Painting With Colour: Kelsey Galbraith and Lacey Macleod Grade 7 Art
Painting With Colour: Kelsey Galbraith and Lacey Macleod Grade 7 Art
Painting With Colour: Kelsey Galbraith and Lacey Macleod Grade 7 Art
Colour
Kelsey Galbraith and Lacey
Macleod
Grade 7 Art
Students will:
Learn about
colour theory
Create key
terms with
TRANSFER GOAL
paint
Learn and
practice colour
mixing
Know what
tints of a
colour are, and
how to
produce them
Understand
different
characteristics
of foreground,
middle
ground, and
background.
Be able to
simplify forms
Understand
the principle of
atmospheric
perspective
Learn to
create space
in a painting
using colour
Understand
the meaning
of strange
space
Enduring
Understandings:
Students will
understand
Essential Questions:
Students will keep considering
Q 1 Examine the idea of colour schemes provoking a
mood or feeling onto the viewers.
U1 Key terms in
colour, primary
tertiary,
complimentary,
analogous, with an
emphasis on
monochromatic, tints
and range of value.
U2 How
atmospheric
perspective works,
specifically that
colour becomes less
saturated as it
recedes.
U3 The process of
colour chunking
when reducing form
to create space.
Applying lighter
tints of a colour in
the background
creates
atmospheric space.
The concepts and
rules of creating
atmospheric space,
and how artists
experiment with
these rules to
create strange
space.
How to compare
two pieces of their
work- discussing
similarities and
differences.
STAGE 2 Evidence
Evaluative Criteria
Performance is judged in
terms of - Critique
Participation- class
discussions, project work,
experimenting with colour
mixing, taking risks in
creating space.
Completion- proper use of
techniques, clean
appearance.
Creativity- showing a sense
of individualism in their final
project,
Assessment Evidence
Students will need to show their learning
by: Showcasing their paintings in a final
critique and explain the elements
involved.
Transfer Task: Students will show their learning
by review of topics they already know, group
discussion about key terms introduced, mixing
their own paints (hands-on), practicing to create
a monochromatic scene using the rules of
atmospheric perspective, and practice creating
strange space by breaking the rules of
atmospheric perspective.
Unit Summary
This unit is all about learning the conventions of art elements and their relation
to creating space. The lessons provide a foundational structure to understanding
how space is created when using atmospheric perspective in many of the
landscape paintings found throughout history - Caspar David Friedrich for
example. Students will apply their knowledge and create examples of space
using different modes of reference. They will practice many skills in colour
mixing, rendering and simplifying form, and applying their understanding of
value / tint ranges. After developing an understanding for the order of value
which is found in atmospheric perspective, students will then be asked to disrupt
these rules to create strange space that can be found is works by Georgia
OKeeffe and Etel Adnan. These lessons are designed to be the primary lessons
to give students a confident foundation in the spatial conventions of art. The
direction will be in the form of key questions in reference to visual examples
from contemporary art and history and peer work. Many different approaches
could be taken to this framework which allows for open manipulation of the
lessons. Students could create a number of pieces for studies and examples to
work from. The end result could come much later in the unit with subjects of
strange space, spatial collage mixed media, contrasting a piece from art history
- simplifying and changing the space.
Unit Rationale
This lesson package for painting with colour works well for grade 7 students as it
outlines fundamental principles of art. Grade 7 is a transitional year, as students
are now in junior high. It is the grade where students begin to pick their own
options, a huge difference from elementary routines. This may be the students
first real art class, so teaching fundamental principles is ideal. Understanding
colour theory as a young artist will allow for success in their future. Along with
teaching colour theory, students will have the opportunity to explore
atmospheric perspective and the conventions to create this principle. Next
students will begin to understand the ideas of colour blocking and simplifying
forms, vital principles used by artists. After the students have a solid
understanding of the following concepts, they will have the opportunity to play
with strange space. This will allow students to begin to explore their own ideas,
and start to develop their individual potential. It will encourage a deeper thought
process in students, and act as a vehicle to inspiration. This lesson package
includes essential vocabulary, visual examples, hands on experimenting, and a
comparing critique. These choices were made to reach a wide range of learning
styles.
Lesson Summaries
Lesson One: Colour Theory. In this lesson students will have the chance to
explore further into what they already know about colour theory. Students have
their own colour wheel from a previous lesson that will be essential to further
their understandings in this lesson. Trusting that they know the properties of a
colour wheel, and which colours are primary and tertiary, this lesson will take
them a step further. The lesson explores multiple colour schemes such as
complementary, split-complementary, analogous, and monochromatic. Students
will have the opportunity to express their understanding of these schemes with
paint in the final activity. There will be a detailed review of the colour wheel,
defining and explaining the colour schemes, paired with thought out examples
to go with each. Students will understand the formula (which colours to choose
on a colour wheel) to produce each of the colour schemes. By completing this
assignment students will start to ponder colour relationships, and what colour
can produce; for example, mood and space. After the products have been
finalized, conversations about the monochromatic section will be introduced.
Language like tints and shades of one colour will we addressed in relation to
monochromatic colour schemes. This branches into the next lesson, which
addresses the idea of atmospheric perspective, and how different tints of a
colour can create this concept.
Lesson Two: Teaching Atmospheric perspective. Students will learn the
role of colour in the concept of Atmospheric perspective and the relationship of
foreground and background. Using the knowledge acquired from the previous
lesson on colour theory students will understand that colours and detail become
less saturated and prominent as they recede into space. The activity Using
paint chip strips students will use previously built skills to remix the colours of
the paint strips, then apply their new knowledge to create a space that has
atmospheric perspective. Using images with atmospheric perspective, students
will be introduced to the idea of simplified form and how artists use this as a
stylistic choice, but also to create space. In completion of this lesson, students
will have applied their knowledge of colour mixing and arranging colour tints in a
value range to create three-dimensional space. With the introduction to
simplified form, this will set up the students for the next sequential lesson.
Lesson Three: Creating Strange Space. This would be considered the end
result, a simplified monochromatic rendering of a given space. After the
students have had time to practice atmospheric space in the previous lesson,
students will be given an image that they then plan and chose to simplify a part
of the image in a value of colour. Using this as reference material they will then
further reduce the image into simplified forms of monochromatic color,
transferring this composition onto their own piece of paper. The aim is to have
students start to create strange space using their skills of colour theory and
spatial rendering. The criteria/parameters are important to structuring the
activity
Evaluation. Students will be assessed on the activities throughout each lesson.
The activities provide scaffolding for the next lessons in sequence. Students
would be assessed on their work from each activity and mini lesson therefore
their engagement and participation could be measured as well. The criteria
would be quite structured due to the nature of these lessons are to explore and
refine technical skill. This can be a no- fail approach to teaching skill and
constructs of art. A fourth lesson could be added which would then allow for
more conceptual exploration adding an object into space, further distorting the
space. Ect.
A.
B.
C.
Learning objectives:
1. Students understand how to produce tints and shades of a specific colour.
2. Students understand meanings of key terms.
3. Students understand beginning of atmospheric perspective.
Assessment methods:
1. Students will paint their monochromatic section using tints and shades.
2. Students will produce work according to the formula that has been
specified
3. Students recognize that tints and shades affect perspective.
Key terms: Monochromatic, Analogous, Complementary, split-complementary,
mood, Atmospheric. perspective
Materials: tempera paint, paintbrush, pencil, paper, paint tray.
Teaching Strategies: Review, and introduce key terms, hands on experience of
materials, demonstration, show examples, and class discussion.
Procedure:
Intro
(students have a colour wheel similar to
this one displayed that they created in a
previous lesson)
1. Have a quick review of terms they
should already know. Have a large
colour wheel displayed either on
the smart board or physical copy.
2. Have students recall simply ideas,
such as which colors are primary,
tertiary, and complementary. This
knowledge should be known to
students in grade 7.
3. Talk about the colours that are formed on the color wheel between a
primary and tertiary colour. Some students may have not gone this far in
past colour theory lessons.
4. Explain four specific terms. Complementary, Split- complementary,
Analogous, and monochromatic. Have the definitions the
definitions on a slide, SHOW students on the colour wheel, and then
provide examples of art works that work in that particular colour scheme.
Complementary
Analogous
Split- Complementary
Monochromatic
5.
Body
1. Now that we know, and understand these basic key-terms we are going to
create our own depictions of each colour theme. The purpose of this
assignment is to have a physical base model of these terminologies to
refer back to in your painting journey.
2. You will receive a 12 x 12 piece of paper. You must divide this paper into 4
EQUAL parts. You may go about this by making 4 squares, or 4 triangles.
You must use the whole page.
3. You must design a pattern in one of the 4 sections, and then duplicate the
SAME pattern in the other sections, with a high emphasis on symmetry to
your middle point.
4. When you are done your symmetrical drawings, you must show the
teacher before you move on to painting. From there you will depict the
above 4 colour themes in each of your sections. You may pick which ever
colors you want on the colour wheel, but they MUST follow the formula of
each key-term.
5. Use your previous knowledge of mixing paint, and appropriate amounts of
paint when you are working on this project. If you need a reminder on how
to do this, ask the teacher or a peer.
6. Here are examples of works. DO NOT COPY these works. They are just to
show you an example of what the end product might look like.
Closure
1. When you are finished, place your work in the drying racks and gather for
discussion.
2. Start a discussion and emphasis on the monochromatic section of their
painting. Discussion questions to prompt thinking:
Does your monochromatic section evoke a certain mood?
How is the space in your monochromatic section portrayed?
Describe how to use monochromatic colours to create perspective?
3.
If students finish early have them paint doodle with only one color,
including black and white, and make different tints and shades. Ask them
to ponder the idea of perspective, and how they think they could show
perspective with only one hue.
This is a sponge activity for the following lesson that involves atmospheric
perspective, and monochromatic colours.
Learning objectives:
Students will:
1. Understand that when creating atmospheric perspective colours become
less saturated as they recede into space. Their hues and tints become
lighter.
2. Mix colour to match references (Paint sample strips) to create their own
idea of atmospheric perspective.
3. Begin to understand the process of color chunking by reducing form.
Assessment methods:
1. Students will create atmospheric perspective on a 2-d surface, using paint.
2. Student will mix paint to match their colour samples and prove they
understand elements of atmospheric perspective.
3. Students will demonstrate colour blocking on a magazine picture.
Key terms: Atmospheric Perspective, colour Saturation, recede/ reduce, value,
colour chunking.
Materials: Paint chip samples, paintbrushes, paper, white paint, paint tray
Teaching Strategies: show examples, define keywords, hands-on experience
with tints.
Procedure:
1. Mini- Lesson on Foreground, Middle ground, and background
relationships.
Explain Using Examples such as Example C (below) Engage in discussion
about what is in the foreground- what is in most detail.
Middle ground- what would be considered the middle ground of this image
(the lake)
The Background- what would be considered the background- what are
some clues that make it a background (less detail, lighter in colour)
Students could fill out a simple chart with the art elements on the X-axis,
and labels like foreground, middle ground, background on the Y-axis.
Foreground
Middle-ground
Background
Line
-Highly Detailed
-Line styles and
characteristics easily
distinguishable
Colou
r
2.
Value
Shap
e.
B.
3.
C.
Where in the examples are there higher valued, or lighter tinted colours?
Are these colours located in the same area in all three pictures?
Examine the difference between the intensity of the colours. Where are
the more saturated colours located?
Activity 1:
Hand out paint sample strips to each student with matching paint and white
paint and paper.
Students will be asked to mix the colours to match their paint sample strips- so
adding white to make a value range.
Activity 2:
Students will be asked to create their own creation of space with atmospheric
perspective. Show examples of previous works, using simplified form and colour
blocking to make landscape, city scape, objects, rooms.
Key Questions:
When creating space - what do you notice about detail as you look from the
foreground to the background?
Looking at Georgia OKeeffe (image in lesson 3) - What do you think about
what she has chosen to paint. Do you think she has chosen to simplify her
image? How do you think she decided to do that - what do you notice about her
layers of space? Does the detail become less or more? What do you think about
her color palette? How do you think she made this colour?
What would you say is an important rule to create space? What is an important
order of colour?
Sponge Activity: What are the rules for atmospheric space? Where are lighter
colours, where are darker? What is in the middle? Next class we will be looking
at something a bit different. Artists are rule breakers, so next class we are going
to experiment with strange space. Not following the rules of atmospheric space.
Resources:
http://artconfidence.blogspot.ca/2011/08/color-theory-and-balance.html
http://www.outdoorexposurephoto.com/photoblog/digital-photography-tips/73/
https://kenziw1.wordpress.com/2013/10/30/foreground-middle-groundbackground/
Teaching Strategies:
Using the smart board to present examples.
Allow time for student involvement for review and apply understanding of
simplified form. Show examples and invite students up to show how they
would reduce the form of a given image. Key Questions will be essential in
the verbal instruction application for the class. They are outlined in the
procedure.
http://www.explore-drawing-and-painting.com/painting-landscapes.html
Key Questions:
- Describe simplified form.
- Analyze the form in these examples; think about how the artist simplified
them.
- Explain the process of reducing form found in an image?
- In this image, identify the foreground, middle ground, and background?
- If I was to reduce form in the background, I would choose to use chunk all
of this information together, can you explain why I would choose only some
information?
- Would someone like to show me how they would reduce form in the
foreground of this image?
- Ponder atmospheric perspective, can you explain to me what the
background would look like in atmospheric perspective? What are some
general rules when creating atmospheric space?
Georgia O'Keeffe, Black Mesa Landscape, New Mexico/Out Back of Marie's II,
1930, Oil on canvas mounted to board, 24 1/4 x 36 1/4 inches, Gift of the
Burnett Foundation, Georgia O'Keeffe Museum
http://www.okeeffemuseum.org/landscape.html
Examples:
http://gallerytravels.blogspot.ca/2014/04/etel-adnan-at-callicoon-finearts.html
http://jasonmessingerart.com/artwork/2984998_Versailles_France_16_8x8_Til
es.html
Key Questions in Response to Examples:
-Describe the space in this image. Is it conventional or strange?