Art 1 students at Old Orchard Beach High School are working on a literacy themed printmaking project! Last week I gave a slide show and lecture on the history of printmaking and then introduced the criteria for the assignment:
1. Choose a school-appropriate quote from a book that means something to you.
2. Choose at least one word from your quote to incorporate into your relief or monotype.
3. Design and carve a relief block that reflects the ideas, themes, or imagery present in your quote.
4. Design and create a gelatin monoprint that reflects your chosen quote and incorporates your relief print.
After students finished sketches inspired by their chosen quotes they transferred them onto the Easy Cut blocks.
Once the image was transferred, students began using gouges to carve their relief blocks.
After students finished carving their relief blocks they prepared brayers and water soluble block printing ink.
They then added the prepared ink to their blocks.
And they made beautiful prints!
Here is my example. It was a lot of fun! I hadn't carved with Easy Cut since I was in middle school.
This week my High School mentor Piper Bolduc and I were busy setting up the district K-12 art show at the Saco Museum. This year the title is "Hungry for Art", and much of the work in the show reflected upon that theme.
It was a wonderful to get to experience setting up a district art show, to meet many other art educators, and to see countless examples of amazing lessons I could potentially teach in the future.
"The Big Chill" was the pride and joy of the advanced art students from Old Orchard Beach High School.
Inside of "The Big Chill", all of the food was made larger than life out of paper mache
Inspired by Andy Warhol's Pop Art prints, this Campbell's soup can was made entirely out of candy by Old Orchard Beach High School students.
Sections were divided by theme, this is the Mexican Cantina.
The museum is filled with SO much art! Here are some of the projects that I really enjoyed:
Paper mache letters by Loranger Middle School 7th grade students, Giacometti figures by 8th grade Saco Middle School students, and Nevelson studies by 1st grade Young Elementary School students.
"Living Letters", a digital design project by Saco Middle School 7th grade students.
Collapsable paper lanterns by Saco Middle School 8th grade students.
Baskets by 5th grade Loranger Middle School students and sandwiches by 1st grade students at Young Elementary School.
We brought some humor to the show by giving captions to the cardboard portraits by 1st grade students at Fairfield Elementary School.
The show is up until April 20th at the Saco Museum located at 371 Main St. Route 1, Saco, ME.
Hours at the museum are:
Tuesday-Thursday- 12:00-4:00PM
Friday- 12:00-8:00PM
Saturday- 10:00AM-4:00PM
The view of the art room featuring illustrated names by all students and patterned portraits by 1st and 2nd grade students.
I had a busy last week at Poland Community School! First and second grade students made large patterned shelf-portraits and contemporary paper mosaics were made by 3rd grade students. Students in grades 4 and 5 finished up their observational drawings and self-assessments, and the 6th graders finished up tessellations.
Fourth and fifth grade students practiced gesture, contour, and blind-contour drawings before beginning their final copy.
Drawings improved with each attempt!
Self-assessments gauged understanding of the vocabulary and the objective of the lesson.
I had so much fun with the patterned portraits done by the 1st and 2nd graders! Each student had to create a self portrait on three pieces of paper featuring three different patterns. Once students were finished they hung their portraits in the hallway grouped by class. The self-portraits were a colorful and welcome addition to the hallway leading to the art room.
First grade patterned self portraits
Second grade patterned self-portraits
More second grade patterned portraits
The kindergarten students needed a one class project, so I decided to have them draw simple patterned birds. First we talked about different qualities of birds: beaks, feathers, talons, and webbed feet. Then I showed students how to make a simple bird from a half circle for the body, a circle for the head, and a triangle for the beak. Students were then asked to decorate their birds with a pattern. I was so impressed with these adorable birds from such a short and simple lesson, I would love to have more time for a project like this with the younger age group. Because we had a little extra time in one of the classes I had students come up with a story to share about their bird(s). Hearing their stories was so inspirational- I would love to teach more literacy themed projects.
Some students decided to draw multiple birds.
"This bird has a garden growing out of it." -Olivia
Some students were very focused on their patterns.
Some students added other elements to their compositions.
I am going to miss everyone from Poland Community School. I have learned so much from my time here.
Next week I switch gears and start teaching at Old Orchard Beach High School!