Showing posts with label relief sculpture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label relief sculpture. Show all posts

Monday, February 19, 2018

Environmental Installation Slab



Objective: Students explore outdoors to create an original environmental installation that demonstrates this acquired knowledge
Students define, identify and discuss the significance of these art terms in relation to their own artwork, their peer’s artwork as well as current and historical artist’s work
Historical and cultural exemplars: Andy Goldsworthy, Christo and Jeanne-Claude
Final Project is inspired by environmental photo and created through slab building with clay. 

Project Requirements: 
  • Student will explore and create an environmental installation while on nature walk
  • Student will preserve the installation through photography and video
  • Student will use the installation to inspire a final project as a slab vase. 
  • Student will design and create a hand built slab base in a style of their choosing while sticking with demo instructions. 
  • The vase will be a min of 6” and a max of 10”
  • Vase should include relief, indentation, subtraction and pattern, 
  • Student will complete the vase using only one, neutral glaze color

CA Art Standards: 
1.1 Identify and use the principles of design to discuss, analyze, and write about visual aspects in the environment and in works of art, including their own.
1.5 Analyze the material used by a given artist and describe how its use influences the meaning of the work.
2.3 Develop and refine skill in the manipulation of digital imagery (either still or video).
3.3 Identify and describe trends in the visual arts and discuss how the issues of time, place, and cultural influence are reflected in selected works of art.
4.4 Articulate the process and rationale for refining and reworking one of their own works of art.
5.3 Compare and contrast the ways in which different media (television, newspapers, magazines) cover the same art exhibition.

DISCUSSION: 
ARTIST: Christo Javacheff (June 13, 1935-           )
Christo attended the Fine Arts Academy, Bulgaria, 
When the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 broke out, he fled to Vienna.
He studied for a semester, moved to Paris and began exhibiting his works with the nouveaux réalistes. 
Christo’s earliest sculptures were composed of cans and bottles—some as found and some  painted or wrapped in paper, plastic, or fabric.

Vocabulary: Nouveaux Réalistes: Founded in 1960 by the critic Pierre Restany, artists associated with nouveau réalism (which translates as ‘new realism’) made extensive use of collage and assemblage as well as painting

While working there as a portrait artist, Christo met Jeanne-Claude de Guillebon, whom he married in 1959. 

ARTIST: Jeanne-Claude de GuillebJon  (June 13, 1935- 2009)
environmental sculptors, noted for their controversial outdoor sculptures that often involved monumental displays of fabrics and plastics.

Jeanne-Claude was once described as her husband’s publicist and business manager. 
She later received equal billing with him in all creative and administrative aspects of their work. In 1964 the pair relocated to New York City, where their art was seen as a form of Arte Povera.

Vocabulary: Arte povera:  means literally ‘poor art’ but the word poor here refers to the movement’s signature exploration of a wide range of materials beyond the traditional ones of oil paint on canvas, bronze, or carved marble
 
Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s first collaborative works included Dockside Packages
In 1968 they also completed a suspended 18,375-foot (5,600-metre) “air package” over Minneapolis, Minnesota, 
Their monumental later projects included Valley Curtain (1972; Rifle Gap, Colorado), 
Running Fence (1976; Marin and Sonoma counties, California), 
In 1985 in Paris, they wrapped the Pont Neuf (bridge) in beige  cloth. 
In 1995 the couple received the Japan Art Association’s Praemium Imperiale prize for sculptures
ARTIST:Christo and Jeanne-ClaudeThe Gates, Central Park, New York City, 1979–2005 was unveiled in 2005. Stretching across 23 miles (37 km) of walkway in Central Park, the work featured 7,503 steel  gates that were 16 feet (5 metres) high and decorated with saffron-coloured cloth panels. The Gates was on display for 16 days and attracted more than four million visitors.
Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s huge, usually outdoor sculptures are temporary and involve hundreds of assistants in their construction. 
Seen as they are by all manner of passersby, including those who would not necessarily visit museums
These works force observers to confront questions regarding the nature of art. 
As the scope of the projects widened, increased time was needed for planning and construction phases, the securing of permits, and environmental-impact research. 
For each project, they formed a corporation, which secured financing and sold the primary models and sketches. 
Most installations were documented in print and on film, and the materials that created them were sold or given away after the projects were dismantled.

ARTIST: Andy Goldsworthy (1956-     )
Born in Cheshire, England
Currently resides in Scotland. 
He studied at Bradford School of Art and Preston Polytechnic and has been making art in the environment, both rural and urban, since the  mid-1970s. 
Over the past 25 years, Goldsworthy has gained a significant reputation for both his ephemeral works and his permanent installations that draw out the endemic character of a place. 
The artist works with natural materials, such as leaves, sand, ice, and stone that often originate from the local site. 
Goldsworthy has produced more than 70 exhibitions and projects all over the world
In addition, he has made temporary museum installations at the J. Paul Getty Museum, The Metropolitan Museum, and The Tate. 
Goldsworthy's other large-scale installations in the United States include Garden of  Stones (2003, Museum of Jewish Heritage, New York); 
All of these large-scale commissioned works have their origins in ephemeral works.

Vocabulary: ephemeral: lasting for a very short time.

Andy Goldsworthy's Garden of Stones at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in NYC has trees growing from boulders creating an ongoing process of growth 

PROCEDURES: 
Students receive and hour of class time outside to create an environmental installation. 
Students document that installation in photograph
Students use their photograph to inspire their slab sculpture 

SLAB STEPS: 
  • Slab-built ceramics: the artist assembles an artwork by hand using flat slabs of clay.
  • Artists form slabs by forcing a lumps of clay through a roller mechanism, flattening the clay to a consistent thickness. 
  • Roll slabs of clay using 1/4” slab sticks (Guides)
  • Slabs can be used to build sculpture or functional vessels, and often gives the artist more freedom to alter a form from the beginning of the process.
  • Start with wedging and throwing clay on a flat surface (covered with canvas).
  • **Wedging: throwing or kneading clay to remove air bubbles
  • Spread the clay out by patting it with your whole hand.
  • Flip the clay over carefully.
Place wooden slab sticks (guides) on both sides of the clay to help you achieve an even thickness
Trace from sketchbook planning and cut with a needle tool.

Sketchbook plan should be to scale. 


Once slab is complete: Students will use additive, subtractive and relief methods to create the look of their environmental sculpture in their final sale vase. 




Thursday, January 4, 2018

Repeated Paper Modules






Repeated Paper Modules 

PROJECT OBJECTIVE: 
Create a repeated Paper Module Sculpture inspired by origami
Fold, curl, twist or crumple paper (magazine pages, printed out photos, maps, book pages, etc.) and create 30-60 of the same form (they can be different sizes). Glue the papers into either a 3D-sculptural form or a relief sculpture on painted cardboard. This piece should emphasize unity/variety and balance.

PRESENTATION: 
Critical to 3-D production, students must consider presentation: 
  • Freestanding
  • Suspension
  • Relief
  • Pedestal
  • Consider the environment

CA ART STANDARDS
1.5 Analyze the material used by a given artist and describe how its use influences the meaning of the work.
2.1 Solve a visual arts problem that involves the effective use of the elements of art and the principles of design.
3.4 Discuss the purposes of art in selected contemporary cultures
4.1 Articulate how personal beliefs, cultural traditions, and current social, economic, and political contexts influence the interpretation of the meaning or message in a work of art.
4.4 Articulate the process and rationale for refining and reworking one of their own works of art.
5.2 Create a work of art that communicates a cross-cultural or universal theme taken from literature or history.

DISCUSSION: 
  • Origami historians argue that since the invention of paper is credited to Ts'ai Lun of China in A.D.105, paper folding must have been invented soon after. 
  • Paper was then introduced to Japan in the late sixth century by Buddhist monks, and paper folding was brought along with it. 
  • In Japan, paper was considered an expensive commodity, and it was used in many aspects of Japanese life, most notably in architecture. 
  • Historians claim that origami is definitely a Japanese invention. 
  • Regardless of its ultimate origin, Japan is recognized as the country that most fully developed the traditional art of origami.
  • The Japanese transmitted their designs via an oral tradition
  • Recreational designs being passed from mother to daughter. 
  • Because nothing was ever written down, only the simplest designs were kept. 
  • The first written instructions appeared in AD 1797 with the publication of the Thousand Crane Folding 
  • The name origami was coined in 1880 from the words oru (to fold) and kami (paper). Previously, the art was called orikata ("folded shapes”).
Origami generally involves folding a square piece of paper into a two or three dimensional object. 

Folding paper in origami is typically performed by hand only on a smooth surface, but can include tools: including a scorer, embosser, paper clips and tweezers.

Origami has a strong link to mathematics, and can be seen used in practical solutions such as airbags in vehicles

Origami has been a common subject of copyright issues, as designs have been often stolen and republished.

ARTIST: 
  • Richard Sweeney was born in Huddersfield, England in 1984. 
  • He discovered a talent for sculpture at Batley School of Art and Design in 2002
  • He studied Three Dimensional Design at the Manchester Metropolitan University, 
  • He concentrated on the hands-on manipulation of paper to create design models, which ultimately developed into sculptural pieces in their own right.
  • Richard’s practice combines the disciplines of design, photography, craft and sculpture, resulting in a varied output of work including graphic design and public sculpture commissions. 
  • Richard seeks to maintain an experimental, hands-on approach, utilizing the unique properties of often mundane materials to discover unique sculptural forms. 
  • He regularly holds workshops to share his knowledge of paper folding and construction techniques

PROJECT REQUIREMENTS: 
  • Create a repeated paper modules sculpture
  • Fold, curl, or origami paper (your choice of paper: magazine pages, printed out photos, maps, book pages, etc.) 
  • Create min: 50-100 of the same form (they can be different sizes). 
  • Sculpture should emphasize unity, variety, and balance.
  • Student must consider presentation: suspension, relief or free standing on floor/base













Saturday, April 25, 2015

Embossed Funk Faces




 Lesson Objective: Students explore the medium of metal embossing to create relief in a metal medium. Students will gain knowledge in proportion of the face and complete a portrait using accurate proportion and self expression

Project Requirements: 
Sketchbook: Complete Portrait in full color with emotion, FUN and self expression
Full Page, Full Color Study to prepare for foil medium
Final Project: Complete a relief “Funk Face” in metal Tooling Foil Embossing
Use of full sheet of Tooling Fool and Full Color
Face in accurate proportion with relief based on class discussions
Funk Influences: Fun, Self Expression, Political/Social Message & Bold Color 
Mounted on foam and free-standing

Direct Instruction: Draw and shade each part of the face: Eye, Nose, Mouth, Ear. Draw a face in Blind Contour for pre-assessment
Discuss and practice drawing each item of the face over five days
Practice drawing a complete portrait in pencil

Key Vocabulary: Students will be able comprehend and use these terms in relation to drawing 
Pupil Cornea Highlights Shade Tint Relief
Iris Sclera Tragus Tip Lateral side Self Expression
Tear Duct Root Dorsum Columella Vermilion zone Philtrum Embossing Proportion

CA STANDARDS
1.3 Research and analyze the work of an artist and write about the artist's distinctive style and its contribution to the meaning of the work.
2.1 Solve a visual arts problem that involves the effective use of the elements of art and the principles of design. 
2.4 Review and refine observational drawing skills.
2.6 Create a two or three-dimensional work of art that addresses a social issue.
2.4 Review and refine observational drawing skills.
3.1 Identify contemporary styles and discuss the diverse social, economic, and political developments reflected in the works of art examined.
4.1 Articulate how personal beliefs, cultural traditions, and current social, economic, and political contexts influence the interpretation of the meaning or message in a work of art.
4.2 Compare the ways in which the meaning of a specific work of art has been affected over time because of changes in interpretation and context.
Make Informed Judgments
5.2 Create a work of art that communicates a cross-cultural or universal theme taken from literature or history

PURPOSE: Complete an accurately proportioned self-portrait in relief while engaged in CA Funk Inspired self-expression

Art History
By the middle of the 1950s Abstract Expressionism had held sway in the Art World for a full decade, and there existed certain artists who felt the adulation had gone on for roughly nine years too long. 

In an uncoordinated artistic rebellion, a number of new movements began to gain traction. 
The one characteristic these movements had in common was shunning the abstract in favor of the tangible. This article will look at the delightfully-named Funk Art movement.

Funk Art? From Whence Came that Name?
The romantic version of Funk Art's etymology says it came from jazz music, where "funky" was a term of approbation. 
Jazz is also perceived as unrefined and -- especially with late 50s free jazz -- unorthodox. 
This fits neatly, for Funk Art was nothing if not unrefined and unorthodox. 

However, it is probably closer to the truth to say that Funk Art came from the original, negative meaning of "funk:" a powerful stench, an assault on one's senses.

Whichever version you believe, the "baptism" occurred in 1967, when UC Berkeley Art History professor and Founding Director of the Berkeley Art Museum, Peter Selz, curated the Funk exhibition.

Where Was Funk Art Created?
The movement got its start in the San Francisco Bay area, specifically at the University of California, Davis. 
In fact, many of the artists who participated in Funk Art were on the studio art faculty. Funk Art never outgrew being a regional movement, which is just as well. 
The Bay Area, the epicenter of the underground, was probably the one place in which it could have thrived, let alone survived.

How Long Was the Movement?
Funk Art's heyday was in the mid- to late-1960s. Naturally, its beginnings were much earlier; the (very) late-1950s seem to be the point of origin. 
By the end of the 1970s, things were pretty much over as far as artistic movements go. To include all possibilities, we can say Funk Art was produced for no more than two decades -- and 15 years would be more realistic. 
It was fun while it lasted, but Funk did not have a long life.

What Are the Key Characteristics of Funk Art?
Found and Everyday Objects
Autobiographical Subjects
(Frequently Inappropriate) Humor
Audience Engagement
Elevation of Ceramics
Historic Precedent

Artists Associated with Funk Art

Robert Arneson
Wallace Berman
Bruce Conner
Roy De Forest
Jay DeFeo
Viola Frey
David Gilhooly
Wally Hedrick
Robert H. Hudson
Jess
Ed Kienholz
Manuel Neri
Gladys Nilsson
Jim Nutt
Peter Saul
Richard Shaw
William T. Wiley

INSTRUCTION
Students will be instructed on how to draw a segment of the face each day, beginning with the eyes. They will spend half the class in instruction and half the class practicing their new skills. Over the course of four days, they will learn the eye, nose, mouth, ear, and proportions of the face. They will complete a whole portrait in pencil before beginning their self expression, self portrait inspired by the artist Robert Arneson 

MATERIALS: Sketch Books
Pencils
Tolling Foil
Wooden skewer
Sharpie Markers
Black Foam Core 
Foam Core Risers
DIRECT INSTRUCTION:
Day 1: Power Point Presentation EYE: 
Opening: In sketch Books, Blind Contour Face activity
Blind Contour Drawing: 
Draw the face across from you 
Grab all details Eyes, Nose, Mouth, ears, Hair, etc.
Two Minutes

Students will: Independently complete the activity
Discuss the completed activity with group members 
Share final drawing with group
Participate in class discussion on the activity

Review: Happy Mistakes make better artists
HOLDING YOUR PENCIL
Discussion: Parts of the eye
Step by step of the eye 
Try each step in sketch book
Shading Techniques
ACTIVITY: Draw second eye next to first eye use mirror
Looking at subject as you draw it
MIRROR
Draw a partners eye from your table
CLOSURE: How are you feeling about drawing eyes? 

Teacher Models: 
Step by step of the eye 
Students simultaneously draw an eye in their sketchbooks
Shading the eye using mirror and finding highlights and shades
Check for Understanding: 
Monitor room During Step by Step Modeling in sketchbook
Monitor throughout second eye and partner eye
Day 2: Power Point Presentation NOSE 
Opening: In sketch Books, 
Think Pair Share: Eye activity Power Point
DISCUSSION: The parts of the nose
Step by step of the front nose using a mirror
Try each step in sketch book
Shading Techniques
Draw second nose next to first nose
Looking at subject as you draw it
MIRROR
DISCUSSION: Step by step of side nose 
ACTIVITY: Draw four rectangles and fill them with different noses
CLOSURE: How are you feeling about drawing the nose? 
                                           Like/dislike/rules/etc.
Teacher Models: 
Step by step of the front and side nose
Students simultaneously draw a nose in their sketchbooks
Shading the nose using mirror and finding highlights and shades
Check for Understanding: 
Monitor room During Step by Step Modeling in sketchbook
Monitor throughout four nose drawing activity
Day 2: Power Point Presentation Ear
Opening: In sketch Books, Draw a nose from the visual directions
DISCUSSION: The parts of the EAR
Step by step of the ear from the front
Using a mirror
Draw your ear
As you see it from the front
Step by step of ear from the side
ACTIVITY: Draw second ear next to first ear
Draw a partners ear from your table
Try each step from the sketch book
CLOSURE: How are you feeling about drawing the mouth? 
                                           Like/dislike/rules/etc.
Teacher Models: 
Step by step of the ear from the front
Students simultaneously draw an ear in their sketchbooks
Students have a moment to try ear from the front
Step by step of the ear from the side
Students simultaneously draw a ear in their sketchbooks
Students have a moment to try ear from the side by drawing 
A partner’s ear
Shade the new ear finding highlights and shades
Check for Understanding: 
Monitor room During Step by Step Modeling in sketchbook
Monitor throughout second mouth and partner mouth

Day 3: Power Point Presentation MOUTH
Opening: In sketch Books, Draw a nose from the visual directions
DISCUSSION: The parts of the Mouth
Step by step of the mouth using a mirror
Try each step in sketch book
Shading Techniques
ACTIVITY: Draw second mouth next to first mouth
Draw two eyes, a nose and a mouth on the same plain
Time permitting: add Two ears
CLOSURE: How are you feeling about drawing the mouth? 
                                           Like/dislike/rules/etc.
Teacher Models: 
Step by step of the mouth
Students simultaneously draw a mouth in their sketchbooks
Shading The mouth using mirror and finding highlights and shades
Check for Understanding: 
Monitor room During Step by Step Modeling in sketchbook
Monitor throughout second mouth and partner mouth
Day 3: Power Point Presentation: Facial Proportion
Opening: Think-Pair-Share: facial proportion and features
DISCUSSION: Step by step of how features are placed on the 
Face based on proportion
Step-by step: Adding Hair
Visual Spacial learners: 4 quick visuals on face proportion
ACTIVITY: Students draw and shade a face (Two days)
Teacher Models: 
Step by step facial proportion
Students simultaneously draw proportion rules 
In sketchbooks
Check for Understanding: 
Monitor room During Step by Step Modeling in sketchbook
Monitor throughout second mouth and partner mouth

Day 4: Power Point Presentation: Artist: Robert Arneson, Self Expression, Funk Art
CA Funk Information
Artist Information
Self Expression
Self Portrait
Final Artwork assigned
Day 4: Art History: CA Funk: 
By the middle of the 1950s Abstract Expressionism had held sway in the Art World for a full decade, 
Certain artists felt the adulation had gone on for nine years too long. 
New movements began to gain traction. 
Funk Art? From Whence Came that Name?
Funk Art's came from jazz music, where "funky" was a term of approbation. 
Jazz is perceived as unrefined and -- especially with late 50s free jazz -- unorthodox. 
This fits neatly, for Funk Art was nothing if not unrefined and unorthodox. 
Also: Funk Art came from the negative meaning of "funk:" a powerful stench, an assault on one's senses.
1967, when UC Berkeley Art History professor, Peter Selz, curated the Funk exhibition.
Where Was Funk Art Created?
Started in the San Francisco Bay area: University of California, Davis. 
Many of the artists who participated in Funk Art were on the studio art faculty. 
Funk Art never outgrew being a regional movement
How Long Was the Movement?
Funk Art's heyday: mid- to late-1960s. Beginnings earlier; the (very) late-1950s. 
End of the 1970s, things were over as far as artistic movements go. 
Funk Art was produced for no more than two decades -- and 15 years would be more realistic. 

What Are the Key Characteristics of Funk Art?
Found and Everyday Objects Autobiographical Subjects
(Frequently Inappropriate) Humor Audience Engagement
Elevation of Ceramics Historic Precedent

Robert Arneson (1930-1992)       Born:  Benicia, CA
Robert Arneson was encouraged by his father to draw. 
He drew cartoons for a local newspaper as a teenager. 
He studied art education at the California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland 
He taught in a local high school, where he became interested in ceramics. 
He went on to receive an MFA from Mills College in 1958. 
Arneson became head of the ceramics department at the University of California at Davis in 1962
Arneson was greatly influenced by the expressionist work of fellow Californian Peter Voulkos, 
Arneson rejected the idea that ceramic artists produce only utilitarian or decorative items. 
He began creating non-functional clay pieces, contradicting formal traditions previously associated with this medium. 
He created a number of self-portraits using photographs, mirrors, and drawings;
Arneson was part of the dynamic group of irreverent California Pop artists whose work has come to be known as "Funk Art." After the artist became ill with liver cancer in the early 1980s, his work became progressively more somber in tone. Arneson's own confrontation with death made him aware of society's flirtation with mass destruction.

Assessment
Informal: Written critique
Formal: Artist Statement
Formal: Grading final sculpture

Modifications
English Language Learner: Handout for project, project samples, Power point with visuals, Critique for additional understanding, Demonstration of techniques, group activities to check for understanding
Special Needs: Handout for project, project samples, Power point with visuals, Critique for additional understanding, Demonstration of techniques
Accelerated Learner: Expand on skills learned to create a unique project. 
Advanced art students will be asked to increase the difficulty of their final sculpture They will also be expected incorporate more details and principles into the final project

Scaffolding Adaptations
Students will revisit texture and scale from the earlier learning. We will use similar visuals to refresh earlier learning.  Notes on Art history, Key Vocabulary and artists will be taken throughout discussions for added understanding. Creating sketchbook plans and Constructing final sculpture will be demo started in class using guided instruction.