| Studio Projects
Action Painting
Appliqué Banner
Group Mural
Pinhole Camera Photography
Pop-Up Cityscape
Print Motifs
Wire Sculpture
ACTION PAINTING
Jackson Pollock created his own technique
to accomplish a style of painting known as action painting.
The colors in his paintings related to his feelings when he
began the work. The lines in his works appear to move or follow
his feelings by being very quickly applied. Sometimes they
are slowly dripped and drawn into his canvas. He did not use
drawings or color sketches for his works but worked directly
on the canvas.
WHAT YOU WILL LEARN
You will create an action painting using tempera on a large
sheet of white paper. Choose colors that reflect how you are
feeling before you begin to work. Warm colors can be used
for feelings of happiness, excitement, or anger. Cool colors
can be used to reflect calm, peacefulness, sadness, or serenity.
WHAT YOU WILL NEED
- Sheet of white paper, 12 x 18 inch (30 x 46 cm)
- Tempera paints
- Brushes, varied sizes
WHAT YOU WILL DO
- Select a color scheme that represents how you feel before
you begin to paint. You can create striking art work by
combining colors in ways that use tints or shades of the
same hue (monochromatic). You may want to combine colors
that share a hue, such as green, blue-green, and yellow-green
(analogous). Or you might choose a third way to combine
colors using a complementary color scheme to achieve contrast
colors that are opposite each other on the color wheel,
for example, yellow and purple.
- Put a layer or two of newspaper down on the floor and
on your work area for protection. Tape the corners of your
white paper to the newspaper. Tape the newspaper to the
work surface to keep it from moving.
- Load your brush with the paint. Hold the brush over your
paper and let the paint drip from your brush. Let the paint
drip to relate to your mood—fast or slow drips. Whether
you have fast or slow drips depends on how full your brush
is and on the consistency of the paint. A brush full of
thin paint will result in fast drips. A brush that is not
as full will have slower drips. Also, if the paint you use
is thick the drips will be slower.
- Observe that lines of color will probably dominate your
work, but try to create shapes by accident. Be sure to create
balance and harmony in your composition.
- As you examine your art, also check to see if you are
achieving balance and harmony. To check for balance look
at your entire composition and see if any one area is too
overpowering. However, keep in mind that balance need not
be symmetrical. Next check for harmony. Make sure the various
elements in your work (drip patterns, dark versus light,
size of spatters) are blended in a pleasing way to create
a harmonious whole.
- Stop occasionally while you work to look at the parts
from every side of the paper.
- When you feel your art work is finished, make sure to
give the painting enough time to dry in a flat position.
If you must move the work to a drying area, carefully carry
your painting (still attached to the newspaper) to a flat
surface. Let the painting dry and then remove the tape and
trim the edges to give a clean professional look to your
painting.
- Show your work to classmates and ask them to interpret
your feelings.
EVALUATING YOUR WORK
| Describe |
Identify areas in the
composition that were a result of fast and slow drips.
Point to the way the colors were combined to form a color
scheme. |
| Analyze |
Tell why you chose the colors you
did. Are they warm or cool colors? Do you have fast or
slow drips? Does a pattern show in your work? Is there
any suggestion of subject in your painting? |
| Interpret |
Give your work a title. How do the
colors make you feel? Do the drip patterns remind you
of anything? Explain why you chose to use fast or slow
drips. |
| Judge |
Tell whether you feel your work is
successful. Explain your answer. |
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APPLIQUÉ
BANNER
WHAT YOU WILL LEARN
You will create a personal banner by sewing fibers and fabrics
and small found objects onto a shaped piece of fabric. The
banner must show objects or designs that are symbolic of you.
Include your name or initials on the banner. To give the banner
unity use harmony of color and rhythm through repetition of
line and shape. Use variety in the size of the negative spaces
between the shapes and in the textures of fabric and stitches.
WHAT YOU WILL NEED
- Sketch paper, pencil, and ruler
- Large sheet of newsprint
- Fabric scissors and straight pins
- Fabric for the banner
- Thick and thin sewing needles
- Small pieces of fabric
- A variety of fibers
- Small found objects
- Optional: A dowel rod or a wire coat hanger
WHAT YOU WILL DO
- Plan the symbols you will include in your banner. List
and draw them on your sketch paper. Remember to include
your name or initials as one of the symbols. Collect a few
small found objects that you might sew onto the banner such
as a button from a special jacket, a ticket stub, an election
button, a dried flower, a blue ribbon, or a stone from the
river where you love to fish.
- Practice some stitches on scrap fabric.
- Plan the size and shape of your banner. Think about the
space where you will hang it, and what you plan to include
on it. If you plan to use a coat hanger, the banner can
be no wider than the bottom rod of the coat hanger. Then
design the way you will arrange the symbols on the shape
of your banner. Remember to repeat lines and shapes to create
a sense of rhythm. Vary the negative spaces. Make several
rough sketches in your sketch book. Select your best design.
- Make a pattern for the banner. Draw the shape on the newsprint
paper. Use the ruler to measure and to make straight lines.
Cut out the paper pattern. Pin it to your fabric, and cut
the fabric to match the pattern.
- Decide what harmonious color scheme you will use. Select
fabrics and fibers to fit the color scheme.
- Think about texture as you select fabrics and plan stitches.
Decide which symbols will be made with fabric and sewn on
to the banner, and which will be made with stitches. Draw
on the scrap fabric with pencil and cut out the fabric pieces.
Pin them in place, and sew them to the banner using the
running stitch or the blanket stitch. Draw the symbols to
be made with stitches onto the banner and stitch them with
a variety of fibers.
- Turn the sides and bottom of your banner under ¼
inch and sew a hem. Sew the top over a thin dowel rod or
the bottom rod of a wire hanger. Attach string to the rod
so that you can hang it up or you may decorate the wire
areas of the coat hanger.
- Place your work on display with your classmates. Can you
recognize any by the symbols alone?
EVALUATING YOUR WORK
| Describe |
List the kinds of fabric,
fibers, and found objects you used in this project. List
the symbols you included. List the stitches you used.
Describe how you included your name or initials. |
| Analyze |
Describe the shape of your banner.
What harmonizing color scheme did you use? Which lines
and shapes did you repeat to create rhythm? Explain how
you introduced variety into your design. Did you vary
negative spaces? Did you vary textures? |
| Interpret |
Is your banner a symbol of you? Can
your friends recognize the banner as your symbol?rns remind
you of anything? Explain why you chose to use fast or
slow drips. |
| Judge |
Are you satisfied with the quality
of the banner? If not, what could you do to make it better? |
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GROUP MURAL
Have you ever seen large pictures painted
on walls of buildings? These pictures are called murals. Do
you wonder how the artist was able to draw the mural on the
wall and keep everything in proportion to one another?
To make murals, artists begin by making a small drawing on
paper. They add details and color. Next they create an enlarging
grid that is in proportion to the finished product. Using
the grid as a guide, the picture is drawn the wall. (See Technique
Tip 5, Handbook page 271.)
WHAT YOU WILL LEARN
You will work with your classmates to create a wall mural.
The mural will be planned for a specific wall in your school
or community. Before you begin, get permission from your art
teacher and school administrators and determine how the project
will be financed. If that is not possible you can paint on
butcher paper or plywood and display your artwork temporarily
in an appropriate area.
WHAT YOU WILL NEED
- Sketch paper, pencil, and eraser
- Ruler, tape measure, yardstick, or meter-stick
- Chalk
- Acrylic paints and brushes
- Specific wall to be painted
- Drop cloth
- Safe ladder
- Cleaning materials, such as sponges, soaps, and buckets
of water
WHAT YOU WILL DO
- As a group, brainstorm ideas that could be used for a
mural. The subject of your mural could be based on native
traditions, school or community events, or social statements.
Discuss possibilities and as a group decide on a theme for
the mural.
- Develop thumbnail sketches based on the theme. Show these
sketches to community officials, school administrators,
teachers, and other students. Make adjustments to the plan
as needed.
- Identify the specific wall where the mural may be painted.
Measure the length and width of the area that the final
product will take. Determine the materials which make up
the wall. Consult with your teacher to find out what pre-treatment
is necessary and what medium should be used on the wall.
- Assign one or two people to render the final composition,
which includes ideas and sketches from the entire group.
Render the final design in color. Show it to the entire
group and make adjustments as needed.
- Develop an enlargement grid for the drawing and identify
a scale for smaller drawings to the mural. For instance,
1 inch on the grid equals a wall measurement of 1 foot.
- Place drop cloths on the floor and protect the surrounding
area as needed. Divide the wall into squares on the wall
to match the squares on the paper. Begin to enlarge the
plan one square at a time.
- Continue working until the mural is complete.
EVALUATING YOUR WORK
| Describe |
Explain what medium you
used to produce the work. |
| Analyze |
Identify how the work achieved unity. |
| Interpret |
Describe how the mural is a good
representation of your school or community. |
| Judge |
Explain why this is a successful work
of art. |
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PINHOLE CAMERA
PHOTOGRAPHY
As with other works of art, learning to
make photographs like this takes skill and practice. It does
not, however, take an expensive camera. A simple homemade
pinhole camera will allow you to test your skills as a photographer.
Pinhole cameras work by letting the photographed image enter
a darkened box through a tiny hole. The image is captured
on a piece of film attached to the inside lid of the box.
WHAT YOU WILL LEARN
You will build a pinhole camera using simple materials found
around the house. You will make a photograph using your camera.
WHAT YOU WILL NEED
- Scissors or cutting knife
- Empty round oatmeal box with a lid
- Flat back spray paint
- Square of heavy-duty aluminum foil, 2 inch (5 cm)
- Needle or sharp pin
- Masking tape
- Square of cardboard, 1 inch (3 cm)
- Sheets of Kodak Plus-X film, 4 x 5 inches (10 x 13 cm)
- Sheet of white paper, 12 x 18 inches (30 x 46 cm)
SAFETY TIP
Use spray paint outdoors or in a well ventilated area. Be
careful not to inhale the fumes from the paint.
WHAT YOU WILL DO
- Using the scissors or cutting knife, cut a ½-inch
(13 mm) square hole in the bottom of the oatmeal box. The
hole should be as close to the center as possible. Paint
the inside of the box and the lid with spray paint. Set
them aside to dry.
- Hold the piece of aluminum foil against a hard, flat surface.
Using the needle or pin, carefully poke a pin-size hole
at the center. Make sure the hole is crisp and sharp. A
ragged or too-large hole will produce a blurry image.
- Place the foil inside the box. Line it up so the pinhole
is centered over the hole at the bottom. Using the masking
tape, attach the foil to the bottom of the box. Place the
cardboard square over the hole on the outside bottom of
the box. Fasten the square along one side with tape, making
a hinged flap.
- In a darkroom, cut a piece of film to fit inside the lid
of the box. Try to handle the film by the edges only because
touching the film may cause blurs on the image. Tape the
film in place. Place the lid on the box. Hold the cardboard
flap closed until you are read to shoot a picture.
- Choose a subject that is outdoors in bright sunlight.
Standing about 10 feet away from your subject, set the camera
down on a flat unmoving surface. Prop the camera with cloth
or crumpled paper towel, so it won’t roll or move
while you are taking your pictures. Aim the bottom of the
box at your subject. Lift the flap, and hold it open for
about 15 seconds. Close the flap. Holding it in place, return
to the darkroom to develop your photo.
EVALUATING YOUR WORK
| Describe |
Show that all inside surfaces
of your camera are coated with paint. Tell whether you
held the camera steady and kept the cardboard flap open
for 15 seconds. |
| Analyze |
Tell whether your photograph was blurry
or clear. If blurry, explain why. If the photograph is
too light or too dark, explain why. |
| Interpret |
Explain how a viewer would recognize
your work as a portrait. Give your photograph a title. |
| Judge |
Tell whether you feel your work succeeds.
Explain your answer. |
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POP-UP CITYSCAPE
Art, as you have learned, may be judged
using three different aesthetic views. One of these views
holds that what matters most in a work is a realistic subject.
A second view states that what is most important in art is
form. A third view argues that content is what counts most.
WHAT YOU WILL LEARN
You will create a three-dimensional pop-up cityscape. Your
work will be guided by one of the three aesthetic views describe
previously. The cityscape will have three parts—a foreground,
a middleground, and a background. You will use the principle
of proportion to organize the element of space.
WHAT YOU WILL NEED
- Pencil and sketch paper
- Four pieces of illustration board: one 3 x 12 inches
(8 x 30 cm), one 6 x 12 inches (15 x 30 cm), one 9 x 12
inches (23 x 30 cm), one 10 x 12 inches (25 x 30 cm)
- School tempera paints and several brushes
- Ruler, scissors, masking tape and white glue
- Two scrap pieces of illustration board, 3 x 2 inches
(8 x 5 cm)
- Two strips of heavy construction paper, 7 x 2 inches
(18 x 5 cm)
WHAT YOU WILL DO
- Decide which of the three aesthetic views you want your
cityscape to resemble most. Will it have a realistic subject?
Will it focus on lines, textures, and shapes? Will it capture
a feeling?
- Once you have chosen a style, make three sets of pencil
sketches for your cityscape. One set should focus on the
low buildings and shapes that will appear in the foreground.
This set should have the most detail and color. A second
should focus on the buildings and shapes of medium height
that will appear in the middleground. A third should focus
on the tall buildings and shapes that will appear in the
background. Include details of design. The three sections
of illustration board should be cut at the top edge to show
the roofline of the buildings on each.
- Use the first three pieces of illustration board and transfer
your best sketches to three of the sections of illustration
board. Carefully paint the buildings and shapes in each
section.
- Turn the remaining piece of illustration board so the
12-inch (30-cm) side is facing you. Placing the ruler firmly
against the near edge, make a pencil’s mark 3 inches
(8 cm) from either end. Make two more pencil dots the same
distance from the ends of the opposite side. Connect each
pair of parallel dots with a light rule.
- Line up the foreground panel (the smallest section) along
one rule. Holding the foreground panel upright, attach it
along its back to the base panel. Use strips of masking
tape for this task. The tape should work as a hinge. Attach
the middleground and background to the base in a similar
fashion.
- Center a scrap of illustration board on a strip of construction
paper. Join the two pieces with glue. When dry, bend the
flaps up to form a letter U. Apply glue to one flap. Attach
the flap to the back of the foreground panel. Be careful
about keeping the U-joint as out of sight as possible. Apply
glue to the other flap. Attach it to the front of the middleground
panel. Repeat this task to join the middleground and background
panels.
- Display your work. Compare it with that of other students.
EVALUATING YOUR WORK
| Describe |
Identify the aesthetic
view that you chose. How did you express that aesthetic
view in the design of your cityscape? |
| Analyze |
Tell which art elements and principles
you used. Tell how you used the principle of proportion.
Explain how you organized the element of space. |
| Interpret |
Does your work express a mood or
feeling? Why did you choose to express this mood in your
cityscape? |
| Judge |
Tell whether you feel your work succeeds.
Explain your answer. |
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PRINT MOTIFS
Artists have always found nature to be
a rich source for inspiration. Patterns created by repeated
designs can be found in nature all around us. Something as
common as interesting patterns left in the sand by an insect’s
tracks can inspire an artist’s imagination.
Creating a pattern by repeating a motif
can be easily accomplished by using a printing technique.
Patterns on fabric, wallpaper, or wrapping paper are often
printed.
WHAT YOU WILL LEARN
You will create a printed pattern to decorate wrapping paper
for a special holiday. You will glue bits of plastic foam
to a piece of wood to create a relief block for printing.
Your wrapping paper will be decorated by a rhythmic pattern
created by repeated printing.
WHAT YOU WILL NEED
- Scratch paper, pencil, and eraser
- Small piece of wood
- Foam packing trays, or any pieces of reusable plastic
foam
- Scissors or cutting knife, glue
- Butcher paper, 12 x 24 inch (30 x 61 cm)
- Printer’s ink or tempera paint, brushes
- Newspaper
WHAT YOU WILL DO
- Consider some of the holidays that are less advertised.
You might research a special holiday celebrated in another
country, or you might decide to create wrapping paper that
has a personal design for someone special. This person could
be someone you know, someone famous, or even an imagined
character.
- Using pencil and scratch paper, sketch some designs that
you might use. Remember you will be cutting out a piece
of plastic foam to glue on a wood block. Use your pencil
to draw the outline of a shape that can be cut out. Keep
your design simple. Consider whether your design will have
formal or informal balance. Remember even a small motif
must have unity or a sense of wholeness to it.
- Select your best sketch. Draw the shape on the plastic
and cut it out. If you use more than one shape, carefully
determine how they are to be arranged on the wood block.
Remember the space between the shapes will be left white.
Again think about the unity of your motif. When you are
satisfied, glue the shape down.
- Place a pad of newspaper under the butcher paper for
better defined prints. Carefully paint the plastic foam
shape on your wood block with ink or tempera paint and begin
printing. Be sure to add more paint each time you make a
print.
- You may decide to make prints using different colors.
Let the paint dry on your block before adding a new color.
Be sure to plan ahead of time when a new color will be added
to your pattern.
EVALUATING YOUR WORK
| Describe |
Point out the shapes in
your print. Point out which motifs in your pattern came
out most clear. Tell what you did to achieve this clear
print. Describe the theme of your wrapping paper. |
| Analyze |
Tell whether you used formal or informal
balance to create unity in your motif. Tell how you created
rhythm with your motif. |
| Interpret |
Tell what mood the theme of your
motif suggests. Explain how adding different colors to
your pattern enhanced the mood. |
| Judge |
Tell whether you feel your work succeeds.
Explain your answer. |
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WIRE SCULPTURE
WHAT YOU WILL LEARN
You will construct a freestanding wire sculpture. The finished
sculpture will be a three-dimensional objective form. It will
be created entirely of wire lines. You can bend, curve, and
twist the wire to make a variety of large and small shapes.
Your figure should show movement. It should also suggest a
feeling, such as happiness, sadness, or fright.
WHAT YOU WILL NEED
- Sketch paper, pencil, and eraser
- 14-gauge steel wire, 35 inch (89 cm) piece
- Pair of needle nose pliers
- Optional: foam or wood block for base, 6 x 6 inch (15
x 15 cm)
WHAT YOU WILL DO
- Decide what subject you will use for your true-to-life
form. Think of the features and feelings that will be associated
with your figure. Identify other objects that may be part
of your sculptural form, such as a bike, kite, or balloon.
- Make a pencil sketch of the form you see in your imagination.
Use one continuous line to create this true-to-life form.
Keep your form simple and concentrate on the line used.
Continue to reshape and redraw until you are happy with
your sketch.
- Grasp your wire at one end. Choose the part of the subject
in your sketch where your sculpture will begin. (You will
not be cutting the wire; your sculpture will be made of
one continuous wire line.) Bend, curve, and twist the wire
until it resembles the part you chose. Then move on to the
next part. Continue working on one part at a time.
- As you work, use a mixture of large, curved twists and
small, tight, twists. This will give interest and variety
to your sculpture.
- If your sculpture can stand on its own, you won’t
need to mount it on a base unless you want to. However,
if your work needs mounting, attach it to a plastic foam
or wood block, using wire bent into hooks, or small screws.
- Display your finished sculpture with those of your classmates
in a gallery in front of the class. Stroll through the gallery,
comparing the different sculptures you and your classmates
created. It is more important to catch the feeling of life,
movement, and uniqueness than to be overly concerned with
exact proportion and details.
SAFETY TIP
Before beginning to form your sculpture, cover both ends of
the wire with masking tape or electrician’s tape. While
working, wear protective eye goggles. Both of these tips will
help prevent you from scratching or poking your eyes and skin
while you work.
EVALUATING YOUR WORK
| Describe |
Point out the features
in your work that identify the subject. Explain what features
you added to create a true-to-life sculpture form. |
| Analyze |
Identify the variety of large and
small shapes created in your wire line. Explain how your
sculpture form shows movement. |
| Interpret |
Explain how you made the sculpture
express a mood. |
| Judge |
Explain why this is a successful work
of art. |
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