Posted by:
Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum
10/27/2006 2:55:48 PM
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Title: |
Tour + Workshop = DESIGN: Value |
Grade Level: |
Middle School |
Subject Area: |
Arts
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Lesson Time: |
Two fifty-minute class periods |
Introduction: |
At first glance value seems to be an obvious and
elementary component of every design or artwork we look at.
It is second nature to most of us to simply
acknowledge the lights and darks of a painting or design as
being integral to it and to never give it another thought.
It is critical, however, that the aspiring artist or
designer develops the ability to separate value from all
the other design components and to begin to register an
incremental and relative reading, rather than a
general value reading, consequently being able to translate
this knowledge into the application of value through color
which is the most difficult skill to master. This lesson is
designed to simplify the complex world of value through the
presentation and discussion of the painting, " Two
Girls with Sunbonnets in a Field" by Winslow Homer, and by
creating a value scale; a tool displaying a range of values
between black and white, designed to help quantify values
thus enabling the young artist to make decisions about
their application of value and ultimately color. The
students will come full circle in their understanding of
value as the closing discussion ties together the making of
the value scale with their results when applying it to the
Winslow Homer painting. |
Standards: |
Standard 1. Understanding and
applying media, techniques and processes Standard 2.
Using knowledge of structures and functions Standard
3. Students will choose and evaluate a range of subject
matter, symbols and ideas Standard 4. Students will
understand the visual arts in relation to history and to
cultures Standard 5. Students will reflect on and
assess the characteristics and merits of their work
and the work of others Arts Connections
Standard 1. Students will make connections between visual
arts and other disciplines |
Objectives: |
By participating in this project students will be able
to: - evaluate color as value rather than only as a
dark or light color of a certain hue
- observe a work of art
or design and 'draw' out the element of value even if the
work is composed of many colors
- understand that
there are tools available to assist them as they learn to
make artworks and designs; that art is not the exclusive
domain of those with talent
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Resources: |
- Frederic Church, Winslow Homer and Thomas Moran Tourism
and the American Landscape by Davidson/McCarron-Cates;
Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum pg. 121
plate 2. Winslow Homer Two Girls with Sunbonnets in a
Field , ca. 1877-78. Oil on canvas.
- Color, A course in
Mastering the Art of Mixing Colors by Betty Edwards;
Tarcher/Penguin
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Materials: |
- graphite pencil and 12" ruler to measure and use as
straight edge
- white tempera paint and black tempera paint
-
mixing pan with minimum #10 wells/divisions
- water container
and water
- 1" flat watercolor brush for painting and 2 cheap
bristle mixing brushes per student
- sponge, approximately 3
x 3"
- paper towels
- hole punch 3/4" diameter
- marker, black
Materials prepared in advance for the students: - white
illustration board 7. 5" long x 5. 75" wide, divided down
the middle by 3/4" strip of masking tape
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Vocabulary: |
value: a. degree of lightness or darkness in a color
b. the relation of light and shade in a painting, drawing,
or the like hue, middle value gray, relative value,
incremental, 'eyeball' or estimate,
saturated color |
Procedures: |
Each student will have the above
listed art supplies at their seat. Presentation of exemplar
and motivation - The teacher will write the definition of
value on the board and explain it to the class. value: a.
degree of lightness or darkness in a color
b. the relation
of light and shade in a painting, drawing, or the
like -
The teacher will present a finished value scale,
pointing out all of its physical aspects such as the number
of values 1 through 10 and how the scale can be used.
The teacher will also point out that an optical
fluting is taking place as the scale lightens from
rectangle 6 to 10 and darkens from 5 to 1, the result of
equal incremental lightening or darkening of values. -
With
the completed value scale, the teacher will present an
introductory demonstration of how to use the scale to
determine values in the color reproduction of the Winslow
Homer painting " Two Girls with Sunbonnets in a
Field, " noting that a more complete demonstration will
take place when they are ready to use their value scales. -
The teacher will then present a value scale template
lined off in 10 rectangles with black/value1
and white/value10 painted in appropriate
rectangles. -
The teacher will proceed to mix the
middle gray/value 5 , painting the appropriate
rectangle and explaining how to 'eyeball' the value. -
The
teacher will continue to mix one or two more incrementally
lighter values and paint them into the appropriate
rectangles. -
The teacher will demonstrate that paint is
darker in value when wet than dry by painting a bit over a
sample area already dry. -
The teacher will apprise the
students that it may be difficult to see if their values
are working until the scale is reasonably developed
reminding the students that they can easily paint over a
value that isn't working with the whole value scale.
Step-by-step process of the activity: Part I - Each
student will mark the measure of 1. 5 inches four times
across the length of the construction board and
draw a line across the width of the board at each of those
measure marks.
- The students will then put black paint into
one well on their mixing pan and fill another pan with
white paint.
- The students will paint pure
white/value10 in the top right rectangle and
wash their brush well and dry it on the sponge
- The students
will then paint pure black/value1 in the top left
rectangle and wash their brush well and dry it on the
sponge.
- * note: Students will be instructed
to paint all rectangles beginning at the edge near the
masking tape, allowing the brush to go over the tape and to
paint away from the tape to the edge of the board. When the
tape is removed after all rectangles are painted it will
leave a clean edge and create a white unpainted area down
the center of the board.
- In a mixing
well 5 wells from the white well students will mix a fare
quantity of middle gray / value 5
and will essentially 'eyeball' this value ; then
paint it into the 4th rectangle down from the black
rectangle and the very last one on the left side.
- The
student will take one half the amount of the middle
gray/value 5 paint mixture and put it into another
well.
- Students will then proceed to mix, in separate wells,
small amounts of white paint to lighten the middle
gray/value 5 in equal increments to create values 6,
7, 8, 9.
- note*: These mixtures need to be saved in
case the values need adjustments so if the
student will mix them in sequential wells they will not
confuse the number values of each well.
- Value 6 will be
painted in the rectangle opposite middle gray/value 5.
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Values 7, 8, and 9 will be painted toward the white
rectangle/value10.
- *note: The students will 'eyeball' the
values making the increments as equal as possible.
If the values are correct an optical 'fluting' will occur
as the eye travels from one value to the next. If
the fluting does not occur the value needs adjustment and
repainting.
- Using the reserved middle gray/value 5 the
student will begin adding black to create values of equally
darker increments, again reserving the incremental value
mixtures to allow for easy adjustment.
- Once the scale
successfully graduates up and down in equal value
increments, the students will use the hole punch to punch a
hole approximately 1/2" in from the edge, and centered
within each rectangle.
- The student will give value numbers
from 1 to 10 to each rectangle.
- Lastly, the masking tape
can be removed carefully.
Step-by step-process of
the activity: Part II (Probably requires a second
workshop. Or to complete in an hour, a commercially made
value scale can be used allowing you to skip Part I. ) -
The teacher will demonstrate the following activity
explaining that the values of colors can be determined by
looking through the holes punched into the different values
on the scale, trying each value until you find the value
that fits or contrasts the least with the
color viewed.
- Using the color reproduction of the Winslow
Homer painting the students will first squint while looking
at the painting to get an overall sense of value changes in
the painting. Then they will view areas of the
painting through the holes in their value scale and make a
determination of the values of those particular colors and
marking the value number on that location.
- Using the black
and white reproduction of the same painting the students
will repeat the squinting and scale viewing exercise and
mark the corresponding value numbers onto the areas viewed.
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The students will compare their value notations on the
color reproduction to their notations on the black and
white reproduction.
- The students can also compare their
value determinations with their classmates.
Wrap-up -
Students and teacher will discuss the ease or difficulty of
mixing equal value increments and handling of paint,
including thoughts on what they might do differently next
time.
- Students and teacher will discuss the exercise of
viewing the value of the color reproduction versus the
black and white reproduction comparing the differences and
similarities of the value notations made on each image.
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They will then enter into a discussion on how value plays a
part in the Homer painting; what does value convey; hour of
day, depth of field, quality of light or shadow,
compositional direction, perspective, etc.
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Assessment: |
- The students have successfully learned the objectives of
this lesson if they were able to make a finished value
scale exhibiting equal incremental value changes and subtle
optical fluting.
- Success will also be exhibited if the
student is able to make constructive comparisons between
their value notations on the color reproduction and on the
black and white reproduction.
- If the value notations on the
color reproduction are comparable to those on the black and
white reproduction, then a high level of understanding of
value as found through color is exhibited.
If the notations of the color reproduction and the black
and white reproduction are not close in values, the student
will have the opportunity to continue to use the value
scale to practice seeing closer value comparisons when
viewing colors.
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Enrichment Extension Activities: |
- Students can move on to create a value scale with
different pigments and gain a further
understanding of color and value.
- Students can work on
copying from the Winslow Homer painting and experience the
effect of mixing and applying his colors and values.
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Students can develop a painting of a simple still life lit
in fairly high contrast and use only one hue and its values
from lightest to darkest to create the image.
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Teacher Reflection: |
N/A. |
Related Files: |
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