Visual Arts Visual arts classes introduce students to the key skills, concepts, and studio art disciplines that are basic to the development of their creative expression and visual literacy. In the elementary years, the focus is on exploration and experimentation. In the middle school years students learn the essential skills of each art discipline. The high school provides a foundation in classical and modern methods of drawing, painting, graphic design, and sculpture which gives students the insights and abilities to undertake more advanced works in these areas of concentration and build their portfolios. From K-12, Visual Arts emphasizes the following intellectual skills: Methods, Materials, and Techniques Elements and Principles of Design Observation & Abstraction Critical Response & Exhibiting Stylistic Influence and Expression Drawing and Painting II: Description Building on techniques learned in Drawing/Painting I, this course provides students with the opportunity for advanced study in representational art. With a sustained focus on naturalism and observation, students create work in a variety of major genres that include human and animal figure studies, landscapes, and portraits. An emphasis is placed on situating figures in environments in order to create more complex compositions. Units: Unit 1: Landscapes Unit 2: Perspective: Houses & Interiors Unit 3: Portrait Painting Unit 4: Drawing Plants and Animals Unit 5: Comics and Cartooning Subject: Drawing & Painting II Grade: 11-12 Suggested Timeline: 9 weeks Unit Title: Landscape Drawing and Painting Unit Overview/Essential Understanding: Students will develop paintings that reflect an understanding of contemporary and historical landscape paintings. Working en plein air as well as from reference, they will Unit Objectives: Students will: work en plein air (directly from nature) Develop proficiency in glazing, impasto, underpainting Employ color theory, rhythm, linear perspective and atmospheric perspective Draw and paint trees, water, rocks, clouds, skies using a variety of techniques Create studies in the style of great landscape artists Focus Standards Addressed in this Unit: 9.1.12.A: Know and use the elements and principles of each art form to create works in the arts and humanities. 9.1.12.C: Integrate and apply advanced vocabulary to the arts forms. 9.1.12.E: Delineate a unifying theme through the production of a work of art that reflects skills in media processes and techniques. 9.3.12.C: Apply systems of classification for interpreting works in the arts and forming a critical response. Important Standards Addressed in this Unit: n/a Misconceptions: Concepts/Content: Value and rapid studies Atmospheric Perspective Foreground Middle ground Background Basics of scenery drawing Trees, foliage Rocks, mountains Clouds, skies Water Competencies/Skills: Alla prima painting Glazing Washes and impasto Underpainting Description of Activities: Limited palette landscape painting, Full palette and underpainting with complementary colors, Landscape with distinct foreground, middle ground and background, landscape that includes body of water, master copy of landscape Assessments: Students will create a landscape based at least partially on working en plein air that incorporates the style of a master painter and includes a variety of painting techniques and natural objects. Interdisciplinary Connections: Art History Biology Earth Science Environmental Science Subject: Drawing & Painting 2 Additional Resources: Drawing Scenery, Jack Hamm Landscape Painting, Albala The Elements of Landscape Oil Painting, Brooker Carlson’s Guide to Landscape Painting, Carlson Landscape Painting Inside and Out, MacPherson Drawing Nature, Maltzman Grade: 11-12 Suggested Timeline: 3-4 weeks Unit Title: Perspective Drawing: Houses and Interiors Unit Overview/Essential Understanding: The unit in perspective further develops an understanding of perspective drawing and its terminology. Students will create illustrations that use multiple perspectival views to convey a mood and depict a narrative. Unit Objectives: Students will: Demonstrate an understanding of perspective terminology Apply 1-point & 2-point perspective in the creation of an original work Use perspective to construct a series of illustrations that tell a story Study the work of children’s book illustrators such as: Edward Gorey, Charles Addams, Joseph Mugnaini Focus Standards Addressed in this Unit: 9.1.12.B: Recognize, know, use and demonstrate a variety of appropriate arts elements and principles to produce, review and revise original works in the arts. 9.1.12.C: Integrate and apply advanced vocabulary to the arts forms. Important Standards Addressed in this Unit: CC.2.3.HS.A.1: Use geometric figures and their properties to represent transformations in the plane. Misconceptions: Horizon and horizon line is the same thing; there is always one vanishing point on the horizon line Concepts/Content: Competencies/Skills: Description of Activities: Pen and Ink Drawing Horizon/horizon line Vanishing point 1-point, 2-point, & 3-point perspective Children’s book illustration Render 1-point & 2-point perspective drawings of space and objects; Incorporating specific styles into an original composition; Research architecture and period décor; Use line, value, hatching, to evoke mood; Hatching with pens, Using brush pens Observation drawing of space in 1-point & 2-point; composition of a downhill or uphill view; still life drawing of objects in perspective; research on specific illustrators & period architecture Assessments: Students will create a series of illustrations that describe an imaginary house (student-created or based on literature), its interior, exterior and environs, drawing on the style of a specific illustrator. Interdisciplinary Connections: Additional Resources: Geometry Perspective Made Easy, Norling Subject: Drawing & Painting II Grade: 11-12 Suggested Timeline: 9 weeks Unit Title: Portrait Painting Unit Overview/Essential Understanding: This unit builds on the skills acquired in Drawing the Head, translating pencil/charcoal compositions to paint/color. Training the artists’ sensibilities through traditional painting skills, the unit will cover the Old Master techniques of great painters, the basics of working with acrylics, and working from reference to create original works of both portraiture and illustration. Unit Objectives: Students will Demonstrate mastery of tools and techniques in acrylic portrait painting Demonstrate the ability to portray emotions and personality through the rendering of physical characteristics Create artwork that demonstrates understanding of the elements of design in establishing a point of view, a sense of space, and a mood Apply procedures for safe and proper maintenance of the workspace, materials, and tools Create original works of illustration Focus Standards Addressed in this Unit: 9.1.12.B: Recognize, know, use and demonstrate a variety of appropriate arts elements and principles to produce, review and revise original works in the arts. 9.1.12.D: Demonstrate specific styles in combination through the production or performance of a unique work of art 9.1.12.E: Delineate a unifying theme through the production of a work of art that reflects skills in media processes and techniques. 9.1.12.H: Incorporate the effective and safe use of materials, equipment, and tools into the production of works in the arts. Important Standards Addressed in this Unit: 9.1.12.F: Analyze works of arts influenced by experiences or historical and cultural events through production, performance or exhibition. Misconceptions: Lack of understanding re: the differences between painting & photography, reliance on unmixed color, improper care of brushes Concepts/Content: Competencies/Skills: Description of Activities: Painting facial features Select a toned ground; block in the image; Students will create monochromatic studies of facial Painting the head frontally, in profile, and working alla prima vs establishing an features and complete heads based on reference ¾ position underpainting; apply a working material; monochromatic paintings of a photographic Acrylic painting technique knowledge of painting techniques; replica portrait of an historical figure/self-portrait; clean and Monochrome painting photos in painted form; create original maintain their workstations (paint, brushes, palettes & Using photo reference works of art based on specific criteria, easels); employ alla prima technique in rendering Alla prima painting using photo reference and imagination; portraits; make a copy of a master painting Self portraits maintaining/cleaning brushes, Illustration work workstations, palettes Assessments: Students will create a self-portrait triptych that includes three views from a variety of angles, employing a unifying technique and color scheme Interdisciplinary Connections: n/a Additional Resources: Figure Painting in Oil, Graves Classical Painting Atelier, Aristides How to Paint Like The Old Masters, Sheppard Portrait Painting Atelier, Brooker Subject: Drawing & Painting II Grade: 11-12 Suggested Timeline: 8-9 weeks Unit Title: Drawing Plants and Animals Unit Overview/Essential Understanding: Scientific illustration combines art with the scientific study in a variety of fields. Students will create biological and botanical illustrations that demonstrate a knowledge of anatomy, explain biological interactions, and describe environments and ecosystems. Unit Objectives: Students will: Apply scientific knowledge to artmaking Use scientifically-informed observation Practice biological and botanical illustration through the production of an original work Use still life painting to create scientifically accurate illustrations Study animal and plant morphology through sketching, painting Focus Standards Addressed in this Unit: 9.1.12.C: Integrate and apply advanced vocabulary to the arts forms. 9.1.12.E: Delineate a unifying theme through the production of a work of art that reflects skills in media processes and techniques. Important Standards Addressed in this Unit: 3.1.12.A5: Analyze how structure is related to function at all levels of biological organization from molecules to organisms. Misconceptions: n/a Concepts/Content: Competencies/Skills: Description of Activities: Botanical Illustration Insect illustration Animal anatomy Still life composition Paleoart Creating still lifes with colored pencil and Still lifes of butterflies; Bird studies; Assemble three field gouache; Drawing living plants and trees guide images of various creatures they plan to use for through field drawing; Using scientific their final composition; hybrid creature “Old Master” knowledge to create informative and painting; Dinosaur figure studies based on maquettes representational (accurate) illustrations and fossil evidence of prehistoric creatures Assessments: Create a fantasy creature based on three animals, situated in a realistic environment or a dinosaur or other prehistoric creature model sheet based on evidence provided in a scientific paper Interdisciplinary Connections: Additional Resources: The Handbook of Scientific Illustration, ed. Hodges www.sciencepicturecompany.com www.gnsi.org Dinosaur Art, White How I Paint Dinosaurs, Gurney (DVD) General Science, Biology Subject: Drawing & Painting II Grade:11-12 Suggested Timeline: 3-4 weeks Unit Title: Illustration: Comics and Cartooning Unit Overview/Essential Understanding: The unit in illustration introduces students a number of techniques, styles, and theories useful in constructing sequential narratives (comics). Beginning with a close reading of a work of comic illustration, students will learn the basic concepts of comics as a medium. Then will then work on constructing cartoon heads and figures, students will create model sheets of characters [depicting full figures from multiple points of view]. Students will then explore different methods of inking penciled drawings, using a variety of pens and brushes and employing multiple systems for rendering value in ink. An introduction to composition, gives the students the skills to begin composing their own panels, situating figures in an environment. Creating backgrounds based on specific art styles follows, after study of particular cartoonists and their methods for character and background design. The unit culminates with the production of an original work of sequential art. Unit Objectives: Students will: Interpret the visual rhetoric of a graphic novel Design characters and environments using a variety of artistic media and techniques Create individual panels and page layouts based on principles of composition Analyze the meaning and methods of Surrealism in order to incorporate it in their creative work Focus Standards Addressed in this Unit: 9.1.12.B: Recognize, know, use and demonstrate a variety of appropriate arts elements and principles to produce, review and revise original works in the arts. 9.1.12.D: Demonstrate specific styles in combination through the production or performance of a unique work of art 9.1.12.E: Delineate a unifying theme through the production of a work of art that reflects skills in media processes and techniques. 9.1.12.F: Analyze works of arts influenced by experiences or historical and cultural events through production, performance, or exhibition. Important Standards Addressed in this Unit: 9.1.12.J: Analyze and evaluate the use of traditional and contemporary technologies for producing, performing and exhibiting works in the arts or the works of others. 9.4.12.A: Evaluate an individual’s philosophical statement on a work in the arts and its relationship to one’s own life based on knowledge and experience. Misconceptions: Insufficient use of line weight in inking process/of ball and plane practice/ of feathering and hatching; reluctance to draw on reference material Concepts/Content: Competencies/Skills: Description of Activities: Nomenclature of comics Define essential terms in comics medium; Reading and discussion of graphic novel/comics terms; Character design/model sheets design characters using mannikins; adapt Designing characters using mannikins; Copying the work Surrealism Surrealism to the design of original of master artists to incorporate in character design; Inking: hatching/feathering in pen/brush artwork; apply composition theory to Inking master drawings with a variety of media; Panel design/page layout page layout/panel design; practice inking Painting surreal figures and backgrounds based on using various media master illustrators; Creating a comics narrative Assessments: An original inked sequential narrative of at least a page (5-6 panels), incorporating surreal backgrounds and character designs based on a study of master artists. Interdisciplinary Connections: Additional Resources: Textual analysis Fun With A Pencil, Loomis http://comicbookplus.com/ The Portable Frank, Woodring