¶ … Teaching Video
Lesson
In the video I am showing how to paint like a Baroque artist, teaching the students the art of chiaroscuro, dynamism, impasto, and sprezzato. This would be lesson plan no. 5 and incorporates various aspects of the art technique.
Promoting a Positive Learning Environment
Demonstrating Respect, Rapport, and Responsiveness
I demonstrated respect for students with varied needs and backgrounds by taking time to ask them each whether they saw how the four different methods of painting helped to produce the desired effects. This allowed them to show that they could see the effects of light and shadow, movement, thickness, and quickness. We developed rapport by talking about other techniques that could be used and the students each contributed by suggesting a technique, such as blotting, dotting, etc. that could add something to the style. I demonstrated responsiveness by locating those techniques in other art movements, such as pop/modern and abstract, etc., and the students saw how techniques of painting helped to establish new directions in art and new movements that went away from the Baroque/Mannerist style. I encouraged them to examine and compare two styles from two different eras, say Baroque and Modern (Velasquez and Picasso) to see how different they were and I asked them why this might be so -- what had happened in culture and the world to give these artists such different approaches to creating art and reflecting reality in the way that they did. We did this at the beginning of class before starting on practicing their own brush strokes in the style of a Baroque painter.
3. Engaging Students in Learning
a. Creating Meaning through Interpretation
My instruction engaged students to create meaning through interpreting art by showing them why an artist like Honthorst would use light to focus attention on a specific individual, such as the Matchmaker. Then I asked the students why this was done, and they interpreted the meaning of this use of light, suggesting that the Matchmaker is the subject or that the light shifts the narrative from one side of the picture to another. The students each had to say one way of interpreting this image.
When it came time to practice developing Baroque works of art, the students were encouraged to create a concept first. This means they had to think about the subject they wanted to paint. It could come from their personal lives or their life at school. The main thing was to have a subject, a story, and then to tell that story by painting an image. We discussed how stories in paintings do not have to be long like a book. They can simply be an idea -- something like Mr. X is A, B, and C, shown by how he is painted. This got them thinking about who or what they would like to paint. The main focus was to choose an idea that was meaningful for them. So for some, who had religious families, they wanted to do a religious picture. For others, sports and movies were important to them, so they wanted to paint a picture of a sports hero standing with his baseball bat or his football, because this gear identified them, just like a sword and horse would identify a Baroque person. The movie star was given the similar treatment, so in this way, modern examples of important things were used as the subject for Baroque treatment and the students were more engaged in the process of painting as a result.
b. Linking Students' Prior Learning with New Learning
This instruction linked students' prior academic knowledge with new knowledge in that they already had an understanding of the Baroque era and how art represented major ideas from the time, such as nobility, redemption, social interaction, etc., and now they could see how those ideas were generated in painting in a hands-on approach. Their personal knowledge was also linked in that they already understood what was important to them and now they could express that importance in an artistic way by using Baroque expression to locate the noble ideas within that which they valued. This taught them to see why they valued what they did. In a cultural way, this link was made by showing how though cultures and times change, some things stay the same and their knowledge of European history was connected to new knowledge of modern times when I showed them each how the subject they chose could be traced back to the...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now