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UPDATED: Jacob Lawrence Mosaics

10/20/2013

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Sixth grade students recently helped design the school yearbook cover.  Rather than highlight just one individual, each student's artwork is featured on the cover. 

I designed this project to not only complete the cover, but also add a learning experience to our existing curriculum.  Our units of study are: Baroque, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Cubism, The Harlem Renaissance, Collage/Assemblage, and Pop Art.  Last year's sixth grade students created a Pop Art-inspired cover (see Individuals Create Unity)


PictureEvents in the Life of Harold Washington (1991)
This year, I decided to design the lesson around artist, Jacob Lawrence.  Students will learn more about Lawrence this spring when they research about the many different musicians, writers and visual artists of The Harlem Renaissance.

I recently discovered Events in the Life of Harold Washington, a mosaic Lawrence made in 1991 for the Harold Washington Library in Chicago.  I visited the library to see the work in person this summer.  Below are photographs of the mosaic in full, and also in closer detail.  Like many of Lawrence's great paintings, the environment and figures have been abstracted into bold shapes of color.

This year, the sixth grade students created mosaics inspired by this style.  Using a limited color palette of primary and neutral colors (similar to Lawrence), students designed their own unique mosaic using construction paper. 

Each student personalized their design using pattern and symbols to reflect their own interests.  I photographed and digitally  assembled the artwork to complete the cover with text and our Oregon Hawk mascot.

The mosaics are works of art individually, but are even more successful as a collaborative design.  Community is a prevalent theme in much of Lawrence's artwork.  I hope this project is a strong metaphor for students to understand the value of working together.

Below are examples of student work:
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Common Core and The Harlem Renaissance

10/12/2013

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Later this month I will be presenting at the Illinois Art Education Association state conference on the topic of culturally relevant teaching.  Although I currently teach in a predominantly white community, I still believe in an inclusive art curriculum for all students. 

Last year, my sixth grade students explored artists, musicians and poets of the Harlem Renaissance.  This unit plan is just one example of presenting diverse artists in the classroom.  I chose this unit to begin implementing the newly released Common Core art standards.  Below are the anchor standards, enduring understanding and essential questions for this particular unit:







CREATING
Anchor Standard: Students will investigate, plan and work through materials and ideas to make works of art and design.
Enduring Understanding: Clarity of visual organization supports effective communication.
Essential Questions: How does art and design communicate stories and ideas?  How do artists and designers create works of art that effectively communicate?

6th grade standard: Select and organize images and text to make clear and compelling presentations.
Students will write a poem and select music to accompany their finished artwork and present to the class.

RESPONDING
Anchor Standard: Students experience, analyze and interpret art and other aspects of the visual world.
Enduring Understanding: Understanding the historical and cultural context of an artwork can influence how people respond to it.
Essential Questions: How does art help us understand how people lived in different times, places, and cultures?  How does knowing how people lived in different times and places influence our response to the art?

6th grade standard: Analyze how art reflects changes in time, resources and cultural uses.
Students will analyze artworks by Jacob Lawrence, Lois Mailou Jones and Romare Bearden before and after learning the historical and cultural context.  Students will write a reflection on how this context influenced their interpretation of the artist's work. 

PRESENTING
Anchor Standard: Students will intentionally select and analyze their artwork and the work of others when deciding what artwork to present.
Enduring Understanding: Artists and others select, present, and preserve objects, artifacts and artworks in personal collections and portfolios.
Essential Questions: What is a portfolio? What is a collection? What criteria might be considered when selecting a work for a collection or portfolio?

6th grade standard: Apply established criteria to analyze a collection of art works.
Students will apply our art critique criteria of: Observation, Interpretation, Analysis, and Judgment to a collection of works by Jacob Lawrence, Lois Mailou Jones and Romare Bearden.  Students will use these criteria to imagine which of these works they would select for a personal collection.

This year, sixth grade students will explore The Harlem Renaissance during third quarter.  When I was in sixth grade, we studied The Harlem Renaissance in Language Arts class.  I really enjoyed learning about the many influential artists and decided to develop a unit on this historic period for my students.

We will begin by listening to the music of famous jazz musicians of the time: Jelly Roll Morton, Duke Ellington and Josephine Baker.  While students listen to each of these musicians, they will work together to create an artwork.  We will define the term "imagery" and how certain sounds may make us imagine different colors, lines, and shapes. 

Below are examples of brainstorming activity and collaborative artworks from last year's students:
We will begin the next class by reviewing the term "imagery."  Each student will receive a poem by a famous poet of the Harlem Renaissance (Langston Hughes, Clarissa Scott Delaney, Gwendolyn Bennett, and Claude McKay).  Once they read the poem, students will describe and explain it to their peers.  Students will then draw a picture illustrating their poem.  At the end of class students will share their illustrations and explain how they interpret the poem.

Below are examples of last year's poems and illustrations with a photograph of the corresponding poet.
The next class, students will receive images of artworks by Jacob Lawrence, Lois Mailou Jones and Romare Bearden.  Each student will critique the work briefly in writing before learning any historical/cultural context.

PRESENTING - 6th grade standard: Apply established criteria to analyze a collection of art works.
Students will apply our art critique criteria of: Observation, Interpretation, Analysis, and Judgment to a collection of works by Jacob Lawrence, Lois Mailou Jones and Romare Bearden.  Students will use these criteria to imagine which of these works they would select for a personal collection.

Then we will go to the computer lab to discover more about The Harlem Renaissance.

We will watch an online video produced by teenagers in New York City.  I chose this video for its unique perspective, as the young filmmakers actually traveled into the Harlem community.  The video features footage and information from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, a research unit of the New York Public Library.
After the video, students will research information online about three specific artists of the Harlem Renaissance: Jacob Lawrence, Romare Bearden, and Lois Mailou Jones.

At the end of class, students will re-evaluate the artwork they had previously analyzed and interpreted.  Each student was asked to write a reflection on how learning about the Harlem Renaissance influenced their reinterpretations. 

Students will choose one of the three artists to inspire their next project.  The subject matter and art media will be completely up to each individual student.  The only requirement is to apply an artist's style to their own work.  For example, the use of color, abstraction, patterns, etc.

RESPONDING - 6th grade standard: Analyze how art reflects changes in time, resources and cultural uses.
Students will analyze artworks by Jacob Lawrence, Lois Mailou Jones and Romare Bearden before and after learning the historical and cultural context.  Students will write a reflection on how this context influenced their interpretation of the artists' work. 
As the projects near completion, students will participate in an in-progress critique.  Their projects will be displayed in front of the class, and their peers will offer complements and suggestions.

Below is an example of the in-progress critique from one of last year's classes
Picture
When the projects are finished, students will present their artwork to the class.  Inspired by the music and poetry of the Harlem Renaissance, each student will write a poem and select music to accompany and enhance their artwork. 

CREATING - 6th grade standard: Select and organize images and text to make clear and compelling presentations.
Students will write a poem and select music to accompany their finished artwork and present to the class.

Below are examples of finished student work from last year
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