
SWEET
STUFF
Submitted by: Amy Shapley, a
PreK-8 art teacher at Notre Dame de Sion School of
Objectives:
To create become familiar
with the works of Wayne Thiebaud
Vocabulary:
visual balance, visual
texture, textural paint
What You Need:
·
poster board or
stretched canvas in large sizes. larger than 18 x 24 inches
·
gesso if using
stretched canvas
·
plenty of white
acrylic paints
·
colored acrylic
paints
·
acrylic gel paint
thickener or textural additives
·
brushes of all
sizes, palette knives, other manipulative tools
·
pencils
What You Do:
1.
Show examples of
the work of Wayne Thiebaud. Focus on the works that depict sweets and use the
thickened paint. discuss the size and visuals of Thiebaud work. Discuss the
thickness of paint. Discuss the colors Thiebaud used. Discuss the balance that
is so necessary in such large compositions.
2.
Make a list on the
board of the focal points of the work:
·
large, balanced
composition
·
sweets as subjects
·
pastel colors
·
thick frothy paint
3.
Choose a sweet
subject and begin to sketch it in balance on the poster board or prepared
canvas. Remember to enlarge logically, and that it is okay to have part of the
objects "fall off the edge" of the ground.
4.
Once the design
has been roughly sketched, begin to mix paint for the back ground. ALL colors
must be mixed with white to create a pastel. When mixing with white, remember
that you add small amounts of color to the white paint until you reach the value
you desire. Do not add white to color or you will have to add bucket loads of
white before you reach a pastel tint. Add thickener or textural additives to the
paint as desired. The back ground can have less texture than the subject matter
in order to give the foreground emphasis.
5.
Add frothy texture
as you add the foreground of the painting. Think of frosting...
6.
As the painting
dries, keep an eye on how the thickener affects the color and texture of the
paint. Add new layers of paint and manipulate the paint with palette knives of
brushes until you reach the desired effect.
Recommended Books:
Wayne
Thiebaud: A Paintings Retrospective
by: Steven A. Nash, Adam Gopnik (Contributor), Wayne Thiebaud
Famous for his dreamy 1960s paintings of cakes, Wayne Thiebaud began his career
as a commercial artist and cartoon illustrator like many other artists of the
period, including Andy Warhol. And like Warhol, Thiebaud became tied to pop art
since he was making images of popular American products like food, lipsticks,
and toys. Yet unlike many of his pop peers, Bay Area-based Thiebaud wasn't
interested in poking fun at the establishment.
Resources:
Wayne
Thiebaud
http://sheldon.unl.edu/HTML/ARTIST/Thiebaud_W/SSI.html
Wayne
Thiebaud
http://www.fi.muni.cz/~toms/PopArt/Biographies/thiebaud.html


|
Coordinator ( 741-1028
*
|
© copyright 2010 |