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Submitted by: Dave Haines,
Grafton High, Grafton, West Virginia
Unit: Contour Drawing - Art with Text
Lesson Plan: Contour Hand Gestures with text
Grade Level: High School (adaptable to middle school)
Alternate Lesson: Hand with sign language
Examples are 18 inch square with drawing 16" square
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Objectives: Students will
- draw hands from close observation
- develop 3-D volume with cross contours
- work with blind and semi-blind contour drawing
- create a composition that works for all
directions - combined with text - emphasizing design principles of
balance, contrast and repetition
- appreciate use of hand gestures in art to show
emotion - symbolism
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Materials:
handouts of various fonts
newsprint, pencils, erasers
Seral transfer paper
Canson drawing paper (or other fade resistant colored paper)
Tempera paints, brushes
Ultra fine point Sharpies
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| Vocabulary:
Symbolism, gesture, contour, cross contour, blind
contour, semi-blind contour, fonts, serif, san serif, book, Old English,
gothic, Roman (etc). Balance, repetition, contrast, variety,
positive/negative space, figure/ground
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| Resources:
Lettering books and computer fonts (many web
resources are available for fonts)
Hands online lesson http://www.princetonol.com/groups/iad/lessons/middle/hands.htm
Preparation:
Look through an art history book for paintings that
show the hands. Scan in the paintings - then blow up the section that
shows the hands. Find examples through the course of art history (from all
time periods). Put these images into a PowerPoint. Look up symbolism
of hands. Address hands as a symbol of protection and a sign of
identity.
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Instruction/Motivation:
- Show PowerPoint of expressive hands (from your
collection of scanned images or from the Internet)
- Students will research (independently) for works
showing the hands. Select at least one work to critique paying close
attention to what messages the hands are giving the viewer. Include
artist, title and time period. Make a comparison to one other work
from same time period.
- Review blind contour and semi-blind contour.
Review design principles to be addressed. Students should not need
much demonstration for this at high school level. Younger grades may
need demonstration of what is expected for contour drawings.
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Procedures:
- Develop good 3-D quality contour
drawings of 5 different hand poses (have not tried the signing idea
with this). We do these on newsprint and go through the stages
of blind contour, continuous line and modified contours.
- The five best drawings are assembled
onto a newsprint 'working drawing' composition (cut out newsprint
drawings close to the contour of hands and arrange - tape in place when satisfied). Wrists
should run off edge of paper - fingers touch - connect or overlap. A
goal of this arrangement is to break up the background space into
interesting negative shapes that are fairly evenly balanced.
Note: contour drawings can be enlarged slightly larger than life with
photocopier.
- Letters (student name or initials) are
developed from various font resources (lettering books, etc.)....These
are added to the negative space. Students make patterns to trace.
Letters can overlap and go beneath the hands; also run partial letters
off of the edge of the format around the composition.
- This composition is transferred onto
Canson paper in pencil (any quality colored paper could be used and/or
brown butcher paper for those on a tight budget)
- Color is painted with tempera (the
negative spaces and letters) by mixing colors that provide a nice
contrast with the chosen paper color. Two coats may be necessary
for negative space background. Use a thinned paint to cut in close to
hands - for sharper edges. Mix about 1/3 jar of color in a baby food
jar for negative space background color.
- Once completed, outlining is done with
fine point Sharpie.
- Students will write/reflect on what
messages their hands are telling the viewer (note: no obscene gestures
permitted).
Alternate Lesson idea:
Do this all with cut paper. Cut negative
space out with X-act knife - mount on contrasting Canson paper. Use scrap paper
for letters.
Do as Character Lesson - have character
words in negative space and hand gestures that suggest positive character
traits.
Career Lesson: Show working hands - Hands
holding various objects of the trade. Example: Artists Hands - holding
pencil - paint brush - scissors etc.
Hands signing letters
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Evaluation:
Did students
- Show understanding of importance of hand gestures
through personal research?
- Demonstrate skill in observational drawing by
drawing a minimum of five contour hand studies - showing volume
through cross contours.
- Show understanding of principles of design in
completing composition.
- Demonstrate craftsmanship in painting
Sample Rubric (adapted from Marianne Galyk)
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Assessment
Rubric
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Student Name:
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Class Period:
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Assignment:
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Date Completed:
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Circle the
number in pencil that
best shows how well you feel that you completed that criterion for
the assignment.
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Excellent
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Good
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Average
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Needs
Improvement
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Rate
Yourself
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Teacher’s
Rating
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Criteria 1 – Developed five contour
hand studies with cross contours to show volume
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4
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3
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2
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1
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Criteria 2 – Arranged hands in a
well balanced composition - with expressive qualities.
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4
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3
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2
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1
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Criteria 3 – Designed letters
to enhance composition and add meaning - selected colors for variety
and emphasis/contrast.
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4
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3
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2
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1
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Criteria 4 – Effort: took time to
develop idea & complete project? (Didn’t rush.) Good use of
class time?
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4
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3
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2
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1
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Criteria 5 – Craftsmanship – Neat, clean & complete? Skillful use of the
art tools & media?
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4
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3
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2
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1
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Total
Possible: 20
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YOUR TOTAL
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Grade
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Student comments:
Teacher Comments:
Tips from Dave on Blind Contour Drawing:
Getting students to do the 'blind contour drawing
process' can be a challenging experience. I have my students use a sheet
of newspaper to completely cover their drawing paper when drawing blind.
Even though I stress the purpose, directions, and outcomes for blind
contour drawing, many students will try to 'cheat' by peeking/looking
while they draw. They think that doing so is going to give them better
resulting drawings. The truth is, as we all know, that 'cheating' on blind
contour drawing actually delays the development in achieving good,
3-dimensional modified contour drawings.
I've found that one way to get students to do blind
contour drawing correctly (and approach it as a learning experience) is to
have them begin with fairly easy subjects. I've used keys or fonts/letters
as subjects. Cartoon characters also work well (use a line drawn/not
shaded/colored version). Getting some lines 'captured' by drawing such
subjects completely blind will build some student confidence that can be
applied to more challenging subjects (like hands)!
Submitted by: Nerina Patane,
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T. C. Roberson High School - Ashville, NC
UNIT: Contour drawing - Hands (Art with a message)
Lesson: Contour drawing with sign language - personal statement - Identity
Grade Level: High School (adaptable to middle school)
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SIGN LANGUAGE CONTOUR LINE HANDS:
Students learned how to draw using contour lines and close
observation. They were required to chose three to five letters
that they would pose their hands in. In addition to drawing their
hands in a sign language pose, they had to incorporate the written
letters that the hands represented in a creative way for the
background. Because their options were open, students came up with
visually appealing solutions for this project. Students used
colored pencils. |
[HIGH
SCHOOL LESSONS] [MIDDLE SCHOOL
LESSONS]
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