Tomorrow officially kicks off my YAM festivities at school. Here's what I have done so far!
This is for my YAM bulletin board. I'm going to put the caption, "Share your favorite art memory!" on the board with this and invite faculty, staff, students and community members to write in the logo.
Every day I will be giving an art trivia question on the morning announcements. I'll take all of the correct answers at the end of the day and do a drawing for sketchbook and an art medium to go along with it. Since I don't like the washable watercolors I bought, I'm going to give the rest of them away. I also have some conte crayons that I don't use in class that I'll give away. I got these YAM stickers from Nasco to attach to everything I give away.
Here are my interesting trivia facts. Some of these are trivia I had in my art history notes, others just from surfing the web. I don't have all of the sources to site for these...but if you search "interesting art trivia" on Yahoo! or Google, you'll find most of these.
I am a priceless painting of a woman. I was stolen from the Louvre Museum in Paris
by an employee in 1911, but returned two years later. In 1956, a man threw a rock at me and damaged
the paint next to my left elbow. I am
currently in the Louvre Museum in Paris, protected in a climate controlled
environment and encased in bullet proof glass, which cost seven million dollars
to build. Leonardo da Vinci spent 12
years painting my lips. Who am I? The
Mona Lisa
Vincent Van Gogh produced more than 2000 artworks during his
lifetime: approximately 900 paintings and 1100 drawings and sketches. How many paintings did Vincent Van Gogh sell
during his lifetime? While Vincent Van Gogh is now considered a
very famous artist, he only sold one painting while he was alive, Red Vineyard at Arles. As with many other artists, Van Gogh only
became famous after his death.
Where was the first pencil invented? England in 1565.
What are Mondrian’s favorite colors? Mondrian
painted all of his paintings with the primary colors: red, yellow and blue.
Pablo Picasso is an artist famous for starting the cubism
style in 1909. He has a very long name,
made up of 23 names, as he was named after various saints and relatives. (Pablo Diego José
Francisco de Paula Juan Nepomuceno María de los Remedios Cipriano de la
Santísima Trinidad Martyr Patricio Clito Ruíz y Picasso). Interestingly enough, Picasso learned to draw
before he learned how to walk! His first
word was “piz”, which is short for “lapis” and is Spanish for what? Lapiz
is Spanish for pencil.
This artist is also well known for being an inventor. In 1495, he designed a pyramid-shaped
parachute and began painting The Last
Supper. This artist and inventor is
also credited for designing and inventing the high heel shoe for Catherine de
Medici, who was from a prominent Italian family who commissioned lots of art
from famous artists. Who is it? Leonard
da Vinci. Rumor has it, da Vinci
invented high heels for himself because he didn't like being short, but others
say he invented them for Catherine de Medici to wear at her wedding.
This artist considered himself more of a sculptor than a
painter, but eventually Pope Julius II convinced him to paint the Sistine
Chapel. It took this artist four years
to paint the ceiling, and he did so while lying on his back. Who is it?
(Hint: One of the Ninja Turtles was named after this
artist!) Michelangelo
This artist is famous for his glass work. This artist designs all of his art, but
because of a car accident in which he lost one of his eyes, he cannot blow the
molten glass to create his art. Because
of that, he works in collaboration with other glass artists. Some of his famous series are the Macchia
series, his chandeliers, and Persians.
Who is the artist? Dale Chihuly
This artist was born in 1958 and died at the age of 31 in
1990 from a disease that was untreatable at the time. His art style was a blend of graffiti art and
advertising design. This artist’s work
is very colorful and our mural by the Elementary gym is based on his
artwork. Who is the artist? Keith
Haring
This artist was influenced by history, philosophy, religion
and music. He believed that, “Artists
must express the spirit and their innermost feelings by orchestrating color,
form line and space.” Not only did he
create art, but he also played the cello and the piano. This artist claimed he could see colors when
he listened to music, so he painted all of his paintings while listening to
music. Who is the artist? Wassily
Kandinsky
This artist is probably most well-known for the metal
breakdown he had while fighting with his artist friend, Paul Gauguin. During this fight, the artist got so upset
that he cut off part of his hear and sent it to his girlfriend! Who is the artist? Vincent
Van Gogh (I realize that this fact is a little skewed...there are many versions of what actually happened...I've heard he mailed it to his girlfriend, cut it off and hand-delivered it to a prostitute. I figure this is the most appropriate way to say this trivia fact over the announcements!)
This artist was born in 1912 and died in 1956 in a car
accident. He is known for his “drip”
style painting, also known as “action painting.” His canvases were so large that he once
knocked down a wall in his studio to make it large enough for a 20-foot
canvas. In 2006, his painting, “No. 5,
1948” sold at an auction for $140 million, making it the most expensive
painting ever. Who is the artist?
Jackson Pollock
I'm going to fill in some of these artist facts with some random color theory questions, elements of art questions, etc. etc.
This is my flyer that is going home with students for the spirit week next week. I am reviewing each color theory term in class and having the students color in the words with the correct colors.
This is the version of my take-home flyer that is hanging in each classroom and in the hallways.
Finally, today we started prepping for our first bottle cap mural. I had my kinders start sorting the caps within each color category...light, middle and dark tones of each color.
These 5th graders helped draw out the Starry Night on the boards, and the rest continued the bottle cap sorting.
These 6th graders were finished with their projects so I had them outline the traced Starry Night with black marker so we could see it better. Tomorrow I'll have students start painting the boards.
I love your YAM spirit week! Can I copy it next year???
ReplyDeleteSure sure! Though I have to admit the spirit week isn't totally my idea. I went to a YAM workshop at the NYSATA conference and there were some examples of dress up days other schools have done and submitted. I just took the ones I like and made a full week out of it!
DeleteAll of yur plans sound amazing! I have a question for you about your bottle cap mural--what will you be using to affix the caps onto the board and will you screw each of them on? I am planning a mural for an indoor site and am not planning to screw the caps into place but am not sure what glue to use. Am thinking of using liquid nails.
ReplyDeleteThis is my first bottle cap mural, so I'm kind of winging it a bit. I have seen lots of other cap murals on Pinterest and done a little research on the adhesives others have used, and it seems like caulking is the optimal choice. I've read about others using tacky glue and hot glue, but the caps end up falling off. I've seen a few of the outdoor murals be successful with the caulking.
DeleteI agree about washable watercolors. I won't be ordering them again. I'm going to pin this post to the KAEA Pinterest board to share your great ideas!
ReplyDelete