Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Eric Carle Hearts


Docent: Brandi Hennessy

Grade: 2nd

Date: March 2016

Medium: Paint, White Paper, Green large matting paper, sponge dot brushes

Reason for Lesson: We are talking about space…white space/negative space, and creating art by making different use of our space. Our art project is going to use both positive space, and negative space to create a dot out of smaller dots.

Label: Space

Prep Time: Materials will be in the 2nd grade box. 8 ½ x 8 ½ paper with a circle template on it. 8 ½ x 8 ½ white cardstock paper for the students to do their 2 art projects on.

Preparation prior to lesson: gathering supplies, printing circle template (I did it on a not-white paper), cutting 8 ½ x 8 ½ squares of white paper for the actual painting (2 per student)

Class Time: 60 minutes

Materials: Circle template, white paper squares, matting paper (large), paint, sponge dot brushes

Step by Step Instructions:
1.       Read The Dot by Peter H Reynolds (It will be in the 2nd grade art box)
2.       Talk about negative space and positive space. We are going to create two pieces of dot art—one using positive space and one using negative space. Show the example:
See image dot (1)
3.       Hand out the colored square with a circle on it. Students need to cut out the circle without cutting through/ruining the outside template…we are using both pieces of the circle template as stencils.
See image dot (2) and image dot (3)
4.       Hand out 2 white squares ( 8 ½ x 8 ½) to each student. They will carefully tape the circle to the center of one of the squares. They will carefully tape the negative circle template to their other piece of paper.
See image dot (4)…note that you are only using two small pieces of tape per page, and barely have it on the white paper.
5.       Now comes the painting of dots on the two pages in the stencil area. I think the easiest way to handle the paint and sponge situation (without having to constantly wash brushes) is to choose the 4 colors you are using, and give each student a cup (or egg crate pieces, whatever) with one color and one brush…for instance, create 5 cups of red, 5 cups of blue, 5 cups of green, 5 cups of yellow and alternate them between students. Have students create dots with their one color, and then say “switch” and have them pass their paint to the right so everyone has a new color. If you switch 4 times, each student will have a chance to use each color, and they are passing the color AND the sponge so they wont have to wash their sponges until the very end.
See image dot (6)
6.       Once their two pages are done, remove the circle templates and then mat their two squares side by side on their larger colored paper. Be sure their names are on the back!!
Final image dot (1)








Reference:
Here is some information on the book we are using:


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