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.
Students will view Gillian Wearing's "Self-Portrait as My Uncle, Bryan Gregory"; learn …
Students will view Gillian Wearing's "Self-Portrait as My Uncle, Bryan Gregory"; learn about her process of documentary portraiture; and debate whether her work is "self-portraiture" or not. Students will also use collage to merge an image of themselves with that of another. Students will also write a character sketch of one of Wearing's photographs and a short biography of the person they have researched.
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.
This resource contains a list of tips that have been written specifically …
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).
Students will be able to discuss the growth of suburban development in …
Students will be able to discuss the growth of suburban development in the United States after World War II; write a persuasive essay about suburban development in California; and design a plan for a utopian and environmentally-friendly housing development.
Students will become familiar with the term "landscape" and will revisit the …
Students will become familiar with the term "landscape" and will revisit the terms "foreground," "middle ground," and "background." Students will consider how an artist's painting technique impacts a viewer's interpretation of a painting.
Students will discuss the style and function of an 18th-century compound microscope …
Students will discuss the style and function of an 18th-century compound microscope and its case and then design their own modern scientific or technological instrument. Students should be able to discuss and analyze the elements and principles of design as seen in the Compound Microscope and Case; discuss and compare the design of the microscope to the design of modern scientific or technological devices; and apply the elements and principles of design to the creation of their own modern scientific or technological device.
Students will be able to compare portrayals of individual soldiers to depictions …
Students will be able to compare portrayals of individual soldiers to depictions of battle scenes and discuss the impact of each on viewers; analyze rhetorical strategies in two newspaper articles about a current war; write two different newspaper articles about a current war from different viewpoints; and create digitally or manually manipulated photographs.
Students will be introduced to the notion of ephemeral and site-specific art …
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.
Students will consider artists' choices related to materials, line, color, and scale; …
Students will consider artists' choices related to materials, line, color, and scale; consider artists' motivations for using repeated forms; compare and contrast industrially fabricated works of art with those made by hand.
The five lessons that comprise this guide may be used sequentially or …
The five lessons that comprise this guide may be used sequentially or as independent units. An introduction to the key principles of each lesson is followed by a close examination of the works, including historical context and information on the artist. Discussion questions based on the images lead students through formal analysis of the artworks and seek to create connections between information and visual evidence. The activities that conclude each lesson encourage students to synthesize what they have learned about the works, and carry the lessons into the broader curriculum or relate it to skills students are practicing in the classroom.
Students will consider the challenges of representing identity visually; consider text and …
Students will consider the challenges of representing identity visually; consider text and elements of popular culture in an image; continue to consider the role of drawing as a political medium.
Students will consider gesture in drawings; consider alternative materials and processes artists …
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.
In this lesson, students reflect on the social relevance of right-brain and …
In this lesson, students reflect on the social relevance of right-brain and left-brain thinking. Then, they practice the science skills of observation and drawing using a right-brain dominant approach and reflect on whether and how the different perspective helped them to learn the material.
Students will: 1. Respond to a logical, systematic and verbal drawing prompt. 2. Learn about the differences between brain hemispheres and the current emphasis on the value of creativity and imagination by reading and discussing the article "Let Computers Compute. It’s the Age of the Right Brain." 3. Employ drawing techniques to engage the right hemisphere of the brain and then apply these techniques to a science topic. 4. Compare two self-created drawings and reflect on the experience of approaching the topic from two perspectives, linear/logical and spatial/nonverbal/holistic.
Students will examine architectural structures in paintings and how they are used, …
Students will examine architectural structures in paintings and how they are used, also considering the art elements, composition, emphasis, color, and light. Students will be able to examine the use of architectural structures in paintings; consider the use of composition, emphasis, color, and light in paintings; write words, phrases, and a stanza of a poem depicting a painting's mood; draw an interior and write a related stanza of a poem; and draw exterior landmarks and write a related stanza of a poem.
Students will be introduced to one new medium and one new technique: …
Students will be introduced to one new medium and one new technique: bronze sculpture and lithography; consider the ways in which popular culture is recorded or disseminated in society; consider the ways in which art and popular culture may be integrated in advertising.
Students will be introduced to some of the conventions of portraiture such …
Students will be introduced to some of the conventions of portraiture such as costume, gesture, expression, pose, and background; consider how the above elements can communicate information about a person; consider how symbols can be used in a portrait to add meaning.
Students will compare propagandistic strategies in artworks to modern-day examples of persuasive …
Students will compare propagandistic strategies in artworks to modern-day examples of persuasive techniques and create a propaganda poster for a current political leader.
Students will be able to use English–language vocabulary to describe what they …
Students will be able to use English–language vocabulary to describe what they see in a work of art; create a collage that communicates their experience of the urban environment; and write about their collage, articulating what they were trying to express through visual images using English–language vocabulary.
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