Students will consider the ways that artists respond to political and social …
Students will consider the ways that artists respond to political and social events and ideas; think about sources of inspiration; learn about symbols and think about what they represent.
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 be able to identify architectural elements in paintings; compare different …
Students will be able to identify architectural elements in paintings; compare different vantage points in paintings; discuss methods of representing a three-dimensional building in a two-dimensional painting; and write an essay exploring the use of spaces or perspective in a painting.
Students will discuss the ways paintings and prints created during the interwar …
Students will discuss the ways paintings and prints created during the interwar years reflect changes to the landscape; visually analyze landscape images, using such terms as background, fore-ground, middle ground, medium, and composition; consider the different ways artists responded to the changing landscape.
Students will be introduced to works of art that address constructions of …
Students will be introduced to works of art that address constructions of identity in a consumer society; explore the roles memory plays in the creation and evolution of identity.
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 Richard Serra's 'The Consequence of Consequence'. They will …
Students will look at Richard Serra's 'The Consequence of Consequence'. They will then create a mock-up of a space in or near their school and create model sculptures for the space. Students will also write a dialogue between the artists Constantin Brancusi and Richard Serra depicting what the artists might say to each other with the conversation revealing insights into their work.
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 make word associations while looking at an American flag. Students …
Students will make word associations while looking at an American flag. Students will then compare the American Flag with Oldenburg's "The Old Dump Flag, 1960" concentrating on proportions, materials, color, movement, shape, etc. Discussion will proceed to Oldenburg's idea of "grand symbols". Students will then collect recyclable items, flatten them, and sculpt a "grand symbol" of their community by tearing, crumpling, folding and spray painting the work. Students will divide into groups and create a performance piece incorporating all the objects made by group members.
Students will: * Learn about The Highrise of Homes Project and James …
Students will:
* Learn about The Highrise of Homes Project and James Wines (architect) and his design firm SITE (Sculpture in the Environment). * Work in groups as "city planners" and "architects" to create a proposal for a home construction. * Research examples of high-rise housing by other architects and compare them to the Highrise of Homes project and high-rise housing where you live.
From Creative Living: Residential Architecture in MoMA's Collection: The Curved House--Endless House …
From Creative Living: Residential Architecture in MoMA's Collection: The Curved House--Endless House Project (unbuilt). 1950-60
Students will:
* Learn about The Endless House project and Frederick Kiesler (the architect). * Compare the Endless House with other homes from this guide and in your neighborhood. * Build the Endless House * Research Kiesler's vision for the Endless Theater.
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.
Students will be able to discuss depictions of the civil rights movement; …
Students will be able to discuss depictions of the civil rights movement; analyze the effectiveness of juxtaposing image and text; create an image that addresses a social, economic, or political problem in their community; and write accompanying text to an image that addresses a social, economic, or political problem in their community.
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 look at Egon Schile's "Self-Portrait: Pulling Down an Eyelid, 1910" …
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.
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