Wednesday, May 18, 2022

Summer ART

 How to be ARTSY this summer


It doesn't take a lot of planning or setup to be creative. You can put a little or a lot of effort into doing or creating something artistic.  Hopefully this list will inspire you and your family to get ARTSY this summer.

Go see art...places to see art in STL.

City Garden downtown

Laumeir Sculpture Garden-explore the hiking trails

Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis


St. Louis Art Museum--the new wing is my favorite!  

St. Louis Grafitti Wall

Get Messy--Art activities

Ask a grown up to help you with these next projects...or google the directions.

Make a mobile
Bust out the Sidewalk Chalk--try blending colors, using paint brushes and water to create a new look.

Make a book--fold, staple, draw, collage, write.
 Make it a pop-up book or accordian folded pages.
Draw, Draw, Draw

Act it out--write a play, design the costumes and scenery.  Perform for your family.

Make a card--write a note to a friend or relative that lives far away...get a stamp and mail it! Be sure they
know to write you back.


friendship bracelet--choose colorful string and beads 

make stop motion movie
Make a cut paper mosaic


en plein air in the park or your yard --paint or draw outdoors.

paint with Q tips

Make your lunch into ART

Try Painting with BUBBLES


or even SHAVING CREAM


Paint Kindness Rocks and place them where someone can find your inspirational message.

Read a book about art--books about an artist's life or an art how-to book.



FREE
Free art supplies everyone has in their home are recyclables. families can save these items in order to create over the summer.

  • Shoe boxes
  • Paper towel rolls
  • Egg cartons
  • Cereal boxes
  • Toilet paper rolls
  • Kleenex boxes
  • Yogurt containers
Ask mom or dad...or a grown up about signing up for an art camp or workshop!
Michael's Craft Store
Yucando
Joann's 
COCA
Craft Alliance
Krueger Pottery

Have a fantastic summer...see you in August...don't forget to file away all these art experiences in your creativity bank account.

Tuesday, May 10, 2022

Finding the RAINBOW in art

This mini lesson is total eye candy.  Sit back and enjoy basking in the glow of the RAINBOW.
Let's look at the RAINBOW in art!


Yayoi Kusama: Life Is the Heart of a Rainbow

Starting with Glass artist Dale Chihuly who along with his glass blowing team of artists spins RAINBOW colored glass into multi-color glass works of art


A boat filled with spheres of color or a twisted glass chandelier

Rainbows of thousands of shredded paper strips create this art by Travis Rice.


Sol Lewitt was an American artist whose color filled spaces might stop you in your tracks


Stripes of color carefully drawn and painted on a wall



A RAINBOW of Sol Lewitt's colors may greet you as you enter a New York City subway station.  A burst of color in a typically gloomy underground.

An Alabama community of quilters has transformed Colorful bed coverings into works of art.


A group of Gee's Bend quilters create a RAINBOW in stitched scraps of fabric to make these colorful quilts.

In Taiwan an entire village is covered in a spectrum of colors
The buildings in this Taiwan village become works of art right down to the ground.
Why would an artist fill the walls of a building with color?



Well, over 10 years ago, the village where a then-86-year-old Huang Yung-fu lived faced being knocked down.  He did not want to leave the only home he had known in Taiwan.  Painting his village made people want to visit this location and residents to stay





Gabriel Dawes brings us RAINBOart that is hanging by a thread

Strand by RAINBOstrand 



Literally miles of threads create RAINBOW installations 



Across a space, back and forth, slow and steady Gabriel strings delicate threads between secured hooks


A peak inside the process of Gabriel Dawes

Almas Thomas was a retired school teacher and artist. You made art in her style in Kindergarten


Alma would look out her window panes and see specks of color from the flowers in her backyard garden.  




She wanted her paintings to look like the rainbow she would view out her window. Dashes of color mimmic the squares of glass in a window.



A group of artists painted their art with intense and saturated colors that we don't typically see in nature.




Because of the colors these artists used, they were called the Fauves --which in French translates to Wild Beast.  People were not used to brightly colored art at this time.  It was unusual.  Sometimes people might not be kind when they don't understand or see something new.  How do you respond to things you aren't used to.  


Fauvism was a style of painting in the early 1900s (over 100 years ago) that emphasized bright, expressive color

Maurice Vlaminck, Bougival, 1905,
In this LANDSCAPE Do you see PINK, Blue, Read and Teal t
small towns and landscapes with intense color, thick paint, very similar to van Gogh’s style.


Color by number!  Artist Emmanuelle Moureaux used brightly colored paper to create a interactive paper installation titled Forest of Numbers



Our St. Louis Art Museum has several colorful works of art


Art by Elsworth Kelly and Frank Stella are a great place to start on your St. Louis Art Museum Rainbow hunt




The Shape of Abstraction by Stanley Whitney is another great stop on the search for color packed art at the SLAM.
Do you respond to color in art?  

Will you use more than one color in your art?

What are some of the colors that can make you feel emotions when you look at art?

Jen Stark Chromatic Cascade