Monday, 4 June 2012

Collective Sgraffito




kindergarten: 15 students between 5 and 6 yeas old | Merton Elementary (Montreal) | January to April 2010

LESSON PLAN
Duration: two sessions of 30 to 45 minutes

Title: Hot and Cool Sgraffito

Rationale: This lesson serves to teach students the warm and the cool colors of the color wheel through responding to artwork and creating one of their own using brightly colored pastels. The second part of the lesson teaches them the sgraffitto technique by allowing them to scratch into a layer of paint covering their oil pastel drawing.

Competencies:
To perform sensorimotor actions effectively in different contexts
´        To broaden his/her repertoire of actions
o        To experiment with gross and fine motor movements
o        To pay attention to his/her sensory and bodily reactions
´        To adjust his/her actions to the demand of the environment
o        To situate him/herself in the physical environment and experiment with sequences of actions
o        To use tools and materials for an explicit purpose

To interact harmoniously with others
´        To cooperate with others
o        To share play, materials, ideas and strategies
o        To identify factors that help or hinder cooperation
o        To cooperate in activities and projects
´        To participate in the group
o        To express his/her ideas
o        To listen to others
o        To take part in formulating rules of social conduct
o        To take part in decision making and take responsibility

To communicate using the resources of language
´        To understand a message
o        To express his/her understanding of information received
´        To produce a message
o        To organize his/her ideas
o        To use appropriate vocabulary

To construct his/her understanding of the world
´        To exercise thinking in a variety of contexts
o        To observe, explore and manipulate
´        To organize information
o        To express what he/she knows
o        To seek, select and exchange information
´        To describe his/her learnings
o        To describe his/her method
o        To define his/her learnings and strategies
o        To apply his/her learnings

To complete an activity or project
´        To show tenacity in carrying out the project or activity
o        To use a variety of strategies
o        To take time and space into account
o        To use creativity
o        To finish the activity or project
´        To show satisfaction with the project or activity
o        To present his/her project
o        To describe his/her method
o        To explain the strategies and resources used


Learning Objectives:
´        The students will learn to work together on a large collaborative piece
´        The students will learn hot and cool colors an apply them by choosing one of the two to create an artwork
´        The students will learn the sgraffito technique by scratching into a layer of paint above a previously made oil pastel drawing.

Art Form: drawing

Technique: scribbling, scratching, sgraffito

Materials, Tools, Equipment:
·         Large surface (paper) on which to make the collaborative piece
·         Smaller papers on which to make the individual pieces
·         Oil pastels
·         Acrylic paint
·         Water
·         Rollers (one per table)
·         Plates (one per table)
·         Various objects with which to leave marks in the paint such as the ends of paintbrushes, twigs and sticks, etc.
·         Smocks

Vocabulary: scratch, reveal, cover, sgraffitto, oily, slippery, warm, cool

Artistic and/or Cultural References:
A simple color wheel, and any artworks that contain hot and cool colors. For example:
Renoir, P-A. (1866) Bouquet of Spring Flowers.
Renoir, P.-A. (1910) Roses in a Vase.
Renoir, P.-A. (1889) The Piano Lesson.
Renoir, P.-A. (1880) Clichy Place.

LESSON PHASES: Part 1
Motivation: Time allotted: 10 minutes
Procedure: Take out the color wheel and ask the students why it is called a color wheel. Talk about the primary colors and the secondary colors by asking them why they are placed in that specific order on the wheel. Talk about where the brown would go. Ask the students what colors seem cold, or what colors they would see on something that is cold. Ask the same for the warm colors. Explain the concept of warm and cool colors by splitting the wheel in half (the line should separate the yellow and the purple).  Show the students the motivational artworks one by one, asking them if they are cool or warm and why. Compare two similar ones (for example, the two flower bouquets), asking them which one is cooler or warmer and again, asking why. Explain the art activity.
Development: Time allotted: 20 minutes
                                Procedure:  Separate the class into 3 stations: one with the motivational material for them to discover, one with the collaborative artwork, and one for all the individual pieces. Ask the students to choose either the warm OR the cool colors to draw on their individual works. Explain that the original color of the surface (or paper) must not show through the pastel. For the collaborative work, emphasize that no space belongs to one person; that everyone must work together to fill out the entire surface.
Response: Time allotted: 10 minutes
                                Procedure: During the activity, ask the students which colors they are using, if they chose the warm or the cool colors, etc. Clean up before doing the post-activity response. After the activity, gather the students and ask them if they enjoyed their experience and why. Review the terms hot and cool by showing them the motivational artworks once again.
Clean-up: Time allotted: 5 minutes
                                Procedure: put away all pastels and papers. Clean hands and wipe tables with a damp cloth.
LESSON PHASES: Part 2
Preparation: create a sample to determine the amount of water to dilute the acrylic in. It should be thin enough to have lost most of its plasticity, but thick enough to still be opaque. Bring this sample to the students for the motivation.
Motivation: Time allotted: 10 minutes
Procedure: Review the last part of the lesson, including the terms warm and cool. Pass around your sample and ask the students to scratch into it to make a mark. Ask them to describe what happens. Explain the concept of Sgraffito and how it is a technique that uses scratching to reveal the color underneath. Ask if they know how this is possible. Remind them of the slipperiness of the pastels. Emphasize the word ‘oil’ in front of oil pastel means it has oil and that oil is slippery. Explain the art-making process of the lesson.
Development: Time allotted: 20 minutes
                                Procedure: With the students, roll a thin layer of diluted acrylic onto the large collaborative piece. Explain that it will be left to dry before the students can scratch into it, but that their individual pieces can be scratched in while still wet so they can feel the difference. Leave one roller and a plate with some paint out for every table of students to roll the acrylic onto their oil pastel drawings. Leave a few tools per table to scratch into the paint. Make sure they put on their smocks. When the students are finished using the sgraffito technique on their individual pieces, they may work on the larger piece after having washed their hands. If the paint is completely dry, they may take off their smocks as well.
Response: Time allotted: 10 minutes
                                Procedure: Clean up before doing the final response. Ask the children which sgraffito technique they preferred (scratching in wet or in dry) and why. Ask them what they liked best about this project and why. Review the reason they are able to scratch into the paint to let the under-layer show through, emphasizing the slipperiness of the oil pastels underneath.
Clean-up: Time allotted: 5 minutes
                                Procedure: clean all hands, surfaces and tools, and exhibit work.





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