My third day at Glenwood City high was another informative experience in the art classroom. When I first got there, it was once again painting class. The Students were continuing studio production on there acrylic assignments. Each student was at a different place in the project, but they all worked well throughout the period. Some students were close to completing their compilation's, others were still designing them. One Student in particular had designed a very interesting and intricate logo design. It was some sort of flaming animal. It was highly detailed and asymmetrically balanced. He put the drawing in the schools projector and expanded in onto the painting paper.
Once again, drawing is not a pre-requisite for painting class, so most of the students were working off of photographs. The last student I mentioned was advanced and it was nice to see Mrs. Jones make accommodations for the skilled as well the other Students. Throughout the period the Students all advanced on their pieces and the period was quickly over.
In the afternoon, the advanced studio class worked on their individual projects in a wide variety of media. The most important thing that happened was one Students struggles and experiments with molding glass. She had cast several different colors of glass in plaster molds. Unfortunately, the plaster was stronger than the glass and there was no way to remove the glass without breaking it. Throughout the period the student, Mrs. Jones and Myself researched alternative methods of casting glass that might work for the Student. Ironically, it was the Student who proposed She use investment and that turned out to be a good solution to the artistic problem.
The final hour was an intro to life drawing assignment for a new group of eight graders. This is the group of eight graders Mrs. Jones will have for the rest of the Semester and I will present an assignment to them. Introducing Life Drawing to middle schoolers is ambitious to say the least, but Mrs. Jones did a good job of stressing the basics and I was able to help correct some of the larger proportional mistakes of some of the struggling students. Both Mrs. Jones and Myself were very impressed by the progress of these new students.
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