Different Kinds of Sentences according to Function and Purposesarah_ichi07
Oral reading activities with two students pretending to be the two main characters in the short skit. The teacher would ask about the sentences used in the skit and its function and purpose. Then he/she will proceed in discussing the different kinds of sentences according to it's function and purpose. Next is an activity and finally, group activity wherein the students should make a skit using the different kinds of sentences according to its function and purpose.
Different Kinds of Sentences according to Function and Purposesarah_ichi07
Oral reading activities with two students pretending to be the two main characters in the short skit. The teacher would ask about the sentences used in the skit and its function and purpose. Then he/she will proceed in discussing the different kinds of sentences according to it's function and purpose. Next is an activity and finally, group activity wherein the students should make a skit using the different kinds of sentences according to its function and purpose.
A NARRATIVE REPORT: TRAINING EXPERIENCES AT HARADA AUTOMOTIVE ANTENNA (PHILIPPINES) INC., FIRST CAVITE
INDUSTRIAL ESTATE LANGKAAN I
DASMARINAS, CAVITE
Presented to the Faculty of
Cavite State University-Rosario Campus
Rosario, Cavite
In partial fulfillment
of the requirements for the degree
Bachelor of Science in Business Management
Major in Marketing Management
CHRISTIAN C BOCALAN
JULY 2017
The inclusion of text is successful at encouraging rather than limiting a viewer’s interpretation of art and this is most evident in power of text, particularly narrative text. The inclusion of text does not hinder the meaning of the image, but encourages the viewer to think beyond what is presented, thus develop multiple interpretations—this is the power of narrative text that leads the viewer to create a relationship of identification or empathy with the subject matter and the artist. For these reasons, artists such as Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson, Pat Ward Williams, and Elizabeth Catlett include text as a narrative tool within their artwork, allowing the viewer to connect more closely with the subject matter and the artist. The use of first person narrative allows the viewer to temporarily occupy the artist’s identity or the subject’s identity, where the viewer can then develop an intimate relationship with the artwork. When a viewer visits an art gallery, often the viewer skims through the painting, sculpture, mixed media, or photograph at hand. The visual content is quickly consumed. Hence, a piece of art is barely given time for interpretation or deconstruction of its meaning. Too often people come out of art galleries looking exhausted, as if they had walked through a store rather than an art showing. The viewer does not take the time to discern the content of the visual arts and thus, the art is left without or little critical assessment. However, aiding the visual with text can change the viewer’s perception or encourage multiple interpretations of the work. Text causes the viewer to stop, and pause to read around, under, or, above the image, which leads the viewer to further assess the image. When establishing a relationship between the text and the image, the viewer is using the mechanism of dual coding. Dual coding, a phrase coined by Allan Pavio, a psychologist of the theory of cognition, is the process in which our mind shifts back and forth between the writing system and the visual system. Incorporating narrative text within the artwork enables the viewer to exercise dual coding to construct a unique relationship of identification or empathy.
To continue reading this paper please email art historian, Madelyne Oliver at: madelyne.oliver@yahoo.com
Looking & Learning - telling stories originally posted in SchoolArts Magazine (November 2011)
Developed by the Kutztown University Looking and Learning Team, with Dr. Marilyn Stewart and graduate students Zoe Dehart, Amanda Deibert, Cassie langan, Ellen Pados, and Rhona Tomel.
Written by Marilyn Stewart, professor of art education, and zoe Dehart, art teacher in two sixthe-grade gateway school - Communication and Technology Gateway and Agriculture, Science & Ecology Gateway - Reading, PA.
Powerpoint by C.Pena-Martinez, Jackson Middle School, San Antonio, TX
Portfolio, Commentary and Notes
A portfolio of black and white photographs taken during numerous craft buying trips to craft villages around Oaxaca, Mexico. Most of the photographs center on the artisans, their lives and their surroundings (always more interesting to me) rather than on the craft objects. This book is the first in a planned series on other regions in Mexico; next, Michoacán and Chiapas
Hardcover with jacket, portfolio & commentary, 11” x 8.5”, 82 pages. 48 black and white images, published 2010, $110 ppd. (ISBN 978-1-4507-3327-4)
A NARRATIVE REPORT: TRAINING EXPERIENCES AT HARADA AUTOMOTIVE ANTENNA (PHILIPPINES) INC., FIRST CAVITE
INDUSTRIAL ESTATE LANGKAAN I
DASMARINAS, CAVITE
Presented to the Faculty of
Cavite State University-Rosario Campus
Rosario, Cavite
In partial fulfillment
of the requirements for the degree
Bachelor of Science in Business Management
Major in Marketing Management
CHRISTIAN C BOCALAN
JULY 2017
The inclusion of text is successful at encouraging rather than limiting a viewer’s interpretation of art and this is most evident in power of text, particularly narrative text. The inclusion of text does not hinder the meaning of the image, but encourages the viewer to think beyond what is presented, thus develop multiple interpretations—this is the power of narrative text that leads the viewer to create a relationship of identification or empathy with the subject matter and the artist. For these reasons, artists such as Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson, Pat Ward Williams, and Elizabeth Catlett include text as a narrative tool within their artwork, allowing the viewer to connect more closely with the subject matter and the artist. The use of first person narrative allows the viewer to temporarily occupy the artist’s identity or the subject’s identity, where the viewer can then develop an intimate relationship with the artwork. When a viewer visits an art gallery, often the viewer skims through the painting, sculpture, mixed media, or photograph at hand. The visual content is quickly consumed. Hence, a piece of art is barely given time for interpretation or deconstruction of its meaning. Too often people come out of art galleries looking exhausted, as if they had walked through a store rather than an art showing. The viewer does not take the time to discern the content of the visual arts and thus, the art is left without or little critical assessment. However, aiding the visual with text can change the viewer’s perception or encourage multiple interpretations of the work. Text causes the viewer to stop, and pause to read around, under, or, above the image, which leads the viewer to further assess the image. When establishing a relationship between the text and the image, the viewer is using the mechanism of dual coding. Dual coding, a phrase coined by Allan Pavio, a psychologist of the theory of cognition, is the process in which our mind shifts back and forth between the writing system and the visual system. Incorporating narrative text within the artwork enables the viewer to exercise dual coding to construct a unique relationship of identification or empathy.
To continue reading this paper please email art historian, Madelyne Oliver at: madelyne.oliver@yahoo.com
Looking & Learning - telling stories originally posted in SchoolArts Magazine (November 2011)
Developed by the Kutztown University Looking and Learning Team, with Dr. Marilyn Stewart and graduate students Zoe Dehart, Amanda Deibert, Cassie langan, Ellen Pados, and Rhona Tomel.
Written by Marilyn Stewart, professor of art education, and zoe Dehart, art teacher in two sixthe-grade gateway school - Communication and Technology Gateway and Agriculture, Science & Ecology Gateway - Reading, PA.
Powerpoint by C.Pena-Martinez, Jackson Middle School, San Antonio, TX
Portfolio, Commentary and Notes
A portfolio of black and white photographs taken during numerous craft buying trips to craft villages around Oaxaca, Mexico. Most of the photographs center on the artisans, their lives and their surroundings (always more interesting to me) rather than on the craft objects. This book is the first in a planned series on other regions in Mexico; next, Michoacán and Chiapas
Hardcover with jacket, portfolio & commentary, 11” x 8.5”, 82 pages. 48 black and white images, published 2010, $110 ppd. (ISBN 978-1-4507-3327-4)
A presentation about Kurt Weisers ceramic artwork; Continental Drift. This presentation includes information about the artist and the artwork itself; where it is situated, what it's about, how it was made etc
Created by Georgia Carter-Kanowski and Jordan Moy
1. Thanksgiving
1935
by Doris Lee
The ArT InsTITuTe of ChICAgo
Department of Museum Education
Division of Student and Teacher Programs
Crown Family Educator Resource Center
2. Doris Lee Doris Lee grew up on the banks of the Mississippi River in rural
Aledo, Illinois. As a youngster on her grandfather’s farm she
developed a great appreciation for the spirit of the American
(American, 1905–1983) family, a theme that continued to appear in her paintings long
after she moved away from the Midwest.
In 1935, The Art Institute of Chicago awarded Lee the Logan
Prize Fund for her painting Thanksgiving, which then entered
the 20th-century collection. Her painting offered a quaint
Thanksgiving, 1935 model of domesticity that appealed to those who were tired
of the complication of modern life in the 1930s. To a genera-
Oil on canvas; 28 1/16 x 40 1/16 in. (71.3 x 101.8 cm.) tion exhausted with the trials of the Depression (1929–38), the
return to a simpler past became more desirable as the search
Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Logan Prize Fund, 1935.313 for a new national identity continued. Her work received
public and critical acclaim for its earthy qualities and sense of
humor. One critic described her paintings as “fresh, with the
charm of innocence.”
Thanksgiving celebrates the joys of family ties. The bustling
kitchen is filled with life and love as a group of women pre-
pares the annual feast. It is clear that to Lee the meaning
of the holiday lies in the ritual of its preparation. Women,
children, and animals fill the entire composition, even the back
room. Every character’s personality emerges through body
language; even the dog’s demeanor is apparent as he dozes
under the warm stove to escape the commotion. In this cozy
space a steaming turkey emerges from the oven, the table is
set, dough is rolled out, and babies fidget in the corner.
The painting, although simple in subject, is filled with tiny
details. The edges of the cast-iron stove gleam from sunlight
entering the opposite window; a delicate brown line creates
a shadow defining the collar of the woman rolling out dough;
the floral patterns on the women’s dresses are, like the rest of
the painting, composed of small dots and splotches of paint.
Realistic touches like the small still-life painting near the door,
the designs on the wallpaper, and the cat’s subtle marmalade
stripes make it clear that the painting was inspired by the
artist’s observations of events of everyday life. Each figure is
carefully positioned to create a sense of balance and unity in
the painting. Lee’s intelligent use of color and arrangement
of figures creates a polished effect, evidence of her impressive
technical skill and use of perspective, honed by study in Italy
and France.
The artist’s national popularity grew with her exposure in
the mass media. Life magazine commissioned many paintings
from her. For the magazine, she first depicted sights she en-
countered on travels through Mexico and Cuba, and later her
impressions of the musical Oklahoma. She also designed ads
for the 1948 film The Pirate which were seen by millions
of moviegoers all over the country.
Lee’s expert technique gave her work the power of believ-
ability. Her talent for painting “the comic frenzy of people in
action,” as Fortune magazine put it, earned her the respect of
a nation yearning for the charm and security of the traditional
hearth and home.
3. Glossary Math
• Create and extend geometric patterns using pictorial images
to cover and area such as the red and white tiles on the floor.
Have the students redesign the floor using another geomet-
ric shape and different colors.
perspective: Devised by artists in 15th-century Italy, this
technique is used to create the illusion of three-dimensional
• Have the students find 90-degree angles (table, cupboard,
objects and space on two-dimensional (flat) surfaces, so
squares, doorways). What other angles can be found?
that things appear as they do in reality.
• Artists often use different techniques to create three-dimen-
sional images on a flat surface. Two of those techniques are
overlapping images and things made smaller as they move
back in the space. Have students find examples of each.
Classroom Activities and sOCIaL stuDIes
Discussion Questions • Thanksgiving is a holiday that can bring families together.
Discuss with students their family traditions at Thanksgiving
or during other times of the year, noting the differences in
beliefs and styles of celebration. Have students write about
and illustrate a favorite family tradition. As an alternative to
this activity, have students interview grandparents to learn
Language arts how their celebrations of Thanksgiving (or another holiday)
• This painting is rich in detail. Play this game with your have changed over the years.
students: show them the image for 30 seconds and then
ask questions about what they remember observing. • Discuss the different contributions that family members
Questions can include: make to the effective running of a home. What job does
each individual have in Doris Lee’s painting? Have students
1. How many people are in the painting? Discuss. discuss roles that family members play on holidays or in
daily life.
2. What are they doing? Discuss.
3. Where are they? Describe the room. • Thanksgiving is a time of giving thanks for the people and
4. Does this painting show a scene from today or from long things in our lives. Have students reflect on the people,
ago? How can you tell? particularly family, for whom they are grateful. (As with this
painting, extended family plays an important role in many
5. Are there any animals in the painting? Discuss.
people’s lives.) Have students write letters of thanks to dif-
ferent family members, describing and expressing gratitude
This activity sharpens students’ skills of observation, analysis, for their various contributions.
and interpretation. Students learn how an artist can tell a
story with pictures instead of words.
• Have your students participate in a dramatic presentation
using physical expressions to communicate. Have students
choose a character from the painting and pose as the
person and then act out his/her next movements as if the
painting would come alive. Have the rest of the class guess
the character.
• Play the “I Spy” game with your students. Begin with the
phrase “I spy…” and then describe something seen in the
painting but do not name it. For example: “I spy something
that is worn. It is made out of glass and plastic. It has two
circles in it and is worn on the head (glasses).” Divide the
class in half and have one side come up with descriptions for
the other side to guess. Give points for successful guesses.
4. Related Works of Art Related Resources
for Teachers
Thanksgiving is just one of many works of art that celebrates
family. Here are additional works in the Art Institute’s perma-
nent collection that relate to family and some key themes to Baigell, Matthew. The American Scene: American Painting of the
discuss with students: 1930s. New York: Praeger, 1974. Historical overview of the 1930s
and social realism and the Federal Art Project.
1. The many definitions of family
• Edgar Degas (French). Uncle and Niece, 1875/78 Donley, Susan K. Toward a Better Balance. A Curriculum Guide
• Olowe of Ise (Nigerian, Yoruba). Veranda Post Representing for Multicultural Education. Pennsylvania Ethnic Heritage
an enthroned King and His Senior Wife, c. 1914 Studies Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1988. Curriculum
guide with accompanying crafts activities considers how eth-
• Jacob Lawrence (American). The Wedding, 1948 nicity is rooted in the family and explores the ethnic texture
of communities.
2. Different customs and lifestyles
• Cradle, Northern Plains, Crow. Lent by the Foundation for Self, Family and Community. The Art Institute of Chicago.
the Preservation of American Indian Art and Culture. Chicago, Illinois, 1997. Slide packet introducing concepts of
self, family, and community as expressed by artists from
• Jan Steen (Dutch). The Family Concert, 1666
different times and cultures.
• Grant Wood (American). American Gothic, 1930
Wigmore, Deedee. Doris Lee: Images of Delight 1930–1950. New
3. Needs such as shelter, clothing, and food York: D. Wigmore Fine Art, Inc., 1996. Catalog of an exhibition
• Wall Fragment from the Tomb of Amenemhet and His Wife held October, 1996.
Hemet (Egyptian), c. 1800 b.c.e.
• Frans Snyders (Flemish). Still Life with Game, 1614
• Parts of an Armor Garniture, Italy, 1570–80
4. Places where families live
• Horace Pippin (American). Cabin in the Cotton, 1933/37 Related Resources
for Students
• Thorne Miniature Rooms
• Sesson Shukei (Japanese). Landscape of the Four Seasons,
16th century
5. Time period of the work of art and its possible relation
to family life Conner, Patrick. People at Home. Looking at Art Series. E.
Sussex, England: Wayland Publishers, 1982. Thirty-five famous
• This theme can be applied to all works of art paintings illustrating people at home, including scenes of birth,
death, leisure, work, and weddings.
Peppin, Anthea. People in Art. Brookfield, Connecticut: The
Millbrook Press, Inc., 1991. Examines the way in which people
are depicted in different kinds of art.
Yenawine, Philip. People. New York: Delacort Press, 1993. This
book from the Museum of Modern Art looks at portraits and
other pictures of people in art.
Yenawine, Philip. Stories. New York: Delacorte Press, 1993.
The works of art included in this book from the Museum of
Modern Art depict everyday stories.