I’m currently collecting ideas for a sculpture and mixed media class for 6-9 year olds that I’ll be teaching in a couple months. In my internet meanderings, I came across this activity posted on the schoolartsroom blog which involves creating dioramas that depict camouflaged animals in their environments. I just might have to incorporate this activity (or some version of it) into my class!
This is the motivation and procedure for the activity (for a comprehensive description including vocab words, objectives, and materials, look here):
Motivation:
I first display reproductions of artworks that depict different habitats, drawing from various times and cultures, and discuss them with students. Beverly Dolittle’s amazing camouflaged artworks are engaging for young students, as are works by artists such as Henry Rousseau and John James Audubon. We discuss the characteristics of different habitats and how camouflage is an adaptation for survival. We brainstorm a list of ecosystems and camouflaged animals found in them and then look at and discuss a PowerPoint I made of camouflaged animals in their environments.Procedures:
Students next choose an environment, as their choices determine what color of 9” x 9” (or 12” x 12”) construction paper each will start with for the background of the diorama. They can chose from tan for a desert environment, green for a forest or rainforest, white for an arctic environment, or blue for an underwater scene.
Once they receive their chosen papers, students follow the steps below:
Begin with a 9” or 12” square piece of colored construction paper. Fold it in half and then in half again (it will now have 4 square sections). Open the paper and cut on one fold only to the center of the square. After making the cut, carefully overlap the two cut edges and fold the paper into a “box” (actually a corner of a box). Glue together the overlapping edges.
Use construction paper to construct two- and three-dimensional figures and objects and glue them in the “box.” Fill in the area formed by the box with paper sculpture techniques (folding tabs so objects can stand, curling paper, going beyond the space of the box, overlapping shapes).
I encourage students to start with larger pieces of paper before moving to numerous details. All kinds of paper sculpture techniques and paper can be used in the dioramas. The animals, birds, or underwater creatures for the dioramas can be made from paper or clay or from other modeling materials. (If students are making clay animals, they make those first and then work on the dioramas while waiting for the clay to dry and be fired.)
When the dioramas are complete, students write narratives or artist statements to accompany their artworks for display. The artworks make a really impressive display when grouped in fours, back to back, of like habitats.
