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Showing 1 to 15 of 51 results Save | Export
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Sotomayor, Leslie C.; García, Christen Sperry – Art Education, 2019
In connecting personal stories with historical and cultural contexts, art becomes more accessible. We have integrated into this article our family stories that connect our personal experiences, historical, social, and cultural contexts with artmaking. They frame their family stories as "funds of knowledge," or knowledge and skills…
Descriptors: Handicrafts, Cultural Influences, Art Activities, Story Telling
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Belleville, Rebecca – Art Education, 2014
In this article, the author examines how art educators can create narrators of art history rather than those who ascribe truth to the opinion of a few. She presents a series of tangible classroom activities that will potentially help art history become meaningful to students' lives. The author states that students have a right to access art…
Descriptors: Art History, Art Education, Class Activities, Narration
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Pembleton, Matthew; LaJevic, Lisa – Art Education, 2014
What does an introduction to and engagement in performance art offer K-12 students? In this article, we respond to this question by proposing a lesson inspired by the artmaking practices of the contemporary artist Erwin Wurm. Performance art can be defined as any form of work that combines the artist's body and a live-action event with or…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Classroom Environment, Theater Arts, Sculpture
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Denmead, Tyler; Brown, Ruth-Nicole – Art Education, 2014
In this Instructional Resource, Denmead and Brown consider how "Ruffneck Constructivists," an exhibition curated by Kara Walker at the Institute for Contemporary Art (ICA), University of Pennsylvania, can disturb and provoke young creatives and art education more broadly. For this exhibition, Walker draws on the figure that MC Lyte…
Descriptors: Art Education, Instructional Materials, Art Appreciation, Art Materials
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Bobick, Bryna; DiCindio, Carissa – Art Education, 2012
Advocacy is not new to art education. Over the years, Goldfarb (1979), Hodsoll (1985), and Erickson and Young (1996) have written about the importance of arts advocacy, but the concept of advocacy has evolved with the times. For example, in the 1970s, arts advocacy was described as a "movement" and brought together art educators,…
Descriptors: Art History, Visual Arts, Elementary Secondary Education, Art Activities
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McMullen, Brianna – Art Education, 2006
A result of the industrial age was a short-lived but powerful new American art movement called Precisionism, most evident in painting, but visible also in drawing, photography, and print-making, focusing on industrial and mechanical subjects. Precisionism originated in the 1920s, allied with European Cubism's fascination with shape and geometric…
Descriptors: Visual Arts, Art History, Artists, Industrialization
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Park, Tad – Art Education, 1988
Presents a lesson plan which uses a "haniwa" figure of a horse to introduce K-3 students to Japanese ceramic sculpture. Includes student objectives and background information on the Kofun Period in Japan (250-552 A.D.). Presents instructional strategies, evaluation criteria, and a photograph of the sculpture. (GEA)
Descriptors: Art, Art Activities, Art Education, Art History
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Susi, Frank D. – Art Education, 1988
Discusses the advantages of academic games and simulations in art education. Provides information on developing academic games and simulations and includes an example. Concludes that these strategies not only broaden the range of instructional approaches, but enhance the learning that results from the study of art. (GEA)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Art History, Educational Games
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Selle, Penny – Art Education, 1988
Uses a print of a T'ang Dynasty tomb figure to acquaint grades 10-12 students with the tools needed for developing aesthetic judgement and artistic criticism. Includes background on the artwork and instructional strategies to help students describe the object, analyze the artmaking process, and formulate their own opinions. (GEA)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Art History, Grade 10
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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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Jenke, Veronika; McCoy, E. Sue – Art Education, 1986
Presents two art lessons, the first of which introduces elementary students to Dutch still life painting and to the Dutch painter Claesz. The second lesson introduces intermediate grade students to still life as a subject for painting and to the possibility of personal interpretation by an artist, as shown in an O'Keefe painting. (RM)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Art History, Artists
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Tollifson, Jerry; Lester, Laura – Art Education, 1986
The first art lesson helps middle-school students to understand characteristics, methods, and the historical significance of Cubist paintings as shown in Picasso's "Still Life with Compote and Glass." In the second lesson high school students learn about Cezanne's work and his relationship to the Impressionists and 20th century artists.…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Art History, Artists
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