Painting

Each lesson Plan focuses primarily on one of the 4 Cornerstones of Art:
Drawing | Painting | Color | Style

OVERVIEW

Students continue from last week’s drawing and preparations. They’ll get set up right away for painting, and review several insights as well as techniques. There are 3 techniques to use for this project, and a set of art terms is provided and discussed while students begin working. At the end of the lesson, there is a demo for creating a signature in paint.

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Grades 3 – 5

Week of February 3 – 7

1 Hour & 45 Minutes

Lesson At A Glance

Here’s a brief overview of the complete lesson. It’s also on your prep page in the Ready, Set, Go! section (below the lesson).

Colored buttons jump to each section in the full lesson plan below.

5 Minutes – Students set up for acrylic painting

5 Min –  review Secret Plate technique & adjust guidelines

42 min – Mixing paint review & begin painting.

40 min – Encourage students & add Most Important Spot.

10 min – Teacher DEMO on signatures

2 min – Set aside paintings to dry

Use this button to jump down to the preparation section.

 

SCROLL & TEACH

LESSONPLAN

Each section is a different color. Read over once and then you can SCROLL & TEACH using any device you like. It’s designed to work well with your phone.

STEP 1. Set Up

Students will set up their materials for painting

 

5 Minutes

LEARNING TARGETS

Students know how to set up their work area for painting with acrylics.

M A T E R I A L S

  • Water tubs
  • Small to medium brushes
  • Palette pads
  • Acrylic paints
  • Paper towels
  • Canvas board with guideline drawing from previous lesson

All materials are suggestions and may be modified as you see fit. We have tried many items, and these seem to allow the most versatility for the cost.

Brushes should be nylon for springiness and durability. Round brushes are the most versatile.

Paint pigment list:

  • Napthol or Pyrrol Red
  • Hansa or Light Yellow
  • Pthalo Green (blue shade)
  • Cyan or Cerulean Blue
  • Ultramarine Blue
  • Dioxazine Purple
  • Magenta
  • Burnt Umber
  • Raw Sienna
  • Titanium White (professional grade only)

1.1 Print

Guide

Acrylic Pigment List

Print enough for each student to have one.

Hand out reference prints.

PRINT

1 Page – Opens in new window

1.2 setup

Students set up their work area. Ask several people to go get water tubs filled, and others to find smocks. That way you have two or three groups in different areas so you don’t get backed up with lines.

Advanced Student Lesson

CREATIONS - tap here to open

Our Creations lessons are for students who have completed the two years of Foundations and are ready to begin using all that they have learned to create new work. These more challenging versions of the same concepts and techniques are easily taught along-side students in the Foundations course. This allows for excellent review, and is encouraging for students to see progress from each viewpoint.Use the Student Instructions printout below to distribute to your Creations students. Tap the image to open the PDF in a new window.

Abstract Painting

Overview: Students will create a background using colors they choose, and then create an abstract line painting using photographic reference as their source.Use a canvas board, a sheet of taped canvas, or a stretched canvas if available.Step 1. (15 minutes) Set up for painting in acrylic, and cover the canvas with a thin coat of any colors of your choosing. Brilliant colors work well. Colors may be mixed with water instead of white, for a glaze effect, or white can be mixed in for opacity – colors that look more solid. Set aside to dry.Step 2. (20 min) Choose a reference source from any book or use the provided PDF photographs below. Use a pencil and sketchpad to create an abstract line drawing based on the photo. You should try to make it different enough so that it’s hard to recognize the subject.Step 3. (5) Write down some ideas for how color will be used as line and filling in areas. The original underpainting may be covered a lot, or it may show through and be an important element in the painting.Note: colorful lines and pattern can add a lot of visual interest to this painting.Step 4. Resume painting, using a variety of Brushes for different effects. Clean edges and lines are much easier to create when the paint is a very fluid.

Print

Tap images to open Creations Student Instructions and Reference Materials in new windows

Use this button to jump down to the preparation section.

STEP 2. Review & Adjust

Students review the Secret Plate technique and adjust drawings.

 

7 Minutes

LEARNING TARGETS

Students know how to adjust their drawings

M A T E R I A L S

  • Canvas pencil
  • White eraser

2.1 review

Show graphic & review The Secret Plate

“Artists must draw the entire secret plate for every ellipse that they see. You simply must draw the invisible part or you cannot accurately depict the visible part. It’s a mistake to think that once you understand it, that you no longer have to use this plate technique. Professional artists use it every time they draw.

In short, you can’t accurately draw something that wraps around to the other side, unless you draw it wrapping around to the other side.”

Teacher Talk

Read verbatim or paraphrase

2.2 adjust

Have students adjust their workAdjust cylinder guideline drawing using the canvas pencil – Look at all of the cylinder bottoms and also label curves. Draw right over the underpainting if done last week.

Use this button to jump down to the preparation section.

STEP 3. Begin Painting

Students will view video on mixing paint and begin painting their still life.

 

42 Minutes

LEARNING TARGETS

Students know how to paint with acrylic

M A T E R I A L S

  • Water tubs
  • Small to medium brushes
  • Palette pads
  • Acrylic paints
  • Paper towels
  • Canvas board with guideline drawing from previous lesson

3.1 paint

 Make sure underpaintings are finished firstAnyone not finished or who has not begun their underpainting should do that first. At this point, the easiest underpainting color is a quick wash of Raw Sienna or Orange over the entire canvas. Make the following important points to these students. You might want them to gather in a group so they hear it all. Repeat as necessary!

  • Underpaintings will be painted OVER. It’s like doing an oil pastel on colored paper instead of white paper. Not much shows through but it changes the feel of the painting and makes it easier too.
  • Use water, NOT WHITE, to lighten the color. White cannot be used at all for the underpainting.
  • Make sure it’s light enough to see the drawing.
  • Don’t over-brush it. You can accidentally scrub up the drawing.
  • Don’t worry about streaks! They will not show at all after you paint over this.

Dry the underpaintings with a hair dryer so students can move forward.

3.2 watch

Show video while students squeeze paints out and begin workingHave any new students, or anyone who has not seen a paint demo, pay attention to the video before beginning.Here’s how to set up for acrylic painting, and also how to mix and work with them on your palette.

3.3 DEMO

The Basics For Setting Up and Painting Acrylics

Tap the 4 arrows icon to enlarge the video to full screen.

Review the demo video and demonstrate to your students, or you can simply display the video on a larger screen for them to watch.

3.4 Print

guide

3 Painting Techniques

Print enough for each student to use or for two students to share.

Hand out reference prints.

PRINT

1 Page – Opens in new window

3.5 teach

Provide the 3 Painting Techniques handoutEveryone who is ready to paint, needs to read over the 3 techniques handout. Students can share them around and refer as needed.IMPORTANT!Make sure you tell your students to mix some white into every single color. It makes the paint opaque, so that the underpainting is not bleeding through. It will show through gaps, but bleeding through transparent paint will not look as good with any of the basic techniques below.3 techniques can be used to paint this still life. Students who have tried one technique before can choose that technique. If no technique has been tried before, then use the first technique, called Local Color.

  1. Local colors first – then add shadows and finally the highlights. Begin anywhere you like.
  2. Darks first – mix up some dark shadow colors using opposites (see color journal from last year if you have one). Paint the shadows (a little larger than they are), over the entire canvas first. Then move to brighter local colors. You can use a dry brush technique as long as all of your colors are lighter than what has already been painted. This is called painting dark-to-light, or the “sunrise” technique. Finish by waiting until the very end to add highlights and fill in the lightest areas.
  3. Wet paint – Keeping your paints almost syrupy by adding water allows each object or area to be fully painted and blended before it dries. Paint things one at a time until you finish. Then move to the next object or area and finish it before moving on again. This creates a wet-on-wet look that is reminiscent of an oil painting technique called alla prima.

3.6 Paint

As you walk around the room:

  • Take a moment with every student on each round, even if it’s simply saying “looks good so far!”
  • Continue rounds throughout the class time.
  • Ask students if there is anything causing frustration or if they have a question about anything
  • Ask what they like and/or dislike about the work so far
  • Have a clipboard or pad and pencil with you. Write and draw any solutions you have, and then give the paper to the student. If you’re not an artist, discuss ideas they have to improve their own work.
  • The focus is on
    • cylinder shapes
    • fun
    • finishing a painting
    • being happy with technique – switch to another technique if there is frustration

TIP

Make sure that all of the wet items (brushes, water, paint, and palette) are on the same side as the dominant hand of each artist. This prevents spills and drips on the artwork.

Use this button to jump down to the preparation section.

Part Two

 

Begin here at your next class time if you are teaching the lesson in two 45-minute sessions instead of all at one time. (The full lesson takes an hour and 30 minutes.)

 

STEP 4. Continue Painting

Students will continue to paint

 

40 Minutes

LEARNING TARGETS

Students know how to paint with acrylics

M A T E R I A L S

  • Water tubs
  • Small to medium brushes
  • Palette pads
  • Acrylic paints
  • Paper towels
  • Canvas board with guideline drawing from previous lesson

4.2 paint

Look for finishing touchesAs students near the end of their painting, look for ways they can add drama, emphasize the Most Important Spot, and make snappy highlights. We sometimes call this “adding bling”.

TIP

Something that looks great in one or two places will not look good if placed all over a painting, ie: an awesome highlight. Too many of a good thing makes it dissapear.

Pinterest Gallery – Henk Helmantel

Tap the icon to the left to open our special Pinboard showing examples of artwork to display to your class. See our Article for making Pinterest work on larger displays. You can also use a laptop or large tablet and gather everyone around like you’re using a book. Below is the artist’s website, which is in dutch but most browsers will translate for you.

Henk Halmantel’s Website

Here’s another PINBOARD with more still life examples in several different styles.

“Henk Helmantel is a renowned Dutch painter who has been very successful as a still life artist, as well as painting serene and simple interior architecture.

He is somewhat controversial in his artistic diretion and outspoken beliefs. His work is deeply moving in person, yet still comes across in reproductions online and in books. He has a mastery of form, painting cylindrical shapes accurately and with beautiful light and shadow.

Yet even he sometimes struggles with drawing accurate elipses. They are that difficult.”

Teacher Talk

Read verbatim or paraphrase

Use this button to jump down to the preparation section.

STEP 5. Signature

Teachers will do or show a DEMO on painting signatures

 

10 Minutes

LEARNING TARGETS

Students know how to sign their painting

M A T E R I A L S

  • Scrap of painted canvas to demo on (light and/or dark areas)
  • Small long-haired skinny pointed brush. A liner brush is best
  • Acrylic paints
  • Mixing surface
  • Water tub

5.1 DEMO

Signature Demo

Tap the 4 arrows icon to enlarge the video to full screen.

Review the demo video and demonstrate to your students, or you can simply display the video on a larger screen for them to watch.

5.2 paint

Help students choose good signature colorsA great color for a signature is one that you can see a little bit of somewhere else in the painting, and that does not stand out garishly.

Use this button to jump down to the preparation section.

STEP 6. Clean Up

Everyone helps

 

5 Minutes

LEARNING TARGETS

Students know the importance of cleaning up.

M A T E R I A L S

  • Paper Towels
  • Cleaning wipes
  • Sink
  • Waste baskets
  • Well-lit spot for photos
  • Camera or phone-camera

6.1 CLEAN

Nothing should contact painted surfacesAcrylic paint takes 24 to 48 hours to completely cure. Until then anything touching it will adhere to it like glue if left in contact for very long. A drying rack is great, but if you don’t have one, use all the flat surfaces you can to store drying paintings. Wax paper between them can help but only after overnight drying at least.Students set up their work area.

  • Wash hands
  • Super-wash brushes if used
  • Put art supplies away
  • Wipe tables & toss trash
  • Remove any smocks (last)
  • Check for items on floors and tables

6.2 PHOTO

Try to get photos of your student’s artwork. Find a good spot for quick lighting without highlights or shadows from your hands and device. Ideally in-between two strong lights on each side.

OBJECTIVES

  • Practice and improvement painting with acrylics
  • Understanding how to finish a painting
  • Accomplishment in finishing a still life on canvas
  • Fulfillment in discovering a personal painting technique

TROUBLESPOTS

Overload from frustration

  • If you have a crisis going on, allow the student to make a graphic painting like the bottles a few weeks ago, with flat colors and sharp edges. If even that is not working, switch to oil pastels on paper and artists’ choice to take a quick break of 5-10 minutes.
  • Students sometimes do things their own way and ignore every single thing you’ve asked them to do. They are convinced that their own way will protect them from embarrassing themselves so they insist that their way is better for them. When it doesn’t work, the stress can be overwhelming, but as a teacher you will be very frustrated too! Take a break. Then have a discussion about trusting you and taking a chance that the lesson will help them be less frustrated. Remember that art and performance are connected to identity, so this is a sensitive issue.

ART WORDS

 Perspective – A term that is used to refer to the general illusion of depth in artwork.

3D drawing – When any artwork gives the illusion of being viewable at more than one angle, and the nature of the work changes when viewed from those different angles, it is a 3D form of artwork. 3D work utilizes the different viewpoints to maximum effect and sometimes creates an environment.

CLASSROOM

PREP

Print all of your PDFs from the lesson plan and cut any references apart as needed.

What your room needs

Here are your printable lists and room prep instructions.

PRINT

Opens in new window

CLASSROOM

MATERIALS

  • Water tubs
  • Paper towels

STUDENT’S

MATERIALS

  • Small to medium brushes
  • Palette pads
  • Acrylic paints
  • Canvas board with drawing from previous lesson
  • Canvas pencil
  • White eraser

PREVIEW

Week 24: Architecture Watercolor

Students will enjoy an easy drawing of architecture shapes that don’t involve perspective, from photo reference. A review or intro to watercolor techniques is next, and then they spend the rest of the lesson painting.

Week 25: The Eye

This week is the beginning of our winter anatomy lessons on the parts of the face. Students will sculpt a human eye as they follow along with a video. They’ll learn to draw accurate eyes by understanding the form and structure of the eyeball and the skin around it. Lighting is demonstrated so that shadows are also understood. There is a “before” and “after” version of their work so they can see the progress from today’s instructions.