Ted Harrison Landscapes



I did this art lesson last year. I thought it was very successful not only did students learn about landscapes but those different than the ones around them in the city they live in. We looked at the work of Ted Harrison a Canadian artist. I think mountain landscapes or anything with an organic shape lend itself well with glue drawing because as I told students, "it is hard to get a perfect straight line". We first talked about what a landscape is. A lot students recognized that yes the word landscape has the word land in it. So, I tried to make them understand all landscapes have a ground line or horizon line. Everything in the back is the sky, anything resting on the line in front is the ground.


Students drew their art in glue and then colored in with oil pastel. Last year I used black glue. I
saw a lot of art projects who used that technique. Black glue is just paint and glue mixed together. This time I decided to try just regular glue. I just didn't want a bunch a black glue sitting around that I only used a few times a year. I think it works just as good. 

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