These will be the background to the students' lighthouse prints. It's chalk shaved with a scissor suspended in water.
Welcome to Primary Art, home to my favorite art lessons. I am an elementary school art teacher, chronicling my favorite art lessons. I hope to bring ideas to other art teachers, parents, home school teachers, and artistic children. Here you will find a catalog of lessons for grades kindergarten through 5, as well as other art-room related stuff! Thank you for visiting!
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Thursday, December 6, 2012
kindergarten shaving cream icecream
We used shaving cream mixed with glue and liquid watercolor for the ice cream. The best way to apply it is with fingers!
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Second grade warm cool leaves
Second graders learned warm and cool colors. They drew maple leaves and filled in with warm colors for the foreground and cool for the background using watercolor.
4th grade lighthouse prints
Fourth grade students study North Carolina architecture, so we looked at our famous lighthouses. Students drew their lighthouse onto a Styrofoam plate with a pencil and stamped with ink and a brayer. The background is a sponge technique, a shell stamped with black ink, and seashells glued on!
Styrofoam plate:
Third grade printmaking
Third grade studied movement as a principle of design. Their goal was to draw a picture of something moving, with a background, and use it as the basis for their Styrofoam monoprint. We used black ink to print. The circles are marker caps stamped for extra practice in printing.
1st grade weaving
First Graders just finished a unit on color and organic shapes, so I combined the two with this cloud weaving, clouds being organic shapes. Students cut out the cloud by folding a 12x18" paper in half and using bumpy lines. I cut the slits into their clouds and students carefully wove the rainbow in, and secured it with glue! I had the students add some shaving cream mixed with glue to create the cloud texture.
Friday, November 2, 2012
Third grade recycled pugs
This fit in with our North Carolina standard for third grade, 'create art from recycled materials'. We watched a Sesame Street video I found on Youtube that shows the process of recycling newspaper. Then, I showed the students work by artist Denise Fiedler (as the blogger from Fine Lines did). We used paper mache glue and brushes for our adhesive. The third graders loved making their dogs!
Third grade art:
Friday, September 21, 2012
Fifth grade acetate pictures
Fifth graders looked at the artwork of Paul Klee and discussed his use of line and shape. Next they sketched out a design onto white paper and traced it onto clear acetate using black sharpie. They flipped their acetate over (or were supposed to anyway!) and colored the back with oil pastel. Any mess-ups were fixed by students scrubbing the pastel off with a sponge. Finally we stapled them onto black paper so the students could decorate their boarders. I had samples of line designs ready for students to use as a reference.
Fifth grade art:
first grade rockets
We studied the planets and chose different size circle tracers to make each planet. The students used pictures of the real planets as a reference and colored with oil pastel. The next week, we added the black paint background. The following class we looked at a youtube video of a rocket launch. We drew our rockets onto small white pieces of paper, colored with crayon, cut and pasted them to our art. Finally, we dipped sticks into white paint to create stars! (my example was from a few years ago, we did the same basic steps but painted metallic paint over the plants to make them shiny. I just don't have any more metallic paint this year so we skipped it)
First grade work:
Andy Warhol Hands
Third grade works in progress: