Submitted by: Joani Share,
Arcadia High School, Phoenix, Arizona
UNIT: Mixed Media -Painting - Figure Drawing
Lesson: "Take a Road Trip" - Mixed Media with Map (student
handout)
Grade Level: Advanced High School (adaptable to lower grades)
“Take
A Road Trip”
What do you think about when you hear “Road Trip?”
This assignment is meant for you to explore this phrase. It does not have
to be a literal translation or an actual destination. To begin – get
out your sketchbook and
make a list of words that inspires you from the phrase “road trip,”
brainstorm on paper!


ASSIGNMENT:
The
goal of this assignment is to create a composition that incorporates the
use of a map as your paper surface. The map MUST be included in some
capacity.
THEME
“Take a Road Trip”
• Does this make you think family togetherness?
• Have you thought about the inside of a car?
• How about a traveling through time?
• Something that is friendly or scary?
• Maybe it is a series of thoughts
• Use the map as a support- just a surface to work on
MEDIA
Any
dry media such as Prismacolor Colored Pencils
, Drawing Pencils
, Pen
& Ink
, torn
paper- – mixed media.
You can use
Watercolor Paint
or
Gouache
on this composition. Some Acrylic Paint
can be used if it
fits the composition.
The Media is not the
message - the Message Or
image should say it all!
The map does not have to stay intact.
Be inventive!
Alternate
Idea - Mixed Media Abstract from Ken Schwab
From Ken Schwab: I did a unit on relief painting using toilet
tissue, paper towels, white glue, water, acrylic and oil paint to
produce designs from maps. The idea was to get out street maps and
look for the composition with circular finders. Redraw the lines of
the roads and then build them up with rolled paper towels and white glue.
We also used string for lesser roads and then covered it all with toilet
tissue and white glue/water to create a textured surface. Painting
with acrylic using color schemes we painted them very bright and then
antiqued it with oil paint for a darker duller appearance.
Spaying with Crystal Clear to make it sparkle and "Voila"!
The kids sold more of these to faculty members than any other project in
those years (Ken did this in the 1970s)