Redesigning Food Packaging

By Tobi Meuwissen

As more schools adopt the timetabled approach of providing students with one term of DT followed by a term of Art, Tobi shares a project that could be used to link the two together. The project reuses cardboard food packaging and materials such as ink, coloured paper, paints and supplies that could be used to rebuild the packaging such as string and glue.

Using the reverse (plain) side of the packaging net gives students an opportunity to make their own creative response, whilst challenging both their logic and creative thinking skills. They will be encouraged to think about how they can build nets whilst experimenting with drawing, composition and type.

This resource demonstrates ways in which the outcomes can be adapted according to materials and also the level of ability of the audience.

Close up of Final Packaging by Tobi Meuwissen


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AccessArt & The Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge: Touch

To coincide with The Human Touch, an exhibition at the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, AccessArt has collated a collection of resources to help pupils and teachers explore the sense of touch in making art. 

The exhibition explore how we use our hands to leave traces, make art and symbolise emotion and intention. The resources below can be used as starting points to explore ideas about our sense of touch in the classroom or studio.

 

Drawing & Mark Making

Making “Feely” Drawings

See the Resource

Nest

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Doodle Ball

See the Resource

Drawing Like a Caveman

See the Resource

Painting with Plasticine

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Hands, Feet, Flowers

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Clay

Quick Clay Sketches

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Sensing Form

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Making Mini Food

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Painted Clay

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Fruit Pinch Pot

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Beyond Clay

Hand Casts

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Worry Dolls

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Paper Bowls

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Wave Bowls

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Drawing and Performance

The “Drawing and Performance” In the Studio event explores connections between drawing and movement. 

Drawing is often seen as a passive activity which takes place whilst we are seated; a process of making marks with a pencil whilst moving from the wrist. 

But drawing CAN be a much more physical activity – an activity which involves making marks on a much larger scale with materials other than pencils to create artwork which we approach with our whole body, and verges on performance both in terms of how drawings are made and how they are viewed.

Drawing can also of course be inspired BY performance itself – dance, film, theatre and tv can all provide exciting starting points to explore a more fluid and experimental approach to drawing. 

Find the recording of the session below.

 

Drawing dancers by Tobi Meuwissen Drawing dancers by Tobi Meuwissen

Choose stills from the video above, drawing them in panels (rectangles), to create a sequence of drawings

Draw as you watch the above video, making marks on the paper and layering image over image. Take what you need form the video, leave out what you don’t need. 

drawing in the dark

Screenshot 2021-03-16 at 11.12.41

using a tablet

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impressability project

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dressing up as a fossil

Turning ourselves into fossils

Tape, projectors, wicki sticks

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drawing with tape on walls

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shadow puppets

Shadow puppets on sticks held high

shadow puppets and whiteboards

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drawing with tape on walls

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painting the storm

Graphite and watercolour cloud and rain

missing you

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Drawing in space

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Drawing dancers by Tobi Meuwissen Drawing dancers by Tobi Meuwissen


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AccessArt Prompt Cards

The AccessArt Prompt Cards are a series of very short drawing prompts which can be used in a wide variety of situations. You can download the prompts below as a PDF.

Find the recording of the In The Studio session focusing on AccessArt’s Prompt Cards below.

DOWNLOAD THE ACCESSART PROMPT CARDS PDF

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Using the Drawing Prompts as a Warm Up

The Drawing Prompts are a great way to help learners be open about what drawing is and how they make marks on a page. 

Before you work with the drawing cards, consider enabling learners to understand how they hold a pencil, how much pressure they apply, and how they move their arm will effect the marks they make. See Anatomy of a Pencil resource here. 

moving and drawing

Betsy Dadd at St Bede's

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Drawing prompt - drawing for mindfulness

Anatomy of a pencil

Hold your pencil lightly in the tips of your fingers - drawing for mindfulness at Chesterton Community collge

Using the Drawing Prompts as an Aid to Well Being

The resources below share how you might use the Drawing Prompts to help learners develop their appreciation of drawing in the “now” – a useful skill to help build a sense of well being.

drawing as a tool for mindfulness

Mark making - warm up at Chesterton Community College - Drawing for Mindfulness

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Using the Drawing Prompts as an Aid to Exploring

In the resource below, the AccessArt Drawing prompts were used as a way to help teachers (or learners of any age) explore artwork made by others (in this case an exhibition of the work by Degas at the Fitzwilliam Museum). The drawing prompts help learners collect information in a visual way and help make an individual creative resource.

Drawing in a museum or gallery

Seated Dancer 1873–74 Edgar Degas


Progression Plan for Making

The Progression Plan for Making below, is taken from our more comprehensive Progression Plan here.

Click on the image below to launch the PowerPoint, and then click on the photos within the PowerPoint to link to resources. Please note the resources included are for suggestion only, there are many more resources available on AccessArt. 


Roots & Shoots: A Sculptural Challenge

See This Resource Used In Schools…

Year 2, St Clare's Primary School, Coalville, Leicestershire
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Year 2, Whitchurch Primary
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Welcome to AccessArt’s Newest Team Member!

Tobi

AccessArt is really pleased to welcome Tobi Meuwissen to our team! Tobi is a recent graduate from Manchester School of Art, where she gained a First Class BA (Hons) in Illustration with Animation. 

Tobi will be working with artists and educators to help create exciting content for AccessArt, and also helping with admin, membership and marketing. 

Tobi is a talented artist and communicator and we think she will be a real asset to the team. 

“I can’t wait to get started with the AccessArt team, trustees and members!”

 

Tobi Meuwissen

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Tobi Meuwissen


DrawAble: The Secret Powers of Sketchbooks

By Jo Blaker

Sketchbooks are powerful tools. Enjoy these three videos in which Jo Blaker shares why sketchbooks have secret powers.

*If you are having issues viewing videos it may be due to your schools firewall or your cookie selection. Please check with your IT department.*

Sketchbook Powers Number 1 & 2

Secret powers numbers 1 and 2: Jo describes how sketchbooks can be a door into a hidden world, and a place to explore what you feel like as a person.

Sketchbook Power Number 3

Secret power number 2: Sketchbooks can be a weapon; a weapon you can use to fight boredom, ease anxiety, and find gratitude.

Sketchbook Power Number 4

Secret power numbers 4: Sketchbooks can be a laboratory – a safe place to experiment, test and discover.


Diverse Mark Making

Last week we looked at how we can use sound to help develop our mark making in a very intuitive way. Today we are going to look at how we can develop our mark making skills in a slightly more analytical way – through examining the work of other artists. By doing this, and by using our new mark-making vocabulary in the drawings we make, we can begin to understand how different types of marks create personality and meaning in our drawings.

As with all the AccessArt resources, we want to help learners aim high, but through a series of small steps. And at each of the steps we ensure we are encouraging open-ended, creative experiences so that the learning is really owned by the learner.

Find the recording of the In The Studio session exploring diverse mark-making below.

 

Activities which help learners identify new marks…

Finding marks through artists

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thoughtful mark making

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drawing clouds and mark making

Drawing clouds and mark making

Typography for children

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Monoprint with Oil Pastel

Carbon and oil pastel mono print

Flat Yet Sculptural making

"Flat yet sculptural" standing dog!

Making Sculptural Wild Things

A Wild Thing!


Finding Marks Through Drawings Made by Artists

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Year 3 Redesdale Primary
Year 3, Whitchurch Primary School
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Session Recording: Finding Marks Made by Artists

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Exploring Sound & Drawing

What is the connection between sound and mark making, and how can we use one to enable an exploration in the other?

At it’s most essential, drawing is the result of our bodies moving while we hold some kind of drawing tool. How we move while we draw (how fast, how slow, how carefully, how chaotically) is not something we often consider – we are usually too busy looking at our drawing on the page.

The sounds around us mark and describe the passing of time: birdsong, traffic, machinery, speech, music. Each sound reverberates through our body, and we react, at some level, to everything we hear.
Sound is energy, and our bodies respond with movement – sometimes on a micro scale (a tap of a finger) sometimes through the whole body (we dance).

How can sound become a gesture on the page? The exercises and resources below explore how we can use sound to create energy, rhythm and movement which transform through our body and through the drawing material into mark making on the page.

Find the recording of the Zoom session exploring sound and movement below.

 

Although not made in response to sound, the work of Japanese artist Tomoko Kawao shows how drawing relies on movement of the body in response to a stimulus. Even when we draw from the wrist with a fine drawing material, the movements we make, the pressure we apply, and our empathy with the material, dictates the marks we make.

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Painting the storm

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Drawing to a metronome

Crinkled paper

Drawing in the dark

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Inspired by Miro

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a cheerful orchestra

Some people invented a new instrument by joining lots of things together

Sketchbooks and Performance

My Gaudi City Installation- Fabriano, Sugar and Watercolour Paper, Water Based Paints, Oil Pastels and Pencil 2012


Design and Build: An Electric Wooden Bike

Lluis shares how and why he designed and built an electric wooden bike.

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In the Studio with AccessArt: Creative Zoom Sessions for Members

A fabulous session-just the right length and so clear and inspiring-I know what I will be spending my day doing tomorrow.

It really was the perfect CPD, a combination of excellent modelling, an opportunity to have a go ourselves and excellent signposting of how to use the skill. The decision to make these sessions 30 minutes is also a fabulous idea. As well as being a brilliant addition to my subject leadership it was also such a welcome relief to do something so enjoyable in these trying times!

AccessArt is excited to announce we will be starting a series of creative drop-in zoom sessions for AccessArt members, to help bring AccessArt ideas to life! Find out more below about how you can use these sessions, and find a list of dates and themes here. 

These sessions are recorded and available for members to access after the event. We also create resource pages from the content/themes explored. Find the resources and recordings of past events here. 

 

Secure with an elastic band

In the Studio with AccessArt

AccessArt runs an ongoing programme of drop-in creative zoom sessions for AccessArt members. Sessions will:

  • Aim to bring to life through practical demonstration a particular skill, process or idea

  • Last just 20 to 30 minutes, making it easy for you to fit into your day and absorb new ideas

  • Link to an AccessArt resource so that you can then share the idea with your audience (learners of all ages)

  • Members will be able to access the event from a link posted on the events page near the time of the session, (the webpage will be behind the membership wall). Simply login as a full AccessArt member and join the zoom.

  • Watch or Participate: Before each session we will let you know what materials you need to try the activity. You can watch the demonstration and hear the ideas and processes brought to life, or you can have a go along side – it’s up to you. There will be time for questions after each activity and we will share how you can use that activity in a variety of contexts. 

The sessions are aimed at:

  • Teachers, facilitators, educators of all ages – use the sessions to develop your own personal creativity or as short CPD to develop your teaching skills and understanding

  • Learners aged 16 upwards – use the sessions to develop your own creativity

  • Parents of children of all ages

Browse our timetable of up and coming sessions and join us wherever you live. Attendance is open to full AccessArt members. All times are GMT. 

Questions? email info@accessart.org.uk


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