![]() |
||
|
|
Teachers
> Lesson Plans
> Visual
Arts > Quilting |
|
|||||||||||||||
|
Standard: Students will visualize and draw two-dimensional geometric figures with special attention to analyzing and reasoning informally about their properties (e.g. parallelism, perpendicularity) Indicator of Achievement:
Standard: Students will learn new color and design elements Indicator of Achievement: Students will:
Standard: Students will explain the aesthetic and utilitarian use of quilts in their community and that of the Amish Materials:
Preparation: Discuss when art is useful, "functional." List examples on the board. Discuss quilts, quilt makers and uses. If there are quilters in the community have the students look at their work, interview them. Have them also consider quilts from other parts of the country and earlier periods. Show them examples of Amish quilts, ". . .the finest of American [quilts]. . .America's first major abstract art." (Robert Hughes, "American Visions," TIME, Special Issue, 1997) Compare examples of the Amish quilts with other non-representational art the students have studied. Activity: Review the basic geometric shapes with the students: circle, square, rectangle, triangle. Have the students practice drawing the geometric shapes, using their rulers and compass. Pass out the sample geometric shapes and have the students experiment with the shapes, turning them, flipping them, sliding them, to create a quilt design. When they have decided on a design, have them draw and then cut out the geometric shapes they will need. Have them select a white (or colored) square as the background and arrange their geometric shapes on the square. Review the color wheel and help the students decide if they want monochromatic
designs or designs with complementary or analogous colors. Have them paint
the geometric shapes to create their unique design and then glue them
to the paper quilt square.
(If this unit is used with older students the students can study the
evolution of the quilt as an American art form. Issues to consider: What
is the origin of the quilt? Why and how are quilts made? How do quilts
vary across cultures? How does the quilt serve as historical record? How
can the change in traditional roles of women be traced through the evolution
of the quilt? How can visual and verbal images be compared? How can the
quilt be used as a vehicle to convey messages or evoke feelings regarding
specific social change?) |
|||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|
|
Copyright
© 2002 by Arizona State University and
the Arizona Board of Regents.
![]() |