I love fine art. I love museums and I kinda like taking my kids there. Ok I love exposing them to art but honestly I wish I could take them to museums for a quick zip through then send them off with their dad to get ice cream while I soak it all in at my speed ( which is normally fast but in an art museum I am a turtle, a lethargic one at that). Luckily one way to expose kids to fine art day today is through books. We have a coffee table book that we flip through daily and we all have our favorites. The other day I caught my son pretending to shoot at this painting by Jasper Johns. I suggested we make our own and he skipped off to the kitchen to do just that.
- Gather your materials. You will need some white paper, red paper and if you want another sheet of card stock to make it sturdy enough to throw things at. Also some round objects like jar lids to make the rings if you aren’t talented enough to make them free hand ( I am most certainly not, even with the lids I did it twice), blue and yellow markers, glue and scissors.
- Start by making the target using the lids to trace. Kids or adults can do this. I wanted this project to focus on cutting for my son so I chose this step and he did all the cutting ( which you’ll see later on) but there is not reason it needs to be perfect if wee ones want to do it, go for it.
- Next add the bulls eye.
- Time to color. This was a lesson in being careful, I didn’t tell him to stay in the lines, but he naturally wanted to. I am not big on asking kids while doing art to stay in the lines but practicing control while drawing/writing is a good skill once they are working on printing letters.
- Time to cut. I wasn’t sure how far he’d get so I had adult and children’s scissors ready.
- He did it all himself – hooray. Cutting is another wonderful fine motor skill and important for writing as well.
- Add glue to the red paper. He was dropping “glue bombs” here… what can I say?
- Pop the target on.
- Add more glue to the card stock add the target and let dry.
Fine Art Books by Bob Raczka
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Artful Reading (Bob Raczka’s Art Adventures) is a perfect combination of promoting an appreciation of art and a love of reading. The concept is simple with each page showcasing a painting of someone reading. What I love so much is that while the text suggests what type of reading the painting is showing it’s still up for the reader to go deeper into each and decide what they are seeing. Both times my son and I rad this book we discussed what the people were reading and which we liked the best. I love books like this.
Here’s Looking at Me: How Artists See Themselves (Bob Raczka’s Art Adventures) is devoted to self-portraits and the story behind each one in this fascinating book. This is a book for children older than my son who is 4 but I still showed him every painting ( all self-portraits) and read highlights of the text which I found fascinating and can’t wait to share it with my kids when they are a little older. I read a lot of art history books for fun and I learned a few things reading this. I can’t think of a better book to couple with a lesson about self-portraits for kids 6-12.
No One Saw is a more general book focusing on familiar subjects of different artists. What I think is so genius about this book is that it focuses kids’ attention on the subjects of the paintings and gives a natural introduction into a conversation asking children what they would paint better than anyone else.
butterfly wishes and wonderland dreams says
we love doing artist studies I’ll have to save this for later we are doing Piet Mondrian right now
MaryAnn F. Kohl, art book author and educator says
I love connecting kids to the masters. You may have seen my books for ideas; if not, I’ms ure you library has copies.
For Jasper Johns, you could also make concentric colored circles and glue them like a stack of shapes to make a target. Also stacks of smaller and smaller flags pasted one on top of the next.
You might like Demuth, who painted the Figure 5 in Gold, like it was on the front of a fire engine, and boy, do kids like using foil or metallic!!
Mariné says
queria comentarte que copiar cuadros, al igual que colorear imagenes, no es una actividad adecuada para los niños, ya que genera perdida de la autoestima, deterioro de la creatividad y conflictos en el desarrollo de su personalidad. Las teorias de la educacón artÃstica lo manifiestan del los años 60. Si bien las obras satisfacen al adulto por su similitud con el original, poco tiene de relación con las necesidades artisticas del niño. Te recomiendo leer a Lowendfeld, o a Stern, o a Hargreaves, o a Gardener, entre otras teorias de la educación artÃstica.
Erin says
Great ideas! Thanks for the different book suggestions too.