| Carnival!
A Display of Children's Imaginations |
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| In partnership with the Beaver Area
School District |
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The
Carnival! exhibit heralds the growth of Heritage Foundation's
six year collaboration with the Visual Art Program of Beaver
Area School District. Brook Manz, Dutch Ridge Elementary
School art teacher, and Ellie Taraborelli, art teacher at College
Square Elementary say that the art classes' annual involvement
with the museum's holiday display has been great. "The
kids get a kick out of going to the museum and knowing that
their art is displayed for the community to see," says
Manz.
For Carnival!, students
in kindergarten through sixth grade produced projects with
a circus theme. Each grade learned about different artists,
techniques and media in order to create their projects.
Through this process, they learn that history is not just
found in books, but that they are a part of history as students
and members of the community. Through their involvement
with the museum, they come to experience themselves as creators
of and contributors to our town's rich fabric.
Chuck Close
Self Portrait Value Study Graphite Grid Drawings - Sixth
graders used graphite, anatomical study, and the grid and
cell method for self-portraits, replicating the photo-realism
style of Charles "Chuck" Close, a contemporary American
painter and photographer who achieved fame through massive-scale
portraits.
Tempera
Paint Tint Study and Abstracted Illusions of Self-Portraits
inspired by Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde -
Robert Louis Stevenson's novella has so impacted
society that it has become part of our language, with the
phrase "Jekyll and Hyde" referring to someone who
behaves vastly different in moral character from one situation
from the next. Sixth graders explored and rendered their
hidden abstracted sides, using tempera paint to create a split
illusion focusing on tint and psychological color theories.
Giant
Papiér Mache Carousel Animals - Larger than
life and made out of anything one could possibly find in a
recycling bin, garage or attic, by sixth grade art enrichment
students, these projects will become part of a permanent display
in the foyer of Dutch Ridge school.
Peter
Max Abstracted Carnival Compositions - Peter Max
is a contemporary German-born Jewish American artist best
known for his iconic "Cosmic 60s" art style, using
organic and geometric shapes to create dramatic planes of
vision. Fourth graders created their own cosmic compositions,
using colored pencils, water colors and markers.
Carnival
Inspired Pennsylvania Dutch Fraktur Hex Designs - Fraktur
is both a style of lettering and a highly artistic and elaborate
illuminated folk art created by the Pennsylvania Dutch, a
form of which are Hex signs. Fifth graders created Fraktur
Hex designs, incorporating carnival symbols, rather than the
traditional stars, hearts, tulips and birds, while maintaining
the folk art's fundamental symmetry, and incorporation of
geometric and organic shapes in a radical fashion, as well
as the traditional design size of approximately 14 inch diameter.
They finished their projects by writing their last names in
traditional Fraktur calligraphy on a plaque beneath their
designs.
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Georges-Pierre
Seurat Silhouette and Pointillism Paintings - Based
on "The Circus" by French Post-Impressionist painter
Georges Seurat, fourth graders created circus-themed tempera
paint and oil pastel compositions: The foreground is
a cut paper silhouette of circus performer of the student's
choice; the middle ground uses the oil pastel pointillism
technique; and the in the background, students used tempura
paint pointillism to illustrate an audience.
Carousel
Horses - Fourth grade art enrichment students used
found objects such as sodapop cans and broken costume jewelry
to construct sculptures of carousel horses.
Wayne Thiebaud Inspired Origami Paper Sculpture Ice Cream Cones - Thiebaud is an American painter most famous for his pop art renderings of sweet treats such as cake and ice cream cones. Third graders created ice cream cone sculptures using paper weaving methods and origami, the traditional Japanese art of paper folding, which started about 17th century A.D. and has evolved into a popular modern art form.
Pablo Picasso
Mixed Medium Harlequin Clowns - Picasso, a Spanish
painter, draftsman and sculptor who lived in France, is best
known for co-founding the Cubist movement. Many of his
paintings involve figures which could be identified as self
portraits of the artist, especially the Spanish clowns and
circus performers known as harlequins. The theme
of the circus and the circus performer has a long tradition
in art and in literature; circus performers, known as saltimbanques,
were regarded as social outsiders, poor but independent. As
such, they provided a telling symbol for the alienation of
avant-garde artists such as Picasso. Third graders learned
to manipulate tempera paint, colored glue, oil and chalk pastel
to create the vibrant and vivid patterns that adorn performers
in Picasso's work. First graders also learned about
his work by studying "Family of Saltimbanques."
They used detergent caps to stamp patterns on paper and created
clowns with pattern and fabric patch decoration.
Carnival Masks - First graders created carnival masks from recycled cereal boxes and paper mache, decorating them with symmetrically balanced details such as gems and feathers.
Polka Dot Performing Elephants - Kindergarten students learned about Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama, famous for her polka-dotted art. They used oil crayons and watercolors to create their colorful polka-dot elephants.
Supplies
- Donated items are needed for use in students' found
and recycled object projects. Ms. Manz will respond
to your email with a list of needed supplies: manzb@basd.k12.pa.us.
-- by Paula Soto
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