Perspective in Art
Medium: Tempura Paint
Reason for the Lesson: This lesson discusses that although we see objects in their entirety what if we could only see 'part' of the object or we're looking at the object close up. What form would our art take if we could only see part of the object?
Medium: Tempura Paint
Reason for the Lesson: This lesson discusses that although we see objects in their entirety what if we could only see 'part' of the object or we're looking at the object close up. What form would our art take if we could only see part of the object?
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Classroom Time: 50 minutes
Materials: Blue construction paper, pencil, sharpie, red, green, white, black, orange tempura paints.
Preparations: collect materials. Do some research on perspective in art.
Instructions for Leading Lesson
Start lesson with a discussion about PERSPECTIVE in art. Ask a student to define perspective. Definition: 'looking at a subject from a different angle or direction'
Start lesson with a discussion about PERSPECTIVE in art. Ask a student to define perspective. Definition: 'looking at a subject from a different angle or direction'
Using the subject of a snowman, most students (even adults) want to draw the three circles of their snowman and get on with it. Talk about taking a close up look at a snowman. Ask the questions: what do you see if your snowman in directly in front of you? We may not see the bottom part of the snowman but his face would appear very large. How big would his nose be? Would you see his entire body or just part of it?
After discussion, instruct the students to draw the body shape, from the mid-part of the middle circle to the head. Depending on grade level...show them step-by-step show how to draw the hat, scarf, nose, eyes and buttons. Pass out tempura paint and shown how to property use the paint brush and other tools to create their ‘close-up’ perspective of the snowman.
The children were quite impressed with their new found knowledge on perspective. The artwork you see here is a result of this lesson!
Credit: Deep Space Sparkle
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