Submitted by: Laurie
Unit: African Art - Sculpture - African American Art
Lesson Plan: Arm and Face Casts - body art
Grade Level: Middle School
Summary:
Students will cast
their face and/or arm for a temporary sculpture installation. They will
paint it with patterns and symbols that reflect their cultural heritage.
They will get input from family members for symbols to reflect ancestors.
Preparation:
Decide if you want
the installation to be all on one (or two) 4 foot by 8 foot Dow foam insulation
boards OR if you want students to do individual works. Faces and arms will
be mounted vertically on board. For individual works - cut Dow board into
sections about 8 inches wide x 4 feet (experiment to see how long they
need to be). Individual works could be done on 1/2" thick boards. A
group installation would need to be 1" inch thick. Optional: Draw
oval where face will be mounted. Cut out oval with scroll saw. This will
reveal the INSIDE of the face cast (for students to show what is inside
their head with collage). If you do not mount on Dow board, come up with
some way to hang these individually. You could secure a piece of
corrugated cardboard to back side with a hole cut big enough to slide over
a T-pin on your bulletin board.
Objectives: Students will
- Show awareness of characteristics of African art
- Cooperate with classmates to cast arm and face -
demonstrate craftsmanship in plaster addition
- Design arm and face to show cultural heritage -
reflect on personal identity
- Demonstrate understanding of elements and
principles of design
- Demonstrate craftsmanship in painting
Materials:
Plaster Gauze
Vaseline Petroleum Jelly
Plastic dishes (cool whip size)
Old t-shirts - plastic trash bags
Plastic Face Molds
(optional)
Black and white latex paint (house paint is cheaper than acrylic)
Acrylic Paint
Paint Markers
, Puffy Paint
(small squeeze bottles) - Permanent Markers
Tacky Glue
(or hot Glue Gun
)
1" (25.4 cm) Foamboard
Scroll Saw
(optional)
Vocabulary:
plaster addition - pattern/repetition - concentric
shapes - exaggeration - distortion - geometric - culture - ritual -
symbolism - identity - adornment
Resources:
- See additional info. and student sample work of this lesson here.
- Variety of African mask images
- images of body art and adornment
from Africa (some good articles have been in National Geographic
)
- Images of arm face casts by Ben Jones

- Images of other African American artists showing
inspiration from art of Africa (find some books on Contemporary African
American art. I have seen some with Ben Jones work shown).
- Images of Ndebele painting (this is optional for
painting background Dow foam board)
- Some tips and photos for mask making
- http://www.mendels.com/mask.html
- http://bayard.daysofyoreevents.com/ursula-masks.htm
- "Revealing the Hopes of Adolescents
through the Art of Tattoos" by Michael Gerrish http://whyart.com/tattooarticle.htm
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| This is a face cast on foam board. Sculpture is painted with acrylic paint and sealed with polymer medium. |
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Instruction/Motivation:
- Present some introductory activities on African
Masks (see the Ceramic Mask lesson plan)
- show examples of body adornment (in
various African cultures - and other cultures). Discuss the concept of
culture and how art reflects culture
- Show some examples of African American art -
discuss inspiration from art of Africa (especially Ben Jones).
- Review/demonstrate casting process
Note: Get parent permission for casting the students
face and/or arm. some student may have a slight allergy to the plaster. If
in doubt, use the plastic face molds for those with highly sensitive
skin.
I covered the student with a large trash bag
(hole cut for head) -- and also wrapped plastic wrap to cover the hair.
Do not cover nostrils. Some have used straws - but I though that would
be uncomfortable - I just used tiny strips around the nose. I used
petroleum jelly on the face - but some use damp paper towels over the
face. You just won't get as much detail.
Procedures:
- Students look at and discuss significance/purpose
of African masks - understand meaning - discuss
similarities/characteristics (at least one day introduction to African
art). Look at body adornment in various cultures.
- Student look at African American Art and see
connections to African art - look for similarities. Also look at
influence of African art on Modern Art.
- Students research design/art in their own culture
- symbols - textiles - imagery. Learn about the beliefs and values of
their ancestors. Learn about the flora and fauna of the homeland - the
landscape. Make a mini journal of their findings - including sketches.
Make a tracing of oval shape for face and an outline for arm to do
some planning - this can be on going through the lesson and can
change.
- Decide if you will have students do face cast -
arm cast - or both. Students will work in pairs to cast face and arm.
Wear old T-shirt to do arm. Stretch arm out on table - keep it flat.
Only cast the top side of the arm - all the way up to shoulder. Do not
wrap around to underside of arm. Use petroleum jelly on arm. Apply at
least two layers of plaster gauze. See resources above for face cast.
- For individual works - glue and mount onto strips
of Dow board. Mount face and arm vertically. Seal arm and face around
edges with strips of plaster gauze. For a group work, it might be
easier to paint the face and arms first, they carefully mount to the
4' x 8' boards and touch up. Work on drawings while plaster is drying
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This is a creative way to use casts of hands and face on foam board. Photo from Body Casting Sydney. |
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When plaster is completely dry -paint with base
coat. Keep it simple. Chose black or white for base coat. Work on
designs while paint is drying. Plan designs for background board, too.
These can be inspired by wall paintings of Ndebele and other wall
paintings in South Africa.
- Transfer designs to face and arm casts. Black
permanent markers can be used on white surface. White paint markers on
black (or use gold and/or silver metallic markers)
- Paint patterns - designs and symbols with acrylic
paint. Permanent markers work well on white surface for details. Paint
markers can be used on black surface for details. Embellish with
squeeze paints (middle school students love using these) - just use
for pattern and line.
- If you are doing the cut out for the face on the
Dow board - students can collage materials on the inside of the face -
"What's inside my head?" " What issues are important to
me?"
- Decide if entire mounting board needs to be
covered with gauze. Paper mache would be much cheaper. Paint mounting
board. You could leave these solid white or black for contrast - OR
paint with bolder patterns/geometric designs (See Ndebele
painting). If mounting on one or more 4' x 8' Dow boards, come
up with a way to hinge these together so they are displayed free
standing so people can walk around them and see the back side. On the
back side, there could be an outline of the arm below the cut-out of
the face and that could be collaged as well. The cut out of the arm
could be a tracing done on poster board and glued to the display
board. Arm could be collaged first - then cut out.
- Student write a reflection on their work. What do
the motifs mean? How do they express culture? What have they learned
about their ancestors?

Black Face and Arm Unit by Ben Jones, 1971. Not only does he have an interesting composition, he also had added creative patterns and colorful designs to his sculptures.
NOTE: For whatever reason, an almost duplicate of this lesson is also located here.
Evaluation:
Student reflection and modified rubric
Student
Comments:
Teacher
Comments: