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Fritts, Lauren – Art Education, 2019
The term "knolling" was first used in 1987 by Andrew Kromelow, then a janitor at Frank Gehry's Santa Monica studio (Heathcote, n.d.). At the time, Gehry, an architect, was designing furniture for Knoll. While cleaning the studio, Kromelow would arrange displaced tools at 90° angles to create an organized surface. Perhaps done out of…
Descriptors: Art Materials, Culture, Artists, Art Activities
Hood, Emily Jean; Kraehe, Amelia M. – Art Education, 2017
This article explores how new materialism can help conceive of art education practice as research. The discussion is organized in three parts. First, the authors examine how a practicing artist talks about materials as an aspect of creative artmaking experiences. The second section introducees new materialist concepts for thinking about the power…
Descriptors: Art Education, Educational Research, Artists, Art Activities
Ambrose-Smith, Neal; Smith, Janue Quick-to-See – Art Education, 2014
This Instructional Resource relates the experiences of Native American artist Neal Ambrose-Smith, who views himself not only as an artist with a studio practice, but also as an "Arts Worker" who pursues learning new knowledge with his arts-related jobs. Painting, sculpting, and printmaking are only three areas of his studio practice. He…
Descriptors: Artists, Art Products, Art Education, Art Activities
Hark-Weber, Amara G., Ed. – Teaching Artist Journal, 2013
Teaching artists often find themselves working in schools and communities that are new to them, whether these are situations close to home or farther afield. This issue of Four Questions highlights teaching artists who travel extensively as part of their teaching and artistic practices and bring their expertise, energy, and creativity to…
Descriptors: Art Teachers, Artists, Studio Art, Teaching Methods
Egenes, Barbara – Arts & Activities, 2011
Louise Nevelson's circular assemblage, "Collegiate School" (1972), was the inspiration for an art class with the preschoolers at the Kent Children's Center. Nevelson (1899-1988) was the ultimate "found art" artist. Finding interesting throwaway objects, in and out of trash bins, she constructed assemblages that completely changed their former use.…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Artists, Preschool Education
Venola, Penelope – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2012
Popular culture is a relatively new area of study in the artroom, and combining it with the demands of a rigorous curriculum requires some thought. Combining threads from several sources was the key to an exciting exploration of pattern inspired by a newspaper headline. In 2006, a landmark case was settled in Austria, which repatriated five famous…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Popular Culture, Artists
Winters, Laurel A. – Arts & Activities, 2011
In this article, the author describes an art project inspired by the wearable sculpture art created by artist Marjorie Schick. Students used wallpaper paste and newspapers to create papier-mache for a mountain hat, a cherry-pie mask/hat, a "dress" shoe and a Cubistic mask. Cardboard was used in many of these things, in addition to being used as…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Sculpture, Artists
Wilbert, Nancy Corrigan – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2011
Best known for his monumental abstract sculptures of reclining figures, Henry Moore's forms are generally pierced or have a hollow space within them. Some say that these "organic undulating forms" are reminiscent of the landscape of his home in Yorkshire, England. Moore was a giant in the world of sculpture and his large cast bronzes and marble…
Descriptors: Sculpture, Artists, Art Activities, Studio Art
Skophammer, Karen – Arts & Activities, 2011
Oil pastels offer many advantages. They come in a large range of hues, intensities and values, and they lend themselves to blending and shading in a unique way that no other art medium offers. They can be worked and reworked from day to day by the students without the large mess and cleanup time that oil paints require. An artist whose works are a…
Descriptors: Artists, Art Materials, Color, Studio Art
Purcell, John – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2012
In this article, the author describes how his first-grade students made their own compositions based on James Rosenquist's collage series in which long shards of faces were painted over a background that appeared to be abstract. The background was made up of enlarged details of things such as flowers, leaves, fire, and water. The students'…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Elementary School Students, Grade 1
Wayne, Dale – Arts & Activities, 2012
Louise Nevelson, who is called the "architect of shadow," was a "dumpster diver" of her time, collecting found objects in the wee hours of the morning before trash pickup. Recognition evaded Nevelson until she created "Mood Garden + One" (1958), when she was almost 60 years old. In this article, students create their own assemblage using…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Artists, Sculpture
Sutley, Jane – Arts & Activities, 2012
Long before children enter school, it is their imagination that informs their play. Their drawing, too, relies heavily on their natural, unfettered ability to portray both the world around them and their own experiences within that world, without the conventional boundaries between "real" and "imaginary." Surrealism then, is an art movement and…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Art Expression, Art History
Tomascoff, Rocky – Arts & Activities, 2011
Artist Joseph Cornell (1903-1972) created wonderful environments inside boxes using mostly found objects. They were often Surrealistic in nature. Some boxes were designed with glass fronts, and others were meant to be interactive with the viewer, wherein the objects could be handled. With Joseph Cornell in mind, the author introduces an art…
Descriptors: Artists, Studio Art, Art Activities, Creativity
Bey, Sharif – Art Education, 2012
Collecting and placing images/objects of inspiration and personal significance is not an uncommon practice for studio artists. Washington based mixed-media/installation artist Renee Stout draws from the collections she displays in her studio and in her home. She is an avid collector of various objects, including vintage perfumes, West African…
Descriptors: Art Education, Artists, Educational Practices, Art History
Sickler-Voigt, Debrah C. – Art Education, 2011
For centuries people from around the world have celebrated storytelling and puppetry for their educational and social functions. In the comprehensive curriculum, storytelling combined with puppet performances enriches the classroom experience by providing students with opportunities to engage in open dialogue, creativity, and structured play.…
Descriptors: Artists, Art Education, Puppetry, Art Activities