This is a beautiful painting lesson that introduces students the Mexican folk art of amate bark painting.
Amate or bark paper is handmade paper made is made by stripping the bark from a wild fig, nettle or mulberry tree—each tree provides a different tone, ranging from brown to white. The bark is cleaned and dried before it is placed in a pot of boiling water for seven to eight hours. Then it is separated into fiber strips and pounded with a flat rock into a sheet of paper. Once dry, it's used as a base for whimsical paintings depicting wildlife and plants and flowers or village scenes.
I have two samples of my own which I show students. You can often find these at thrift stores!
For our paper, we used brown butcher paper from a roll.
Students sketched out their designs in pencil.
Then went over all their lines using Sharpies.
Then they crumbled their paper to give it a natural paper look and feel.
They painted these using tempera paint as well as neon acrylic colours.
Adding a bit of white to each colour will make it more opaque.
Once dry, they added dots and lines for extra detail and then touched everything up
with the Sharpies again.
Some Grade 4, 5, 6 paintings:
2 comments:
je découvre votre blog, le travail que vous faites est magnifique!!
quel talent!merci de le partager.
Nicole
Merci beaucoup Nicole!
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