Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Welcome Back 2016-2017


Welcome back to a new and exciting year at CHS
Our School-Wide Art Theme this year is Collaboration. Working together on a collaboration is always exciting, and this year we will be doing a variety of collaborating within art classes, across grade levels, and across the curriculum. Collaboration inspires cooperation as well as building community and providing many opportunities for problem solving. 

In the art room young artists have a safe space for exploring materials and new techniques. They have an opportunity to think differently, solve visual and spatial problems, engage and persist in a variety of mediums, and expand their range of personal expression. To this end we began the year reading Beautiful OOPS by Barney Saltzberg. In this wonderful little book the author encourages artists to view mistakes as opportunities...a lesson for life.
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Primary Artists have been exploring shapes and lines through paint and drawing, individually and in collaboration with others:

Shape Painting Collaboration between
Primary and Second Graders
Start with a shape and see where it leads you...

Collaborating with Classmates

"A line is a dot that went for a walk"...artist, Paul Klee

Later, Primary Artists followed their lines with watercolor.
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Kindergartners started off the year exploring the art room and learning where materials and tools are stored. They "gave voice" to their own creative ideas in the form of paper sculpture, collage, drawing, and water painting:




After these explorations they got busy creating surface designs on paper using foam rollers, which was later used as the background paper for their Kindness Quilt (a collaboration with their classroom teachers):

Kindergarten artists also enjoyed creating shape paintings and learning about ways to connect the shapes...
 
Most recently, the Kindergartners learned about the artist Heni Matisse and his artistic life. We focused on the paper cut-outs he created later in his life and tried our own version of "drawing with scissors".:
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First Grade Artists also began the year by exploring the art room and trying out a variety of tools and materials:




The first project that First Graders worked on was a  Mixed Media Collage of Fall Trees. This project incorporates the *Eight Studio Habits of Mind which is a framework for our art curriculum. For example, the project challenges students to:
  • Develop Craft in that they learn to work with a variety of papers in a mixed-media collage
  • Engage and Persist when they work on the project for several weeks, adding a new element each time.
  • Envision the trees they with to create- it's trunk and branches, and create a horizon line where the ground meets the sky
  • Express their own vision of a tree, some including humor!
  • Observe images of many types of trees prior to creating their own
  • Reflect on their work as they discuss it with classmates
  • Stretch & Explore as they create their own unique tree using a variety of handmade papers
  • Understand the Art World as they see their work displayed in the school and are asked questions about their creative process

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Second Graders began the year collaborating with classmates to illustrate our school's Core Values: Community, Play, Knowledge, Respect, and Character. Their illustrations are currently displayed in the Community Room with the Third Grader's work.


After collaborating they worked individually on their self portraits, looking closely at their faces to create a likeness. Did you realize that the shape of lips is made from three lines? 


Second graders also collaborated with the Primary class creating one huge painting. They started with shapes, added to the areas around the shapes and added designs on some.


Most recently, the second graders created mono prints of leaves using glitter paint and fibrous paper.
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Third Grade Artists also began the year illustrating our Core Values. They first worked together to define what each one means. Defining "Character" was tough, but they decided it meant doing the right thingOnce their illustrations were complete, they began working on a two step self-portrait project. They did traditional observational self-portraits first and later created abstract self-portraits after looking at a variety of images created by other artists. For these portraits they used canvas sheets and acrylic paint and felt very professional!
 





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All of the students at CHS have been adding a shape contribution to our "Auction Painting" and enjoying thinking about what Imagination means to them..."Imagination is dreaming, wondering, playing with your mind and having unicorn magic!"


*Eight Studio Habits of Mind were developed by artists and educators associated with Project Zero at Harvard. These “Habits of Mind” are identified as the ways of thinking that are unique to learning in a studio environment, thus demonstrating the real benefits of a Visual Arts Education.
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Monday, April 18, 2016

SPRING 2016

 

Spring 2016

Now that Spring is here we are enjoying the outdoors again, bringing the outside in and soaking up the sunshine. In the art room the students have been busy exploring and creating with several kinds of materials, tools, and techniques. They are learning to Think Like Artists and are practicing the *Studio Habits of Mind that are developed in a studio environment; these include Developing Craft, Engaging & Persisting, Envisioning, Expressing, Observing, Reflecting, Stretching & Exploring, and Understanding the Art World (Collaborating). Here are some highlights:

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Primary Art:
In Primary Art class the students enjoyed creating "Treasure Maps" of their bodies (connected to their classroom study of maps). Each child had an outline created in a unique pose and then added color and details to their maps with paint sticks. The last step was marking the "treasure" (some were hearts...some were tummies!) and showing how to get there:

 
 
Primary artists also enjoyed experimenting with paint sticks while making "Friendship Circles". The students created concentric circle designs which were cut into four parts and rearranged as a vibrant collaboration:
 
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Kindergarten Art Students recently learned to weave on looms! They learned in teams...what I call "Buddy Weaving". As they continued with their weaving they helped each other out. This cooperative process allowed them to practice many *Studio Habits of Mind while they were working: Observing, Engaging & Persisting, Developing a Craft, and Reflecting on their work as they progressed.
 
 
 
Kindergarten art students also experimented with clay and learning how to make a ceramic pinch pot:
 
 
 
Their Matisse Collages were created from a collaborative cutting effort and are both colorful and inventive:
 
 
Their Model Magic Snow Creatures had unique personalities and graced our hallways during the cold weather:
 

 
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First Grade Art Students continue to travel the world in art class as well as in their classroom. The connections they make between their classroom learning and art class are invaluable in enriching their understanding of the cultures they study.
 
While in China they learned about, and then made ceramic panda bears:

 
While in Ireland they painted Celtic designs on silk hoops using liquid watercolor paints and oil pastel resist:
 
 
 
While in Australia they created Aboriginal Dream Paintings after viewing contemporary artist's work from Australia:
 
 

 
 
The first graders have had the opportunity to learn across the curriculum with collaborations between music and art classes as well as science and art. They created musical instruments with Mrs.Vasey in music class and then painted them in art class, followed by a lesson on sound waves in science with Dr. Yaffe. Dr. Yaffe and I will be collaborating once again when the first graders start their bird observations. Later in the spring they will be creating mixed-media spring trees and some art inspired by their studies of Mexican Culture.
 
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Second Grade Art Students also had the opportunity to enrich their classroom studies of Native American Cultures by being introduced to an artist from the Pacific Northwest. Her name is Sue Coccia and she creates detailed drawings of Spirit Animals. The second graders picked animals that were meaningful to them and filled them with symbols and designs to create their own Spirit Animal. This lesson allowed the students to practice Expressing and Envisioning , as well as giving them the opportunity to learn about more ways to Understand the Art World:
 
 
 
 
 
 
Second grade artists practiced Observational Drawing using the beautiful flowers that were gifts during Teacher Appreciation Day! The flowers always provide the perfect object for this lesson!
 
 
 
 
 
 
Second gaders also learned a new hand building technique for clay. Making coil pots is trickier than it looks. In order to put the pots together the students had to follow several steps: make the base, roll the coils, place the coils carefully after scoring and moistening the edges with water, and repeat these steps until the pot is at the height they want. If they wanted to add decorative details at this point, that was an option.
 
 


 
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Third Grade Artists were inspired by images of sculptures created by Pablo Picasso during his "Found Object" period. They used found objects along with their imaginations to create their very own sculptures! The students practiced many *Studio Habits of Mind during this project including Engaging & Persisting, Visualizing, Stretching & Exploring, and Learning About the Art World.
 
 
 


 
 
The third graders also created ceramic sculptures and functional objects (heart bowls) using Picasso's work for inspiration:

 
 
Most recently, third grade artists created intricate design paintings using a multistep process. First they learned  about Cubism and some different ways to divide the space in a visual composition. Next they used the letters in the alphabet to divide the space in their painting, painted in each section, and then added decorative details with paint sticks and metallic pens. They needed to use all of their *Studio Habits of Mind skills in this project!
 
 



 
 
 

 
 
The third graders are currently working on Personal Portraits which will be displayed during their graduation ceremony. This project involves some background information about Frida Kahlo, the great Mexican Portrait Artist, as well as the use of acrylic paints and artist statements! They are creating scenes that include settings and objects to which they have a personal connection.
 
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All School News:

*Studio Habits of Mind were developed by artists and educators associated with Project Zero at Harvard. These “Habits of Mind” were identified as the ways of thinking that are unique to learning in a studio environment, thus demonstrating the real benefits of a Visual Arts Education.