Hero image

CC's Creative Learning Shop

Average Rating3.96
(based on 28 reviews)

Teaching Art is a feast into a of colour, line, texture, space and shape. By encouraging a visual exploration in my learning I love developing a creative approach to learning in the classroom. By encouraging different techniques and an understanding of art I hope to help students appreciate visual learning more. I hope you enjoy my uploads and can use them. Please contact me if you require any further information.

159Uploads

88k+Views

26k+Downloads

Teaching Art is a feast into a of colour, line, texture, space and shape. By encouraging a visual exploration in my learning I love developing a creative approach to learning in the classroom. By encouraging different techniques and an understanding of art I hope to help students appreciate visual learning more. I hope you enjoy my uploads and can use them. Please contact me if you require any further information.
An informative printing presentation for ART: relief, monoprinting and silkscreening
cccampcccamp

An informative printing presentation for ART: relief, monoprinting and silkscreening

(0)
To explain various printing techniques - like relief printing, mono-printing and silkscreening. Slides showing a history of printmaking, from Early letterpress, to Japanese, Picasso, Expressionism and Andy Warhol. Students to be shown how printmaking developed in visuals. There are various historical examples to show the early print works and how they developed. Also linking to projects for students to get ideas to develop their own work. Each printing technique has You Tube clips with specific tasks in the presentation. Student tasks - to write a definition for each style of print. Students to make a presentation in books. Heading in book Stick in your prints when they are totally dry What is … printing? What types of . _____are there? E.g additive, subtractive? Give an example a print artist. Describe your print process. Did you find it difficult or easy.? Do you like the quality of your printing? There is a detailed explanation of each of these three types of printing for students to copy and very informative to support printing techniques. Good for KS 3 but also at GCSE.
Art history: A presentation on key facts of German Expressionism and Der Blaue Reiter
cccampcccamp

Art history: A presentation on key facts of German Expressionism and Der Blaue Reiter

(0)
A short presentation highlighting the key facts and characteristics of the German Expressionism. There are references to a number of artists, Edvard Munch, Oskar Kokoschka, Max Beckmann, Erich Heckel, Karl Schmidt-Rotluf, August Macke, Emil Nolde, Otto Mueller. Expressionism was made up of Der Brucke Art movement and Der Blaue Reiter - there are also examples of these artists linked to Expressionism. Der Blaue Reiter is Frans Marck and Wassily Kandinsky. Key examples given with notes about the movement to be used as worksheets for students.
Cubism Art, No 5:making a 3D construction sculpture  of analytical Cubism style.
cccampcccamp

Cubism Art, No 5:making a 3D construction sculpture of analytical Cubism style.

(0)
This is part of a set 5 powerpoints on Cubism, painting skills and colour mixing and constructing a 3D sculpture. This attached Powerpoint deals with the development of the 3D sculpture Powerpoint 1 Using a drawing of face break this up into geometric shapes and compose an outcome to paint and analyse a cubist analytical painting and develop and understanding of Cubism Powerpoint 2 Explore a mixing of colours, especially complementary colours and develop an understanding of contrasting colours Powerpoint 3 Practice painting skills and applying paint smoothly Powerpoint 4. Painting skills using a card Poweerpoint 5. Simplify and construct a 3D analytical sculpture from your painting and evaluate your putcome. The powerpoint gives instructions and examples to show how to cut and join this. Firstly pasting on cardboard a copy of the painting and then cutting this up in shapes and building a construction of form as a 3D sculpture This then becomes a construction of a 3D sculpture using cardboard to make a mobile or standing sculpture based on Cubism. To paste painting onto Cardboard Ceareal box and to paint the back of the box To finally construct with glue gun to form a hanging mobile. Evaluation of project This is a series of 5 powerpoints where students to learn to paint a Cubist painting using a celebrity picture and complementary colours. Students to gain an understanding of Analytical Cubism and how to fragment a picture into geometric shapes and then learn to paint it in complementary colours. Develop this into a 3D sculpture and make a construction mobile cutting a copy of the painting into shapes.
Peacock Art cultural project -drawing oil pastel and group project making a peacock
cccampcccamp

Peacock Art cultural project -drawing oil pastel and group project making a peacock

(0)
In this powerpoint there is cultural information on the symbolism of the peacock in Indian Art and a look at the peacock dance. Students make a peacock feather drawing looking at a few essential oil pastel techniques: sgrafitto, layering, blending, stippling. Students then are asked to evaluate this outcome and then as a whole class the second project on the powerpoint is that each student is now asked to make a peacock feather which could then be added to a drawing of the body of the peacock. Resources given to support this.This could be completed in any medium, pen work or watercolour or oil pastel. There are examples of different large peacock outcomes in different media and the teacher will need to decide how she would like to do this.
KS3/KS2 Art totem pole task- family tree totem drawing made in groups - symbolic family story
cccampcccamp

KS3/KS2 Art totem pole task- family tree totem drawing made in groups - symbolic family story

(0)
**What are the Learning Objectives for this project in Art? ** Students learn from examples and a clear understanding to totem poles is explained visually in slides, also different video clips about Totem poles and their story telling. There are slides which give a background to totem poles. Lots of symbols for different animals given on separate slides which could be used ot make the totem pole. Students through the research into totem poles will gain an appreciation of how religion and spirituality holds in Native American cultures. Students will be able to communicate experiences, moods, and stories and reflect on their own family history and family tree in a group project. Students to create images using the elements and principles and design their totem imaginatively. Using pictures of animals - students can stylise and create a symmetry outcome to use in the building of their animal/sun/bird/man for their totem pole. Each student completes a different part of the totem pole and students need to work in teams Students create images in response to objects from a variety of cultural contexts as students look at and watch various ‘You Tube’ video links about the Totem pole story telling. Students demonstrate awareness of Pacific Coast heritage The slides give a sequence of classroom activities leading to the making of a cardboard totem pole. Students use recycled materials and build their animal/bird/sun/man they designed. There is an emphasis on coloured paper and pasting this into the cardboard and building up the structure. Students will complete the following: **Teamwork: **Complete a group totem pole. Graphic Design: Design a group/tribe logo. Independent Research: Interview a Family member and research family history 3D Sculpture Design: Design a totem sculpture that represents your family history in 100 years time. Recycling materials: Students use recycled materials and construct a standing Totem. Students can embellish and decorate their totem with coloured paper cut outs and black pen line work.
Drawing an Art doodle combining an object - a Vincent Bal project task
cccampcccamp

Drawing an Art doodle combining an object - a Vincent Bal project task

(1)
This is a short project for students to take a photograph of a doodle they do and where they combine it with an object. Students look at the artist Vincent Bal and there are video links to his Shadowology work. Students are then asked to make up their own version of this by taking an object in their house and then turning this into a picture by combining this object with a doodle. There are some short questions to answer on the work of Vincent Bal.
Art Monoprint development into cultural collage with tattoo art and Chila Burman
cccampcccamp

Art Monoprint development into cultural collage with tattoo art and Chila Burman

(0)
This is part of the self-identity project. Students firstly do a mindmap questioning and finding out about their own personal identity. Students then do a monoprint and then use cultural images to collage into their monoprint portrait. Then after this there is an extension to this project where students use Chila Burman and draw out a large body and in a group collage into this using tattoo patterns and symbols. The Learning Objectives for this task is: To develop into monoprinting cultural symbols and patterns. Brief study of Chila Burman and looking at her collage work. Cultural awareness of our differences and create interesting patterns and textures and symbols of our culture. Understanding of different styles Looking at a brief understaning of Tattoo art. Appreciation of own patterns and self-identity Collaging: Photographs of everyday items, patterns, favourite clothes, pictures of household items, objects that show own culture and self-identity
Xmas Collage Art Textile 12 Days of Xmas using Aminah Robinson’s mixed media collage
cccampcccamp

Xmas Collage Art Textile 12 Days of Xmas using Aminah Robinson’s mixed media collage

(0)
Attached are three powerpoints for developing a KS3 Collage in Fabric on the 12 Days of Xmas and the artist Aminah Robinson. Students use the ‘resources’ powerpoint to draw ideas to make up their own design for the 12 days of Xmas. Class divided and each child gets a different day to design. I used Black velvet fabric as my backing fabric and each time the student did their drawing I traced this onto different coloured fabric shapes and students then cut this out and pritt sticked this onto the black velvet fabric. see powerpoint of song '12 days of xmas ’ for resources see powerpoint Artist interpretation and learning about different fabric artists. see powerpoint on stitchung techniques Thirdly, students then cut their designs out in fabric - I used transfer receipt like paper so students could trace onto the fabric and then cut out. Finally students then embellish their fabric with different stitches and I have a powerpoint with video links on how to do the different stitches: running stitch, blanket stitch, satin stitch, chain stitch and daisy stitch…
Using Cindy Sherman, discuss identity, stereotypes inspiration for History portrait  photography
cccampcccamp

Using Cindy Sherman, discuss identity, stereotypes inspiration for History portrait photography

(0)
Looking at the work of Cindy Sherman in depth with all her major themes and developing one’s own photo-shoot and selfie and a history portrait Cindy Sherman and her photographs and how she captures gender and stereotypical poses, Alter-ego images, Self-identity figures, Bus riders, examples of History portraits, Film Stills, grotesque portraits and her Clown images. There are 11 questions to answer on her work and students should look through the slides and answer the questions analysing her work. Discussing what makes a gender? What are stereotypes? The pictures show how Cindy changes her identity showing how we make our own identity and we are not born with it. There are lots of examples of photographs by Cindy to inspire Year 9/10 and A-level students to question their identity and what makes an identity. Students should 1 Set up a scene and capture a stereotypical identity they would like to capture or 2 Transform their image completely and to take on a new identity or 3 Capture themselves as they see themselves with all their own interests. 4 Develop a History portrait based on examples of Cindy Sherman.
GCSE and A-level Art theme ‘Broken’ or Wabi Sabi with experiences/images for mind map
cccampcccamp

GCSE and A-level Art theme ‘Broken’ or Wabi Sabi with experiences/images for mind map

(0)
This is a powerpoint on the theme Broken and refers to the Eastern concept of Wabi Sabi - where one sees beauty in imperfections. There are lots of examples to get students to think of broken and the meaning of this and what is beauty? Students are asked to do a mind map of broken and try to describe situations where something is broken and what the meaning is of this and question its beauty? Lots of examples of different examples of artworks to show Broken. If this was a GCSE theme students to use this as prompts to help develop ideas on the theme.
KS3 GCSE Design Art Graphics, positive and negative shapes, notan, Escher, black and white designs
cccampcccamp

KS3 GCSE Design Art Graphics, positive and negative shapes, notan, Escher, black and white designs

(0)
This is a project about design and can be used to gain a deeper understamding how positive and negative shapes work. This is about black and white designs using the Notan technique. This is the balancing of light and dark shapes using a Japanese idea of design. What is Notan? is the first part of poweerpoint where students develop an understanding of how to use light and dark shapes. Activity Objective: To make Notan compositions and learn about balancing light and dark shapes to make a composition. Looking at Design artists who use Notan: Marimeko, Escher, William Morris To understand what is the meaning of ‘NOTAN’ and art terms To develop your own Notan design in your book To understand how various designers use the concept of Notan in their work. Task 1 USING A SQUARE OF COLOURED PAPER or black paper to start 2.DRAW shapes in from the edges of each side of the square. Draw in from edges 3.CUT OUT SHAPES FROM THE EDGES AND PASTE IN A MIRROR REFLECTION Task 2 Try add a second layer of shapes in your design into the mirror reflection and reflect this back into design Watch the video clip from 0.5 - see link in powerpoint Terms in Art to define Symmetrical Asymmetrical Notan Balance Harmony Positive and Negative shapes
KS3 Year 7 and 8 Art projects
cccampcccamp

KS3 Year 7 and 8 Art projects

7 Resources
year 7 Diagnostic for year 7 Celtic letters Paper mache plants Clay Gargoyles year 8 Cubism Making Insects - paper craft Modern Movements - collage and paint Surrealism - painting project
GCSE artists - teaching skills through artist studies Developing ideas AO1
cccampcccamp

GCSE artists - teaching skills through artist studies Developing ideas AO1

17 Resources
A support for teaching GCSE art A number of powerpoints on individual artists to use as part of Developing ideas for Assessment Objective One. Learning skills in Art Acrylic painting with card - Viera Da silva painting layers and using Gold - Victoria Crowe Photocopy drawing with Chila Burman Klimt patterns Transfer medium with Robert Rauschenberg Tim Burton drawings and fantasy art Printing with Angie Mitchell relief prints Figure drawing and simplification using Henry Moore City street painting with Lowry Peter Blake graphic CD cover Photography of Cindy Sherman All of these tasks will build skills for GCSE final project Starting in year 9 and year 10 begire students choose own topic to develop
History of art development of sculpture -figures from Greek to Michelangelo
cccampcccamp

History of art development of sculpture -figures from Greek to Michelangelo

(0)
A history of art powerpoint showing key sculptural examples from the early Paleolithic sculpture to the work of Michelangelo showing all the key developments in form to show more realism. There are lots of notes to provoke discussion in the class on the different sculptures. Various comparative tasks can be given to develop students ability to analyse the sculptural forms. This also tells the story of art and the development of sculptural form in Art and how art develops through the ages from Paleleolithic, Egyptian, Greek - Archaic, Classical, Hellenistic Art and Gothic Art following with Early Renaissance and the work of Donatello to the work of Michelangelo in Late Renaissance. Students learn about key sculptures to develop their knowledge of art and begin to understand how sculptural form developed. There is a beginning of understanding how the first sculpture was a small fertility form - the Venus of Willendorf and how this was used to empower people and how this then develops to capture the emotion and pathos in the work of Mary Magdalene by Donatello. Many comparisons can be drawn and it enables students to see the development of form and so understand the history of art.
Art materials to use at home- recycled materials and examples of different techniques
cccampcccamp

Art materials to use at home- recycled materials and examples of different techniques

(0)
Making something out of the resources you have at home. This gives a visual list of resources you can use at home to draw with, paint with and make 3D forms with. Good for GCSE students and above for they need to explore a number of techniques for assessment objective. There are videos to motivate and to demonstrte and there are examples of different types of art you can do. Think of some ideas for making art out of cardboard, recycled containers, toilet rolls, toilet paper, old books, magazines, old clothes, wool, ear buds, toothpicks, straws, stones/plants. It also suggests you could also on your phone make a piece of artwork using a photo and an app or draw on your phone. This is to inspire and students to decide what you are going to make…….
Art Photography GCSE and A-level - theme Decay: support with skills to use on Adobe Photoshop
cccampcccamp

Art Photography GCSE and A-level - theme Decay: support with skills to use on Adobe Photoshop

(0)
In this powerpoint there are key objectives: To use photographs of your school building and change them to emulate artists/photographers who show decay. To learn how to crinkle the picture up to show paper creases To blend in pictures of decay and textures into a school building photograph in the style of the artist. There is a clear definition for decay and students can use this to start there project. There are slides of a number of photographers to use for this theme and then examples of how to use Adobe Photoshop with steps to show progress in building your own outcome. The photographers are Cedric Wilson, Serj Fedulov, Paul Stokinger,Stikki Peaches, Martino Zegwaard and Armita Raafat. Students can use these photographers and there are steps to show how to achieve these effects on Adobe photoshop used by the photographers There is also a clear example on how to do an analysis of a photographer in your sketchbook To start with there is a recap on composition - how to take a photo and a reminder of the 4 Key objectives used in Photography and an explanation of what key objectives this meets. This powerpoint focuses on the assessment objective 'Develop ideas" from photographers and then how to " Explore" Adobe photoshop techniques to develop your Decay theme.
Elements of art: Point, Line, Shape
cccampcccamp

Elements of art: Point, Line, Shape

4 Resources
A detailed set of slides showing the basic elements of art used in Art. Exploring what is a point, line and shape and giving colour theory. This is a supportive project for a Foundation course, Year 12 students to develop a deeper understanding of the principles and elements of Art.
Art Modern Movements 9 powerpoints full project using Cupcakes
cccampcccamp

Art Modern Movements 9 powerpoints full project using Cupcakes

9 Resources
Students make a cupcake in each of the modern movement styles and make a cake stand at the end of the project. This is a set of powerpoints for each movern movement, Surrealism, Cubism, Expressionism, Neo-impressionism, Fauvism and Realism. It is a set of 8 lessons and then there is the Scheme of Work for the project. For each of the movements students learn a different technique: Surrealism- Splash Chance watercolour imaginary creature out of this to add to cupcake. Cubism - geometrical shapes to shade light to dark to create angular cupcake over a collage made of newspaper. Realism - Tonal realistic shading to capture 3D form. Expressionism-Black and white polyprint to capture the agitated marks of artists. Neo-Impressionism - using a stippling technique with paintbrush to capture fine mark-making. Fauvism- random use of arbitrary colour to capture the bright spontaneity of paint marks. At the end of the project students then choose a party theme and independently decorate their party plate with the cupcakes on this.
An Intro to AS and A-level Art with Personal Investigation, Externally set task, Related Study
cccampcccamp

An Intro to AS and A-level Art with Personal Investigation, Externally set task, Related Study

(0)
**What is A-level Art and AS Art? ** An introduction to the Course and why should I study A-level Art? This is to introduce students to what is A-level Art and what is required in the course. It gives examples of the components of the course and describes how to go about developing the coursework project and controlled test. **How to approach the course? ** 1, Respond to work from other artists and cultures. 2, Develop preliminary plans and sketches in preparation for further work. 3. Present and organise your thoughts in a visual and intelligible way. 4. Recognise and deal with design problems 5. Think up your own ideas. 6. Explore and use materials skilfully. **Key Tips to complete the course? ** Examples of how to process the Personal Investigation showing the key objectives, developing ideas from artists, showing exploring materials and taking ideas through a number of processes and doing artist responses. Then developing ideas, compositional plans and artist studies to realise final concept. Examples of Externally set task, pages from sketchbooks to show how ideas were developed to interpret the theme Examples of possible Related Study and what topics one can develop into a written study - examples of covers of different studies to give an idea of what is expected.