This lesson brings Nebraska Reading, Writing, and National Visual Arts Standards together. Students are introduced to the carvings of Nebraska artist Eric Berggren. Students will read and discuss fairy tales, folk tales and fables from various cultures. As lessons progress students create additive and subtractive sculptures taking inspiration from their observations of BerggrenŐs carvings, their readings, and their own life experience. Students will compose stories or poems about their sculptures and share both sculptures and writings with a younger student.
Title: Untitled #2 (Fables in Wood collection)
Artist: Eric Berggren
Media: Wood Carving
Plate/Date: 1965
State
Standard/Curriculum areas
8.2.2 8.3.2
Grades 5-8: 1; 3; 5; 6
Objectives
1. Students will demonstrate voice and sentence fluency by writing a well-organized composition or poem.
2. Students will use appropriate gestures, vocabulary, pace, volume, eye contact, and visual aids by orally presenting their writings and sculpture to a younger student.
3. Students will enhance their communication skills by using subtractive and additive sculpture processes.
4. Students will use intuition and openness in selecting subject matter content by incorporating a story into subtractive and additive sculptures.
5. Students will describe and compare responses to their own artworks and BerggrenŐs artworks by discussing and writing about the works.
6. Students will compare sculpture and language arts by describing interrelationships between characteristics of BerggrenŐs carvings and various fairy tales and fables.
Assessment
Use district assessment instruments for reading, writing, and visual arts.
Rubric generators available at: http://www.teach-nology.com/web_tools/rubrics/
Resources
Museum Of Nebraska Art: http://monet.unk.edu/mona/default1.html
Fables In Wood by Eric Berggren (catalog available from Museum of Nebraska Art)
Mudworks by MaryAnn F. Kohl
I Saw a Purple Cow and 100 Other Recipes for Learning by Ann Cole
Time For Fairy Tales complied by May Hill Arbuthnot
East of the Sun, West of the Moon and Other Tales collected by P.C. Osbjornsen and Jorgen E. Moe
Reading with Music edited by Nancy Polette
Write Traits by Vicki Spandel
The Snowman and video by Raymond Briggs
Art information / vocabulary: http://www.sanford-artedventures.com/
Materials
Modeling clay
Subtractive Sculpture:
Bar of soap
Plaster of Paris Đ 4 inches deep for each child, poured into circular containers such as oatmeal containers, large tube rolls, large powdered drink containers (must be easily torn or cut to remove). Plaster will carve easier if kept moist by covering with wet cloth between work sessions.
Clay
Tools:
Plastic sculpting tools
Toothpicks
Tongue depressors
Files
Table knives
Paint
Paintbrushes
Scraps of wood
Scraps of fabric
Vocabulary
http://www.artincanada.com/arttalk/arttermsanddefinitions.html
Fairy tale
Fable
Folk art
Sculpture
Three-dimensional
Symmetrical balance
Asymmetrical balance
Whittle
Carve
Additive sculpture
Subtractive sculpture
Relief Đ high / low
Orientation Đ cyclical / vertical
Teaching
1. Background
of artwork / artist: Eric
Berggren
2. Language
Arts:
á Language Arts lessons involving fables, fairy tales, and folk tales.
á Teach concepts of voice and sentence fluency.
3. Visual
Arts:
á Review and discuss photos of Eric BerggrenŐs sculptures.
á Go to MONA and view BerggrenŐs carvings if possible.
á Ask: ŇWhat do you see in this block? How can it be brought out? I wonder what story is in there?Ó
4. Language
Arts - Oral Presentation:
á Teach appropriate gestures, vocabulary, pace, volume, eye contact, visual aids.
Creating
5. While connecting to a story previously read, students will be carving a subtractive sculpture of a snowman from a block of soap for practice. Remind students of the connections to Eric BerggrenŐs sculptures and the stories told.
6. Discuss safety necessary while carving. Use of tools and materials for prevention of accidents.
7. Students should experiment with tools and visualize a snowman emerging from the block of soap. Have extra soap available for ŇlearningÓ to carve.
8. Discuss periodically what students are thinking about while carving. What difficulties are arising? What do students have to think about while carving? How do they get what they want while carving? Stress the kinds of cuts to make, slow, patient, thoughtful cuts. Some students may want to sketch an outline on the outside of the block before carving.
9. Carve, add paint and accessorize a snowman.
10. Create a diorama from the finished projects.
11. Create additive sculpture (environment) to complete the story represented with the snowmen.
12. Students write snowman paragraphs and a group acrostic poem in reflection of the carving and story telling involved to create the diorama.
13. For personal experiences with more individuality. Review and discuss Eric BerggrenŐs sculptures. ŇReadÓ the fables present in the sculptures. Tell students they will be creating their own fable carving with plaster.
14. Next, carve small blocks of plaster. Experiment with tools and how to work with the plaster.
15. Students will now consider where their carving ideas will come from: BerggrenŐs sculptures, their reading, their own interests, or life. Complete a carving that can be stacked with other carvings, creating a vertical and cyclical display of the stories.
16. Students now write 3 paragraph stories or poems about the groupŐs sculpture or their part of it.
17. Edit the written pieces. And prepare an oral presentation.
Closure
18. Share presentations with younger students.
19. Display the class diorama, writings, and sculptures in the school.
Extension/Related
Activities
á Invite local artists to share their interests, skills, and creations with children.
á Create an art museum of school projects.
Music
á Read poems and stories with appropriate music in the background.