Life has been a blur this month. It seems only five minutes
since we chatted Halloween art, doesn’t it?
I’ve slowly adjusted to the earlier sunsets (but I’m not
happy about it) and we have two more giant spiders in the front yard. A few
leaves are changing color. Yep, it’s fall.
In the art room it was a flurry of feathers as we created
Thanksgiving-themed art.
My Kindergarten kiddos colored turkeys and we discussed fall
colors (warm colors like red, orange and yellow).
First grade drew pictures of what they appreciate and turned
them into cards for their families. Aren’t these adorable? I love how much
detail they put in their drawings.
The card on the right shows the earth, with four trees growing from it. I thought this was delightful. |
Second grade made their own Thanksgiving cards. These kids
have such cute personalities, and some are very imaginative. I love the random
detail one kiddo included—an owl. Are owls the new turkeys?
My third-grade artists turned pinecones and paper plates
into festive turkeys. They loved this project, and I enjoyed seeing all the
variety in the results.
Fifth grade made cards out of paper plates. Aren’t these
cornucopias delightful?
Seventh grade learned to do accordion folds to create three-dimensional turkeys for Thanksgiving cards.
There is less variety in our art this month because it’s all themed around Thanksgiving. So, to round things out, I’m including a few of my own recent paintings. I painted a lot this year, which felt great. Almost all my paintings were small, and therefore easier to finish. I love 1950s and 1960s design, and it was fun to paint items from that era.
Below are two Rock-Ola jukeboxes (circa 1946 and 1960ish), the
Capitol Records building in Los Angeles (built in 1965) and the neon sign from
Jimmy Wong’s Golden Dragon in San Diego (1958). You know a sign is beautiful
when the restaurant changes names and still keeps the sign with the former
name.
Okay, back to the topic at hand. It’s Thanksgiving week. We
have so much for which to be grateful. I’m thankful for family, friends,
health, freedom, my students, my coworkers and so much more. Thank you for reading
and have a happy and safe Thanksgiving….
Wonderful ideas for Thanksgiving art & cards and your students are amazing! I am thankful that they have YOU as their art teacher!! Have a wonderful and restful Thanksgiving!
ReplyDeleteOh, thank you, Debby! You are so sweet, as always...
DeleteHappy Thanksgiving! I enjoyed looking at all of the turkey "variations"! It is really interesting to see each grade's "take" on that theme. The paper plate cornucopias were another creative use of everyday materials! Great work, SRL Art Team!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Rush! I do love paper plates...They are the Swiss Army Knife of art supplies--they do everything! Happy Thanksgiving!
DeleteLove it
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteThe kids did great! They have such a talented teacher! And your work is amazing!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much. These little artists always make things fun...
ReplyDelete