling Down an Eyelid, 1910" noting use of color and decorative elements, clothing, facial and body language and emotion. Students will also consider Schiele's use of line and his contrasting blocks of color. Students will compare his work to that of his mentor, Gustav Klimt. Working in groups, students will construct and act out a dialogue between artist and subject based on a Schiele drawing. Students will engage in two continuous drawing activities; two contour drawing activities; and create a digital self-portrait experimenting with contortion, asymmetry, and/or disproportionate elements.

Subject:
Arts Education
Visual Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
FMGB Guggenheim Bilbao Museoa
Author:
FMGB Guggenheim Bilbao Museoa Education Staff
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Exploring Photographs, Lesson 3: Writing the Artist's Statement
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Students will read an artist's statement by Dorothea Lange and write an artist's statement based on their own photographs. Students will examine the relationship between photography and the artist's statement; look closely at their own works of art; and use the methods of description, reflection, and formal analysis to write their own artist's statements.

Subject:
Arts Education
Visual Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
J. Paul Getty Trust
Author:
J. Paul Getty Museum Education Staff
Date Added:
02/26/2019
How to Create Excellent Observational Drawing: 11 Tips for High School Art Students
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This resource contains a list of tips that have been written specifically for high school art students who are looking to improve the realism of their observational drawings. It is for those who have already selected something appropriate to draw and who understand how to compose a drawing well.

Observational drawing is an integral component of IGCSE, A Level Fine Art or Painting and Related Media courses. For many students, drawing is the core method of researching, investigating, developing and communicating ideas. While it is accepted that there are many wondrous types of drawings - and that non-representational drawing methods have an important role in student art projects – it is usually advantageous to demonstrate competent, realistic observational drawing skills to the examiner (particularly in the early stage of a project).

Subject:
Arts Education
Visual Arts
Material Type:
Reading
Provider:
Advanced Distribution Limited
Author:
Amiria Robinson
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Impressionism: What Can Art Tell Us About Ourselves?
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Students will be able to view and discuss five different artworks (drawings and paintings created in late-1800s France) in terms of what art can tell them about vocations, social conventions, history, style, science, politics, economics, and creativity; create imaginary narratives about how the subjects came to be painted by the artist; create imaginary narratives about what the artists' private lives might have been like in Europe in the 1880s and 1890s by using historical references; learn how to organize information quickly in a visual manner by using various Bubble Maps©; conduct research to make study sketches (examples of text or graphic backgrounds); create an original work of art; and write a short essay in which they address the question: What can art tell us about ourselves?

Subject:
Arts Education
Visual Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
J. Paul Getty Trust
Author:
Justice O'Neil
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Minimalism and Conceptualism: Public Interventions
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Students will be introduced to the notion of ephemeral and site-specific art and will consider the role of the photo-documentation of these works; explore works that challenge traditional notions of where art should be displayed; be introduced to artists' strategies of institutional critique.

Subject:
Arts Education
Visual Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
The Museum of Modern Art
Author:
MoMALearning
Date Added:
02/26/2019
On Paper: Drawings in the Collection of the Museum of Modern Art, Lesson Two: Gesture and Chance
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Students will consider gesture in drawings; consider alternative materials and processes artists can use to create drawings; consider the role of chance in the creation of drawings.

Subject:
Arts Education
Visual Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
The Museum of Modern Art
Author:
MoMALearning
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Shaping Ideas: Symbolism in Sculpture-Lesson 2
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This lesson is part of a sequential unit. Students use criteria developed in class to evaluate which of their own sketches would make the best symbolic sculpture. They choose a final design, techniques and materials, and create sculptures based on their designs.

Subject:
Arts Education
Visual Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
J. Paul Getty Trust
Author:
J. Paul Getty Museum Education Staff
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Stories of History: Mrs. Lenin and the Nightingale, 2008
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Students will examine sixteen paintings by George Baselitz. Students will describe the works and discuss details, the reasoning and meaning behind painting upside down, techniques and methods required to work in this manner, and the process behind the series. Students will also analyze the titles and subtitles Baselitz used and the meaning or implications associated with each. Students will compose a dialogue between two characters in the paintings and will experiment with painting with hands and feet in the style of Baselitz.

Subject:
Arts Education
Visual Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
FMGB Guggenheim Bilbao Museoa
Author:
FMGB Guggenheim Bilbao Museoa Education Staff
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Teaching Resources from the Denver Art Museum
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This free website provides more than 600 adaptable lesson plans written by teachers in collaboration with the Denver Art Museum for more than 130 objects from the museums world-class art collection. Lesson plans and resources focus on inspiring students to think and problem-solve creatively. Organized in an easy way so that teachers can pick the topic they would like to explore or enhance, then use works of art to teach that subject.

High resolution images are included. Museum visits are not necessary to implement lesson plans. Includes professional and student development tools such as teacher workshops and webinars, virtual classroom courses, career videos, educator blogs and creativity tools. Easy for teachers in language arts, social studies and visual arts to provide a curriculum rooted in the arts while also meeting 21st Century Skills.

Subject:
Arts Education
Visual Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
Denver Art Museum
Author:
Denver Art Museum
Date Added:
02/26/2019
Yoko Ono. Half-A-Wind Show. Retrospective: Action Art
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Students will watch and discuss an excerpt from Ono's "Cut Piece" 1964. Students will also record sounds to create audible poems, produce a school-wide sound-sculpture project, and create short videos in response to a series of prompts.

Subject:
Arts Education
Visual Arts
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Provider:
FMGB Guggenheim Bilbao Museoa
Author:
FMGB Guggenheim Bilbao Museoa Education Staff
Date Added:
02/26/2019