A few updates, I'm first of all excited about teaching at the Frist Center for the Visual Arts again this year. I will be teaching two summer camps, two of each session! Folk Art Fun and Paint N' Play for the 5- 7 year olds! Yay! AND More good news....
I got a new job! I will be one of two art teachers at Metro's NEW Cane Ridge Elementary School for this up coming school year! I'm pretty psyched about a new art room, a new kiln, and new kiddos. I will miss the staff and most of the kids from Shwab for sure, but this school is much closer to home and not extended day- which means I get out of school earlier. YAY!
Another thing that I'm excited about is the Montreal Jazz Festival! At the end of the month I'm flying home to RI to meet up with my dad and step mom and we are driving to Montreal for the Jazz Festival. They have been to this several times, I haven't ever been to Canada, so I'm pretty stolked about popping the cherry of my virgin pass port!
As they say in my fav movie of all time, "Almost Famous".... "It's all happening!"
Saturday, June 9, 2012
Friday, June 1, 2012
A few more... End of the Year Art Show
Here are a few more photos I stumbled upon while downloading photos onto my computer. The first few are from when the Recycle truck featuring my student's artwork came to visit the school, and the following are a few more from the art show! Enjoy!
Thursday, May 31, 2012
The artist and the art educator
There are some art educators who don't pursue their own art and some that don't even consider themselves to be an artist! I'm definitely making an effort to not be one of those teachers. This spring I took an opportunity to set up at our local farmers market with my ceramic pendants and other pottery pieces at Nashville's Meet N' 3 Friday night event. They host this event the first Friday of every month, or started to recently. Needless to say I didn't do very well but I'm going to keep trying!
Today I set up my very first etsy shop! Yay me! I'm pretty excited about this so I wanted to share a few pictures of my work and mention that the link to my shop is now at the top of this page.
Whether you are making work for yourself, therapeutic purposes, or to sell I encourage all of you to get dirty this summer and create something. It is good for our mental health, our minds, and spirits that we are active artists in one way or another continuing to create and inspire ourselves so that we can do a better job of inspiring our students.
Today I set up my very first etsy shop! Yay me! I'm pretty excited about this so I wanted to share a few pictures of my work and mention that the link to my shop is now at the top of this page.
Whether you are making work for yourself, therapeutic purposes, or to sell I encourage all of you to get dirty this summer and create something. It is good for our mental health, our minds, and spirits that we are active artists in one way or another continuing to create and inspire ourselves so that we can do a better job of inspiring our students.
Monday, May 14, 2012
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Loss of a former student
I began my teaching career at the King's Daughters' School down in Columbia TN. It was a difficult job, one of the most difficult teaching jobs out there. Many of the special needs students that I taught there spent their childhood bouncing around from foster home to foster home and found themselves calling KDS home. For most of them, being adopted was a far fetched dream. A dream that they all held onto until it either it came true, or they turned 18 and went into adult care. For John that dream came true twice, the first time it didn't work out. The family that adopted him fought hard and made it final the second time.
John was a joy to be around. He loved keys, starring out the window, and all of the students and staff at KDS. He loved art class and was really a sponge. I remember taking a group of students to the Mideval exhibit at the Frist Center several years ago. Before we'd gone I spent quite a bit of time on lessons leading up to the trip. While at the museum, John impressed me with his retention from our lessons in the classroom. He wanted to be the one to tell the others about this one piece, how it was used as a water pitcher, that sat on the table and was used to wash hands with. I was floored!
Another time we had used coffee filters to make monet waterlilies. A year later, we used coffee filters for another project, and John remembered them as being waterlilies.
He always made me smile, laugh, and filled everyone around them with love. Out of all my students at KDS he is one that I have truly missed being around. This morning I received a text from the current art teacher there telling me that John has past away in a car wreck last night, that he was killed instantly. I find peace in the fact that he didn't die waiting to be adopted. That he was one of the few that lived that dream of being apart of a family and having people to call mom and dad.
I love you John.
John was a joy to be around. He loved keys, starring out the window, and all of the students and staff at KDS. He loved art class and was really a sponge. I remember taking a group of students to the Mideval exhibit at the Frist Center several years ago. Before we'd gone I spent quite a bit of time on lessons leading up to the trip. While at the museum, John impressed me with his retention from our lessons in the classroom. He wanted to be the one to tell the others about this one piece, how it was used as a water pitcher, that sat on the table and was used to wash hands with. I was floored!
Another time we had used coffee filters to make monet waterlilies. A year later, we used coffee filters for another project, and John remembered them as being waterlilies.
He always made me smile, laugh, and filled everyone around them with love. Out of all my students at KDS he is one that I have truly missed being around. This morning I received a text from the current art teacher there telling me that John has past away in a car wreck last night, that he was killed instantly. I find peace in the fact that he didn't die waiting to be adopted. That he was one of the few that lived that dream of being apart of a family and having people to call mom and dad.
I love you John.
Friday, April 27, 2012
Jim Dine Art!
So this post is a little late, I had executed this lessons back in Februrary around Valentine's Day of course. Jim Dine is a well know artist who's art focus's on the subject of hearts. His art is very kid friendly and easily adaptable to elementary art lessons. I used his art as the focus for both a 1st and 2nd grade lessons. The second grade lesson was a print making lesson, focusing on visual texture and pattern. The 1st grade lesson we learned about warm and cool colors. I asked the students to use warm colors for the inside of the hearts, and cool colors for the background squares. The media we used were crayons and watercolors. Some followed these directions, others not so much, but the results were quite varied none- the less. Here are some of the results.
Shaving Cream Marbling
I know that I've posted about shaving cream marbling before, but after having an actual marble artist visit our classroom I feel the need to post about this again!
This time I not only had the students marble their papers, but we then looked at patterns in Klimt's tree of life and incorperated that into the art. We used copper tempera paint for the tree paintings. Check out the results!
This time I not only had the students marble their papers, but we then looked at patterns in Klimt's tree of life and incorperated that into the art. We used copper tempera paint for the tree paintings. Check out the results!
Teresa Hayes: Marble Artist!
Tree of Life Paintings over Marbled backgrounds
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