Art educator Rama Hughes shares a fun and reliable activity in which students illustrate scenes from passages of text.
Elementary students create visual responses that evoke empathy for those experiencing weather-related catastrophes.
High-school students draw alongside Tibetan monks as they create a sand mandala symbolizing compassion.
High-school students express what democracy means to them through symbolism and printmaking.
High-school students build confidence while drawing personalized surreal structures with an added visual narrative.
Middle-school students use the lighthouse as a metaphor for expressing who or what serves as a guiding light in their lives.
An art class based solely on the creation of a sketchbook art journal allowed students to be evaluated on the beauty of brainstorming, playing with media, exploring ideas visually, and personal reflection.
Finding moments of calm and mindfulness in a classroom setting can be difficult. As art teachers, we have the ability to bring serenity into our classrooms and guide students to embrace their creativity while practicing mindfulness. Welcome to the garden of joy—an inspiring lesson that encourages students to embark on a mindful adventure while using their senses to create art amidst the beauty of nature.
Morel Doucet is a Miami-based, Haitian-American multidisciplinary artist and arts educator who explores climate change, gentrification, and displacement among communities of the African diaspora through sculpture, printmaking, and illustration. He views his art as a celebration of nature within the Afrofuturism movement. Afrofuturist art incorporates futuristic and science-fiction themes with elements of black and African culture.
The Flower of Life is a symbolic representation of life and the interconnectedness of all things. It is associated with the Sacred Geometry school of thought, an ancient science that studies the spiritual significance of shapes and proportions and how they reflect the universe. The circles that make up the flower symbol can be arranged in an infinite number of ways, each creating a new and unique pattern.
Welcome to our art lab. Today, we will discover what it feels like to be mindful in and through drawing class. We’ll participate in a series of activities that incorporate physical manipulation of materials, visual thinking and storytelling, mark-making on paper, sculpture, creative movement, and body-breath work.
Elementary students adapt and recreate a famous artwork or artist portrait in art parody style by incorporating animals into the piece.