Painting

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

OVERVIEW

Artists will continue to work on their portraits from last week. The focus should be on the technique, but also to re-work areas that are not looking the way they want them to. Early finishers have Artists’ Choice.

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Grades 3 – 5

Week of March 31 – April 4

1 Hour & 45 Minutes

Student Work

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.

 10 Minutes – Artists’ choice from reference

 5 min – Setup for acrylic painting

10 min – Slideshow

27 min – Continue with portrait

40 min – Finish portrait

10 min – Use leftover paints or dry medium

2 min – Everyone helps

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. Warm Up

Students will warmup with Artists’ Choice.
10 Minutes

LEARNING TARGETS

Students know how to warmup before drawing or painting

M A T E R I A L S

  • 14″ x 17″ sketch pad
  • 4B pencil
  • White and kneaded erasers
  • Cheasel reference stand & clip

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.

    1.1 sketch

    Use reference

    Students should look around and quickly settle on something to sketch from life or photo reference.

    If anyone wants to skip this step and rush into their painting, that’s ok, but taking even a couple of minutes for a quick life sketch is a great way to start. It builds confidence and promotes the discipline of life sketching, which is essential for artists.

    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.

    Continue Portrait Painting

    Students are in their 3rd week of portrait work, which is good since advanced students are usually more inclined to work on details and rework areas than beginning students.

    If anyone is finished, they can enjoy artists’ choice. Encourage your students to develop ideas for a one-day project using any medium they like. Have them come up with a few ideas and then present them to you for review. Help them choose something that they will enjoy but is also challenging.

     

    Print

    No prints needed today.

    Use this button to jump down to the preparation section.

    STEP 2. Setup

    Students will set up for acrylic 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

    • Acrylic portrait painting
    • Acrylic paints
    • Brushes – various sizes
    • Water tubs
    • Paper towels
    • Smocks
    • Cheasel reference stand & clip

    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)

    2.1 setup

    Palette is on dominant side

    All of the paints, water, palette, and brushes should be on one side, so that the wet brush is not constantly being moved back and forth over the painting to get to these items.

    It’s easiest if this is the side their dominant hand is on.

    Use this button to jump down to the preparation section.

    STEP 3. Review

    Students will review steps to creating an acrylic portrait.
    10 Minutes

    LEARNING TARGETS

    Students know how to create an acrylic portrait

    M A T E R I A L S

    • Acrylic portrait painting
    • Acrylic paints
    • Brushes – various sizes
    • Water tubs
    • Paper towels
    • Smocks
    • Cheasel reference stand & clip

    Review and Learn Portrait Techniques (tap any image to open viewer)

    3.1 review

    Review & learn some new ideas with a slideshow

    Display the images and read the captions.

    Use this button to jump down to the preparation section.

    STEP 4. Paint

    Students will continue with their paintings from last week.
    27 Minutes

    LEARNING TARGETS

    Students know how to paint with acrylics

    M A T E R I A L S

    • Acrylic portrait painting
    • Acrylic paints
    • Brushes – various sizes
    • Water tubs
    • Paper towels
    • Smocks
    • Cheasel reference stand & clip

    4.1 set up

    Watch for palette setup

    Make sure everyone gets out all of their colors and sets their palette up properly, and with the tubes nearby for when a color runs out.

    TIP

    Sometimes we’ll tell a student that their colors all need a faucet (source), so if they run out of a color, they’re working without a source of that color. It handicaps your ability to make colors. Always put out color right when you run out of one so all the faucets are ON. You wouldn’t think about taking a shower if one of your faucets was broken!

    4.2 help

    Encourage with truth

    We say this a lot, because it’s so important.

    Use this button to jump down to the preparation section.

    STEP 5. Paint

    Students will finish portrait and add final details.
    40 Minutes

    LEARNING TARGETS

    Students know how to paint a portrait

    M A T E R I A L S

    • Acrylic portrait painting
    • Acrylic paints
    • Brushes – various sizes
    • Water tubs
    • Paper towels
    • Smocks
    • Cheasel reference stand & clip

    5.1 Paint

    Keep working dark to light

    Finish the portrait, always working towards slightly lighter colors.

    Some darks can be added

    If the paint is wet enough to cover the canvas texture well, and not leave holes like a drybrush technique would do, then it’s ok to add some small dark and medium details if needed.

    Early finishers

    Artists should look for any other paintings they have in progress that are not yet done. Since paints are out and ready, move into finishing these works before going to the next step.

    Use this button to jump down to the preparation section.

    STEP 6. Artists' Choice

    Students who are completely finished will have Artists’ Choice.
    10 Minutes

    LEARNING TARGETS

    Students know how to create artwork independently

    M A T E R I A L S

    • Acrylic paints
    • Brushes – various sizes
    • Water tubs
    • Paper towels
    • Smocks
    • Cheasel reference stand & clip
    • 2B and 4B pencils
    • Erasers
    • Sketchpad
    • Oil Pastels

    6.1 create

    Enjoy!

    Use leftover paints and work on a small piece of canvas, or move to a dry medium. If paints are not being used, clean up first.

    Use this button to jump down to the preparation section.

    STEP 7. Clean Up

    Students will clean up all paint and work area.
    2 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

    7.1 CLEAN

    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

    7.2 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  in using, mixing, and applying acrylic paints
    • Understanding how to mix skin tones and create different values
    • Accomplishment from painting a portrait
    • Fulfillment from learning from a master by copying their work

    TROUBLESPOTS

    Washes – Semi-transparent layer of color on the canvas, using water to lighten the color instead of adding white. Avoid washes in acrylic for this project.

    Dry lightening – Using a dry brush with very little paint can lighten a color. This does not work well if you are lightening a dark color. This ONLY looks good on an acrylic (opaque) painting if you are DARKENING a light color by decreasing the amount of the light paint with the dry brush technique. Hence the Light-to-Dark method.

    ART WORDS

    Opaque– Paint that does not allow you to see through it to layers below. All of the colors we use are translucent, but we need opaque colors for this painting. Add white even to dark tones to make them opaque.

    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

    • Cheasel reference stand & clip
    • Water tubs
    • Paper towels
    • Smocks
    • Camera or camera phone

    STUDENT’S

    MATERIALS

    • 14” x 17” Sketch pad
    • 4B Pencil
    • White and kneaded erasers
    • Acrylic paints
    • Brushes
    • Oil pastels

    PREVIEW

    Week 34: Fun and Expressive Animal Art

    This is a great expressive project that students really enjoy. Animals drawings are practiced and then drawn in bold expressive ink using a brush. After drying, the students add watercolor to the animals for a striking piece of artwork.

    Week 35: 1,2,3,4

    1 project; 2 weeks, 3-dimensional, 4 You! Artists must design and create a painted sculpture made of 3 or 4 panels of corrugated cardboard.