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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

5th grade Focal point drawings

For this abstract pencil drawing lesson, students studied the composition of movie posters. We discussed how the artist created a focal point or center of interest. We clearly noticed one part of the image before anything else. Why? How did the artist make your eyes notice the focal point first? After looking at Spider-Man, Up, and a few other movie posters. We noticed the focal point was usually pretty large compared to other things in the image. We found many lines and shapes in the image leading to the focal point. And thirdly we noticed the use of color featured high contrast, light and dark colors together, to draw attention to the focal point.
Our drawings feature just that--they have a clear focal point created through size, leading lines and contrast. They are also shaded carefully to have equal amounts of black, white and gray.





















5P Clay presidents

After researching and writing a paper on different American presidents in social studies class, fifth graders sculpted their president out of clay. We used reference photos to help us sculpt details like hair, clothes appropriate to when the president lived and facial features. We looked at the artwork of Shepard Fairey, the controversial street artist who created Obama' "hope" poster for the 2008 election.





Tuesday, April 2, 2013

O'Keefe flowers

Kindergarten and first grade artists looked at the life and artwork of Georgia O'Keefe. She is a famous female, American painter noted for her large, colorful paintings of flowers and other natural objects. We also found inspiration in time lapse videos of flowers opening and closing and sunflowers following the sun. We began by painting with primary colors. We painted ten randomly placed blobs of each color. Then using markers we added stems, leaves and grass. Then using a variety of colored markers, we added petals and looking at photos of actual flowers drew and colored petals to finish our landscape artwork.