Teaching Art Appreciation to Children: Creating a Picasso Pumpkin

You can do this project with one child at home, or with a whole classroom full of children. Children are very open to seeing and learning about art, and the more you expose them to all kinds of artists and varieties, the better. The best time to give a person this appreciation, is to
 begin when they are children. It also encourages them and shows them that art is not just one style, that what appeals to one person, may not to another and that is o.k.. Art, like music, is a medium friendly to subjective interpretation and appreciation. The more variety there is, the richer the world of art.

The best way to start is to ask before you begin, "Have you ever heard of Pablo Picasso" or "Can anyone tell me who Pablo Picasso is"? You might ask them to simply find out who he was and what he did before the next class or gathering. Then ask the question against the next class meeting and do the project then.

To begin this project, gather a few facts about Pablo Picasso, copies of a few of his works from books or online, and a little history about the artist. Make the information simple and concise. Include his national heritage and maybe even show the children where Picasso was born and raised on a map.

Ask them what they think of his work, how it makes them feel. Tell them there is no wrong or right in how they interpret it. You just want their reaction. After a very brief synopsis of who he was, what he did and the style of his work, the first art appreciation project is very simple and fun to do. This is even appropriate for younger children. This is an inexpensive project. Do one along with the children.

Supplies Needed:

A few precut stencils of pumpkins made of any colour construction paper. (If this is for a group of children, spilt them into smaller groups and make one stencil per group. For much smaller children, precut all the pumpkins ahead of time.)

One or two sheets of black construction paper per child. (One if you use the cut out method to follow or two if you glue cut out eyes, nose and mouth on the pumpkin. This second method is the best method for younger children.)

Related information
  • ALWAYS encourage a child to sign their artwork, the way a real artist does.
  • Ask them what they think of his work, how it makes them feel. Tell them there is no wrong or right
  • in how they interpret it.
 
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This is a cool idea.

Posted on 05/09/2007 at 12:05:00 AM

Great article and a wonderful idea!

Posted on 05/05/2007 at 11:05:00 AM

Great project.

Posted on 05/05/2007 at 7:05:00 AM

You could expand on this and do just about any cut out shape this way. The Pumpkin is just very striking.

Posted on 05/04/2007 at 8:05:00 PM

What a cool idea. Even though it's not Halloween.

Posted on 05/04/2007 at 4:05:00 PM

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