These butterflies were created in the Art Room by 5th graders in conjunction with their World History unit on the Holocaust and inspired by the poem "I Never Saw
Another Butterfly." The line drawing was made with black oil pastel on
black paper and then the color was added with chalk pastels. Butterflies are a symbol of hope.
In Art Class, we looked at
real Sunflowers and read Camille and the Sunflowers, a story about Vincent Van Gogh in Arles. The students quickly drew in craypas and then painted their own big, bold and beautiful versions of a Sunflower. These always make viewers smile.
“Art does not reproduce what we see; rather, it makes
us see.” Paul Klee
The fourth graders started with a big round head, divided it up
and used craypas to make patterns in warm or cool color combinations
transposing facial features for vibrant results.
Paul
Klee
was a Swiss artist of German Nationality (1879-1940). His highly
individual style was influenced by movements in art that included
Expressionism, Cubism, and Surrealism. His works reflect his humor and
sometimes child-like perspective, his personal moods and beliefs. He
was a highly trained musician and instructed his students in a series of
musical operations for pattern development using rotation, inversion,
mirroring
or transposition of colors.