Written by: Liz Ebanks
"Inspired by the Florida Highwaymen Workshop" Copyright Liz Ebanks |
Published on http://www.artsonia.com/
Lesson Plan Id: #4427
http://www.artsonia.com/teachers/lessonplans/plan.asp?id=4427
Event Location: Tampa Bay Black Heritage Festival (Children's Village)
Location: Curtis Hixon Park; Tampa, Florida; VSA Florida Booth
Date: January 16, 2011
Grade Level: Pre-K through 6th
Duration: 1 session (1hour)
Media Type: Painting and Pastels
Subject Integration: African American Art History
Description: By discussion of the historical accounts students will acquire knowledge of how the Florida Highwaymen made their paintings available to the middle class. Students will gain an understanding of how their landscapes reflect a new approch to painting without first sketching traditional compositions. The participants will reveal how the Indian River School did not focus on depicting political views of African-Americans because, they needed to sell the paintings to a larger audience. Students will be lead into a discussion on how without gallery representation the Highwaymen successfully sold their work. They will review how the African-American artists peddled their paintings to banks, doctors, and dental offices. The students will explore how the Highwaymen used palette knives and speedy brushwork to communicate the mood of each piece. They will emulate the Highwaymen's vibrant color palette and select a Florida vista from their imagination. A technique demonstration will be offered to inspire the children to contribute to the "All Kids Can Create" contest. Students will create a Florida landscape using the traditional masonite hardwood that the Highwaymen used as a canvas for their pastels.
Curriculum Integration Content and Achievement Standards The following standards were developed by the Consortium of National Arts Education Associations for grades PreK-4. Understanding and applying media, techniques, and processes Students know the differences between materials, techniques, and processes Students describe how different materials, techniques, and processes cause different responses Students use different media, techniques, and processes to communicate ideas, experiences, and stories Students use art materials and tools in a safe and responsible manner Using knowledge of structures and functions Students know the differences among visual characteristics and purposes of art in order to convey ideas Students describe how different expressive features and organizational principles cause different responses Students use visual structures and functions of art to communicate ideas Choosing and evaluating a range of subject matter, symbols, and ideas Students explore and understand prospective content for works of art Students select and use subject matter, symbols, and ideas to communicate meaning Understanding the visual arts in relation to history and cultures Students know that the visual arts have both a history and specific relationships to various cultures Students identify specific works of art as belonging to particular cultures, times, and places Students demonstrate how history, culture, and the visual arts can influence each other in making and studying works of art Reflecting upon and assessing the characteristics and merits of their work and the work of others Students understand there are various purposes for creating works of visual art Students describe how people's experiences influence the development of specific artworks Students understand there are different responses to specific artworks Making connections between visual arts and other disciplines Students understand and use similarities and differences between characteristics of the visual arts and other arts disciplines Students identify connections between the visual arts and other disciplines in the curriculum |
Materials:
masonite
gesso
water
gloves
pastels
viewfinder
paper stumps for blending
paper towels
babywipes
erasers
Procedure:
Firstly, I liberated my pastel artists by creating an underpainting in acrylic blue tones or yellow-orange hues on masonite. Pastels are a unique painting medium that does not require mixing with a solvent or water. This made the inexpensive dry pastels an ideal medium for all ages outside at the Heritage Festival. I invited all students to discover what happens when they layer the pastels in the brisk brushstrokes of the Florida Highwaymen on the masonite underpainting. Letting some of the acrylic underpainting peak through the pastel created a more personal interpretation of how the two mediums are different for my visual learners. Secondly, I demonstrated step-by-step the impact of layering, blending, and scumbling to create a warmer atmosphere and mood. The color I emphasized is not uniform or hard-edged where the horizon meets the sky in my teacher example. Thirdly, I engaged tactile learners with the feel of working on the rough side of the stationary board. The grooves grabbed the pure pigment quickly to resemble an oil painting without the fumes or mess. When students became emotional I reminded them that the kneaded eraser was there for them to rip off a chunk and start fresh with a clean drawing or experiment with lifting partially the pigment. Giggles burst out when I showed the students how to mold the eraser into teacher pets. Participants were encourage to create customized hand grips by wrapping the kneaded erasers around the chalk. For my students that had limited hand dexterity I offered large sidewalk chalk to help them more quickly cover the surface of the board with confidence.
Students eagerly volunteered to share their new knowledge in exchange for their favorite colors of pastel. I facilitated the discussion by distributing a fill-in the blank handout to small groups of 4-5 students. As a reminder the questionnaire was posted on my blog with vocabulary terms to select to match the statements. Older students identified answers by completing reading key Highwaymen web pages that were listed as resources. This was one way I integrated technology into the lesson.
All festival participants received immediate, individualized praise and a VSA sticker for voIunteering to help. Following the Festival I joined each student's Artsonia fan club and emailed a personalized “All Kids Can Create” certificate. Parents were encouraged to show their support. A welcome was emailed to the parent’s individually with each child’s screen name and security code.
I enriched my lesson by linking the students to how they contributed to the success of the Tampa Bay Black Heritage Festival within our 1 hour class. The children connected how they can overcome the title of disability and adapt to share their gifts with the community through the arts. The class established a link between leading the community as landscape artists and their heritage to preserve the natural beauty of Florida’s beaches. The children’s sunsets became a renewed cherished symbol of Florida’s beauty, resilience, and fragility.
Assessment with Inclusion: Together we reflected on how these African-Americans triumphed over being ostracized and the lack of gallery representation. Therefore, I graded my students by how well they adapted to their personal challenges after presenting them with multiple accommodations and inclusions.
Student Assessment Rubric:
Discussion Questions:
Based on Internet Readings
http://www.interestingideas.com/out/highway.htm
Vocabulary:
Collaborate
Twenty- six
Accessible
2004
Romantic
Heritage
A1-A
Elements
Mentored
Rediscovery
Solicitation
Twenty-five
Essence
School
1. Jim Fitch is sited with the ___________ of these Florida African-American Landscape painters by coining the term Highwaymen in his book after they lost popularity. Prior, to this the Highwaymen paintings were considered Folk Art because, the artists received no formal art training.
2. A. E "Bean" Backus was the white painter that inspired and__________ the first Florida Highwaymen Alfred Hair during the 1950's.
3. Alfred Warner Hair shared what he learned from Backus after each class with his friends who learned to quickly create _________ landscape paintings of Florida.
4. Each person contributed a different ________ whether it be the sky, water, birds, or trees to create together a complete painting as quickly as possible as a group or Collective Enterprise.
5. Therefore, they did not make pencil sketches on paper and composition. They blocked in the elements onto board quickly to capture the __________ of the landscape or mood. The brushstrokes communicated gusty winds, tranquil estuaries, and crashing waves.
6. Often the group placed several canvases on the walls at once. The challenge for the group was to overcome being excluded from representation in galleries because, of their black _________ and segregation.
7. The group of ____ Highwaymen and one woman were mostly from Ft. Pierce, Florida.
8. Alfred Hair invited friends to assist him in his backyard "painting bees" working on as many as ___ paintings at time. The Highwaymen became, known as the Indian River _______.
9. Later the1. Jim Fitch is sited with the ___________ of these Florida African-American Landscape painters by coining the term Highwaymen in his book after they lost popularity. Prior, to this the Highwaymen paintings were considered Folk Art because, the artists received no formal art training.
10. Often, they depicted colorful landscapes using whatever materials that were __________ and affordable to them such as: masonite (pressed hardwood) or cardboard for canvas, door molding for framing, and house paint.
11. The Highwaymen focused on selling 50,000 of their paintings to dentists, banks, restaurants, doctor offices out of the trunks of their cars along the stretch of road known as ______. The artists accomplished this by setting out on foot and making door-to-door sales instead of focusing on gallery commissions.
12. Peddling their art work was an incredible risk. They did not want to be thrown in jail for ___________ or forced to pay license fees like a gallery or artist today. Therefore, they sold their oil paintings often wet before they could dry completely.
13. On average the collaborative paintings were signed by the artist that did the majority of the painting's features and sold for approximately ________ dollars. This made the nostalgic paintings preserving Florida's natural landscapes affordable to the middle class.
14. The Florida Highwaymen were inducted into the Florida Artist Hall of Fame in _______.
Crossword Vocabulary:
Viewfinder
Folk Art
Movement
Mentor
Sketch
Gesso
Acrylic
Pallette Knife
Crown Molding
Masonite
Landscape
Print Resources:
Monroe, Gary, The Highwaymen: Florida's African-Amenrican Landscape Painters, University Press, 2001
Web:
http://www.artistterms.com/paintingboards.htm
http://www.everything2.com/title/Highwaymen
http://www.florida-arts.org/programs/halloffame/memberInfo.cfm?member=11
http://floridahighwaymenartist.com/
http://www.floridahighwaymenpaintings.com/the_highwaymen
http://goflorida.about.com/od/blackhistory/a/flahighwaymen.htm
http://www.interestingideas.com/out/highway.htm
http://www2.tbo.com/content/2008/jun/13/robert-butler-life-full-lessons/
http://www.visitflorida.com/articles/florida-highwaymen-local-art-makes-art-history
Content Keywords: Florida, Landscape, Painters, African- American Artist, Backus, Alfred Hair, Collective Entrepreneurs, Nature, Art, Florida Artists Hall of Fame, Folk Art, Artists
If you enjoyed this post from my upcycling studio you may also like this link on DESIGNING CUSTOM SNEAKERS:
http://lizebanksartgallery.blogspot.com/2011/10/secret-to-reinventing-your-shoes-on.html
Join me on my post on THE MONSTER MASH-ASSEMBLAGE to discover more about PASTELS at this link:
http://lizebanksartgallery.blogspot.com/2011/11/assemblage-and-word-search.html
TIP: What is your favorite time to PAINT PLEIN AIR?
One of the joys of being a morning monster at the easel is capturing all of the subtle colors of the natural light. I encourage all of my young artists to draw outside when learning color.
No comments:
Post a Comment