Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Fall Birch Trees

This lesson incorporated abstract art and pointillism.  Students looked at images from artist, George Seurat, and discussed his technique of using tiny dots of color to create his paintings.  I asked the students to use a similar technique while making the foreground of their pictures with oil pastels.  After we laid down our masking tape trees, we pulled out fall colors from the boxes of oil pastels.  We used reds, oranges, yellows, browns, and greens, and began making tiny motions to full in the ground with dots as if all the leaves had fallen off the trees.  To get the "smudged" appearance, students used baby oil with q-tips to blend all the colors.


Step #1 - Laying down the tape trees


Step #2 - Adding a pointillism style foreground.
Half of the picture has been "smudged" with baby oil and the other half has not.
Can you tell the difference?



After completing the foreground, students then worked on the sky.  Dramatic skies were the focus, making sure to incorporate more than one color.  We looked at images of dramatic sun sets and stormy skies to help with their ideas.  We used watercolors to paint in the skies and I love how each have a different personality.

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