Thursday, October 31, 2013
5th Grade Driftwood Horse Sculptures
Inspired by the larger-than-life-size sculptures of horses from metal and wood by Deborah Butterfield, fifth graders created smaller horse sculptures from small pieces of driftwood joined with hot glue to create forms and, in some cases, little vignettes. It was fun to see the many different ways students approached this assignment to conceive and create these forms, and what details each student highlighted in their sculptures.
3rd Grade Oil Pastel Sunflowers
Third graders learned about Vincent VanGogh through reading Camille and the Sunflowers by Laurence Anholt, and talked about his color choices, high and low contrast, and the unique quality of his brushstrokes. We then discussed symmetry and asymmetry, and looked at examples of each, using some of VanGogh’s paintings as examples. Students folded and cut black paper to form a symmetrical vase shape and glued it to a black background paper. Next, they drew the outline of the form as well sunflowers filling the vase using Elmer’s glue to create raised lines. At the following class, third graders colored their vase, sunflowers, and background with oil pastels, experimenting with how the colors looked on and off the glue areas. These are their stunning creations!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)