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Art and SOL: Grade 2
Learning How to Explore a Work of Art
Teachers: Prior to your tour, please discuss museum manners, especially the most important rule of all: do not touch any works of art. Even the slightest fingerprint contains destructive oil and chemicals. Perhaps the best guideline to remember is: always stay an arm’s-length from the gallery walls.
We appreciate your help in making this clear to our young guests before they even come through our door. Its much better to be redundant about this early on, than to admonish a student during a tour, which can be traumatic for that student. We realize that we only have an hour with you, and that hour will have a lasting impression on each child. We want it to be a positive one!
SUGGESTED PRE-TOUR ACTIVITIES
CLASS DISCUSSION/WRITING ACTIVITY:
Explain to students that Randolph College has been collecting
American paintings for many years and that the Maier
is the home for the College’s art collection.
Ask students to think something special to them that
they collect and keep in their homes. Tell students to pretend that their collection will
be shared with the public like the College’s art
collection, and then write a short description of their
collection and three rules that visitors who come to
see it must remember.
ART ACTIVITIES
Have a class discussion about what a museum is, explaining
that the Maier Museum of Art collects, displays and
teaches people about American works of art made during
the past 200 years. Look at either printed reproductions
from our website, or slides of paintings in the collection
with the students and identify landscapes, portraits,
still-lives, seascapes, and cityscapes.
Discuss art terms from the vocabulary sheet. Become
familiar with the four elements of art listed; line,
color, shape and texture. With crayons or paints, make
as many different kinds of lines and shapes on a page
as possible, using either cool colors or warm colors.
SUGGESTED POST-TOUR ACTIVITIES
WRITING PROJECTS
Describe in writing how you would dress if an artist
were coming to school to paint your portrait. What would
your clothes and their colors show about the kind of
person you are? Would your portrait show you smiling
or not? What feelings would you try to show with you
expression?
Look at the Maier Museum website
and pick a picture you remember seeing on the tour.
Write a story that the artist could be telling about
with this picture. Share your story with the class.
Pretend you are writing to a friend who has never been
to the Maier Museum of Art. Tell about your visit and
the best thing about the tour.
ART PROJECTS
Make a self-portrait by looking at a photograph or
a mirror. Show yourself in your favorite outfit. Write
a paragraph to explain what you were thinking while
your picture was being taken.
Draw or paint a still life using objects the teacher
sets up in class or using some things of your own. Make
a very colorful picture by using the primary and all
the secondary colors.
Draw a design or cut shapes from colored paper and
magazines; paste the pieces to make a collage showing
many different kinds of lines, shapes, and textures.
Imaging that your design is a quiet or a noisy one and
give the picture a title that explains what sound it
makes.
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