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Irvine, Hope – Art Education, 1983
There are five categories of titles of paintings: descriptive, narrative, directive, poetic, and arbitrary. When children title their work they give clues to its intent and challenge the presuppositions that adults may bring to children's art. Titling can expand students' ideas for painting and provide a greater variety of approaches. (CS)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Childrens Art, Elementary Secondary Education
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Burton, Judith M. – School Arts, 1980
This article is concerned with the representational paintings and drawings of six- to nine-year-old children in which human relationships and interactions are central to subject matter. As a rule, children at this age are thought to be at the height of their curiosity and imaginative powers. (Author/KC)
Descriptors: Art Expression, Child Development, Children, Childrens Art
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Eisner, Elliot W. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1979
Describes nine consequences for children who are given the opportunity to work with art teachers. Some of these are that making images provides intrinsic satisfaction; children learn that the images they create can function as symbols; and children's power to conceptualize visual ideas and to use effective means of expressing them increases. (KC)
Descriptors: Art Education, Childrens Art, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation
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Henkes, Robert – Early Child Development and Care, 1990
Explores the similarities between paintings of the abstract expressionists and those of young children. Similarities include total surface coverage, disregard for details, direct application of pigment, disregard for visual perspective, and use of the painting surface as a frontal plane. (CB)
Descriptors: Art Expression, Artists, Childrens Art, Color
Sturtz, Shirley; Ramsey, Jonny H., Ed. – 1982
Class lessons and activities in the visual arts for handicapped students (preschool to adolescent) are presented, based on Programs in the Arts for Special Education (Project PASE). In addition, eight articles from Pennsylvania art teachers are included. The lessons and activities were developed and field-tested by Pennsylvania's Central…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Ceramics, Childrens Art, Class Activities
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Lowenfield, Viktor – American Journal of Art Therapy, 1987
Recognition of the handicapped child's isolation from the environment is the basis for creative art therapy across handicapping conditions (physical disabilities, mental retardation, emotional disturbance, deafness, Blindness, speech impairment, cerebral palsy). Detachment may be overcome by self expression through drawings, paintings, and…
Descriptors: Alienation, Art Activities, Art Education, Art Expression