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Showing 61 to 75 of 99 results Save | Export
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Holm, Don – School Arts, 1990
Outlines four exercises for high school students to demonstrate how people perceive color differently because of changing light conditions, varying viewpoints, and the viewer's preconceived notions of color. Maintains that an artist can use color perception to control a viewer's mood. (KM)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art Expression
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Bowers, C. A. – Studies in Art Education, 1990
Points out the limitations of the Cartesian epistemology underlying most art education textbooks. Explores the ideas of Gregory Bateson and Ellen Dissanayake who express a semiotic view of artistic creation that is multidimensional. Suggest implications for art education. (KM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Values, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art Expression
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Devlin-Gascard, Lorettann – Art Education, 1996
Utilizes a 17th-century Italian sculpture and an African fetish figure to illustrate essential qualities and characteristics of figurative sculpture. Points out the extreme differences and the many similarities between the two and offers explanations. Includes a process for leading students through "reading" the sculptures. (MJP)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, African Culture, Art Appreciation, Art Education
Green, Julie Taylor – 1992
An examination of 19th century U.S. art and literature reveals the country's strong identification with nature, the ideals of individual freedom and pioneer courage, and the faith in human nature embraced by the immigrants who expanded the country. In the 17th and 18th centuries, U.S. painting reflected the styles and standards of English art. By…
Descriptors: Art, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
Read, Donna J.; Smith, Henrietta M. – 1982
The picture books in John Goodall's "Edwardian Series" can enrich the curriculum materials of the upper elementary social studies, reading, language arts, or art instructor. The books in the series are more than artistically correct--they also envelop history in warmth and humor. The books range from the earliest to the most recent:…
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Elementary Secondary Education, European History, History Instruction
Broudy, Harry S. – 1977
This paper presents a rationale for including aesthetic education in the traditional elementary and secondary curriculum. By teaching students to perceive images as artists do and to make images as artists do, aesthetic education fosters imaginative perception and sensitivity to a broad range of feelings. Four factors contribute to the need for…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Affective Objectives, Art Appreciation, Art Education
Dent, Frank L. – 1972
This is the seventh in a series of technical research reports by Harvard Project Zero which study artistic creation and comprehension as a means toward better art education. This study summarizes the content and practical procedures of a series of lecture-performances in different arts performed before a target audience. The lecture-performance…
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art Expression, Audience Participation
Silverman, Ronald H. – 1967
This is an experimental textbook for teaching about the visual arts at the elementary level. The content answers five questions about art: what is art; who makes art; what are the sources for art; why is art important to you; and why is art important to society. At the end of each section of the text is a set of questions and suggestions for…
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art Education, Ceramics, Cultural Education
Feldman, Edmund Burke, Ed. – 1971
Beginning with a discussion of the functions of art, the author traces the various connections between visual forms and the personal, social, and physical dimensions of everyday life. These are examined in the light of the impact art has on psychological expression, social description, the communication of ideology, the design of useful objects,…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Architecture, Art, Art Appreciation
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Arenas, Amelia – Art Education, 1990
Provides six lesson outlines to help teachers motivate high school students to discuss basic questions about the meaning and function of art, aesthetic responses cultural context, and artistic skill. Illustrates artwork from the Museum of Modern Art by Marcel Duchamp, Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollock, and Meret Oppenheim. (KM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism
Hine, Frances D.; And Others – 1976
This report describes the aesthetic education project, which embraces a conceptual structure, a perceptual approach to learning, and belief that aesthetics can be inculcated into the teaching-learning process. The project's goal was to develop an educational base and requisite expertise so that teachers can organize an aesthetic education…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Cultural Enrichment
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DePorter, Deborah A.; Kavanaugh, Robert D. – Studies in Art Education, 1978
Forty students, grades 4 and 8, were given match-to-sample tests on Western art, to gauge their ability to recognize paintings by the same artist. Eighth-graders performed reliably better than fourth-graders, and their matching justifications were more advanced. Prior artistic experiences improved style sensitivity. (SJL)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Art Appreciation, Developmental Stages, Discrimination Learning
Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly; Robinson, Rick E. – 1990
This study attempts to gain information concerning the receptive, as opposed to the creative, aesthetic experience by talking to museum professionals who spend their working lives identifying, appraising, and explicating works of art. The study is based on an underlying assumption that rules and practices for looking at art exist and must be…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Aesthetic Values, Art, Art Appreciation
Broudy, Harry S. – 1977
The case for the inclusion of aesthetic education with the traditional basic courses of reading, writing, and arithmetic is examined. The following points are emphasized in regarding arts education as a basic: (1) Aesthetic experience is basic because it is a primary form of experience on which all cognition, judgment, and action depend. It is the…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Basic Skills
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Amann, Janet – School Arts, 1990
Explains how elementary students learned art criticism by acquiring a collection of miniature reproductions of artworks, which the students critiqued. Describes how the art specialist worked with the classroom teacher to direct writing activities. Comments on how the teacher managed to acquire the miniature reproduction of artwork. (KM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism
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