Overview:

In this lesson, student artists explore how their face is put together and discover that there are some basic rules that artists can follow to know where different features belong. They create a self-portrait by drawing along with the videdo-lesson, then edit it to fit their personal attributes.

Students will be able to:
  • understand how the different parts of the face relate to each other.
  • follow along with the instructions to create a proportional face.

Setup:

Students will be working independently.

Have materials set up in a way that is easy to pass out, see, and select from.

Materials:

  • Pencil

  • Pink Eraser

  • Drawing Paper

  • Optional: Mirrors or Photos (to help identify features for their portraits)

Media:

  • N/A

Handouts & Photocopies:

  • N/A

Lesson 2

10M, INSPIRATION IMAGE

LOOK AND DISCUSS AN ART PIECE THAT INTRODUCES SOME OF THE LESSON CONCEPTS

Project the inspiration image where students can see it. Give students a moment to study it silently, then begin a brief discussion with the phrase, “What can we find?”. Paraphrase what students say for the benefit of the class, being careful to remain neutral, then ask “What else can we find?”. Alternately, allow them to draw or write what they notice on a blank piece of paper or in a sketchbook.

  • \’In Bed\’, Ron Mueck, 2005**
  • Ron Mueck is an Australian hyperrealist sculptor currently working in the United Kingdom. He started out as a prop maker and puppeteer before transitioning to fine art. He makes hyperrealistic sculptures of people where you can see every wrinkle and hair follicle, but then creates them either too large or too small to be real.

Note on using the information above: As your students participate in a conversation around this artwork, it may occasionally be helpful to provide them with additional or contextual information. This information can and should be imparted at the teacher’s discretion.

The point of this discussion time is to have students learn and add onto each other’s thoughts. By remaining neutral and simply repeating what students say you allow students to do the heavy mental lifting and also create an environment where there is no wrong answer, fostering creativity and mental risk-taking.

5M, INTRODUCTION VIDEO

WATCH THE INTRODUCTION VIDEO & CHECK FOR UNDERSTANDING

NOTE: Students will be working along with the film. Pass out paper & pencils before playing the video and be prepared to pause the film when it says ‘pause’. Monitor the class and begin the film again after *most of the students have finished their work.

Check for understanding by asking, “Who was listening closely that can sum up what we are doing today?” Make sure that student artists can list all the steps and clarify anything that needs clarifying.

Tell student artists that you are going to give them the last 5 minutes to go back and revise their work. Tell them not to be overly picky, as they will be making major changes next lesson. The main focus today is to make sure all the features are in the right spot and loosely look like the student artist who drew them.

 

10-15M, WORKTIME

FOCUS ON STUDENTS CREATING A PORTRAIT WHERE ALL THE FEATURES ARE PRESENT AND IN THE RIGHT SPOT. DETAILS AND \’FINESSE\’ ARE NOT IMPORTANT TO THIS LESSON.

 

The focus of this class period is for students to understand how the different features of their face relate to one another and to be to understand the correlation between their real/physical face and the drawing. Encourage students to worry less about getting an accurate portrait and more about ‘planning’ their portrait. Remind them to draw lightly, as they will probably have to erase! If there are mirrors available, the teacher can offer them to students who have successfully ‘mapped’ out their face, and they can begin refining their features to be a more accurate representation.

5-10M, CLEAN-UP/PRESENTATIONS

STUDENTS PRESENT WORKS IN PROGRESS AND DISCUSS THE ARTISTIC DECISIONS THAT THEY MADE 

Sharing should work as follows:

  • Student stands by their work. A teacher should hold it, or place it on an easel.
  • The student presents their work, answering What they made, How they made it, and Why they made the decisions that they did. When they are done they ask, “Any comments or questions?” and can take responses from the audience.
  • A note on responses: it is o.k. if an audience member questions or wants clarification from the artist. It is also o.k. if an audience member makes suggestions. But it must be done in a kind, thoughtful, and respectful way.
  • Always end the conversation by asking the class to give the artist a compliment.

Depending on the teacher’s style of classroom management, it might be helpful to only choose and train a few kids to clean. The rest of the class can be busy with the presentation. Make sure to train these helpers well in advance so that you aren’t left with a messy room.

Clean-up times will vary with materials; get to know your class and allow 5-10 minutes depending on how efficient they are and whether or not the material was messy.

ANTICIPATED PROBLEMS

  • Commonly, student artists will continue to draw once even after the video starts again. To counter this, consider making a game out of putting their pencils down (count down, fastest student to put their pencil in the middle of the table gets a star on their hand with washable marker, etc.). Remind students that they are just mapping out where the different parts of the face go, they will have time at the end to finesse them. They should draw lightly, and not worry too much about whether or not it looks ‘right’. It might also be helpful to repeat the instructions during the drawing time.
  • If student artist\’s are getting frustrated with their drawing abilities, or say “I can’t”, pair them with another student who is being successful at it. Ask the artist partner to help without doing it for them—they can draw on a new sheet of paper to show, but they should never draw directly on the work.
  • If a student artist doesn’t think that their drawing looks like them, tell them that sometimes it is difficult to see something clearly when you have been working on it for a long time. Start a group conversation with the other student artists at their table. The group can help out the student by pointing out the problem areas. The student artist can take the advice or not. Also let them know there will be some major revisions during the next lesson, so they can feel free to simply map out where the different facial features belong, then move on the free-drawing.

EARLY FINISHERS

Allow early finishers to ‘free draw’ (draw whatever they wish) on copy paper. This will allow them some freedom after a rigorous assignments.

This project is free to access, but after the first lesson, you will have to create a free account and enroll in the course. After you create an account and enroll, the project can be accessed from the \’artroom\’ tab at the top of the page. 

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This

Proud of the work that your students did?

Please share photos, and be sure to tag us! #doodlesacademy, @doodlesacademy