Lesson Example: Helping Students Respond To Art In A Museum

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Helping Students Respond To Art In A Museum

by Steve Berer, musexplore.net

In this article, I will present a project to challenge your students to creatively respond to art objects that they find particularly engaging or mysterious. Their task is to try to see those works of art accurately and to develop a relationship with them. As a teacher your job is to act as a coach, pointing out interesting details, asking and answering questions, and providing feedback to the work your students are producing.

Project OutlineEdit Edit date and time

Ideal Grade Level: 8-12; 5-12 if modified

I developed this project to help students learn about Asian art at the Freer Gallery in Washington, DC. However, you can easily modify it by providing a collection of images, or assigning your students to explore a local museum’s collection, or exploring any of dozens of great museum collections that can be found online.

Find 3 objects in the museum. First, describe each of them accurately in words. Second, draw each of them. Finally write a poem or story about each of them, or create counterpart drawings to them. Students can work individually or in teams of 3. Students should be sure to photograph or record each object and its label, if available.

Tools Needed

  1. Notebooks for writing and sketching
  2. Phone for photos, video, and sound recording (if visiting a museum; be sure to verify if the museum allows photography)
  3. Pens and pencils; colored pencils or water colors, if desired

Job Assignments (if working in teams):

  1. Documenter: writes descriptive text
  2. Artist: sketches the object
  3. Writer or 2nd artist: creates poem, story, or counterpart drawing

Teams should begin by discussing the object, deciding who takes on each task, and coming up with creative ideas for the poem/story/counterpart drawing.

Timeframe:

  1. If exploring a museum online: 1 class to find the art objects; 2-3 classes to write and draw
  2. If you provide the artworks: 2-3 classes to write and draw
  3. If in a museum: 90-120 minutes, plus 1-3 hours in class and at home, editing and refining the work done in the museum
  4. 1-3 classes for presentation of the completed projects, including rough drafts and rejected sketches and writings

Knowledge Enhancements:

  1. Fluencies in writing, drawing, creative thinking, collaboration
  2. Visual literacy, art history, cultural awareness
  3. Editing, presentation

A Sample Project

Step 1:

(A project-group’s summary after visiting a museum:) Our group chose 3 paintings. We began by taking a quick tour through the whole gallery to locate paintings and objects we liked, noting their rooms. We decided to stick to paintings, and each of us got to pick one. Although there were many we liked, we realized we didn’t have time to ponder. After about 15 minutes we each had a painting that we thought would be fun to work on.

Step 2:

The first painting was ‘Taoist Immortals’, a humorous and appealing ink drawing from Japan. Since none of us was strong in art, we decided to switch roles with each painting, so each of us would have a chance to write a description, to do some creative writing, and to try our hand at drawing. We first studied the painting and then talked about what we could see in it. Two questions jumped out: 1. Why were the immortals laughing, and 2. Why would immortals have a broom?

Step 3:

We then got to work. The person who had to do the drawing tried a couple of sketches and wanted to tear them out and rip them up. It was really hard. Just then our teacher showed up and we asked him if we could skip the drawing part. “Absolutely not!” he answered. What he told us was that creativity begins when we overcome our fears, and try to stop judging ourselves. This was not about proving that we were the next Rembrandt, but about understanding how to translate what we see, through our hand, onto a piece of paper. Our teacher, who was not an artist either, then pulled out his notebook and pencil and showed us how he’d start. He said there were 2 ways:

  1. Don’t try to copy the painting. Instead, produce a schematic drawing, using lines, boxes, and ovals to capture the main shapes, any movement, color centers, and other kinds of focus points in the painting. That was very cool.
  2. Attempt a rough copy. Block out the main shapes with very light lines to get the proportions about right, and then go back and begin to build up the image using the pencil’s point to do sharp lines, and the side of the point to do shading and make soft lines. He kept going over it, building up line and shading and detail. The result was pretty good, fast, and it didn’t seem all that hard. We figured if he could do it, so could we!

He also reminded us to keep all of our rejects and notes. We would use them in our class presentation.

It turned out, the hardest part for each of us was writing the poem or story. We each felt like the painting we were working from was fascinating, and we wanted to create a story as interesting as the picture. We worked as a group to brain-storm ideas briefly; then we got to work. Each of us had a decent first draft by the time we had to leave, but we all felt like we needed to work on it more. All told, we spent about an hour and 45 minutes in the museum.

Suggestions For Customizing This Project

Be sure to specify guidelines. Here’s a sample of a brief set of guidelines:

“Your description should be 2 full paragraphs that carefully and accurately discuss the appearance of the object, the materials from which it was made, basic shapes and colors, originating country and artist if known. If the label provides information about the image/object and it’s background, use that to do research outside the museum to prepare a fuller description of the object, its history, and the story its telling.

Your sketch should be a schematic diagram with notes describing the painting/object, its details, sense of movement, areas of striking color, and what you perceive as the focus point(s). Or if you prefer, attempt to make a copy of the object.

If you write a poem, it should be in the sonnet form; otherwise write 3 different haikus for each object. If you write a story, it should be at least a full page long, opening with a problem and ending with a solution. If you draw a counterpart image, it should be carefully drawn, with attention to form, (color?), and detail. It should have a clear relationship to the original painting.”

An alternative challenge: You might have your students choose two portraits. Have them imagine the people in the portraits are in love, and they are writing an exchange of love poems or love letters. If the portraits originated from different cultures or regions, you might frame it as a Romeo and Juliet situation, or you might have the lovers talk a little bit about what life is like in their country or city, and where they can meet and what they can do.

High school students working alone will probably need an hour per object/painting to complete their description, sketch, and poem/story. Working in 3-person teams, high school students should be able to complete one set in 30-45 minutes. Middle school students will probably complete their work more quickly. Your mileage may vary.

Lesson Example: Helping Students Respond To Art In A Museum; image attribution flickr user woodleywonderworks