Term
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Definition
-dominated teacher training and influences current thinking and practice with respect to early childhood art.
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Term
Discipline-Based Art Education (DBAE): |
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Definition
-comprehensive approach to instruction and learning in art, developed sure to, provide experience with , and acquire content from several disciplines of knowledge : art making, art criticism, art history, and aesthetics.
-education in these disciplines contributes to the creation, understaning, and appreciation of art, artists, artistic processes, and the roles and functions of art in cultuires and societies. |
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1. sensory experiences
2.aesthetic experiences
3. time, space, and materials for making art
4. an introduction to the world of art, artists, and a variety of art forms and styles.
(first three componments should be emphasized during early years) but the four componments are interrelated
Ex: making art is dependent on sensing and experiencing |
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Definition
What to include in an early childhood art program? |
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Term
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Definition
-children do not create in isolation
-art originates from something personally experienced, an idea, an object of importance, an event, a feeling, or a person
ex: painting scenes from a farm experience
taking field trip to the farm allows new content
-encourage parents to take their children out |
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Term
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Definition
-study of beauty in color, form, and design
-human need to make sense of one's self
-can be found in nature
-children can appreciate and have beautiful experiences
-not confined to interior environment
-beauty abounds in nature and the community |
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Time, Space, and Materials for Making Art |
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Definition
-teachers can encourage children to give artistic form and substance to their ideas,urges, wishes, and dreasms, fears, or interest
-practice deciding what to create
-over time children practice deciding what to create and learn to focus their attention and that of others in a specific area |
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An introduction to the world of art |
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Definition
-Art is a basic human need
-ppl make art to reflect and symbolize
-children are active makers of images, and feel connected to artists whom they see as trying, as they do, to do a good job
-children can learn that artists work in different media |
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Term
Prehistoric or Primitive Art |
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Definition
-mixed paints out of plants, berries, and other foods as well as earth, animal blood
-sharpened sticks to draw
-symbolize something meant to somehow capture or control it
-outlines were bold, and picrures were decorated with geometric patterns and designs
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Term
Naturalisitic or Realistic Art |
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Definition
-became popular in the US in the 19th century
-landscapes, birds, farms, etc.
-people
-scenes, landscape usually |
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Term
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Definition
-artistic style in which artists pain what they perceive rather than what they know to be there
-fascinated with color
-unmixed primary colors |
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Term
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Definition
-an offshoot of impressionism, involved a concern for color and an innovative technique for representing it
-worked on large canvases
-small dots or points of pure color were used instead of dashes or strokes
-didnt mix colors but required the observer to fuse neighboring colors |
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Term
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Definition
-artistic style based on an expression of the artists emotions and feelings
-reacting against impressionism, searched for emotional expression in their artist statements
-purposely altered space, form, line, and color to make it emotional
-disorted reality to express their own views and moods
-violent, depressing, and highly emotional |
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Term
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Definition
-intrigued with color and the physical qualities of paint
-began after world war II
-jackson pollock: practiced action or gesture by dripping, dribbling, spraying, pouring, throwing, and splashing paint
-design was often left to chance or accident
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Term
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Definition
-offshot of expressionism
-experimented with pure, bright colors in daring and innovative ways to represent postiive emotions, including joy, pleasure, comfort, love, and happiness
-human skin was painted different colors
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Term
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Definition
-intellectual conception of form and shape
-break down everything down into component geometic shapes
-3D
abandoned traditional treatment of space and form and instead focused on the use of the cylinder, sphere, and cube
-objects appear flat, with little concern for background or foreground
-collages |
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Term
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Definition
-attempts to incorporate physical movement by using levers, gears, and movable parts
-invites participation
-involves wind
-moving junk sculpture |
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Term
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Definition
-super-realism
-attempts to create a magical, dreamlike world that is more intense than reality
ex: fish with a human head |
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Term
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Definition
-makes a social statement or critique of contemporary American culture
-chose subject matter that was familiar to everyday life (ex: soda cans, movie stars, etc.)
-photographic realism |
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Term
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Definition
-artistic style that developed in the psychedelic
-intrigued with effects of black and white, color, figure-ground relations, and depth
-optics perception to create optical illusionswith shapes and patterns |
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Term
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Definition
-expressions of members of a cultural group
-integral part of social life because it describes the beliefs, customs, values, and behaviors, and practices common to a particular cultural |
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Term
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Definition
-teacher facilitates an aesthetic and verbal encounter between children and a work of art
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