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Auger, Emily E. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2009
The methods by which environmental issues are aestheticized in late-twentieth-century film is directly and historically related to those established for grand manner painters by Nicholas Poussin (1594-1665) and taught at the French academy from the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries. That these fundamentals were part of the training of…
Descriptors: Physical Environment, Aesthetics, Films, Painting (Visual Arts)
Hadley, Mary Jane – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2009
The students in the author's first grade class looked at Picasso's painting, "The Three Musicians," and observed how Picasso made the objects and people appear squared or "cubed." This style of art is called Cubism. In this article, the author describes a painting project that required her students to paint a Cubist snowman. This project helped…
Descriptors: Painting (Visual Arts), Artists, Art Expression, Grade 1
Simkus, Joyce – Arts & Activities, 2010
Claude Monet and the Impressionists were the forward thinkers and painters of their time. They used quick brushstrokes and a rapid pace to capture lively outdoor scenes. Inspired by the colors and shadows revealed by sunlight, the Impressionists typically worked outside, without many preliminary sketches or drafts. This was in direct contrast to…
Descriptors: Artists, Art Expression, Grade 4, Elementary School Students
Johnson, Mark M. – Arts & Activities, 2009
A new traveling exhibition and catalogue produced by the Smithsonian's American Art Museum features works by 31 artists from the United States who came to maturity in the mid-20th century. These artists have become the most significant and influential artists over the past 50 years as their works adorn the modern galleries of hundreds of museums.…
Descriptors: Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Painting (Visual Arts)
Salia, Hannah – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2011
How is the natural environment in the neighborhood representative of the larger biosphere in which people live? Studying the local birds and flora of the Pacific Northwest in the context of the local parks and ponds provided a rich opportunity for third-grade students at St. Thomas School in Medina, Washington, to explore and learn about…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Elementary School Students, Grade 3
Nessom, Jennifer – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2010
The wonderful book, "How Are You Peeling? Foods with Moods" by Saxton Freymann and Joost Elffers inspired a lesson on feelings and expressions for this author's second-grade students. Many students at her school have difficult lives and lots of emotional baggage, resulting in behavioral problems at school. Using the example of Fauvist portraits by…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Studio Art, Artists, Art Expression
Pellegrino, Linda – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2009
Art history can be a little dry at times, but the author is always trying to incorporate new ways of teaching it. In this article, she describes a project in which students were to create a place setting out of clay that had to be unified through a famous artist's style. This place setting had to consist of at least five pieces (dinner plate, cup…
Descriptors: Art History, Artists, Painting (Visual Arts), Art Activities
Chrzanowski, Rose-Ann C. – Arts & Activities, 2010
An art room should be a garden of visual stimulation, born of creativity, inquiry, critical thinking and intellectual conversation--and a little collaboration is not a bad thing either! When the author unpacked the new stools for her art room at the high school, she envisioned something more beautiful than the brown masonite circles that…
Descriptors: Art History, Artists, Art Activities, Studio Art
Hantula, Donald A.; Sudduth, Mary Margaret; Clabaugh, Alison – Psychological Record, 2009
The question of whether an artist's use of technology to create art results in a detectable aesthetic difference was investigated in the case of Dutch realist painter Johannes Vermeer and his use of the camera obscura. In Experiment 1, participants evaluated 20 Vermeer paintings on 6 aesthetic dimensions and preferred paintings created with the…
Descriptors: Artists, Technology, Value Judgment, Painting (Visual Arts)
Cameron, Louise – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2009
Missouri artist George Caleb Bingham (1811-1879) was both a painter and a politician. An exhibition of his work at the Saint Louis Art Museum in the fall of 2007 sponsored by Bank of America featured his painting "The County Election" along with its preparatory drawings. In anticipation of the exhibition, the museum's education…
Descriptors: Museums, Art History, Artists, Visual Aids
Sartorius, Tara Cady – Arts & Activities, 2010
Back in the 18th century, it was popular to give one's lover a locket containing a painted image of one's eye. Possibly this was a way of keeping privacy between two secret lovers. Or it may have been a way of keeping close to the gaze of a loved one while spending time apart. The pendants may have included a lock of hair or other tiny element…
Descriptors: Painting (Visual Arts), Human Body, Artists, Art Expression
Kirker, Sara Schmickle – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2008
One contemporary artist that kindergarten students can easily relate to is Jasper Johns. In this article, the author discusses how she introduced John's numeric and alphabetic paintings to her kindergarten students. The young artists were amazed that art can be created from the familiar symbols that they are learning to make in their regular…
Descriptors: Artists, Kindergarten, Studio Art, Painting (Visual Arts)
Barndt, Deborah, Ed. – SUNY Press, 2011
This compelling collection of inspiring case studies from community arts projects in five countries will inform and inspire students, artists, and activists. "VIVA!" is the product of a five-year transnational research project that integrates place, politics, passion, and praxis. Framed by postcolonial theories of decolonization, the…
Descriptors: Popular Education, Art Education, Community Development, Social Change
Sandell, Renee – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2009
This article addresses the need to rebalance 21st-century art education for inclusion and integration leading to fuller art engagement in an increasingly visual world. I expand upon the form versus content canon in art and offset the typically predominant use of sensory, formal, or technical qualities in comprehending meaning from, as well as in…
Descriptors: Art Education, Visual Literacy, Painting (Visual Arts), Art Products
Herberholz, Barbara – Arts & Activities, 2009
Edgar Degas was not yet famous, but was on the point of aesthetic and commercial success when he left Paris in the fall for his New Orleans visit of about four months, during which time he painted 22 major works. It might be said that he was having a midlife crisis at this time. He had been painting ballet and horse pictures to assist his father's…
Descriptors: Art Education, Intellectual History, Artists, Phenomenology