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Art Appreciation Made Easy

I feel very comfortable teaching music appreciation.

Art appreciation is another story. 

This year, thanks to our simple morning basket, art appreciation has become EASY and quite enjoyable.  

Learning about art and how to APPRECIATE art brings my children one step closer to their creator. It helps them develop a sense of beauty, and it brings further context to our history studies. 

Art Appreciation Made Easy

One Simple Art Appreciation Resource

As we continue to strive for a more simple, beautiful homeschool, I have chosen just ONE art appreciation resource for this school year.

(You will see that I may offer up other resources, but if we only use this ONE THING, I will know I have provided my children with some art appreciation.)

We study one painting each week - during our morning time. 

After breakfast we review the week's memory work, watch CNN Student News, and then have a music appreciation or art appreciation lesson. 

Each art time takes us about 15 minutes - just enough time for my children to analyze and talk about the painting of the week. I have been so pleased that names like BOTTICELLI, DURER, and VAN EYCK have been integrated into our conversations!  

Our book includes a timeline of artists and when they completed their works, as well as important dates in history, such as the first excavation of ancient Rome, Columbus discovering the New World, the invention of the first spectacles, the first appearance of Halley's Comet, and many other events. 

Why have I been neglecting art appreciation for so long when it is this easy and enjoyable? 

There are MANY other books in this series, as well.  I am anticipating we will be using them after this first book.  These are just a few that caught my eye:  



Digging Deeper into Art Appreciation

As usually happens in our homeschool, one of my children will become interested in a particular artist through our studies. At that point, I believe it is important to have materials placed throughout our home so they can investigate further if they wish. 

In addition to library books I might seek out, I invested (when the kids were little) in the Getting To Know The World's Greatest Artists books. They are informative, silly, and fun - with many cartoons that appeal to children. 


Making Art Appreciation Fun With Games

One last resource I want to share with you, and that will be enough. 

Remember -- too much information can actually overwhelm and confuse, but a few quality resources made available to our children can enrich their lives. 

The Renaissance Art Game is just one example of how to make learning about art fun!  

You can play memory match, Go Fish, and also learn about the pieces of art with the book that accompanies the cards. This is BY FAR my favorite art game. 

There are some other art cards I have my eye on... which we may need to use in our homeschool this year!

Art Game: Van Gogh & Friends
BIRDCAGE/JOHN N. HANSEN

Do you teach art appreciation in your homeschool?

Tell me about it in the comments below!


Incorporating Fine Arts in CC Cycle 1

The older my children become, the more thankful I become for the time we have spent learning about music and art. 

Fostering a love of art and music not only creates more well-rounded children, it also creates children with an appreciation of TRUTH, BEAUTY, and GOODNESS. 

One of the biggest advantages of homeschooling is that children have the luxury of studying art and music in ABUNDANCE!  

This year we will be very INTENTIONAL about incorporating fine arts. A SIMPLE plan of attack - one that will work in the schedules of my elementary and high schooler - is in order.

Incorporating Fine Arts in CC Cycle 1

Fine Arts FIRST THING!

Mornings are the perfect time for fine arts. 

This year we will intersperse art & music, making sure to incorporate a little of each every single day. 

LESS IS MORE - and by incorporating a little bit of art and music into the first hour of our day, I hope to make a lasting impression. 

Breakfast is the time in our homeschool when we are all together (and this year dad will be with us since he works from home now -- hooray!) and I can easily incorporate fine arts. 

During this time together at the table we always have a devotion, watch CNN Student News, and then will move on to art or music study. 

Hopefully, we can compact these things into 45 minutes. 

While I'm not always a stickler for "the schedule" - morning is a time when the kids get up (usually by 7:30), and we are all together at the breakfast table by 8 a.m.  This is the best way for our family to get everything accomplished in a day. 


Art Appreciation

We have several artists on our schedule this year. (They are recommended in our CC Foundations guide.)  

While we may not study the artist on the exact week, I have just come up with a rough schedule of artists we can study during the first 12 weeks. 

  • Ghiberti
  • Angelico
  • Durer
  • Michelangelo
  • El Greco

My plan is to read a brief biography (which I will locate online) about each of these artists, and then find representative works online as we go.  

We will be using Discovering Great Artists as our guide. 

I have also found this GREAT little deck of art appreciation cards for Go Fish.  I imagine we will be using them quite a bit! 


I also LOVE the suggestions made in this post about using art books to foster art appreciation.  I am a firm believer in strewing books around the home to help us learn about a particular subject. 

In the past I have tried creating a strict "schedule", but I have found that it inhibited my children's sense of exploration. If I simply start by saying "Let's see what we can find out about Angelico", I find that we do research together and make interesting discoveries. 

Too much rigid planning can stifle creativity! 



Music Appreciation

This year we will be focusing on a variety of composers, from Bach to Mozart.

In our Foundations guide Bach, Handel, and Mozart are covered. We will learn about other composers from their respective musical eras (the Baroque & Classical Eras). 

{ In case you hadn't gathered, this area is my favorite - and my area of expertise because I was an elementary music teacher. }

And, of course I will be using the curriculum I've written - SQUILT

This year, as part of Cycle 1, we will be working our way through SQUILT Volume 1 & 2 (Baroque and Classical Eras).  

 

What I LOVE about SQUILT is that it is 100% open-and-go -- each lesson teaches my kids about a great musical work and teaches them how to SPEAK and WRITE about a piece of music. 

We can simply sit at the breakfast table with the iPad or laptop and conduct a SQUILT lesson from there.   It's so simple -- I designed it for ALL parents - especially those with NO MUSICAL BACKGROUND!   

AND, because the SQUILT site is freshly redesigned, I'm offering a 25% discount on any SQUILT volume or bundle -- this week only!   


That's the SIMPLE plan of attack for fine arts this year in our homeschool. 

There are no elaborate schedules or online booklists, just a plan that we can follow - while allowing for interest and creativity to lead the way.

What is YOUR plan of attack for studying fine arts?  

Incorporating Fine Arts in CC Cycle 1