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Submitted by Tim Hunt
AP Lesson Plans
Assemblage Sculpture - Plexiglas
Engraving – Watercolor -
Drawing (3)
Assemblage Sculpture
3
D AP Art
Tim
Hunt
Objective:
To create an assemblage sculptures that is a reflection of
you.
Procedure:
Collect things that create a theme that create a reflection
of you and your personality. Sort through your found
objects to gain an idea for your creation then build
upon. (see examples).
Assemblage is an untraditional sculpture usually with an
attitude that makes it contemporary.
An assemblage sculpture is the bringing together
of matters (assembling) rather than the making
(creating) of the work. The sculpture will be a
sculpture in the round.
This is an outside assignment: Due date:
Supplies:
Found
objects
Hot glue guns and glue sticks – “Goop Glue” (E6000
glue) - Epoxy
Any items that will embellish a reflection of you and your
personality
Vocabulary:
Assemblage
Sculpture in the round
Artists:
Marisol “Women and Dog
Brian Yale “The Dungeness Drifter”
Assemblage Artists:
http://www.princetonol.com/groups/iad/lessons/middle/cornell.htm
David Gilhooly assemblages:
http://www.davidgilhooly.com/
Ron Smith may inspire some found object sculpture:
http://www.degraaffineart.com/degraaf3/smith.html
Wendy Heers- found form sculpture:
http://www.degraaffineart.com/degraaf3/heers.html
Dewey Blocksma
http://www.degraaffineart.com/degraaf3/blocksma.html
Evaluation:
Did you use the 4 C’s (good
Composition, good Craftsmanship, extreme Concept,
Catch the Viewer’s Eye)? Does your sculpture show
movement, create an emphasis, depict a concept about
you, use pattern, repetition but have a variety of
interest (the use of the elements and principles of
design). Is your sculpture innovative? The sculpture
must be self-supporting, stable and at least 3 feet
tall.
Dry Point Etching
Tim
Hunt
AP Drawing
Objective:
Students will gain an understanding of the intaglio process
of printmaking.
Procedure:
Student will be given a Plexiglas plate. They will need to
do a drawing
using hatching, cross-hatching technique to create the
imagery. The drawing needs to be at least one inch
smaller than the plate. If it is a small plate ½ from
the edge. After completing the drawing they need to tape
it to the back of the plate. Follow procedures on
attached sheet.
Materials:
Plexiglas plate
Newsprint
File
Etching paper
Making tape
Etching ink
Etching tool
Petroleum cleaner or baby oil
Non lint rags
Mat board or palette knife
Etching press
Tarlaton cloth
Pencil
Drawing paper
Rapidograph pen
Vocabulary:
Etching
Plexiglas
Intaglio
Press
Etching needle
Tarlaton cloth
Plate
Edition
Etching paper
Evaluation:
Did you use the 4 C’s (good Composition, Good Craftsmanship
as in a good clean print, Extreme Contrast such
as showing extreme hatching and cross hatching
technique, and Catch the viewer’s eye.)
___________________________________________________________
Drawing
Watercolor/
Prismacolor Drawing
Tim
Hunt
Unit
Title:
Mixed Media drawing using Watercolors and Prismacolor
pencils and Prismacolor art stixs
Objective
for this lesson: Students will gain an understanding of how to
create a mixed media drawing through the use of
Prismacolor pencils, art stixs and watercolor.
Procedures:
Students will take two sheets of white watercolor paper and
brush watercolors in two different interesting color
schemes such as complementary, warm, cool, analogous,
etc. on them. Then, while the watercolor is wet, they
crinkle plastic bags on top of the watercolor paper, and
leave it on until the watercolor paint dries. After the
watercolor dries, students should look at their papers
and try to find some hidden image, such as a person,
shape, or animal in each watercolor design. Choose the
watercolor design with the best hidden image. Expanding on what they see, draw enhancements using
Prismacolor art
stixs and Prismacolor pencils on the chosen design so
that they have a finished composition that enhances the
hidden watercolor image.
Use a Prismacolor blending stick to blend with.
The watercolor design does not have to be the dominating
factor in the composition.
(If the watercolor paper is too wrinkled to
easily draw on, the student may smooth the paper out and
mount it on mat board.)
Supplies:
White watercolor paper
Watercolors
Plastic dry cleaner bags
Pencil
Prismacolor pencils/ Stixs
Watercolor brush
Mounting spray (spray adhesive) Mounting board or mat
board
Eraser
Prismacolor
blending stix
Vocabulary
words:
Composition
Color schemes
Mixed Media
Evaluation:
Does artwork show good
compositional skills?
Does artwork show good craftsmanship (no torn
or folded paper, mastery of blending with their
Prismacolors using both the pencils, sticks and
blending stick)?
Does artwork show mastery of Prismacolor
technique? Did
student take advantage of the watercolor effect?
Realistic Still life Drawing
– Cone cups & foam worms
Tim
Hunt
Objective:
Students will create a realistic drawing using graphite
pencils and still life material provided by teacher.
Procedure:
Student will take paper drinking cone/cups and foam worms
and arrange them into an interesting three-dimensional
composition (you may cut the cups and foam worms and/or
glue them to the poster board). On a sheet of cold press
illustration board, block in your drawing. Using a
variety of graphite pencils, draw the composition in a
realistic manner. Be
sure to use the full range of the value scale and the 4
C’s (good Composition, good Craftsmanship,
extreme Contrast, and Catch the viewer’s
eye). You must use at least 7 cups and 5 foam worms.
The worms and cups must touch all four sides of your
illustration board. This will insure that the
composition does not create a bull’s eye effect. The
only white that should be showing is highlights.
Materials Needed:
Cold press illustration board
Variety of graphite pencils
Paper cone cups
Foam worms
Rubber cement or hot melt glue
White poster board
Scissors
Evaluation:
Do you have an interesting composition? Do you have good
craftsmanship? Is your composition realistic? Did you
use the full range of the value scale? Does your
composition catch the viewer’s eye?
Corrugated
Paper Composition –Value Drawing
Tim
Hunt
Objective:
To
show the entire value gradation range using various
graphite pencils.
Procedure:
Students
will take white corrugated paper or light bulb boxes
with white corrugated interiors and arrange them into an
interesting sculptural composition.
To create the composition, students may fold, cut
or tear the paper.
After designing the composition, they will glue
the corrugated paper to white poster board with rubber
cement to create a permanent still life arrangement.
Arrange a one directional light source.
Students then should lightly block in a drawing
of the entire corrugated sculptural composition or use a
viewfinder to focus on a particularly good composition
part of the corrugated sculpture. Use a soft pencil on
illustration board.
Using the full range of drawing pencils, draw and
shade a drawing of their chosen subject using at least
six value gradations. Show extreme contrast in drawing,
using the entire value gradation scale – show
highlights, cast shadows, core shadows, and reflected
light. Drawing
must touch all four sides of the illustration board. Highlights will be the only white showing in the drawing.
Supplies:
Corrugated paper or light bulb containers that have a
corrugated interior
Full range of drawing pencils from hard to soft
Eraser
Illustration board
Light source
White poster board
View finder
Rubber cement
Scissors
Evaluation:
Did you use the four C’s in your drawing (good Craftsmanship,
good Composition, extreme Contrast, Catch
the viewer’s eye)?
Did you use at least six value gradations?
Does the drawing touch all four sides of the
illustration board?
Are highlights the only white showing in the
drawing?
Does the drawing show shadows
from only one light source?
AP
Drawing
Realistic
Still life Drawing - Tootsie Roll Pops®
Tim
Hunt
Objective:
Students will create a realistic drawing using graphite
pencils, Prismacolors, and still life material provided
by teacher.
Procedure:
Student will take the Tootsie Roll Popsâ
and Lifesaversâ
and arrange them into an interesting three-dimensional
composition (You may not remove the wrappers from the
pops. Do remove the Lifesaversâ
from their cellophane wrapper).Glue items on to a white
poster board. On
a sheet of cold press illustration board, block in your
drawing. Using a variety of graphite pencils, draw the
composition in a realistic manner and color in the three
colored pops with Prismacolors.
Be sure to use the full range of the value scale
and the 4 C’s (good Composition, good Craftsmanship,
extreme Contrast, and Catch the viewer’s
eye). You must use at least 7 Tootsie Roll Popsâ (including 3 colored pops) and 3 Lifesaversâ.
The Tootsie Roll Popsâ
or Lifesaversâ
must touch all four sides of your illustration board. This
will insure that the composition does not create a
bull’s eye effect. The
only white that should be showing in your drawing is
highlights. The only color will be from the 3 colored
Tootsie Roll Popsâ.
Materials Needed:
Cold press illustration board
Variety of graphite pencils
Prismacolors
Tootsies Roll Popsâ
Lifesaversâ
Rubber cement or hot melt glue
White poster board
Evaluation:
Do you have an interesting composition? Do you have good
craftsmanship? Is your composition realistic? Did you
use the full range of the value scale? Does your
composition catch the viewer’s eye?
Lessons are
Copyrighted by Tim Hunt © 2004 and can not be
republished without permission
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