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Showing 16 to 30 of 37 results Save | Export
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Stephens, Pamela; Walkup, Nancy – Art Education, 2011
Many of the paintings of 20th-century American artist Philip C. Curtis defy clear classification. Curtis's artworks often show dreamlike and fantastical qualities and are therefore frequently pigeonholed as Surrealistic. While this classification is not completely erroneous, it fails to acknowledge some subtle differences between Curtis's artwork…
Descriptors: Artists, Painting (Visual Arts), Art Products, Art Expression
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Lott, Debra – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2010
Louisville, Kentucky is an eclectic town of architectural styles from Greek revival to Renaissance Revival to Post modernism, not to mention an entire street dedicated to artsy mom and pop stores. Louisville is second only to the New York City Soho district in terms of the number of its cast-iron facades. Many of these building's fronts have…
Descriptors: Architecture, Studio Art, Art Activities, Municipalities
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Green, Denise; Mitchell, Timothy; Taylor, Patrick – Improving Schools, 2011
Mentoring in classrooms allows teachers the opportunity to be motivational tools in the lives of students while operating as role models. The current research shows that mentoring in the art classroom provides stimulation and the momentum to students who are less motivated with creative assignments. The first part of this study looks at the…
Descriptors: Mentors, Studio Art, Elementary School Students, High School Students
Sartorius, Tara Cady – Arts & Activities, 2011
When artists are inspired to travel in Europe to study art and history of the Western world, Italy is a good place to start. With its ancient architecture, rich cultural heritage, and superb works of art, Italy has been the quintessential center of Western art history for centuries. It was the good fortune of Alabama-based artist and teacher…
Descriptors: Art History, Foreign Countries, Artists, Freehand Drawing
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Cempellin, Leda – Journal of Effective Teaching, 2012
This article focuses on the structure, challenges, and outcomes of a service-learning project experimented by an art historian in an innovative special topics course Museum Experience, cross-listed with an Honors art appreciation course. The discussion includes: creating a new course content planned according to a multidisciplinary perspective…
Descriptors: Service Learning, Arts Centers, Museums, Honors Curriculum
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Pellegrino, Linda – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2009
Art history can be a little dry at times, but the author is always trying to incorporate new ways of teaching it. In this article, she describes a project in which students were to create a place setting out of clay that had to be unified through a famous artist's style. This place setting had to consist of at least five pieces (dinner plate, cup…
Descriptors: Art History, Artists, Painting (Visual Arts), Art Activities
Chrzanowski, Rose-Ann C. – Arts & Activities, 2010
An art room should be a garden of visual stimulation, born of creativity, inquiry, critical thinking and intellectual conversation--and a little collaboration is not a bad thing either! When the author unpacked the new stools for her art room at the high school, she envisioned something more beautiful than the brown masonite circles that…
Descriptors: Art History, Artists, Art Activities, Studio Art
Greenman, Geri – Arts & Activities, 2009
In this article, the author describes the last assignment of her Advanced Studio class, which was about art movement and movement in art. In the assignment, students were to find a master painting they really liked. They would then have to break it up (usually into foreground, middle ground and background) and reassemble it. The difficult part was…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Advanced Courses, Art Activities, Artists
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Kruszewski, Julie; Fontes, Kris – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2008
In this article, the authors present a classroom activity called Pop Culture Peep. In this particular activity, students are required to first research famous artists and/or famous artworks to have an image to use as a reference. Students then plan out how they would decorate the Peep, deciding what materials they would use to create the Peep in…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Art History, Studio Art, Artists
Brew, Charl Anne – Arts & Activities, 2010
The splendor and beauty of stained glass punctuates any room. In this article, the author describes a cross-curriculum project which incorporated the French classes' research and written study of France in the Middle Ages. For the project the author suggested Sainte-Chapelle which is considered a reliquary and was built by Louis IX to house the…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Second Language Instruction, French, High School Students
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Benter, Doris J. – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2008
At Portledge School in Locust Valley, New York, ninth graders in their upper school study art history for one semester. The visual arts department has created a vigorous new syllabus culminating in an hour-long mock art auction. The department selects several art movements (e.g., Post-Impressionism, Cubism, Abstract Expressionism, Social Realism,…
Descriptors: Art History, Art Education, Group Activities, Student Projects
Freeman, Zachary – Arts & Activities, 2009
In this article, the author describes a class project based on the work of contemporary American artist Red Grooms. Grooms is best known for his "sculpto-pictoramas," which are a combination of both painting and sculpture that literally pop off the page or out of the background.
Descriptors: Class Activities, Artists, Art History, High School Students
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Lott, Debra – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2007
This article describes a project with a transformative approach to color theory and still life. Students' use of an arbitrary color scheme can open their eyes, push their creativity and produce exciting paintings. Ordinary still-life objects will be transformed into dramatic, vibrant visuals. The Fauve style of painting is a great art history…
Descriptors: Art History, Studio Art, Color, Painting (Visual Arts)
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Bader, Miriam – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2007
In his book "A Whole New Mind," Daniel Pink describes the aptitude of Symphony as the ability to synthesize, or to put pieces together. Symphony is the capacity to see relationships, detect broad patterns, and to create by combining diverse elements together. The artist Wassily Kandinsky exemplifies Symphonic thinking. A pioneer in nonobjective…
Descriptors: Artists, Profiles, Art Expression, Music
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Horst, Carol – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2007
In this article, the author describes how her intermediate art class used silhouettes expressively and interpreted ancient and contemporary silhouettes in a personal way. The students analyze relationships of works of art to one another in terms of history, aesthetics, and culture, justifying conclusions made in the analysis, and using such…
Descriptors: Art Education, Art, Studio Art, Art History
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