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Math and Art with Sol LeWitt's Sculpture: "1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6"
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CC BY-NC-SA
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Using the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts website, students explore the sculptural work of 20th Century Conceptual artist Sol LeWitt to expand their understanding of geometric concepts, creatively play with mathematical ideas, and be inspired to make art of their own.

The website page provides a scaffolded approach to exploring Sol LeWitt's sculpture titled "1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6." culminating in a challenge for students to build a 3-D Tinkercad model of a geometry concept of their own choosing.

Subject:
Computation and Estimation
Cross-Curricular
Fine Arts
Mathematics
Measurement and Geometry
Number and Number Sense
Patterns, Functions, and Algebra
STEM/STEAM
Visual Art
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Interactive
Lesson Plan
Visual Media
Provider:
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (VMFA)
Date Added:
07/23/2019
Narrative Art: What's Your Story?
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC
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Shared narratives can be found in art from many cultures and throughout time. Use this resource to encourage students to explore diverse narratives, discover their own personal narrative, and express that narrative through their own work of art.Using provided engagment strategies students are able to hone Critical, Creative, and Communication skills using works of art in the Virginia Museum of Arts collection. Discussion prompts and activities offer instructional oppotunities for building Collaboration and Citizenship skills. 

Subject:
American History
Communication and Multimodal Literacy
Visual Art
Writing
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Author:
VMFA Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Date Added:
07/26/2019
Narrative Art: What's Your Story? Art in your life.
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC
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Shared narratives can be found in art from many cultures and throughout time. Use this resource to encourage students to explore diverse narratives, discover their own personal narrative, and express that narrative through their own work of art.Using provided engagment strategies students are able to hone Critical, Creative, and Communication skills using works of art in the Virginia Museum of Arts collection. Discussion prompts and activities offer instructional oppotunities for building Collaboration and Citizenship skills. Symbols that we find in literature and the use of figurative language to describe artworks go hand in hand.  Find two pieces of artwork that move you one in Virginia and one in an international museum and create multiple examples of 10 different types of figuative language.

Subject:
American History
Communication and Multimodal Literacy
Visual Art
Writing
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Author:
Caroline Wray
Date Added:
12/12/2019
Rome: Interactive Exploration - Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Only Sharing Permitted
CC BY-NC-ND
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0.0 stars

Explore objects from Ancient Rome and discover how Romans portrayed themselves and wished to be remembered. This student-facing resource includes text, images, maps, as well as interactive exercises that call invite students to closely examine authentic objects from Ancient Rome.

The first three activities provide close-up views with guiding questions and background information. What will you learn about the connections between power, status, citizenship, and images in ancient Rome? How do these objects relate to identity and how people are portrayed or remembered? Who is represented and who is not?

The next three investigations offer pop-up hot spots on selected objects to reveal intriguing information about Roman culture, gods, goddesses, and mythology.

How do these objects relate to what the Romans thought was important?

Subject:
Fine Arts
History/Social Sciences
Social Sciences
Visual Art
World History
Material Type:
Interactive
Reading
Visual Media
Provider:
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (VMFA)
Author:
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Date Added:
10/26/2020
SIFTing and Seeing: An Approach to Looking at Art
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC
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Why look at art? Art is one way humans communicate ideas to one another. Sifting through the information art presents takes careful and purposeful looking. Virginia Museum of Fine Arts has a resource that can foster close-looking and thoughtful analysis of artworks from any period or culture. Use this resource (see link) to practice looking at art before a visit to the art museum or to document thinking about art as a primary source of insight into a culture or time period. Included in this resource are: a) Works of art from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and a link to find more.b) Simple framework and prompts to help students document their analysis and thinking. c) Discussion prompts.  

Subject:
Communication and Multimodal Literacy
History/Social Sciences
Humanities
Visual Art
Material Type:
Lesson Plan
Author:
VMFA Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Date Added:
08/06/2019
Thematic Explorations: Portraits - Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Only Sharing Permitted
CC BY-NC-ND
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In this Thematic Exploration, students will explore the different ways artists represent individuals in portraits. They will learn to gather clues about the time period in which the portrait was created, the lives of the subjects, and the thoughts of the artists.

Using portraits from the VMFA's collection, students will explore the Who, What, When, Where, and Why of portraiture. Guiding questions are woven throughout the activity, alongside a close examination of seven different portraits from a variety of different eras and cultures. Students are encouraged to observe, interpret, analyze, and reflect thoughtfully in each step. This activity also includes summative reflection questions to wrap up the conversation, as well as an optional "Create Your Own Portrait" activity.

Subject:
Fine Arts
History/Social Sciences
Visual Art
Material Type:
Interactive
Student Guide
Provider:
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (VMFA)
Author:
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Date Added:
01/26/2021
What's the Big Idea? - Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Conditional Remix & Share Permitted
CC BY-NC-SA
Rating
0.0 stars

Artists throughout time have come to their work with stories to tell, concepts to explore, and puzzles to work out. By looking at works of art with a curious and investigative eye, students may connect with these artistic ideas while exercising creative and critical thinking skills. This resource pairs objects from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts collection with simple engagement activities to help students thoughtfully consider and unpack the big ideas each artwork presents.

Subject:
Communication and Multimodal Literacy
Cross-Curricular
English
Fine Arts
History/Social Sciences
Humanities
Mathematics
Measurement and Geometry
Research
Visual Art
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Provider:
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (VMFA)
Author:
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Date Added:
03/27/2020