Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Kids' Artist Rhyme



Seurat painted dots.
I mean lots!

Jackson Pollack split-splat.
Look at that!

Georgia O’Keeffe with flowers
And land without rain showers.

Monet loved lakes.
He painted as the day wakes.

Salvador Dali drew his dreams.
Things I have never seen.

Picasso painted in blue
And odd people too.

Chuck Close painted faces
Not places.

Van Gogh painted Starry Night
And in colors bright

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The children LOVED this game. (I made it up the night before camp for a large motor activity. If you have any other rhymes for me, email me please!)

I printed color photos of each of the artists' work, then put them in clear folders. I put the pictures all in the grass and then read each rhyme one at a time. The children were lined up on the sidewalk then ran to the painting they thought was correct. I told them who was right, why, and then a little about the artist.

On the second day, we reviewed the paintings with names and how to use memory tools to remember the pictures. Simple: "Seurat and dots rhyme." "Dail had clocks melting, so I picture melting baby dolls." "Chuck Close painted faces up close." "I know a kid named Jackson. He is crazy. I can imagine him splashing paint everywhere." They line up on the sidewalk again with the photos in the grass. They get a sticker for each one they get right, if they get 4 right they get a prize (Twizzler).

On the third day, we reviewed again. I don't read the rhyme, just the artist name. They must get 6 right to get a prize. (We used the review time to discuss helping the other students so they can all get them right! This is not cheating. You are discussing the answer and working together.)

On the fourth day, I put out new paintings by the same artists. These paintings the students had never seen before! They had to get 5 right to get a prize. (They could get them all correct because they had learned them so well.)


If we held up just the painting they could immediately say the artists name. It was amazing. This was such a great way to get the kids excited about famous artists. We will be using it again!



Here are the photos that I used. I put 1-3 on a sheet. I printed a second sheet for the final day.

Seurat painted dots.
HERE, HERE, HERE, and HERE.

Jackson Pollack split-splat.
Look at that!
HERE and HERE

Georgia O’Keeffe with flowers
And land without rain showers.
HERE, HERE, and HERE.

Monet loved lakes.
He painted as the day wakes.
HERE, HERE and HERE

Salvador Dali drew his dreams.
Things I have never seen.
HERE and HERE

Picasso painted in blue
And odd people too.
HERE, HERE, HERE and HERE

Chuck Close painted faces
Not places.
HERE, HERE, HERE, and HERE.

Van Gogh painted Starry Night
And in colors bright
HERE, HERE, HERE and HERE.

Name Plates

On the final day of art camp each child is given 5 name plates.

Name:
Material:
Title:

They are allowed to choose 5 pieces of artwork to display in the show.
They are to fill out their name, the material they used, and a title for the piece.

Before we hand out the name tags we discuss naming the piece by what it looks like or trying to make the viewer think of something else. We give the children one card to start with and have them fill out the name plate for their photograph.

The name plates are a great way to quickly identify which pieces the students want in the show.
They are a great way to have the child title the piece so it is finished.
They are often funny and add to the piece of artwork. Misspellings and long explanatory titles give insight into the child.

Finger Painting



This image was found HERE.

I like the idea of teaching the students how to make an animal by painting with their fingers.

Watercolor Trees






These images were found HERE. I think either one of these ideas would be useful for a little kids guided watercolor.

Zoo Photo Scavenger Hunt

Here are two other photo scavenger hunts I have used with other students.

Zoo Photo Hunt
Let’s go have some photo fun
If you get them all done
I’ll give you bubblegum
Snap a photo of you and me
And animal in a tree
Now go and find two giraffes, a marmoset and tapir
Paw prints, spots, 3 birds, and a grey ear
A trunk, strips, and a tail
At our zoo there is no whale
letter ‘S’
Do your very best


Scavenger Hunt
If you’re bored with nothing to do,
Find these things for a prize or two.
All these things can be found
A straw, a napkin, a penny on the ground
One thing small and lost
Something that has no cost
A paper cup, a zoo map, squirrel food
Have fun dude!

Photo Scavenger Hunt

In 2009, we took a field trip to the local art museum. After a tour of the inside of the museum, we did some outside activities. This photo scavenger hunt was one.

Here are the poems we used for the photo scavenger hunt.
(We divided the students into four groups. The students took turns taking the photos.)

Photo Scavenger Hunt #1
It is time to start
Taking pictures of art.
It might be harder than you think
To find something that is pink.
I found a sphere and the number 3.
Then the letters M, J, and T.
Also, a tree that can’t grow
And the word, “NO.”
Now I need a picture of us
Then a heart drawn in the dust.
I’m all done.
We won!


Photo Scavenger Hunt #2
I have to take these photos in order?
Where am I going to find a quarter?
Now, it can’t grow but it’s a tree
And the alphabet letters B, N, and T.
Next I’ll make a green heart
Its my little piece of art.
Three things left to snap
I wish I had a map
An open-toed shoe
And a circle or two!


Photo Scavenger Hunt #3
I spy a leaning tower
And a purple flower.
I spy an animal’s home,
An orange construction cone.
I spy the number four
And a door.
Now, I see something red
And a person missing their head?
Last, I must find stairs
And a place to sit, but not chairs.
I’m all done.
What fun!



Photo Scavenger Hunt #4
I love this game
I don’t know its name
I’m a little kid but I can play too
First I’ll take a picture of a shoe
A tall tower
And a yellow flower
A silver tree
And a picture of me
I’m almost done
I’m having fun
I still need to click
Pictures of the letter K, a pipe and a stick!

Large Motor Rhyme

Straight line (stand up straight)
Squiggly (wiggle)
Turn around and JUMP (turn around in a circle, jump up)
I drew a camel (move your hand like drawing)
He had one hump (put up your finer for the #1)

Straight line
Squiggly
Turn around and HOP
I drew my sister
Spinning a top

Straight line
Squiggly
Turn around and WIGGLE
I drew a polka dot tract
It made me giggle

Straight line
Squiggly
Turn around and CLAP
I drew a baseball player
I forgot to draw his cap

Straight line
Squiggly
Turn around and SHAKE
I drew a froggy
Swimming in the lake

Straight line
Squiggly
Turn around and YAWN
I drew my daddy
Mowing the lawn


(LAST VERSE before starting activity)
Straight line
Squiggly
Turn around and SIT
I drew a doggy
And I got bit!

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Photo Scavenger Hunt

Photograph these things!
An animal with wings
A star , a dog , the number 2
A boat , a car and a shoe .

Still to find- a 9
A flower , a door and a sign
A mailbox and the letter B
Lastly, the bark of a tree .

---------------
I wrote this photo scavenger hunt for the little kids photo lesson. I inserted clipart next to each boldfaced word to help the children who could not read.

We have done this type of activity two years in a row (2009 and 2010). It is always popular.

Painting the Street

We recently learned you can paint the street in our town if you have neighbors sign a petition to allow you to do so. We would love to try this next year (2011)!

Sidewalk Chalk and Paint



This was a simple fun closing one of our very first years of Art Camp. We painted the sidewalk around the church for the art show after talking about Jackson Pollack.

We simply mixed food coloring, water, and corn starch in small yogurt cups and the students splashed them outside. As long as you aren't afraid of a mess and you have a garden hose, you will be fine!

HERE are the instructions to make homemade sidewalk chalk.

What a cool idea this would be to use these to create a collaborative piece of artwork outside of the church. Maybe on a field trip!

Marbelizing Paper


THIS was fun and simple (2010). Both the younger children and the older group enjoyed it.

You MUST purchase the Sta-Flo liquid starch, otherwise it just won't work.

Plaster Sculpture

We are always looking for sculpture ideas. I am interested in using plaster for a sculpture.

HERE and HERE are the sites that interested me in trying it.

I have also seen THIS recipe several places:

Ingredients: 1 part water, 1 part Plaster of Paris, and 1-1/2 parts vermiculite (found in a building supply store). Mix in a plastic bucket. Caution: DON'T pour any of the mixture down the sink! Pour the mixture into a clean milk carton and let set for four or five days. To harden quicker, reverse the process by using more Plaster of Paris. Clean bucket with paper towels.

Carving can be done with simple kitchen tools. Use your imagination and have fun. After drying for about a week, your sculpture can be painted or left in its natural state.

But I am still concerned about the breathing in of vermiculite particles. I don't understand if they are or are not harmful.

UPDATE:


This looks so great! I am excited to try it with the kids.

I would like them to draw a card to make it more complicated. The card could say: make it have one hole. They could also draw an animal to make. My mother-in-law has several small wood and stone animal sculptures they could look at for examples.

Recipe:
2 cups water
2 cups Plaster of Paris
3 cups vermiculite

I purchased vermiculite at Earl May gardening center. Make sure you get the kind without fertilizer. The students should be fine if they aren't eating it or breathing in the dust. The mixture should be thick enough that there isn't any dust.

Pour the mixture into your containers to dry. We used plastic yogurt and sour cream containers.

We let ours sit for an hour and it was pliable with our fingers. After four days it was completely dry and ready to carve.

The best item to carve it was a nutcracker pick.

It can be painted but I like how it looks like stone!

Silhouette Sculpture



This image is from HERE. We are always looking for sculpture ideas. We already have all the supplies for this project in our art cupboard.

Cardboard Lines

The little kids loved making THESE cardboard line sculptures.

We simply used tape and they bent the pieces. I don't know why they enjoyed it so much but it was a fun and inexpensive activity.

Famous Painting Collaborative Project




Every year we talk about dividing up a famous painting for the children to each paint a square. Hopefully, one of these years we will actually do it!

HERE and HERE and HERE are some inspiration.

Checker Board

Making THESE checker boards looked like fun.

The children might make the playing pieces out of Sculpey or by choosing stones from the dollar store.

Portrait Tracing



I am curious to try this and see if it looks like a finished project from a child.

I don't know how much window space we have to accommodate tracing. I will also have to explain to children what lines to trace and what not to.


These directions are HERE:
1.On a sunny day, tape the photograph to a light-filled window and then tape the vellum over the photo. Using a pencil, trace the photo, making the picture as detailed as you'd like, then remove the tracing from the window.
2.To paint each person in the photo, apply the skin color first. When dry to the touch, add facial features and clothing. Once dry, fill in the background.
3.Glue the portrait to a sheet of white paper and slip it into a frame.

Grid Self-Portrait





For these self-portraits, I took photos of the students. I printed the photo in black and white with a one-inch grid over the photo. I also drew a light pencil grid for each child. It worked well and I liked the results but it is very time consuming.

One young students felt too intimidated to try to draw on the grid; he could not write is own name yet. So he made a self-portrait out of clay and we put a photo of it in the show!


I would like to see the children do a photography self-portrait. I would also like these images printed and then try to have them draw the photography they took of themselves.

I think a self-portrait is always a great lesson. It is difficult to draw a person but it is even more difficult to face yourself and your own imperfections.

Adirondack Ink Tiles




THESE tiles are so COOL. We did this for an opener (2010). The kids LOVED them. They are almost impossible to make a mistake.

I found the Adirondack ink at a local craft store in the stamping aisle. The three colors were about $10. The alcohol blending solution was located next to these inks for about $6.

I found the tiles at the local home improvement store for 16 cents a piece. I simply used a clear waterproof spray paint. It was $3. The tiles did need 5 coats of clear spray but it didn't need to dry between coats.


For my personal ones, I adhered felt to the bottom for coasters.

These are worth doing again!

Mod Podged Dish



THESE mod podged candy dishes were easy to make and the kids loved them. Some of them pretended they were hats.

I made sure to cut the scraps small enough to dunk in a small yogurt container filled with modpodge. Clean up was easy with the saran wrap. We let ours dry for a full 24 hours.

Mod Podged Collage

Mod Podge has a distinct smell! I tried THIS mod podged collage.

To do this project with a large group of children I need to find scrap pieces of wood to adhere these too. I would like to find some frames or display pieces on clearance at a local store sometime in the next year.

Window Clings

I thought THESE window clings looked simple to make.

They need time to dry but that wouldn't be a problem for an opener.

I am curious to see how these look when not made by an adult.

_______________________
UPDATE:
Oh my gosh, these did not look good and took three days to dry! My two year old's did not work at all.

String Bowl

I can not get THESE yarn bowls to work! I have seen them on several websites and magazines. I have tried them with Elmer's glue and with Stiffy fabric stiffener. I have tried them with thick and thin yarn. I have tried them with balloons and with Saran wrap covered bowl.

If you have anyway to make these work or if they aren't as cool as they look in the photos, please let me know.

Watercolor with saran wrap & plants

THESE pictures turn out well no matter what your age. (Just make sure your 3 year old student doesn't dump their whole container of water on their paper!)

Guided Drawing & Painting

I often do guided drawing with the little kids. They feel successful drawing when guided step by step.

THIS guided drawing idea for a watercolor seahorse is similar to guided drawings I do with the students.

THIS guided drawing idea for a watercolor of an owl also looks like something the children would enjoy.

HERE is a guided drawing for a humming bird. In 2009, we did guided drawing of fish with both the little kids and the older students. The younger students often respond better to it. We did a guided drawing of a fish then had them look at a photo of a real fish to try and draw it. They worked well in pairs.

Batik Pillows

The little kids loved making their own pillows. They were simple to make and the children even enjoyed stuffing their own.

See the directions HERE.

Kandinsky Circles







I saw THIS so I tried it as a simple guided lesson with the little kids this year (2010).

The little kids were so fascinated by the pastel chalk. They could have cared less about drawing circles passed the instructed ones they drew in pencil.

Little Kid instruction:
Set-up:
Large sheets of paper taped to the table, one for each child
A pencil at each seat
Paint, oil pastels, pastel chalk, crayons, and colored pencils close by

1. Draw a line across the middle of your paper to divide it in half. (Demonstrate)
2. Now draw two lines up and down on your paper. (Demonstrate) Now you should have 6 boxes.
3. In each box draw a circle. (Demonstrate) Now you should have 6 circles.
4. I want you to take your paint and pastels and draw lots of colorful circles over top of these circles to make a beautiful picture. (Demonstrate on your page. Do not show them a finished product.)
5. (Pass out colored drawing utensils.)


I think, this could be a fun opener to explore color.


Eraser Stamps



We did THIS as an opener this year (2010).

The children enjoyed cutting into their own stamp. Opener time is difficult to direct for a formal project because students come to camp at different times. Maybe next time it could be suggested they make a pattern or an animal and have examples on the table.

Also, the could get one 1/2 sheet of card stock folded like a card to decorate. Then on the final day they could use this card as a thank you note to a teacher.

Closing Idea

We often have trouble corralling the students into a formal goodbye.

What if we had them get their opener activity and sit in groups of three to four to discuss what they drew before they were dismissed to go home? That could be an interesting experiment. Some of the openings lend themselves to discussion, such as drawing what you want to be when you grow up.

Career Opener

Simply draw what you want to be when you grow up. A future self-portrait. It is always interesting when you ask a student what they want to be when they grow-up. This could spark some interesting conversations at the tables.

Vase Opener



I would like to try THIS vase warm-up as an opener. It looks like the kids would have fun trying to reverse their images. They could check them in the little mirrors we have. They could also draw one for a friend and trade.

Finish the Magazine



We finished the picture from a magazine this year (2010). The students seem to enjoy this activity.

THIS site shows it more as a lesson. We have never done it that way. Our students often would rather do larger projects with materials they don't use often.

This as a project with more time would be good for a journal drawing activity at home.

Divide Up a Photo

Have two magazine photos in the middle of the table. Have the student pick one then try to turn the photo into simple shapes to recreate the image.

Draw from Memory

I like the idea of having a set of note cards turned upside-down on the table. Each child draws a card of an everyday object and tries to draw it from memory.

Examples of items:
a bicycle
a school bus
a fire hydrant
the front of their school
a stove
the front of their house
the bathroom sink
a toilet

Paul Klee Taking a Line for a Walk

I like THIS idea as an opener. We do some form of this every year. What if we set out vases with flowers as an opener this year?

Lesson Books of the Bible Idea

I would like to teach the children the books of the bible. And try to focus on the meaning of one book of the bible.

Here is a list of the meaning of the books of the bible. I think this could be incorporated somehow.

* Genesis---He is the Creator God
* Exodus---He is the Redemmer
* Leviticus---He is your sanctification
* Numbers---He is your guide
* Deuteronomy---He is your teacher
* Joshua---He is the Mighty Conqueror
* Judges---He gives victory over enemies
* Ruth---He is your kinsman, your lover, your redeemer
* 1 Samuel---He is the root of Jesse
* 2 Samuel---He is the Son of David
* 1 Kings and 2 Kings---He is the King of Kings and Lord of Lords
* 1st and 2nd Chronicles---He is your intercessor and High Priest
* Ezra---He is your temple, your house of worship
* Nehemiah---He is your mighty wall, protecting you from your enemies
* Esther---He stands in the gap to deliver you from your enemies
* Job---He is the arbitrator who not only understands your
struggles, but has the power to do something about them.
* Psalms---He is your song and your reason to sing.
* Proverbs---He is your wisdome, helping you make sense of life
and live it successfully.
* Ecclesiastes---He is your purpose, delivery you from vanity
* Song of Solomon---He is your lover, your Rose of Sharon
* Isaiiah---He is the mighty counselor, the prince of peace, the
everlasting father, and more. In short, he is everything you need.
* Jeremiah---He is your balm of Gilead, the soothing salve for
your sin-sick soul.
* Lamentations---He is the ever-faithful one upon whom you can depend.
* Ezekiel---He is your wheel int he middle of a wheel, the one who
assures that dry dead bones will come alive again.
* Daniel---He is the ancient of days, the everlasting God who
never runs out of time
* Hosea---He is your faithful lover, always beckoning you to come
back, even when you have abandoned Him
* Joel---He is your refuge, keeping you safe in times of trouble.
* Amos---He is the husbandman, the one you can depend on to stay
by your side.
* Obadiah---He is Lord of the Kingdom
* Jonah---He is your salvation, bringing you back within His will.
* Micah---He is judge of the nation
* Nahum---He is the jealous God
* Habakkuk---He is the Holy One
* Zephaniah---He is the witness
* Haggai---He overthrows the enemies
* Zechariah---He is Lord of Hosts
* Malachi---He is Merciful


* Matthew--He is king of the Jews
* Mark---He is the servant
* Luke---He is the Son of Man, feeling what you feel
* John---He is the Son of God
* Acts---He is Saviour of world.
* Romans---He is the righteousness of God
* 1 Corrinthians---He is the rock that followed Isreal
* II Corinthians---He is the triumphant one, giving victory
* Galatians---He is your liberty, he sets you free
* Ephesians he is head of the Church
* Philippians---He is your joy
* Colossians---He is your completeness
* 1 Thessalonians---He is your hope
* 11 Thessalonians---
* 1 Timothy---He is your fatih
* 11Timothy He is your stability
* Philemon---He is your benefactor
* Hebrews---He is your perfection
* James---He is the power behind your faith
* 1 Peter---He is your example
* 11Peter---He is your purity
* 1 John---He is your life
* 11 John---He is your pattern
* 111 John---He is your motivation
* Jude---He is the foundation of your faith.
* Revelation---He is your coming King. From the beginning of the
world to its end, there is no place you can look and not see jesus. He
is everywhere. He is everything. He is before all things, and in Him
all things hold together (Colossians 1:17)

Lesson Drawing Idea

I would again like to have just one bible lesson teacher for the week.

I would like the story to be divided into sections and each child illustrate part of that story.

Harmony Website

I would like to have a laptop computer out for each opener time, so children can take turns drawing on THIS website.

Then I would like them to save the image so it can be printed.