High School Advanced Drawing and Painting
Camouflage Color Scheme Paintings
Rebecca A. Shampine, Indian
River High School, Philadelphia, New York
Objectives:
- Students will understand and be able to use gradients
to define their animal and background.
- Students will learn the seven major color schemes:
Monochromatic, Complementary, Split-Complementary, Analogous, Triad, Warm,
and Cool.
- Students will understand a fragmented grid.
- Students will be able to draw a realistic animal in
a line drawing format.
Materials:
- Animal Books and magazines
-
Drawing Pencils
-
Canvas Board
or
Stretched Canvas
- Rulers
-
Acrylic Paint
- Acrylic gloss medium
- Water cups
-
Sable Brushes
Vocabulary:
Gradient
Complementary
Analogous
Cool
Split-Complementary
Triad
Warm
Monochromatic
Fragmented Grid
Procedures:
1) Students will be introduced to the seven main color
schemes and be shown examples to illustrate each color scheme. The project
will be explained and the teacher will illustrate how you can select a
color scheme based on the type of animal they want to draw.
2) Students will be shown an example of a drawing of
an animal, done by the teacher or a student in a previous class, to show
students what their line drawing of the animal will look like. It should
define the form and show details without any shading. They will select
their animal from magazines and books and begin drawing.
3) Students will observe a demo on creating a fragmented
grid. The teacher will show the students how to measure every two inches
all the way around the edge of the canvas. Then they must connect each
point with a point across the canvas, but it cannot be the one directly
across from it because it would then form a regular grid. The lines will
all cross and create a fragmented appearance.
4) Students will select a color scheme that they want
to work with.
5) Students will See a teacher demo on how to paint each
shape or section in with a gradient of their color scheme. In order to
define the outter edge of the animal and define the details, the contrast
between the edges of the gradients must be strong. For example, if the
animal is being painted with a dark to light gradient on the fur, then
the spots must contrast that in order for them to show up.
6) Students will be shown how to use water or medium
to help them blend well.
7) Students will continue to paint the gradients until
the project is completed.