Tuesday, November 27, 2018

The Nature of Arp Tour, Part Two

We visited these seven prints at the next stop in our tour.  As with our first stop, we shared shapes that we recognized in these artworks.  What shapes do you see?


The students saw so many different shapes in these prints - we could have spent an entire hour sharing what we saw! 


3rd grade
3rd grade
4th grade
4th grade
5th grade
Below are some popular responses from students, along with the titles that Arp gave his prints.


Arp created these for a magazine that was published by an artist friend of his named Kurt Schwitters. He combines two different things in some of his prints, such as Mustache Hat and The Navel Bottle, so you could call these hybrids.  They are also examples of abstract shapes. 

In the prints above and the wood reliefs from the first stop in our tour, we see that Arp often uses body parts or things we wear on our bodies (mustache, hat, shirtfront, watch) and natural things (bird, horse, the sea).

Arp loved to create artwork by chance. What does that mean? To do something without planning, by accident, or when something happens on its own without you controlling the outcome or the result.

To get an idea of how it feels to make art by chance, each student was randomly assigned a number 1 through 5.

Then, I drew a word out of two separate bags for each group to combine together into a single hybrid drawing.  One word related to nature, and the other word related to the body or things we wear on our bodies. 

3rd grade
3rd grade
4th grade
4th grade
5th grade
5th grade
5th grade

Sample random combinations were bee + thought bubble, high heel + rainbow, and horse + hat. The drawings were super fun!

3rd grade
4th grade
5th grade



Tuesday, November 13, 2018

The Nature of Arp Tour, Part One

It's always such a treat to see everyone at the first tour of the year. Everyone is a little taller (well, except for me). Everyone is a little excited (I'm a LOT excited). And, I'm pretty sure I see the same anticipation that I feel inside reflected in the bright and shining faces looking back at me.  :) 

Visit 1 Vocabulary:
relief / el relieve  
hybrid / el híbrido 
abstract / abstracto
biomorphic / biomorfo
chance / el azar 
collaborate / colaborar

During our first tour of the year, we explored the special exhibition The Nature of ArpWhat is nature? Can you name some examples of nature? Nature also refers to the characteristics of something or someone.  So, The Nature of Arp could also mean The Characteristics of Arp.  As we visited different works of art, we looked for things from nature as well as things that might tell us what kind of person Jean Arp was.

We began by looking at the works of art below and pointing out shapes that look familiar to us. What do you see?




These artworks are called (from left to right) Shirtfront and Fork, Horse-Bird, and Bird-Man. Where do you see these shapes? How much do they look like the titles – a lot, or a little, or in somewhere in between?

3rd grade
3rd grade
The artist, Jean Arp, used abstract shapes in his artwork. For example, he creates a shape that is inspired by something like a fork or a bird, with simple outlines and not much detail. It might not look exactly like the object that inspired it. Arp also mixes together two things in Horse-Bird and Bird-Man. We can call this a hybrid – when two or more things are combined.

4th grade (sometimes it helps to look sideways)  :)
4th grade
These artworks are made of painted wood.  Arp designed the shapes, then he worked with skilled carpenters to cut the shapes for him.  Arp liked to collaborate, or work together, with friends, artists, and people with different skills when he made art. Once the wood shapes were cut, Arp painted and combined them to make these reliefs. A relief is a work of art, usually hung on a wall or maybe part of a building, with 3-D parts that are carved from or attached to a flat background.

5th grade
5th grade

Stay tuned for pictures from the next stop in The Nature of Arp tour!

*I usually include pictures from all grades in these blog posts, but the 2nd grade tour has been postponed until early December.  So the 2nd graders will get their own picture post after their tour.  :)