Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Georgia O’Keefe Pastel Flowers 3rd Grade February Art Project West Mercer Elementary Art Enrichment Program.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Georgia O’Keefe Pastel Flowers 3rd Grade February Art Project West Mercer Elementary Art Enrichment Program."— Presentation transcript:

1 Georgia O’Keefe Pastel Flowers 3rd Grade February Art Project West Mercer Elementary Art Enrichment Program

2 How this PowerPoint Works Some of the slides in this presentation are hidden. (The slide number has a box and slash through it.) A hidden slide will not be shown in ‘slide show’ mode. It is visible and can be edited etc. in ‘normal’ mode. You can change modes on the view tab or with the icons in the lower right corner. Some of the slides have notes. These notes contain more detailed information that will be helpful in understanding the background of an artist or talking points for a slide. If you would like view or print this presentation with the notes, use the ‘notes page’ on the view tab or on the print menu.

3 Lesson Overview 1 Lesson: Time: Volunteers: Medium: Project Overview/Skills – Students will look at and discuss artwork of – Vocabulary Resources

4 O’Keefe Pastel Flowers Materials 12x18 white construction paper- 1 per student 9x12 colored construction paper- 1 per student Black construction paper (look in scrap bin)- 1 per table or group- can be cut into smaller sections, about 4x6 size, for each student Pastel chalk Fixative spray Butcher paper or extra construction paper from scrap box to use as background while spraying fixative Glue stick Scissors Wipers for portable classrooms

5 Display Once the project is finished, student work should be mounted on black paper and displayed either in the classroom or in the designated area in the hallway. If there are some who have not finished, please check with the teacher on how they would like to proceed. Do not assume that it ok to continue the project after the allotted time.

6 Georgia O’Keefe American painter 1887-1986 spent many years painting in New Mexico Considered the Mother of American Modernism

7 Modernism There is no single date for the beginning of the modern era in America, as dozens of painters were active at the beginning of the 20th century. It was the time when the first cubist landscapes, still-life and portraits appeared; bright colors entered the palettes of painters, and the first non-objective paintings were displayed in the galleries. cubist The modernist movement during the formative years was also becoming popular in New York City by 1913 at the popular Manhattan studio gallery of Wilhelmina Weber Furlong (1878–1962) and through the work of the Whitney Studio Cub in 1918.Wilhelmina Weber Furlong According to Davidson, the beginning of American modernist painting can be dated to the 1910s. The early part of the period lasted 25 years and ended around 1935, when modern art was referred to as, what Greenberg called the avant-garde.Greenbergavant-garde The 1913 Armory Show in New York City displayed the contemporary work of European artists, as well as Americans. The Impressionist, Fauvist and Cubist paintings startled many American viewers who were accustomed to more conventional art. However, inspired by what they saw, many American artists were influenced by the radical and new ideas.Armory ShowImpressionistFauvistCubist The early 20th century was marked by the exploration of different techniques and ways of artistic expressiveness.

8 Flowers – What do you see?

9 Flowers What do you notice about these flowers? colors size patterns

10 Today’s Project Chalk on large white paper Spray Cut out petal shapes Glue to small colored paper Black details

11 Step 1 – Chalk on white paper Select a chromatic color scheme such as – Yellow-orange- red – Pink- purple- blue – Yellow-lime- green Fill in large white paper with progressive color changes Orient color stripes diagonally on the paper or make wavy lines Smear chalk to fill in gaps and blur changes between colors Wash hands! Smeared = good Not smeared = not as good

12 Step 2 – Spray fixative When you are finished filling in your chalk page, let a parent know. Parents will spray the fixative outdoors. The fixative makes it so that it will no longer smear. It may need a few minutes to dry.

13 Step 3 – Cut petal shapes Your flower will need to fill the entire page and can even go off the edge of the page. Look at your stripes and think of how the petals can be arranged with the color changing stripes parallel to the edge of the petal shape (not through it) Cut petal shapes from your chalk page You will need at least 8 and the sizes should vary a little so that the outside petals are larger than the inside

14 Step 4 – Arrange petals Choose a contrasting color as your background paper. Put your name on the back. Arrange your petals on your page so that the flower is NOT perfectly centered. Angled is good! – Petals can go to the edge of the paper or a little bit over The biggest petals should be placed first to make a top and bottom petal. The smaller petals can help shape this into an oval or circle. Try to arrange it so that the edges of the petals contrast against each other.

15 Step 5 – Glue it down Use glue stick to glue layers down. You can start with smaller, inner petals, putting glue all the way to the edges. Be aware that some sections will need to stay up until the biggest petals are glued and THEN can be pushed down.

16 Step 6 – Black details Using the small black paper, cut out shapes for pistil, stamen, and other details for the center of the flower. Glue down


Download ppt "Georgia O’Keefe Pastel Flowers 3rd Grade February Art Project West Mercer Elementary Art Enrichment Program."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google