Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Keep Calm...

and finish the DC CAS!  The past week and a half has been really tough on everyone because of standardized testing.  It has been a test of endurance as much as a test of knowledge.  Today is the last day of testing (with tomorrow as make ups) so I am doing my best to channel my inner peace! One more day.


Wednesday, April 24, 2013

One Million Bones

Over the past two days, one section of 7th grade students participated in the national project One Million Bones.  One Million Bones is a social justice public art project which displays one million handmade bones to bring awareness to lives lost to genocide.  People from all over the world are submitting bones to this project which will be installed on the National Mall in June.  We are shipping our bones off later this week.

Below is a video promoting the project.

And of course, here are some pictures of our bones.  It is a mix of bones pre- and post- paint.  We made our bones out of clay and then painted them with acrylic paint.






















Friday, April 19, 2013

The last of the blossoms

Here are the last of the cherry blossoms.  I really love the diversity of representations in this group.  These are from my Wednesday art elective.









Friday, April 12, 2013

One last portrait

One last beautiful self portrait, I was so pleased he finished this today!


A few blossoms

I love love love that everyone interpreted the cherry blossom assignment differently!  These are from 8th grade.  Art elective blossoms should be out by next Wednesday.













Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Cherry Blossom Obsessed!

I am officially cherry blossom obsessed.  My 8th graders and my art elective students are all working on cherry blossom ink paintings.  Here are some works in progress.  I'm hoping for full blooms next week!








Saturday, April 6, 2013

Not Quite Yet...

I walked down to the tidal basin to check on the blossoms today and they were not open just yet.  Still took some nice pictures.






And walking back, I encountered a pillow fight on the mall in honor of National Pillow Fight Day.  Next year I will be sure to have my calendar marked!


Friday, April 5, 2013

Vanitas!

Vanitas! by Jeanne Silverthorne is a fun, refreshing, and smart exhibit at the Phillips Collection.  Vanitas! is part of the Intersections series which features up and coming artists who's work intersects in some way with permanent collection of the Phillips.  With some intersection artists, the connection to the permanent collection has sometimes felt forced, diluting the quality of the art (in my opinion) whereas Silverthorne's work is independently meaningful but is enhanced when placed in conversation with masterworks in the collection.  I love her work because it is playful and darkly comedic- using brightly colored rubber as a medium automatically gives her work a childlike and comical quality and the inclusion of highly realistic bugs imbues the work with a sense of life and death (vanitas!).  In addition, it has deep art historical references so it is not only whimsical but also comments on the vanitas tradition, pop art, and our reverence of certain 'important' artists.  The first time I saw this exhibit I spent about 40 minutes looking, laughing and discussing with great enthusiasm her work with on of the museum attendants and even reorganized my the tour I was giving that day to include the exhibit.  I love it and I think you might too.

Here are a few pictures I took at the exhibit:
A rubber relief of blue rounded flowers replete with insects crawling on them in conversation with a more traditional still life.


 A fantastic flower and venus flytrap grouping setting innocently on a mantlepiece near the famous Georges Braque bird.

 The absolutely magnificent and confounding configuration of an electrical candelabra with ill balanced candles that are twisted into a double helix formation and are imprinted with the letters of our genetic code.  And it's, of course, surrounded by more traditional still life paintings (Chardin and Gris).

I love the twisted and melting appearance of the candles, reminiscent of Dali or Alice in Wonderland.

 The bundle of "electrical" cords at the base of the sculpture.  Why is the candelabra electric? Why are the cords so unnecessarily long?

Lovely rose relief with flies and a caterpillar.

One of my favorite pairings (pun intended!), a melting unplugged desk lamp hovering over sliced pears right below an absolutely gorgeous and luminous Marjorie Phillips painting of pears.

This one takes the cake for me.  An elegant, sophisticated, and revered Cezanne Still Life placed next to some ugly flowers (on mantle) and a gross rubber plant that is leaking a milky substance and covered in synthetic ants, flies and other insects.

I also really enjoyed that there were two dead bird paintings (featured in an earlier post) on the stairwell leading to the exhibit, practically hitting you over the head with the vanitas theme.  While I might have viewed the dead birds as depressing on their own, in conversation with the Silverthorne, the over the top macabre nature of the paintings made me smile.




This exhibit is a must see if you are in the DC area.