Common Curriculum Map Discipline: Fine Arts Course: Art I Unit 1 – What is Art?: Standards: 25A: Understand the sensory elements, organizational principles, and expressive qualities of the arts 25B: Understand the similarities, distinctions, and connections in and among the arts. 26A: Understand processes, traditional tools and modern technologies used in the arts. 26B: Apply skills and knowledge necessary to create and perform in one or more of the arts. 27A:Understand how the arts function on history, society and everyday life. 27B: Understand how the arts shape and reflect history, society and everyday life. Essential Questions: What is art? What is the roll of social context and culture in art? Content: criteria for determining "what is art?" artforms, subjects and contexts artists from a variety of time periods made with many different media Types of Art & Artists and Jobs Related to (supporting) the arts Visual art vs. performance art vs. music vs. drama (the other arts) CRISS: ABCs of Jobs Related to Art Skills: recognize the broader view of art and the world today recognize relationship between the artist's work and the social context in which the artist lived consider the contribution of world-wide cultures past and present to the expansive variety of today's art list facts about an artwork using the descriptive process (P. August Renoir's "Luncheon of the Boating Party") identify some conditions used to determine if a work is art Assessment: Is It Art? Group Situation Presentation Quiz Written Description of a work of Art Unit 2 - Line: Standards: 25A: Understand the sensory elements, organizational principles, and expressive qualities of the arts 26A: Understand processes, traditional tools and modern technologies used in the arts. 26B: Apply skills and knowledge necessary to create and perform in one or more of the arts. Essential Questions: How can different lines be created? How can observation of the subject matter contribute to the quality of the drawing? How can line be used to create value? What is the difference between shape and form? Content: variety of line qualities creation & viewing Keith Haring, Chinese Brush painting, Picasso, Diego Rivera, Ben Shan, Morandi, Levin,etc. observation skills blind & modified contour drawing methods & related exercises hatching & cross-hatching foreshortening proportional comparisons optical mixing implied lines vs. edges CRISS: create a T-chart comparing Blind & Modified Contour Drawing Skills: Produce different lines with various drawing tools. Differentiate between outlines and contour lines. Identify lines in artworks such as descriptive, implied, or abstract. Associate expressive qualities with different line techniques in drawing exercises and in responding to artworks Use descriptive lines to produce contour drawings representing threedimensional objects. demonstrate methods of blind contour drawing understand vocabulary associated with line demonstrate methods of modified contour drawing Use of hatching & crosshatching to show implied depth & form Produce foreshortened shapes from observation using ellipses and trapezoids. Assessment: Line variety chart observation line drawing based on a natural object blind contour drawings modified contour drawing hatching & cross hatching shaded object Quiz Unit 3: Shape, Form & Space Unit 3 – Shape and Form: Standards: 25A: Understand the sensory elements, organizational principles, and expressive qualities of the arts 26A: Understand processes, traditional tools and modern technologies used in the arts. 26B: Apply skills and knowledge necessary to create and perform in one or more of the arts. Essential Questions: What is the difference between shape and form? How can specific shapes or forms contribute expressive qualities to a work of art? How can I create a successful sculpture? What is negative space or negative shape? Content: Vocabulary specific to Shapes, Forms and Space Figure Ground reversal /Complex Pattern Observing Negative space Methods for working with ceramic clay and glazes MC Escher's work Skills: Recognize positive and negative shapes open and closed shape & form geometric and organic shape & form active and static shape & form implied forms Recognize expressive qualities of shapes & forms in artworks. Recognize figure ground relationships in a design causing reversal or stability Distinguish between three-dimensional and two dimensional designs Create a glazed ceramic sculpture Explain how foreshortening shape and form affects the apparent depth and viewing angle of objects and figures in artworks. Assessment: Unit 3: Shape, Form & Space figure -ground design sculptural form quiz Unit 4 - : Standards: 25A: Understand the sensory elements, organizational principles, and expressive qualities of the arts 26A: Understand processes, traditional tools and modern technologies used in the arts. 26B: Apply skills and knowledge necessary to create and perform in one or more of the arts. Essential Questions: What is "value"? (value scale) How can value help to imply form & depth? How can I draw a more realistic facial self portrait? Content: Thumbnail sketches Composition tint & shade color value the idealized human facial proportions monochromatic values chiaroscuro Skills: Create Value variations with drawing and painting media to indicate light source and forms appear three dimensional Discuss how value communicates mood or emotion in artworks. Identify and create a monochromatic color scheme Idealized facial proportions to make Assessment: sketchbook value scales Black & White Values painting monochromatic portrait quiz Unit 5: Standards: 25A: Understand the sensory elements, organizational principles, and expressive qualities of the arts 26A: Understand processes, traditional tools and modern technologies used in the arts. 26B: Apply skills and knowledge necessary to create and perform in one or more of the arts. Essential Questions: How can color help to create a mood in a work of art? What is a color scheme? What is surrealism? Content: the color wheel & color relationships color schemes neutral colors warm & cool colors surrealism Skills: Identify the 12 hue color wheel (primary, secondary & intermediate colors) Discuss how color communicates mood or emotion in artworks. Recognize the 5 basic color schemes: (monochromatic) analogous, complementary, split-complementary and triads Assessment: sketchbook quiz mixed color surrealism painting