Saturday, January 5, 2013

Clay - non-representational


Squishing it with my hands. Molding it into towers. Rolling it into little balls. I had a blast working with clay in class on Friday.

Even though I didn’t end up making a sculpture that I would have liked to keep, per se, it was so much fun working with the material. It made me think of how often people put pressure on kids to develop some concrete “work of art” from their artistic explorations rather than let them sit and explore the materials at their own pace.

I found myself changing techniques as I went on to try to create the texture on the clay that I found aesthetically pleasing. I didn’t like how the clay I was working with at first ended up being imprinted with my fingerprints or with the criss-cross pattern of the board I was working on. As the night progressed, I changed the technique I was using to create balls of clay that I rolled up by using my palms, which eliminated most of the lines and patterns that the clay otherwise was taking on.

I really see the value in bringing clay into the classroom for kids to work with. It’s a medium that kids of all abilities can enjoy and work with. For kids with gross and fine motor difficulties, it may be extremely difficult — and sometimes near impossible — to manipulate pencils and paintbrushes, but the clay lends itself to all kinds of explorations and uses. 

And I think it can be a great way to intertwine art and science in the classroom. Kids can learn where clay comes from, how it’s formed, where to find it, etc. — science; then they can be encouraged to use the clay in artistic ways.

Clay - representational

Working with clay again in class was fun, just as it was the first time. I did enjoy the move into representational sculpture and chose to work on the prompt of two animals showing affection. I decided to sculpt two cats snuggling as I have seen my husband’s parents’ two cats in such a position many a time.

It was more fun for me to sculpt something representational because I wasn’t as focused on getting the clay to look just right as I was on getting the shape of the thing I was sculpting to look just right. So even if there was an extra crease or fingerprint in the clay’s texture, I didn’t mind as much because that wasn’t my focus.

I like the idea of having the type of prompts we have had in class for kids in a classroom. I think they are specific enough yet still open-ended enough to allow for creativity but without too much ambiguity so students aren’t stressing over the fact that they don’t know what to do. I think it’s very helpful to provide some guidance but without overstepping into controlling what kids are allowed to make.

And as with anything, I realize that it’s so important in art to understand where your students are at stage-wise so as to create activities and projects for them to meet them where they are, not to push them too far into the next stage of their artistic development.