Showing posts with label construction paper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label construction paper. Show all posts

Monday, October 8, 2012

Organic Shape Drawing with Scissors and Matisse








Discussion
Organic Shape? What is organic shape? 
Where do you hear the word organic? 
Where do you find organic shapes? 

Matisse
 Drawing with scissors
He worked very large, we will work smaller
Show his work
What do you think of this piece? Color? Shapes? 
What would you do first if you were inside the artwork? 

Henri Matisse
1869-1954
French Painter,
Studied law until he was 21
Mother gave him a paint box after surgery and he discovered painting
He returned to work, and every morning before work, he attended drawing classes; at lunch time he would paint for an hour or so, and then return to work. After work he would paint till night fell. It was his life. 
In 1891 set off for Paris. 
Matisse began his journey of studies which ultimately lead him to his love of line, shape and color. 
Matisse felt that his greatest influence had been the work of the artist Cezanne (1839 – 1906, French). 
In the 1950‘s, Matisse began creating paintings using paint and paper cut outs. 
In his last years, as he aged and fell ill, Matisse continued to paint, this time on the walls of his room, using a piece of charcoal attached to the end of a bamboo pole. He painted until his death in 1954. 
Matisse had strong feelings about only one thing, the act of painting. 
The purpose of these pictures, he always asserted, was to give pleasure. 
For Matisse, painting was the rhythmic arrangement of line and color on a flat plane. 
He had created the technique of striking contrasts, unmixed hues, flat planes of color (similar to Gauguin, 1848 – 1903, French) 
expressive brush strokes (similar to Van Gogh, 1853 – 1890, Dutch). 
Light was expressed, not in the method of the Impressionists, but with a harmony of intensely covered surfaces. 

PROJECT: Create a matisse style organic shape composition
Step1: glue one large block of color to your white sheet
Step2: glue a second block of color to your white sheet
Step3: begin to cut organic shapes in all colors and glue them to your paper
Step4: create a composition from your random shapes
Step5: pull the piece together by adding smaller pieces in a pattern

Materials: 
Glue stick
Construction paper
Scissors








Friday, February 25, 2011

Collage Overlapping with Matisse

DISCUSSION: 
still life: group of object placed together in interesting ways
Perspective: near and far
Overlapping: one object covering a portion of another object
Look at Matisse’s work: "Red Interior: Still Life on a Blue Table," by Henri Matisse 45 5/8 by 35 inches, Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Dusseldorf, 1947
What colors does he choose
   Do they help tell the story
What about the lines he chooses 
What do we know about zig zag lines and the color red?
What story does it tell?
Can we tell what time of year or day it is?
What might it smell like
Do you have any other sensory reaction to the scene?

MATERIALS: 
Construction paper scrappys in all colors
9x12 construction paper for window frame
Glue
Watercolors
Paint brushes
Scissors
sheet of white card stock for our exterior (8x11)

ARTIST: Henri Matisse 
1869-1954
French Painter,
Studied law until he was 21
Mother gave him a paint box after surgery and he discovered painting
He returned to work, and every morning before work, he attended drawing classes; at lunch time he would paint for an hour or so, and then return to work. After work he would paint till night fell. It was his life. 
In 1891 set off for Paris. 
Matisse began his journey of studies which ultimately lead him to his love of line, shape and color. 
Matisse felt that his greatest influence had been the work of the artist Cezanne (1839 – 1906, French). 
In the 1950‘s, Matisse began creating paintings using paint and paper cut outs. 
In his last years, as he aged and fell ill, Matisse continued to paint, this time on the walls of his room, using a piece of charcoal attached to the end of a bamboo pole. He painted until his death in 1954. 
Matisse had strong feelings about only one thing, the act of painting. 
The purpose of these pictures, he always asserted, was to give pleasure. 
For Matisse, painting was the rhythmic arrangement of line and color on a flat plane. 
He had created the technique of striking contrasts, unmixed hues, flat planes of color (similar to Gauguin, 1848 – 1903, French) 
expressive brush strokes (similar to Van Gogh, 1853 – 1890, Dutch). 
Light was expressed, not in the method of the Impressionists, but with a harmony of intensely covered surfaces. 
For additional information please visit: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_Matisse


PROJECT:  Could take two weeks
Step 1: on your white card stock create a view from your window. Use weather from your favorite time of year
Step 2: set your painting aside for it to dry
Step 3: cut out a window frame from construction paper
Step 4: on a large piece of construction paper use marker to create wallpaper
Step 5: cut out a chair or table from construction paper
Step 6: cut out a pet or a vase of flowers from construction paper
Step 7: create a piece of fabric for your table or chair with markers and paper, cut it out
Step 8: cut out a piece of carpet from construction paper
Step 9: glue all of the objects on your page, create depth
Step 10: clean up





Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Rouault Stain Glass Portraits





DISCUSSION: 
Portrait: drawing of the face
Go over the face and where things fall on the face
Proportion
Complementary Colors? what are they? where do we find them?
what do they create in a work of art?
ARTIST: GEORGES ROUAULT (born May 27, 1871-Feb. 13, 1958, Paris) 
French painter.
His apprenticeship in a glazier's shop restoring medieval stained glass (1885 – 90) influenced his mature style as a painter. 
After an early academic period, his style evolved toward Fauvism before he established a highly personal form of Expressionism
An ardent Roman Catholic, he painted subjects apparently fallen from grace tragic clowns, and pitiless judges. 
After 1914 his subject matter became more specifically religious, with greater emphasis on redemption, 
He shifted from watercolor to oil. 
His layers of paint became thick and rich, his forms simplified, and his colors and black lines reminiscent of stained glass.
In the 1930s he produced a splendid series on Christ's Passion, while reworking many earlier paintings. 
His series of clowns in the 1940s are virtual self-portraits. 
He also produced many engravings as well as ceramics, tapestry designs, and stained glass.
PROJECT: 
Step1: gather supplies
Step 2: draw a portrait on your page do you best to place thing s accordingly
Step3: begin by mixing complementary colors and see what new color you make add in some flour
Step 4: lighten and darken those new colors by adding in white and black
Step 5: Use your new colors to color in your portrait
Step6: color in your background
Step7: fill in your line in black so your portrait gives of the appearance of stained glass
Step 8: clean you mess
MATERIALS:
Brown paper
Pencils
Paint
Water 
Brushes
Flour for paint