Wednesday, 4 June 2014

LO: Create a piece of artwork inspired by Henri Matisse

Henri Matisse was a French artist and is known for his use of colour.

When Matisse was a child he discovered his love and talent for art. This happened whilst suffering from an illness which prevented him from going to school. Whilst at home his mother brought him art supplies and this is when his passion blossomed.

He stated, “From the moment I held the box of colours in my hands, I knew this was my life. I threw myself into it like a beast that plunges towards the thing it loves.”

Matisse's mother was the first to advise her son not to follow the 'rules' of art, but rather listen to his own emotions.

Over a six-decade career he worked in all media, from painting to sculpture to printmaking.

His subjects were traditional and included images of figures, landscapes, portraits and views.


Today we combined colour, composition and shapes to produce a Henri Matisse inspired paper cut-out collage!

Art Club students studied several of Matisse's work on their Artist research sheet and were given coloured card, scissors and glue and set the challenge to create their own Henri Matisse inspired paper cut-out collage.




Amazing results as always! The colours and composition of all the pieces of artwork are phenomenal!


Well done Art Club members! :)






















Thursday, 22 May 2014

Art Club takes over London!

Art Club's Adam Neate inspired pieces have now hit the streets of London!

Did you find one? :)






















LO: Speedy still life sketching

I want Art Club students to realise that ANYTHING can be used as a subject matter in art!

Every child has been given their own sketchpad and they need to make use of it at home and sketch away! The more they practice, the better their drawing skills will be.

For todays lesson I brought in a few little bits and pieces from my home, things from inside my bag and items I found in the room we were using. These objects were going to be the focus of the still life drawing lesson.
Every child had an object and the challenge was to draw that object anywhere on their A3 white paper.
They only had 3 minutes to complete their sketch. When the 3 minutes were up they had to pass the object to the person on their left. There were 6 objects on each table to draw.
Once completed they could rework some of their designs on the A3 paper, or focus on one new design on A4 paper.
Art students were only allowed to use a HB sketching pencil. They were encouraged to press light for a soft, smooth, light shade and press harder for details and a darker tone.







Check out the final sketches... I'm amazed! These kids have so much talent!