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Snyder, Jennifer – Arts & Activities, 2012
Students often have a hard time equating time spent on art history as time well spent in the art room. Likewise, art teachers struggle with how to keep interest in their classrooms high when the subject turns to history. Some teachers show endless videos, with the students nodding sleepily along to the narrator. Others try to incorporate small…
Descriptors: Art History, Studio Art, Art Activities, Sculpture
Herberholz, Barbara – Arts & Activities, 2011
What makes an artist a great master? Why are some artworks held in higher esteem than others? In this article, the author considers why the contributions and creations of some artists have made it through the years. A short quiz using just a few of the abundant facts and fascinating information found in "The First Time: Innovations in Art" is…
Descriptors: Artists, Art Products, Art History, Books
Herberholz, Barbara – Arts & Activities, 2011
In this article, the author discusses how the view society has taken in regard to the status and role of the artist has evolved over the centuries, and in different countries and cultures. In general, the public has sometimes lacked understanding and has not accepted some of the more avant-garde artworks, while some artists have achieved…
Descriptors: Artists, Status, Role, Cultural Differences
Dionne, Suzanne – Arts & Activities, 2012
Integrating art with literature and science enhances students' learning and retention. Whenever possible, the introduction of the author's art lessons include a relevant artist, such as Claude Monet. In this article, kindergartners paint a pond and learn how to make water lilies using colored tissue-paper squares. (Contains 4 resources.)
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Integrated Curriculum, Artists
Johnson, Mark M. – Arts & Activities, 2011
During the Great Depression, following the stock market crash of 1929, the nation's greatest financial crisis, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's administration created the Public Works of Art Project. It was the first federal government program designed to support the arts by putting artists back to work. The program's purpose was to alleviate…
Descriptors: United States History, Art History, Artists, Federal Programs
Alford, Joanna – Arts & Activities, 2012
James Rosenquist's giant Pop-art panels included realistic renderings of well-known contemporary foods and objects, juxtaposed with famous people in the news--largely from the 1960s, '70s and '80s--and really serve as visual time capsules. In this article, eighth-graders focus on the style of James Rosenquist to create their own Pop-art panel that…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Art Expression, Artists
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
Cunningham, Kathy – Arts & Activities, 2011
What if we hosted a banquet for famous artists and they came dressed in their own work? With this idea in mind, the author gathered materials on different artists from books, magazines, and the Internet. To simplify things somewhat, she only used artists from the mid-1800s to the present. The sixth graders made the artists' masks, placemats, and…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Artists, Art History, Art Activities
Herberholz, Barbara – Arts & Activities, 2012
A humid summer haze covers the River Seine and the grassy bank where young men and boys go swimming on Sunday. Everything seems so quiet, still, and very hot. They wear hats to protect them from the hot sun. The artist Georges Seurat used warm tones to give viewers the feeling of the hot sun. Seurat was trying to catch the dazzle of hot sunlight…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Artists, Art History
Herberholz, Barbara – Arts & Activities, 2012
Artists often paint the different seasonal activities people engage in and the way the world looks as changes take place. The weather for each of the four seasons is different. Farmers plant crops and gardens in the spring and harvest their crops in the fall, just like "The Harvesters" by Pieter Bruegel the Elder. To begin, children will observe…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Artists, Art History
Thomas, Suzanne – Arts & Activities, 2011
When the author traveled to the city of Barcelona, Spain to see the still-unfinished La Sagrada Familia in person, she marveled at the magical genius of Antoni Gaudi's masterpiece. Inspired by Gaudi's whimsical tile work and cathedral towers, the author developed an art project that engages students in a creative experience, which combined art…
Descriptors: Architecture, Studio Art, Art Activities, Art History
Hicks, Bill – Arts & Activities, 2011
This article describes a miniature painting project that allows students to research a master painter and then replicate the work on a smaller scale. This lesson focuses on the students' ability to learn to identify style, subject matter, themes, and content in painting through the study of historical paintings, and the application of various…
Descriptors: Painting (Visual Arts), Artists, Studio Art, Art Activities
Thompson, Virginia P. – Arts & Activities, 2012
Fauvism is a style of painting based on the use of intensely vivid colors that were not natural to the faces, landscapes and objects being painted. It was how artists expressed themselves during the first decade of the 20th century, and lasted only a short time. The artists were called "les Fauves," which means "the wild beasts." In this article,…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Art Expression, Color
Herberholz, Barbara – Arts & Activities, 2010
When one creates an artwork, the "ingredients" are the elements of art: (1) line; (2) color; (3) shape/form; (4) texture; and (5) value. How they are used makes up the principles of art: (1) balance; (2) emphasis; (3) proportion; (4) movement; (5) rhythm, repetition and pattern; (6) variety; and (7) unity. Students will gain a better understanding…
Descriptors: Art Education, Visual Arts, Aesthetics, Artists
Herberholz, Barbara – Arts & Activities, 2010
Having a career in art is based on strong inner feelings that tell a person what it is he or she wants to be, regardless of one's age. By becoming familiar with the lives of artists and what has inspired them, with knowledge of their working processes, teachers can better plan activities for the students in their care. This article takes a look at…
Descriptors: Art Education, Careers, Artists, Art History