Thursday, February 23, 2023

The Elephant in the Room

Welcome back to another episode of Adventures in the Art Room.

February may be short, but my students made a ton of art this month.

My Kindergarten students have two projects to share: Valentine art and Painted Elephants.

Let’s start with Valentines. We did a dot-to-dot art project, showcasing hearts. Some kids were a little confused about the numbers, and some sailed right through. But that’s okay—and that is the beauty of Kindergarten. Kids go at their own pace, but six months from now, they all will be ready for first grade.




Kindergarten also worked on some elephant art. If you are not familiar, the Parade of the Elephants happens in India each March. Elephants are painted, bejeweled, and decorated, and we created our own ode to the decorated elephant in San Diego. I drew the elephant shapes, but the kids colored them in using cheerful colors. They added to the effect by giving their art bright backgrounds full of pattern.





First grade also kept with this theme, coloring in elephant heads.




Second grade made elephant heads from paper plates. I love how these turned out. The ridges on the edge of the plates look like folds in an elephant’s ear and trunk, so this material is extra satisfying.





Second grade made Valentine cards for their parents. Check out how colorful these are.






Third grade created cheerful Valentine art by coloring hearts falling like rain into patterned umbrellas. Aren’t these charming?





Fourth grade made elephant art, as well. The kids truly captured the texture, pattern and ornamentation on these elephants.





Fifth and sixth grades are working on something that is not ready to show, yet. Stay tuned and you will see more of their creations next month.

Seventh graders decorated elephants as well, and I was blown away by how creative the kids were. I love the patterns they made and how individual each elephant is.









Seventh grade did a second project this month: art for Black History Month. I had the kids depict Africa, surrounded by a highly decorated border inspired by kente cloth. Kente cloth is traditional African fabric, known for its rich colors and geometric patterns. I was so impressed by how the students interpreted this project.

 





Eighth grade also did art for Black History Month. The borders on their art are inspired by kente cloth. In the center of each piece is a notable African-American. Some are alive now, and some made history centuries ago, breaking barriers for positive change.







That wraps it up for this month’s art slideshow. I’m so proud of these creative kids, but I will say this: they are more hyper than ever. They need spring break. PS: I need it, too!

Until next time, thanks for reading, and keep your eyes open for signs of spring. They are everywhere!


20 comments:

  1. Wow! A busy, full, CREATIVE month! I am a big fan of COLOR, and what a feast of color the budding artists at SRL gave us! My favorites were from the elephant theme, reflecting the rich culture of India and the passion for rich, vibrant COLOR! What a way to add warmth to the winter months. THANK YOU!

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    1. Thank you so much, Rush! Especially in rainy February, we need lots of color. Scratch that--we need color all the time!

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  2. I absolutely love the African art and can see many of these hanging on my wall!!

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  3. Everything is beautiful. Love the elephants and African art. Some of them are museum quality! Great job, Sarah!

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    1. Thank you so much, but the kiddos definitely deserve the credit!

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  4. They are all so talented and the art is so beautiful. My cousin's favorite animal is an elephant. She loved the pictures when I showed her.

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    1. Thanks, Jessica! How awesome that you shared the post...

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  5. Elephants never have looked so good!

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  6. Well done Sar! I really like the elephants, especially with the paper plates. Keep up the good work!

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    1. Well, thank you! Paper plates are so versatile...

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  7. Fantastic, as always! Loved the variations for Valentine's Day (especially the valentines falling into umbrellas) and the super ideas for the elephant theme (loved how they were decorated, and especially the paper plate ones!). Black History theme was terrific, too. Loved the kente cloth backgrounds. Kudos to you and your amazing students!!

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  8. The 7th graders definitely blew me away! Amazing art all around! :-) They are so lucky to have you to guide them!

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  9. That last comment is from Spring...it wouldn't let me select my Google account. :-D

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    1. Sigh. I know. The comments section can be challenging!

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