Students will consider the choices artists make with regard to painting, focusing …
Students will consider the choices artists make with regard to painting, focusing on color, shape, composition, proportion, balance, style, and scale; learn how to discuss and compare nonrepresentational works of art; think about their relationship as a viewer to works of art and will consider how an abstract work can evoke a sense of atmosphere or place.
Students will consider how and why artists use everyday objects as subject …
Students will consider how and why artists use everyday objects as subject matter; consider the choices artists make when creating works of art, exploring subject matter and sources of inspiration, medium, and style; make connections between consumer culture and art; learn about the technique of screen-printing.
Students will examine three images that represent different ways that artists, in …
Students will examine three images that represent different ways that artists, in the years between World War I and World War II, responded to the social and political turmoil around them; discuss these images in terms of subject matter, composition, style, and representation.
Students will examine a poster and two paintings and consider how the …
Students will examine a poster and two paintings and consider how the artists who created these objects reflected upon movement through subject matter, form, and technique; consider the varying experiences of viewing a triptych, a painting cycle, and a design object; discuss multi-panel artworks in terms of narrative.
Whether specialising in Painting, Graphic Design, Photography, textiles or Sculpture, most high …
Whether specialising in Painting, Graphic Design, Photography, textiles or Sculpture, most high school Art students begin by selecting a topic for their Coursework or Examination project. One of the most crucial decisions an IGCSE, GCSE or A Level Art student has to make is what subject or theme they will spend the year exploring. It is a decision that many find difficult, whether due to a lack of inspiration, an inability to discern between two or more possible ideas or a general misunderstanding about the type of topic that is appropriate. This resource contains a step-by-step guide that students can use to brainstorm, evaluate and select (in conjunction with advice from their teacher) an outstanding topic for their high school Art project.
Students will analyze the symbols used in geographic maps; consider the impact …
Students will analyze the symbols used in geographic maps; consider the impact of cultural, historical, and political contexts on mapping; compare and contrast maps in diverse mediums made by artists from different geographic and cultural backgrounds.
Students will explore the varied meanings of “identity; learn how irony and …
Students will explore the varied meanings of “identity; learn how irony and satire can function in a work of art; discover how maps can be used to chart not only geography but also psycho-logical, emotional, and intellectual states.
Students will learn how artists explore personal, cultural, and national identity through …
Students will learn how artists explore personal, cultural, and national identity through materials, process, and tradition; see how contemporary artists have adapted historic, culturally specific art-making practices to the present day; begin to consider the role of politics and religion in contemporary art.
Students will look at Brancusi's 'The Kiss' and compare it to other …
Students will look at Brancusi's 'The Kiss' and compare it to other sculptures they have seen. Students will also comment on some of Brancusi's aphorisms about art and the creative process. Students will create an artwork that responds to the artwork of Brancusi or Serra or Rodin. Students will also explore direct carving after the work of Brancusi.
Students will create and use pinhole cameras to understand how artists use …
Students will create and use pinhole cameras to understand how artists use and manipulate light to capture images in photographs. They shoot and develop photographs made with pinhole cameras. They compare and contrast a nineteenth-century image, photographs taken with a pinhole camera, and pictures created with a digital camera or camera phone.
Students will create pinhole cameras to understand that light travels in a …
Students will create pinhole cameras to understand that light travels in a straight path. They describe the lines and shapes in a nineteenth-century photograph of a building and then use their pinhole cameras to trace the architecture of their school building.
Students will create pinhole cameras to learn how artists manipulate light to …
Students will create pinhole cameras to learn how artists manipulate light to make photographs. They describe and analyze a nineteenth-century photograph and use their cameras to capture the architecture of their school or other buildings.
This lesson is part of a sequential unit. Students begin work on …
This lesson is part of a sequential unit. Students begin work on a ceramic vessel, which they designed in "Ceramics: A Vessel into History—Lesson 2." They discuss their artistic choices and identify elements derived from historical examples while considering how artists appropriate ideas from earlier artists.
Students will look at Oldenburg's "Late Submission to the Chicago Tribune Architectural …
Students will look at Oldenburg's "Late Submission to the Chicago Tribune Architectural Competition of 1922: Clothespin" and discuss scale, function, and form. Students will consider Oldenburg's reimagining of every day objects into monumental works of art. Students will then create their own "late submissions" for the world's most beautiful office building.
Students will look at Oldenburg's "Mouse Museum, 1977" and discuss the function …
Students will look at Oldenburg's "Mouse Museum, 1977" and discuss the function of museums, the idea of collections, and the meaning of "alter ego". Students will create their own representation of their alter ego. Each student will be provided an object and asked to draw that object and then to draw the object again but transforming it into something else of a vastly different scale. Students will reflect on what they collect and sketch out the design for a museum based on their collection including internal and external views of the buildings.
Students will: * Learn about Farnsworth (the house) and Ludwig Mies van …
Students will:
* Learn about Farnsworth (the house) and Ludwig Mies van deer Rohe (the architect). * Conduct research on the Bauhaus movement. * Write a report about the artists and intellectuals, like Mies van deer Rohe, who sought asylum in other countries to escape censorship and the suppression of individual and political rights under Hitler in the 1930's.
From Creative Living: Residential Architecture in MoMA's Collection, A Guide for Educators …
From Creative Living: Residential Architecture in MoMA's Collection, A Guide for Educators
House Three: The House on Stilts--Villa Savoye, Poissy-sur-Seine, France, 1929-31
Students will:
* Discuss the particulars of the Villa Savoye. * Discuss the Le Corbusier's "Chaise Longe" chair. * Learn about the occupants, the Jeannerets, of the Villa Savoye. * Analyze and evaluate "home" and "home atmosphere". * Compare and contrast, through a series of writing exercises, the qualities of Villa Savoye with their own. * Learn about Le Corbusier's "Five Points of Architecture" and the "International Style".
From Creative Living: Residential Architecture in MoMA's Collection, A Guide for Educators …
From Creative Living: Residential Architecture in MoMA's Collection, A Guide for Educators
House Two: The Red and Blue House--Schroder House, Utrecht, The Netherlands, 1924
Students will:
* Discuss the particulars of the Schroder House. * Discuss the "Red Blue Chair". * Learn about the occupants, the Schroders, of the Red and Blue House. * Analyze and evaluate "home" and "home atmosphere". * Compare and contrast, through a series of writing exercises, the qualities of Schroder home with their own. * Learn about the "De Stijl" movement.
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