Showing posts with label straws. Show all posts
Showing posts with label straws. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Mass Straw Sculpture with Francesca Pasquali



Lesson Objective 
Work with elements of art: Form
Work with Principles of Art: Unity 
Solve the challenge: Creating Unique Art from a common industrial item. 

Plastic drinking straws are one of the hallmarks of our disposable society. The little tubes are manufactured to be used just once, then they are discarded to sit in landfills for hundreds of years. And with our love of fast food and iced coffee, there are untold numbers of plastic straws being sent to the landfill every year. The artists and designers featured here all use these ubiquitous disposable items to create objects of unexpected beauty. While these artists use new straws, as opposed to recycled straws, to make their creations, there’s no reason their designs couldn’t provide inspiration for someone who chooses to use recycled materials. -http://webecoist.momtastic.com/2009/10/28/suck-it-8-brilliant-examples-of-plastic-drinking-straw-art/

Key Vocabulary: 
Organic Shape: Organic shapes and forms are typically irregular or asymmetrical. Organic shapes are often found in nature, but man-made shapes can also imitate organic forms.
Polymeric: chemistry : a chemical compound that is made of small molecules that are arranged in a simple repeating structure to form a larger molecule
Mass: a collection of incoherent particles, parts, or objects regarded as forming one body
Industrial: Of, relating to, or resulting from the manufacturing industry
Recycle: convert (waste) into reusable material.
Additive Sculpture: process of creating sculpture by adding material to create the work.
Disposable: intended to be used once, or until no longer useful, and then thrown away.

Materials: 
Straws
Hot Glue
White glue
Cardboard for relief if needed. 

Focus Artist/s: Francesca Pasquali
Project Requirements
Additive sculpture: Add Straws together to create unique final artwork, work in groups or as individuals. Limited by number of straws per student only.  (must use all straws). 
Sketchbook: Students draw construction plans for each side of their straw sculpture and submit plans for approval. 
Final Sculpture: 
Uses all straws to form unique and original final piece of artwork
Assessment: 
Informal: Written Self Critique
Formal: Artist Statement
Formal: Grading final sculpture

CA STANDARDS: 
1.1 Analyze and discuss complex ideas, such as distortion, color theory, arbitrary color, scale, expressive content, and real versus virtual in works of art.
1.6 Describe the use of the elements of art to express mood in one or more of their works of art.
2.1 Solve a visual arts problem that involves the effective use of the elements of art and the principles of design.
2.4 Demonstrate in their own works of art a personal style and an advanced proficiency in communicating an idea, theme, or emotion.
2.5 Use innovative visual metaphors in creating works of art.
3.1 Identify contemporary styles and discuss the diverse social, economic, and political developments reflected in the works of art examined.
4.2 Identify the intentions of artists creating contemporary works of art and explore the implications of those intentions.
4.5 Construct a rationale for the validity of a specific work of art artwork that falls outside their own conceptions of art.
5.2 Compare and contrast works of art, probing beyond the obvious and identifying psychological content found in the symbols and images.

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 art principles into the final project

Scaffolding adaptations: 
Students will revisit Organic shape 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. 

Anticipatory Set: Art Link: 
Pre-assessment  form
Students fill out pre-assessment on their own
Large Group Activity
Watch Ted-Talk on creativity
Take notes
Large group talk about 
Large Group Discussion on creativity and the classroom
Do they prefer: 
Strict perimeters (Josef Albers)
Loose guidelines (Ra Paulette)
Total freedom (Straw)

OBJECTIVE: Introduce the concept of creative freedom in the classroom. Provide materials and the one requirement to use all of the materials to complete project. Allow students to solve the visual arts problem of creating a new object with the original materials. 

DIRECT INSTRUCTION:
Power Point Presentation Creativity in the classroom
Pre-assessment: Questionnaire on creativity with ranking system
Discussion: Creativity
Watch Video: Ted Talk on Creativity in the classroom

Teacher Models 
Examples of vocabulary on the board throughout discussion 
Students take notes in their sketchbooks 
Teacher Monitors room throughout discussion
Check for Understanding: 
Monitor room during Pre-assessment in sketchbook
Monitor throughout discussion ensure comprehension and active note taking 
Various Activities Designed to check/enhance student comprehension
Activity:  Remaining studio time day 1 and day 2
Sketchbook Drawing: Students will begin thinking about their ideas in their sketchbooks. 
Work in groups or alone
Search Vs. Research: plethora of straw art online.  Does it inhibit your personal creativity for the next 48 hours to expose yourself to other peoples ideas? 

Day 3: Student present their ideas to the class and except feedback as part of the creative process. 
Day 4: Art Link: How did yesterdays presentations help your ideas? 
Please write in your sketchbook
Be prepared to share your thoughts to the large group
Ted Talk: Where do good ideas come from? 
4 Minute video on sharing ideas and collaboration
Discussion on sharing ideas in the art classroom
Direct Instruction: 
Critique Pasquali’s work 
Describe
Analyze
Evaluate
Francesca Pasquali
Francesca Pasquali is an Italian contemporary artist born in Bologna

Francesca Pasquali graduated from the Academy of Art Bologna

She lives and works between Bologna and Brescia in Italy 
Recent work by Francesca Pasquali are sculptures made ​​of straws cut to various sizes and placed one by one in a large mass. 
The artist seeks to give an organic appearance to its facilities, which swing between natural forms and industrial materials
**Art Bazil: “ A Paris gallery had no trouble finding a buyer for Francesca Pasquali ’s $30,000 “Light Yellow Straws,” a wall relief made from drinking straws cut at varying lengths so that the surface appeared to undulate.”  -Wall Street Journal
Key Vocabulary: 
Organic Shape: Organic shapes and forms are typically irregular or asymmetrical. Organic shapes are often found in nature, but man-made shapes can also imitate organic forms.
Polymeric: chemistry : a chemical compound that is made of small molecules that are arranged in a simple repeating structure to form a larger molecule
Mass: a collection of incoherent particles, parts, or objects regarded as forming one body
Industrial: Of, relating to, or resulting from the manufacturing industry
Recycle: convert (waste) into reusable material.
Additive Sculpture: process of creating sculpture by adding material to create the work.
Disposable: intended to be used once, or until no longer useful, and then thrown away.

FINAL PROJECT:
Additive Sculpture can be relief, freestanding or hanging
In addition to straws students have access to any additional materials for construction they need. 
Project Requirements
Additive sculpture: Add Straws together to create unique final artwork, work in groups or as individuals. Limited by number of straws per student only.  (must use all straws). 
Sketchbook: Students draw construction plans for each side of their straw sculpture and submit plans for approval. 
Final Sculpture: 
Uses all straws to form unique and original final piece of artwork









Monday, October 31, 2011

Scale Value Fish with Matt Duffin



Discussion: 
Scale: big and little
What colors has he chosen?
Value chart? what is value?
How do we make colors lighter?
How do we make them darker?
Lines: what lines do we see, what lines can you think of?
Look at Matt Duffin's, Crowd Control, 2006 on display at Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA
Does this painting remind you of a scene in the Wizard of Oz?
What is happening behind the curtain?
Why donkeys? are they smart?
What are they standing?
What is the artist trying to say?


ARTIST: Matt Duffin (1968-)
He grew up in Houston, Texas. 
He received his Bachelor of Science in Architecture from the University of Houston. 
He never practiced as an architect, choosing instead to become an artist. Through art, he found that he could easily combine his tendency toward right angles and persecutive drawing with the more human themes of solitude and irony. 
Over time, his medium has evolved from charcoal to encaustic wax, but he continues to dwell in the realm of dark recesses and stark contrasts. 
PRACTICE: on practice paper try drawing fish. 
First reduce them down to two shapes: triangle, oval
Second: add details: fins, gils, scales, tail lines, 
Now try drawing a very large fish almost the size of your paper
use the same techniques and details but make this fish have its mouth open
remember this is just practice drawing shapes, line and details.
Project: Big Mouth Fish
Step1: using a pencil draw a school of fish, at least 12, all the same on one half of your paper
Step2: On the other half draw a large fish mouth, from the side, big enough to eat the whole school.
Step3: using only black and white paint create 5 shades of grey
Step4: paint in your fish fight drawing using only grey paint.
Step5: using all your light shades of grey add in bubbles around the fish using different sized circles use straws, toothpicks, and bottle caps for the large fish. 
Materials:
12x18 thick white paper
Tempura Black and white paint
Bowls or small cups to make new colors
straws







Thursday, May 12, 2011

Under the Sea Murals with Wyland!!!



Discussion: Murals: what are they?
Where might we see a mural in our town?
What can be on a mural
Why would an artist paint a mural

Look at one or more of Wylnads pieces.
What do you see?
How do they make you feel?
Do you want to be a fish?
Do you feel like a fish?

Robert Wyland (born 1956), known simply as Wyland, is an artist best known for painting large, outdoor murals of whales and other ocean life.
Wyland has earned the distinction as one of America’s most unique creative influences, 
he is a leading advocate for marine resource conservation. 
An accomplished painter, sculptor, photographer, writer, and SCUBA diver, 
he has traveled the farthest reaches of the globe for more than twenty-five years, capturing the raw power and beauty of the undersea universe.
PROJECT: 
Step1: first, using foam paint brushes, add one beautiful coral along the bottom of our coral reef mural in Pink, Brown or lime green
Step2: Next add one small fish in blue or orange using the side of your paint brush
Step3: last using a straw, BLOW like milk, and make bubbles. Take your cup to the mural, place it against the mural, and blow the bubbles onto the mural. add them all over to make our mural look like water. Use Dark Blue, Turq and light blue.
MATERIALS: 
Paint and large brushes in Brown Pink and lime green
Paint and small brushes in orange and yellow
Cups with liquid paint in white, light blue and dark blue
Straws
Large blue paper for mural

Friday, December 10, 2010

Imagination Color Wheel Forests with Marc Chagall




 DISCUSSION: 
Color wheel
primary Colors
Secondary Colors
Mouse Paint
Show Chagall 
what do you think of this piece?
Do you see the upside down houses?
Do you see a large animal with a tiny animal on it’s face?
What about a tree?
Do you see a giant green face?
Are all the primary colors there?
what about secondary?
Marc Chagall
1887-1985
Russian Born. French painter
Known for his use of colors
Known for his dreamlike images
He used clear colors and geometric forms
worked from dreams and imagination
Mastered stain glass in his sixties
PROJECT: CREATE A COLOR WHEEL FOREST
PREPARATION: create primary colored squeeze bottles for this project
where is says mix add both colors to that section of their paper
Step1: On the left side, top of your page, Paint a red tree top
Step2: On the Right side top of your page paint a yellow tree top
Step3: On the bottom middle of your page paint a blue tree bottom
Step4: Mix the color Orange and on the middle top paint an orange tree top
Step5: Mix the color Green and on the bottom right of our paper paint the color green
Step 6: Mix the color purple and paint a tree bottom on teh bottom left of your paper
Step 7: along the very bottom of your page add black watercolor 
Step8: Now tilt your page so the watercolor trickles into the treetops creating our forest. 
MATERIALS:
Squeeze bottles filled with Primary colored tempura paint
Black watercolor
white tag board
brushes