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Silberstein-Storfer, Muriel – Art Education, 1985
Instructional strategies based on a portrait painting of Francisco Goya introduce primary grade students to the idea that portraits are pictures of people. Students also develop an awareness that the visual vocabulary of color, shape, line, texture, and the quality of brushstrokes can communicate feelings and ideas. (RM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Activities, Art Education, Art History
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Tolbert, Peggy Manulikow – Art Education, 1985
Instructional strategies based on a portrait painting of Jean-Baptiste Oudry familiarize intermediate grade students with the techniques of portraiture and introduce the characteristics of eighteenth-century French rococo painting. (RM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Activities, Art Education, Art History
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Bush, Teresia – Art Education, 1985
The instructional strategies suggested use a work of one of Mexico's most celebrated political history painters, David Siqueiros, to introduce junior high students to formal qualities in portraiture and contemporary Mexican art history. (RM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Activities, Art Education, Art History
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Amdursky, Myrna Teck – Art Education, 1985
Instructional strategies introduce students in grades 10-12 to the stylistic characteristics and portraiture technique of Mary Cassatt and help them understand Cassatt's relationship to work of other Impressionist painters. (RM)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Activities, Art Education, Art History
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Copeland, Betty D. – Art Education, 1983
Discusses the contents of typical art education learning packages. Those of the Central Midwestern Regional Laboratories (CEMREL) are designed to heighten student involvement through use of media. Other packages focus on art history, art appreciation, and arts and crafts activity. A package has also been developed for special education students.…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art History
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Mittler, Gene A. – Art Education, 1980
Citing a lack of teacher preparation and available curriculum materials for art appreciation, the author proposes an art criticism/art history approach for the secondary grades. He outlines a sequence of operations modeled after Bruner's stages of perceptual decision making and presents a sample lesson plan. (SJL)
Descriptors: Art Appreciation, Art History, Curriculum Design, Decision Making
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Falletta, Barbara – Art Education, 1996
Presents a series of instructional resources that includes three color plates illustrating the work of three sculptresses. Portrays the historical subjects: colonial America's Virginia Dare, the biblical Hagar, and ancient history's Zenobia. Activities include researching the artist, the subject, and the historical period. Discusses the White…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art History
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Cherry, Schroeder – Art Education, 1997
Presents a series of lesson plans and learning activities using discipline based art education principles to focus on four works by African American artists. The artists featured are Joshua Johnson, Horace Pippin, Alma Thomas, and Tom Miller. Includes a representative color plate of each artist's work. (MJP)
Descriptors: Art Education, Art History, Art Products, Artists
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Loudon, Sarah – Art Education, 1996
Presents four lesson plans centered around artworks involving Japanese clothing. Instructional materials include color plates of a 19th century print showing women's clothing, two beautifully handcrafted coats, and a coverlet in kimono form. The lesson plans discuss Japanese clothing, art, society, and culture. (MJP)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art History
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Wardle, Barbra L. – Art Education, 1990
Examines how a discipline-based approach to multicultural art augments multicultural education. Focuses on Native American arts. Illustrates how symbols, colors, natural materials, and methods differ among tribes. Suggests teaching activities, including focusing on a particular artist to raise specific questions about specific symbols. Profiles…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art Expression
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Lankford, E. Louis – Art Education, 1990
Outlines an issue-centered approach to teaching aesthetics, where students identify and analyze possible solutions before learning an aesthetician's viewpoint. Suggests that teachers acquire basic aesthetic knowledge but also be willing to accept planned uncertainty as an educational principle. Presents a fictional art forgery scenario to…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
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Stout, Candace Jesse – Art Education, 1990
Shows how learning, in an art appreciation class, can be more meaningful and lasting by emphasizing expressive outcomes that develop during class and reflect students' life experiences. Explains how teachers can take advantage of students' spontaneously generated questions. Provides four examples from an undergraduate class that can be applied at…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Appreciation, Art Criticism, Art Education
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Johnson, Kate; Walpole, Rachel – Art Education, 1990
Points out that the word "style" can mean how an object is designed or how to identify a particular artist, group, culture, or movement. Illustrates four artworks from the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. Provides background information and questions for students to analyze, interpret, and create artwork. (KM)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Art History, Class Activities
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Petit, David A. – Art Education, 1990
Describes how three groups of twentieth-century U.S. artists--Landscape and architectural artists, pop artists, and the photo-realists--used the object as the primary image in their artwork. Maintains that this approach to studying still life may be more relevant for teachers and students today. (KM)
Descriptors: Art Education, Art Expression, Art History, Art Teachers
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Marschalek, Douglas G. – Art Education, 1989
Demonstrates how the art education curriculum is linked to general education. Provides a conceptual approach to an environmental design study curriculum that incorporates the Wisconsin state art curriculum guide's five generalizations with appropriate conceptual statements for primary, intermediate, middle, and high school grades, and the four…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Appreciation, Art Education, Art History
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