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An Ideal Art Class...

9/15/2014

 
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Art education is critical in today's schools. It has been since the times of the ancient Greeks, and only lost its luster during the Industrial Revolution when products became more important and as people became more consumer-driven, turning many schools into education, for profit, "factories."

We however know that art education is not hand turkeys, and frill. When we grid, measure, and draw—we use geometry. When we make sculptures—we use engineering. When we mix colors—we reveal information about physics. When we create illustrations for stories—we learn about literature. When we review the styles of art from da Vinci to Bansky—we teach history. When we write about art—we strengthen these skills. When we create works of art, we solve complex visual problems in creative ways.

This info-graphic attempts to dissect why and what it is we do, and maybe where your own class is.

Red is "Media and Technique." Alone this category would represent house paint and a good brush stroke, rope and trying up items on a boat properly, utilitarian ceramic works, or a well made wood stool.

Blue is about math, science, history, literature, writing, cultures, etc., which every art project generally has some connection to. (Color mixing = physics, story illustrations = literature, tessellations = geometry)

Yellow is the individual being considered in the process, the potential for personal connection, internalization of the information, media, and technique.

Purple are formula projects, "make and take," with little, if any personal expression. Hallways are lined with the work, one looking essentially like the next. It is also the realm of craft that helps to define/express a culture, or decorative items for holidays and special occasions.

Orange is the artful program with lots of expression but fewer connections to core content. It's "art for art's sake," like an open studio, like an island in the school with little connection to anything else. It is also how most professional artists work, so many teachers see this as a model to follow to create little Rembrandts. Both orange and purple have their advantages, and many art classes operate out of these realms.

Green is where a good core content class helps students understand content by personalizing it. This might be with questions like, "What percentage of your body is made up of water, and what weight would that represent?" Or "If you were Bilbo Baggins, in The Hobbit, when would you choose to reveal you had found a magic ring, and why?" Or "Compose a poem to take the place of The Jabberwocky in Through the Looking Glass." It's internalization of class content for deeper understanding.

The middle section is what I strive for, and when I do, I see some amazing things happen. Students make connections between content areas, explore them with more depth and understanding, and create more meaningful, insightful works of art. This is the Heart of a great art program, but certainly a difficult balancing act. One needs to take the time to plan both the personal connection and the relevant core content information.

Three examples through a pinch pot.

Purple Mode: Teacher shows students an inverted pinch pot turtle, glazed green, with little appendages coming out from the bottom. The example is what they will create step by step, pinch a bowl, add the bits, color it green. All students know, "the good ones" look most like the teacher's sample. Parent's love them, so cute!

Orange Mode: Students are given clay and taught how to pinch a pot, then asked to "turn it into something creative" that speaks to their personality. Books or images of other pinch creations may be available to flood students with ideas. Some are stumped with too much choice, but most do well and have fun creating their personal expressive artworks.

Central Mode: Students do a bit of writing about who they are, maybe a list of 10 words to describe themselves. (WRITING) Then they connect each word to a possible animal they think best represents that word. (INTERPRETATION) They create a sketch of that animal to scale. (PLANNING) They learn about Oaxacan carved animals, Haniwa animals, or some other culturally or historically connected touchstone as a reference. (HISTORY) Sketches are redrawn before learning how to properly pinch their sculpture. They cut and weight lumps of clay to get 1/4 pound (MATH) and create their work. The project concludes with a critique, and a few written lines about what they did best, worst, and what they could improve if they did it again. (More Writing)

Time may be your enemy if classes are short, but one core skill can be added to a project to get it into that central mode, be that a little writing, measuring, or historic content.

Studies show that students who take for years of art in high school score 100 points higher on their SATs than their peers. That's awesome, but in 2013 my own students scored 155 points higher on average. I credit that to my integrated approach. Those kinds of numbers, if shared with your administration, can save your program, save your budget, and get you the respect you deserve.

Ticky Tacky Little Boxes

9/14/2014

 
Additional musings on the previous post...
One can and many do have their students create cookie-cutter, candy factory projects (and exercises) like those arty party workshops where they serve wine. Most are happy with the results. The teacher, and students have something to "show" for their work. It's comfortable, there is a feeling of closure and completeness, and most parents, students, colleagues, and administers feel "You're doing an awesome job."

It's like going to a lavish buffet and eating pizza, chicken nuggets, with a cookie to top is off. You'll be full, you'll be happy, and you'll have never challenged yourself to go beyond your comfort zone, which is... comforting.

You'll never know what chicken tikka masala is like, or souvlaki, sushi, vichyssoise, shawarma, or the melt in the mouth joy of fresh crème brûlée. You'll never need to use a fork, knife, spoon, or set of chopsticks. You won't care either because you have let yourself stay inside that comfortable ticky tacky little box.

Art is THE most important class a child can have. Even if they want to be a lawyer, accountant, senator, custodian, chef, etc... The most successful people in every field are the ones who can solve problems in creative ways, finding new and innovative answers. The ones who can integrate math, science, history, language, and the other disciplines into their thought process succeed. ART has done this since the times of Ancient Greek schools. It is only since the industrial revolution that the focus on product, as opposed to process, became a goal, dumbing down art to what happens in so many rooms.

Students will learn linear thinking in other classrooms.
2+2=4
H+2O=Water 
In 1492 Columbus discovered something important
"Casa" means house in Spanish, and Umbrella in Japanese

There is a right and a wrong answer.

But no formula, no class, no guru can show you the right way to paint YOUR dreams, express your soul, your pain, your point of view... but we CAN do it EVERY day in art... if we would just let go of the Ticky Tacky mindset.

Banishing the color wheel?

9/13/2014

 
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Personally, I hate color wheels and I dislike shading cones. I abhor the idea that an "exercise" can take the place of even one minute of art making in my classroom. I will never subject my students to it. 

Let me explain...

With a color wheel on the wall, why must my students make one? I can give them primary colors, and with ANY project I choose, force them to mix to learn how to make their colors WHILE making a work of art. I suppose on a test, a mini color wheel can be made to be assessed, but I digress.

I can have a poster with shaded forms, but when we draw objects I have my students shade right on their sketches and projects. I don't have them draw "my still-life," they either make one, or bring in objects that "speak" to who they are.

We sketch, we plan, we write, and we do. I see no value to doing any project where 2 kids, or worse, a whole class has the same outcome in an art room. If names must be on work so the kid who made it knows which one is theirs... I see that as an indication of failure on my part...I know we need names on work so we can grade it - but a kid should not have to see their name to know it's theirs!

...And this is my k-12 approach, and always has been for 25 years...

What am I missing? What don't I get? Why do some projects look like they came off a Wonka assembly line?

Any project can be designed to focus on a specific skill without resorting to the cookie-cutter or exercises. Here's one example (see image below). Before painting I often have students learn to blend, and we use oil pastels as an intro or transition media. I pair it with the spectrum too. So the background is the "skill-based" item with blending and ROY G. Biv, the foreground silhouette includes 1 or 3 natural elements (From a photo resource or observation), and a figure or two that represents the student doing something that illustrates who they are as a person, in this case, a kid that loves astronomy.

Yes, everyone will have a similar background, but each one will have a unique and personal foreground. The natural element is supposed to be expressive. Sad tree, little bonsai, scary, or maybe just a bush... then the figure is doing something the student feels speaks to who they are or what they enjoy, adding that personal/personality element.

Even in a TAB setting, kids can choose a project they want, just require that somewhere they blend the spectrum. OR have a check list and check off that skill when a child shows it to you at some point during the year...

I am not even remotely suggesting that one skips fundamentals and allow students to sink or swim in the classroom. This does not have to be an all or nothing experience where "artsy" students do well, and those with little experience "sink." I fully understand that what I suggest is different than what many people do, and different is scary, and often rebuked out of hand. 

My experience, from Kinder through 12th grade, over 25 years, big and small classes, is that kids CAN LEARN fundamentals without having to do cookie cutter exercises or projects EVER. I will admit, it takes a tad more forethought, a bit more planning, but both the students and yourself will be richer for the experience. There will be more on-task art-making, and less time "wasted" on non-art making.

If you want to start small, that's fine. Give them cakes of Yellow and Blue. Do ANY PROJECT you want. Paint a dream they had this past week, paint a garden you'd like to play hide and seek in, paint the monster under your bed, or the mythological creature that will protect you from your fears... and I swear, those kids will learn in short order that when blue and yellow touch, a magical green appears, and you won't have wasted ANYONE'S time with an insipid color wheels or shading cones that can be posted on the wall ever again.

They will have expressed their personal dreams, fears, wishes, etc. EVERY project will look different. EVERY project will have a story, EVERY project will be an honest and real work of art...

And every child will know yellow and blue makes GREEN.

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A picasso Dream Completed

9/11/2014

 
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My "pet project" is finally done. From concept several years ago and many false starts, Facebook made it possible to connect with other passionate and talented art teachers to make this book a reality.

Emulating artists is something we do often in the art room. Not to copy, but to study a master artist and walk in their shoes a while.

For students, it is a dose of reality. A Rothko painting is far harder than it appears. That not "any" color will do and ghostly blurred edges are difficult to achieve. They learn that Pollock's action paintings take a certain amount of skill, physicality, and practice to achieve... they learn they need a chemist's eye to discover and reveal the properties of viscosity. Learning by doing focused study, observation, experimentation, revisions, internalization, syntheses, problem solving, and creation.

This book, illustrated by 30 teachers from all over the world, is the result. Though it was written for children, it will certainly be loved by lovers of art from the Renaissance to Pop Art, from Realism to Abstract Expressionist. Every artist and the author's contact information is in the back of the book, so you can explore everyone's work in more detail and even contact them should you want to purchase a print or original work of art that appears in the book.

An abridged preview is below. All the links in the book will take you to pages of the artists, author, and publisher, as well as downloads you can use for your classroom. See a full page version HERE.

If you order the book and love it as much as I do, it would be REALLY awesome if you could review it on Amazon. That will really help spread the word about this awesome project.

See something - say something

9/6/2014

 
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As an art educator with 25 years in the classroom, on a few occasions I saw drawings that gave me a double take. One in my very first year of teaching.

When children draw, sometimes their secrets leak out of them. Sometimes their pain is too much to keep all inside. As we start off this year, I thought to post a little heads up and some links to explore should you want to learn more. Statistics show that about 1 in 4 children face some kind of abuse. Verbal, physical, or even sexual. For some it's mild, and for others, severe.

In that first year of teaching, I saw a child who drew fire around his bottom. The expression was not happy, but drawn like a "rocket boy," so I shared it with guidance, and it lead to an investigation that found the child was in fact being sexually abused. That was 25 years ago. 

When teaching a high school, I saw a child was preoccupied with guns, and included such detail I thought odd. I shared it, and later we found he had a gun in his locker. Though a pellet gun, it was VERY realistic. I have reported other things, but privacy laws prevent follow-up and I don't mind that.

This is all to say, if you see something odd, share it with someone in a position that can do something should their be a problem. You may save a life weather you know it or not. In New Jersey it is actually illegal NOT to share that information. All suspicions must be reported. You should find out what the laws are in your own state.

Some issues to be aware of...
+ Repetitive inward spirals (Sometimes indicate suicidal thoughts)
+ Anatomical drawings that are too detailed for the age
+ Drawings that accentuate or are overly detailed of "private" areas.
+ Omissions of eyes, mouth, hands, arms.
+ Omission of these parts on specific people (mom, dad, etc)
+ Houses without windows or doors.
+ Use of just black or red when other colors are readily available.
+ Drawings that regress suddenly
+ Preoccupation on death in artwork
+ A depressed child that draws eyes over and over (Though common for girls, in a depressed child it can be an indication of severe poor self image)

NOT ALL unusual drawings REALLY indicate abuse. Here is an article that details FALSE cases: http://www.ipt-forensics.com/library/images5.htm

BUT sometimes it does. I will provide a list of links where you can read more. The last will be the most "sensitive" so if you don't wish details, don't go there. The others are less "clinically detailed." Feel free to share in your comments about situations you have come across while of course keeping names and places out of it.

http://tinyurl.com/q8kcpa5
http://tinyurl.com/o4rvqz8
http://tinyurl.com/ofvxzoq
http://tinyurl.com/lfjzzw7

http://tinyurl.com/o3qfs82 <-- may be too detailed for some. Sad

HERE however is a good resource. Comment if you are aware of others.

    ArtEdGuru​™

    Please Note:

    When you see Color Text, it's a link to more info.

    If you get nothing else from my blog THIS POST is the one I hope everyone reads.

    THIS POST spells out my approach, and THIS POST explains how I create "Choice-Based" lessons that connect to core content.
    THIS POST explains how you can plan projects that assure individual expression.
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