4th Grade

Welcome to your virtual learning experience.  I hope you enjoy your weekly art enrichment.

Each week I will post a new art enrichment to this website.  Please try to save all projects in a folder.  The folder will be a portfolio that will be turned in when we return to school.

4/16/20 Paper Bag Portfolio

Lets create a portfolio to store all of your wonderful art work! From items you can find around your house!  You will need...

 a scissors, a brown paper bag, tape duck tape or masking tape and crayons or markers for adding detail.

Youtube link for this weeks enrichment 4/16/20

3/26/20 - Mandalas


Create a line structure to build your Mandala

Fill you Mandala in with shapes, designs, objects of meaning

Color or shade your design

The History of Mandala

By Chris Carson •••

The History of Mandala

The mandala is one of humankind's most ancient art forms. With the circle as its basis, it reflects eternity and all of nature: the sun, the moon and even the bird's nest. Types of mandalas may be found in all religions, as well as in psychology.

History

Mandalas are present in many civilizations.

The word "mandala" is Sanskrit for "circle." According to mandala artist Charles Gilchrist, creator of "Sacred Geometry," a wandering guru may have brought the first meditation mandalas to Tibet in about the eighth century. Mandalas have been found across the Far East, and Native Americans symbolism is based on the "sacred hoop." Mandalas are considered to be of Eastern origin, but it would be difficult, if not impossible, to find any civilization without some awareness of the circle's symbolism and potential for spiritual self-examination.

Significance

Notre Dame

The circle is the most natural form known to mankind. The universe is made up of planets, stars, moons and the sun---all spherical in shape. The sun rises and sets in a never-ending circle; seasons pass in an annual circle. Trees, rocks and raindrops are circular, and most fruits and flowers are spherical. The cells and atoms that make up everything within the universe are circular.

Religious Symbolism

Buddhist monks making a sand mandala.

Mandalas have been used by Buddhists, Hindus, Tibetans and Native Americans in prayer, meditation and for healing. Buddhists make mandala sand paintings that are destroyed after they have served their purpose. Many Christian religions use the mandala without even realizing it. For example, Gothic cathedral rose windows, with their intricate designs, are clearly mandalas.

Psychology

Children respond to circles.

Today, mandalas are often used in therapy to represent the "wholeness" of the patient. Babies as young as 1 week old prefer to look at circles over other shapes, which indicates that humans have an inborn desire to look at circular shapes. When children learn to draw, the circle is the first shape they make after random scribbling. As adults, drawing a circle helps us reconnect with our childhood. Making a mandala can help people regain their sense of self and recognize their place in the world.

Mandala Art

Natural fractal designs are present in mandalas.

The mandala as art form continues today as well. The kaleidoscope is one of the simplest ways to experience mandala art. Some artists use recycled records and compact discs to form the basis of their mandalas, while others use clay, canvas, dinner plates or even fabric. Fractal designs, with their self-replication and basis in geometry, are sometimes used to create mandala art as well.

3/18/20-3/20/20

The fourth grade has been creating some really great project using many different mediums.  This weeks enrichment is on perspective. 

Materials needed - pencil, paper, anything you can use as a strait edge like a ruler.  Markers, crayons, colored pencil or whatever kind of supply you have to add to your project is welcome.

Your project will consist of a cityscape from a bugs eye view.

Begin by watching this video and try to follow the steps to create your city scape.

Remember important vocabulary involved with Perspective Drawings

Vocabulary

Vanishing Point :  The point at which something that has been growing smaller or increasingly faint disappears altogether.

Horizontal : Parallel to the plane of the horizon; at right angles to the vertical.

Parallel :  Side by side and having the same distance continuously between them.

If the video is too much to follow try using the document below.  Remember to draw light because you will be doing some erasing.

4th grade Bugs Eye Perspective