Objectives: Students will
- Create portrait with contour line - drawing from observation
- Contrast warm and cool colors - work with pattern and textures
- Work wet in wet graded wash technique
- Develop skills in using elements and principles of design
Materials:
Quality drawing paper (18 x 24 or chosen size), Pencils, fine point
markers, colored pencils,
assorted texture panels (optional), watercolors, brushes, water dishes
From Melissa:
"The color is applied using watercolor and colored pencil.
This part is a little involved. Students are asked to
"fracture" the composition by drawing a pattern over their
drawing (circles, stripes, free form shapes, clouds, etc).
Students will use a warm and cool color scheme. Each student
decides which color scheme will go with watercolor and the other applies
to colored pencil. Colored pencil areas will be filled with
patterns using the designated color scheme (Texture panels can be used
for this step --many are available). Watercolor areas will be
filled with solid color or a graded wash using the opposite cool scheme.
Each defined shape (a shape is defined by the contour lines as well as
the pattern lines) will filled with a different pattern or wash."
"For example: Let's say a student drew circles over
their composition. Each defined shape inside the circles could be
filled with different colored pencil patterns using only cool colors.
Then each defined shape outside of the circles would be filled with
watercolor (solid color or graded wash) using only warm colors. I
usually tell students they can only use mixed watercolors because I
really can't stand those colors straight out of the pan."
"I have a had a class or two that just cannot get these
"rules" straight. See
one
example where a student did not follow "the rules"
completely. I have been known to simplify them (
See
example - In this example the figure is done all in warm colors
while the background is all in cool colors.). However I find that
if I show them an example and explain the process they catch on quickly.
Also, some of the patterns students choose present complications of
their own. Many times if I sit with a student and go over their
choices for color schemes the light bulb goes on and they
"get" it."