K-8 Visual Art Curriculum Model
 

E-mail Mrs Jaci Wighers (Art Specialist -speaker)
E-mail Katie Metcalf Zaman (Fulbright - speaker)

 

Art Methods Syllabus- Course Outline

Overview Assignments

TEXT Resources
Resources


Lessons and Journals:
Jan 23 - Jan 30
Feb 6 - Feb 13 - Feb 20 - Feb 27
Mar 6 - Mar 20 - Mar 27
Apr 3 - Apr 10 - Apr 17 - Apr 24
May 1

REQUIRED READING Chapters
11. Arts and Performing Arts
12. Art and Special Needs
13. Art and Gifted
14. Cognitive and Psychological Factors

 

 

 ART 202

FUNDAMENTALS of ART
for ELEMENTARY TEACHERS
Sem 2 - 2005-06
2 credits
January 23 thru May 1
No class spring break March 13


E-mail

PAINT

Integrating Art into the Classroom
COLOR WHEEL

http://www.artsconnected.org/toolkit/encyc_colorwheel.html

TERMS TO KNOW    
Hue
: Another name for color

Tint
: Color + White
Tone
: Color + Grey
Shade
: Color + Black
Value
:
The lightness or darkness of a color.


Right click, Save this image as (save into Mercury folder)

Open Adobe PHOTOSHOP 7.0 ( in art lab)

  • File open image
  • Image to adjustments to Hue and Saturation (change clors)
  • Image to adjustments to desaturate (turns to B/W)
  • Filters to Artistic, alters texture and "media" of image

WHAT IS A COLOR SCHEME

A Color Scheme is a combination of colors that harmonize with each other. 

Mono-chromatic: Using one color (hue) throughout, utilizing that colors various tints, tones and shades. When using a mono-chromatic scheme using multiple textures creates character and maintains unity. 

Complimentary: Using two colors (hues) that are opposites such as red and green or violet and yellow.  Choose varying tints tones and shades which will give the bold dramatic effect you are looking for. 

Analogous: Using three colors (hues) that are neighboring each other on the color wheel. These schemes can be warm or cool since colors are adjacent on the color wheel.

Triadic: Using three colors (hues) that are equal distance apart on the color wheel, such as red, yellow and blue or using secondary colors yellow-green, blue-violet, and red-orange. 

 

ANALOGOUS

COMPLIMENTARY

TRIADIC

a warm + NEUTRALS

BORDERS AND PATTERNS

The key is color repetition

 

 

 

"At the same time that I'm finding the color world I want,
I'm also trying to make the imagery,you know,
by the nature of the strokes themselves."
- Chuck Close

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WI ART STANDARDS: Knowing | Doing | Communicating | Thinking | Understanding | Creating |
Proficiency

 

WI Art Standard KNOWING WI Art Standard DOING WI Art Standard COMMUNICATING WI Art Standard THINKING UNDERSTANDING WI Art Standard CREATING