The art teacher is tired. So tired that she skipped May’s
blog post. There was simply too much to do and not enough bandwidth for a blog
post.
But I’m back with a look at some colorful creations made by
my students before we closed up shop for the year.
Side note: how do you know you are an art teacher? You clean
out your purse (weighing in at a million pounds) and find two glue sticks, two
pencil sharpeners, one hot glue stick and eleven Sharpies. Yes, eleven,
including one blue and one red, in case you wondered. I have to hide the
Sharpies because the kids destroy them.
But back to art. Here are some of the things my students
made this spring:
With my Kindergarten students, I had them color in a rubber
duckie. They cut out their ducks, and then glued them to blue paper, adding small
turquoise pieces of paper in the background. This ticked several boxes,
including 1) learning collage techniques, 2) mimicking texture in the water and
3) practicing cutting and gluing. And who doesn’t love a rubber duckie? Did you
know that rubber ducks were first invented in the late 1800s? They age well.
My first grade class colored pineapples toward the end of the year. I’ll be honest: this was not a project I thought long and hard over—it was a “throw it in at the last minute” kind of project, as it was almost the end of the year and I did not want to deal with paint or glue! But I think they turned out super cute. I encouraged the kids to use naturalistic colors. I recommended that they try adding a tiny bit of brown to the yellow body of the pineapple. We wanted details! Some turned their pineapples into cartoon characters (perfectly fine) and one rebel turned his into an orange and blue jester (also fine—got to give the kid credit for imagination!). Cute, and it set the tone to welcome in summer.
Second grade did a fun project that I invented called Peace Sign Hands.
I got my inspiration from a peace sign hand sticker on someone's rear car window. I thought it would be interesting
to see how different kids decorated their peace sign. We needed pattern and
color, and the kids delivered. Several grades worked on this project, and in some
classes we added in the “okay” sign with hands, or a fist bump. In some grades
we added traced hand shapes behind our peace sign hand, just to give our art
some more dimension. I love how these turned out.
My imaginative third graders had a lot of fun doing Peace
Sign Hands and Rubber Duckie art. I encouraged them to decorate their duckies
however they wanted. There were no rules about color.
My fifth grade students kept creative by doing two projects
last month. They made peace sign hand art, and they created name art using a product
called Scratch Art. If you are not familiar, scratch art paper looks like a
glossy black paper—until you scratch the surface with a popsicle stick,
revealing color underneath. Some kids got multicolored scratch paper and some
got gold or silver scratch paper. I asked them to scratch patterns in each letter
of their name, and I absolutely love how these turned out.
My sixth grade students made peace sign hands, and I like
how this creative class came up with really unusual ideas.
The rambunctious seventh graders were given the privilege of
using clay. Some ground it into the floor but some actually sculpted with it.
(I’ve made a note to self that seventh grade may be too young for clay. Please,
someone remind me of this next year, lest I forget how messy it is to scrape
clay dust from the floor.)
My graduating eighth graders also did scratch art names and
the results were wonderful.
And so, we wrap up another tiring, exhilarating,
challenging, colorful year in Mrs. Sarah’s art room. If you need me, I will be tackling tasks I’ve put off during the school year (or ignoring them), possibly
napping, hanging with my kids, and dreaming up more fun art projects for next
year. Til then, keep calm…and color on!