This past year I hosted another home art class with Edie and a few of her friends with an art exhibit at the end (my favorite part)…
This is the second year I’ve hosted the class. The first year was just Edie and two friends on our kitchen table, and this year we moved it downstairs to our studio space and invited five friends. I also invited our 10 yr old neighbor to come and help as well.
I really wanted to steer away from kid crafts, the challenge was that most of the younger ‘art’ curriculum online falls into this overplayed genre IMO. I wanted to focus on teaching art techniques and concepts in a simplistic and fun way.
Disclaimer: I’m not an artist! I just really enjoy the process of learning and working with kids on art. I did a lot of research and came up with a list of art techniques, concepts, and movements I wanted to teach. Then I brainstormed some fun ways to translate/execute it with 5 yr olds.
The kids take turns bringing a snack which we have right away and they area always tell me all about it on the way home. A lot of times they come with freshly baked muffins omg thank you parents for the freshly baked muffins. Then we put on aprons (they bring one from home to keep for the duration), we talk about the art concept and technique, look at examples, and get to work on our projects. They usually work for about 30 minutes before I give them a play break (ya know, because they’re 5 year olds). The downstairs family room is close to the studio so I let them run wild in there for about 15-20 minutes. My 10 yr old helper, Linnea, plays ref. While they’re playing I clean things up for those that are done, finish off any extra muffins, and set up something for creative free time. Linnea and Dot sometimes work on art in the studio during this time as well.
After, they come back and either finish their project or work on the creative free time activity. For this I simply put out a bunch of things and let them do whatever they’d like with it. Markers, stamps, pom poms, sequins, glue, little pieces of scraps and other small textured items. Edie always draws some form of princess (like this one).
At the end of the year we host an art exhibit showcasing the work they in the class. The art exhibit might be my favorite part of the whole class. I hang all their art in specific areas of the room (using sticky tak) and invite their families to come. The kids help me prepare some treats and drinks for the guests.
The kids got so excited for the guests to arrive!
After snacks and drinks, we had at Q&A with the artists. Each child answered questions about their art from the parents and other artists. Things like, “What was your inspiration behind the watercolor piece?”, etc. They were so excited to talk about their work and even Edie whose usually super shy, was chatty and happy to engage with the audience.
I’m excited to hear more about your little after school art school! This is something I have been considering for awhile but I get caught up in the details. I grew up with my mom as my art teacher and I have two little girls who would love it 🙂 I’ve had similar thoughts about doing art without all of the extra garbage and stuff you end up with. I’d love to incorporate some simple sewing too. Anyways, thanks for sharing!
So wonderful! I teach elementary art and it’s really nice to see how you approached it! I agree that so much young art is crafty. They can handle learning about elements of art and are so good at expressing their own ideas! keeping their art, promoting an art show, displaying their work and having the kids present and answer questions is so special too. We don’t have time for that in a school setting (with hour long classes, so many kids in a class and teaching the whole school) but this has definitely inspired me to work towards that! I also love how you displayed art without frames and even if it was unfinished. Man, this is so sweet, thanks for sharing.
This is the absolute cutest thing ever. Aside from the fun and the kids experimenting, I adore the plaque with the Polaroid. You have a true gift with kids. Kudos to you. This is so wonderful.