Lesson Title: Portrait of a Young Man

Grade Level: 2
Lesson Overview

Students will view ÒPortrait of a Young ManÓ by Aaron Douglas. The class will discuss how this portrait makes them feel, then tell why they think the artist painted his portrait this way. Finally, the students will examine their own lives and illustrate their own self-portrait using facial proportion and charcoal techniques.


  Aaron Douglas' Portrait of a Young Man  

Art Exemplar

Title: Portrait of a Young Man

Artist: Aaron Douglas (1898-1979)

Media: Charcoal on paper

Plate/Date: 1960

State Standard/Curriculum areas

Nebraska Language Arts 1.1.5; 1.3.1

National Visual Arts 1, 4, 5

Nebraska Social Studies 1.6


Objectives

á      Students will recognize the emotions present in Aaron DouglasÕ ÒPortrait of a Young ManÓ by discussing the portrait with the class.

á      Students will demonstrate an understanding of the multiple reasons behind the emotions Aaron Douglas displays in his self-portrait by creating their own self-portraits showing connections to their own life.

á      Students will identify examples of honesty, courage, patriotism, and other admirable character traits seen in American history by discussing Aaron DouglasÕ life.

á      Students will interpret ideas, experiences, and stories about themselves by drawing a self-portrait using charcoal media.

á      Students will apply facial guidelines by using the guidelines to create their self-portrait drawing.

Assessment

Use the state or district for language arts, social studies, and visual arts.

Rubric generators

Resources                                                               

http://mynptv.org/artsFeat/monamoments/mona06harlem.html

http://www.ops.org/art/douglasweb/ad_artist.html

Museum of Nebraska Art

Art information/vocabulary

Just Like Me (Scholastic Publication)

Materials

Picture of ÒPortrait of a Young ManÓ by Aaron Douglas

Digital camera

Paper

Pencils

Charcoal


Vocabulary dictionary

Emotions- a state of feeling ( sad, angry, happyÉ)

Harlem Renaissance- a movement or period of vigorous artistic and intellectual activity. REBIRTH, REVIVAL

Teaching

Background about Aaron Douglas:

  1. Aaron Douglas was born on May 26, 1898, in Topeka, Kansas. Find Kansas on a map.
  2. He attended the University of NE in Lincoln. In 1922 he was the only African-American in his class.
  3. He taught high school in Kansas City, Kansas. Find Kansas City on a map.
  4. He moved to Harlem, New York City. Find New York City on a map.
  5. He made all kinds or art including murals and self-portraits.
  6. He won many awards and encouraged other African-Americans to follow their dream of becoming artists.
  7. Many people called him ÒThe Father of Black American ArtÓ.
  8. He died in Nashville, Tennessee on February 3, 1979. Show map and figure out how old he was.

Looking at ÒPortrait of a Young ManÓ:

  1. Look at ÒPortrait of a Young ManÓ by Aaron Douglas. (Give the students time to absorb the piece)
  2. Describe this portrait.

1.    What do you see?

2.    What do you think was used to make this portrait?

3.    What do you think this man is looking at?

4.    What emotion is this man showing? How can you tell?

5.    What in his life would make him feel this way?

6.     How does this man make you feel? Why?

7.     What did Aaron Douglas do to show that he had good character?

Creating

1.    Think about how you are feeling right now.

2.    Make your body look the way you feel. If you are sad your body would be hunched over. Your face would have a frown.

3.    Take a photo of each student while they demonstrate their feelings.

4.     Use the photo to help you draw a self-portrait.

5.     Observe the organization of a face. Eyes in the middle of the head space. Teach the facial structure guidelines for drawing a face.

6.     Teach / practice drawing with the charcoal. Teach pressure, control of smudging, and shading.

7.     Students practice using the charcoal and facial guidelines.

8.     Students should observe their own face.

9.     Students should draw their portrait using facial proportions and charcoal techniques.

Closure

1. Have the students tell why they chose to make their piece the way they did. What was it they were feeling and why?

2. Hang the portraits for display.


Extension/Related Activities

1. Students write a story to go with their self-portrait. Tell the story behind the feelings.