Exploring Art with Questions by Mary Erickson Photo
Exploring Art with Questions by Mary Erickson Photo Credit: Debi Johnson
By exploring art making and meaning through questions you learn how to slow down, step back, look at, analyze, reflect on, and interpret art and your everyday visual experience.
Your investment in art inquiry will not only increase your understanding and appreciation of art, but will also give you skills to transform the ordinary visual world into a more fascinating and meaningful place. Photo Credit: Debi Johnson
You can use four broad questions to explore any artwork, including sculpture, Cradle by Michael Brolly painting, Norman Lykes House by Frank Lloyd Wright or Where No Coyote Has Gone Before by Anne Coe
You can explore any artwork by asking: 1. What Can I See? 2. What Else Can I Learn? 3. What Does It Mean? 4. How Does It Compare? Mayahuel by Tlisza Jaurique
You can use the same four questions to explore any object made by people, including such everyday things as cars, toys, shoes, dishes, or backpacks.
You can also use the same four questions to help you make your own artwork, if you ask each question a little differently. 1. What Can I See? becomes How Do I Want My Artwork To Look? 2. What Else Can I Learn? becomes Where Can I Get Ideas for My Artwork? 3. What Does It Mean? becomes What Do I Want My Artwork To Say? 4. How Does It Compare? becomes What Can I Learn From Other Artworks? Michael Brolly and Anne Coe
Art Inquiry Resources are available at Mary. Erickson. Ventures. com Architecture and Environment is an inquiry-based introduction to architecture for grades 5 -8 featuring the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright. Art Making and Meaning is an introduction to art inquiry for secondary students and adults featuring the painting of Anne Coe and the sculpture of Michael Brolly with online teachers’ supplement. Stories of Art is a thematic, inquirybased curriculum for grades 18 with online artworks and teachers’
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