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Showing 76 to 90 of 557 results Save | Export
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Grube, Vicky – Art Education, 2012
In this article, the author describes ethical encounters in Room 13, a schoolroom where children made what they wanted, posed their own questions, and ran an art room like a small business. In Room 13 children had the responsibility to maintain all aspects of the art studio. Specific decisions fell to an annually elected management team, a small…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Ethics, Elementary School Students, Child Responsibility
Skophammer, Karen – Arts & Activities, 2012
Many painters use lines to express powerful emotions. Both Vincent van Gogh and Jean-Michel Basquiat had difficult lives filled with hardship, and died at a young age. They both used art to deal with their emotions. It seems like the stronger the feelings were in them, the faster the strokes were put down in their work. In this article,…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Middle School Students, Psychological Patterns
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
Talley, Clarence, Sr. – Arts & Activities, 2011
Art has a way of helping students better understand and appreciate the world around them, particularly the things that are most important to them. Hip hop is one of those generational genres that capture the attention of young students like few other things do. Drawing on this genre to get students to create art is an excellent way to demonstrate…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Music, Art Expression, Art Activities
Kernan, Christine – Arts & Activities, 2011
For this author, one of the most enjoyable aspects of teaching elementary art is the willingness of students to embrace the different styles of art introduced to them. In this article, she describes a project that allows upper-elementary students to learn about abstract art and the lives of some of the master abstract artists, implement the idea…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Elementary School Students, Ceramics
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Guyotte, Kelly W.; Sochacka, Nicki W.; Costantino, Tracie E.; Walther, Joachim; Kellam, Nadia N. – Art Education, 2014
Recently there have been calls to expandSTEM education to include the arts and design, transforming STEM into STEAM in the K-20 classroom (Maeda, 2013). Like STEM, STEAM education stresses making connections between disciplines that were previously perceived as disparate. This has been conceptualized in different ways, such as: focusing on the…
Descriptors: Creativity, Interdisciplinary Approach, STEM Education, Art Education
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Duncum, Paul – Art Education, 2014
Viewing YouTube culture as a creative, collaborative process similar to animal swarms can help art educators understand and embrace youth's digital practices. School-age youth are among the most prolific contributors to YouTube, not just as viewers, but also as producers. Even preschoolers now produce videos (McClure, 2010). So pervasive,…
Descriptors: Web Sites, Art Education, Figurative Language, Social Networks
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Linesch, Debra; Ojeda, Angelica; Fuster, Maria Elena; Moreno, Stephanie; Solis, Guadalupe – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2014
This article describes an expanded case study methodology that was used to explore the value that art therapy processes have in expression and understanding of the complications of immigration and acculturation. Data collected from two art therapy groups of Hispanic/Latino youth and immigrant women at an urban parish were analyzed to develop an…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Acculturation, Immigration, Case Studies
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Smith, Linda – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2012
In this article, the author discusses how to publicize the art program while integrating art history, technology, art concepts, painting, drawing, and performance opportunities into one project. She suggests that hosting a living artist exhibition might be the answer. Each year, the author and the school librarian conduct a collaborative study of…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Art History, Grade 5
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
McCutcheon, Heather – Arts & Activities, 2012
In this article, the author describes how her studio art students created their Pop art-style self-portraits. Students were each given a printout of a black-and-white picture of themselves that the author had taken with her digital camera. With this picture, students took tracing paper and traced a basic outline of their face, hair, and neck. They…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Portraiture, Popular Culture
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Prager, Phillip – American Journal of Play, 2013
Dada, an art movement that became well known in the late 1910s and early 1920s, challenged traditional notions of art and aesthetics. Dada artists, for example, tossed colored scraps of paper into the air to compose chance-based collages, performed sound poems devoid of semantic value, and modeled a headpiece fashioned of sardine cans. To most art…
Descriptors: Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Artists, Art History, Play
Greenwood, Nate – Arts & Activities, 2011
With all the noise in the world, the flotsam and jetsam sensory input from the media, from friends, from family, from life, it is an arduous task to have students slow things down and focus on the simple, raw elements of their world. Specifically related to art class, the challenge is how to help students digest the work of Minimalist artists. In…
Descriptors: Art Expression, Art Activities, Studio Art, Junior High School Students
Klopack, Ken – Arts & Activities, 2011
The author's art program includes students from kindergarten through eighth grade. In pondering the "nearly impossible," he wondered how the entire student population could work together on one art project that could be exhibited at the same time. He wanted each of his 700 students to create an original artwork that would display individual and…
Descriptors: Portraiture, Studio Art, Art Activities, Student Projects
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Cress, Sarah – Art Education, 2012
For many artists, visual representation begins with the creative exploration of real and personal experiences. The primary challenge in creating such introspective works is maintaining the ability to connect with a broader audience. For high school students specifically, tremendous pride manifests in the creation of artistic works that represent…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Artists, Photography, Visual Aids
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