Elementary students listen to the book Splatter by Diane Alber and create a garden of flowers using lines and shapes.
Young students explore Pablo Picasso’s artistic style and techniques to create unique pirate portraits.
Young students work together on a variety of projects throughout the school year, cultivating a community of compassion and tolerance.
Elementary students place text strategically on a digital canvas to form recognizable animals.
Young students explore fine and gross motor skills while creating a symmetrical work of art.
A preservice art educator develops three interdisciplinary unites to engage students of all levels with the importance of agriculture.
Elementary students identify different types of lines while drawing a patterned rug design.
Elementary students trace their countries of origin and share their discoveries in self-portrait photo compositions.
Young students experiment with shapes and color media to create a rocket ship composition.
Six Turtle Island ambassadors travel to South Africa to share their indigenous teachings with a group of local high-school students.
Middle-school students begin with a guided exercise to draw half of their faces and finish their portraits in the style of a specific artist.
I had learned about handscapes (landscapes the size of one’s hand) from a visiting artist, and I thought pieces this size would be a nice contrast to the large paintings students had recently finished. I decided that postcard-like pieces about places we all long to visit or revisit after the pandemic would be relevant. And that’s how the project Anywhere But Here got its name.