Archive for the Happenings around Maury Category

Great Schools. Great Artists. Great Spellers.

Posted in All Grade Update, Happenings around Maury on May 19, 2013 by studiomaury

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Hello fellow art (and spelling) enthusiasts!

It’s art show season in DC! Select Maury artists will be strutting their stuff at two major art shows in the next few weeks and we’d love your support in coming out to view the work while it’s on display at two local venues. See below for specifics.

On Thursday, May 23rd from 6 – 8 pm, the District of Columbia Public Schools will host its 2013 Annual Art Exhibition’s opening reception and gallery tour in partnership with DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities at 200 I (Eye) Street SE, Washington, DC 20003. The 2013 exhibit “Great Schools. Great Artists” will feature more than 500 artworks from pre-K through 12th grade at schools throughout each of DC’s eight wards. The artwork will be hung throughout the first floor of the building, including “Mainstreet” and the multipurpose room from May 23rd – June 9th. Below are the names of the 10 Maury artists whose work will be on display.

K: Adonis Valentine
1st: Amelia Huxley, Christian Alston, Anna Griffin, Carrie Roberts
3rd: Stella Drager, David Clayton
4th: Brittany Quintero, Nina Anderson
5th: Anna Robinson

On Wednesday, May 29 from 5 – 7 pm, the DC3 will host its Art Show and Spelling Bee at Walker Jones Education Campus. This event will serve as a chance for families of the collaborative to view additional student art work and witness the local championship spelling competition. Ms. Bomba and Mr. Rogers will co-host the Spelling Bee and we need your help cheering on our top spellers. Kerry Mullins and Nicola Plavisc will represent 3rd grade, Andrew Youcom and Isaac Smoker from 4th grade and Xavier Hill and Anna Robinson from 5th.

In addition to witnessing the intense sport of spelling, a series of 12 collaborative, Jackson Pollock-inspired paintings will be on display. These stunning panels are the work of our Preschool, PreK, 1st, 4th, and 5th grade students. They are large and mesmerizing and soon to become a permanent installation back home at Maury after the show!

Mark your calendars for two exciting events highlighting Maury student achievement!

FebruAWESOME!

Posted in All Grade Update, Art Around the Corner, Happenings around Maury on March 6, 2013 by studiomaury

February is already a pretty fantastic month for reasons like Valentine’s Day, the empowering celebration of African American History, and relative to other months of the year, much fewer days (which is extra important with the thought of spring looming just around the corner).

At Maury, February also meant a powerful installation of student art work inspired by African American artists, a two week artist-in-residency with local mobile maker, Kevin Reese, and an emotional celebration of our tremendous 10 year partnership with the National Gallery of Art and Art Around the Corner.

Friday night, 3rd, 4th, and 5th graders, as well as many Maury Alum–both teachers and students–came to share memories, make art, and give thanks to the most dedicated, educational, and inspiring partnership a school could ever ask for. Under the leadership of Maury’s own Henri Cooper and museum educators from the National Gallery of Art, our students have transformed from bystanders, to participants, to experts in museum culture and art history. The skills and appreciation for art acquired during this program will endure for everyone involved for a lifetime. The quality art education and passion instilled by our gallery teachers has inspired a generation of young people to think critically, ask questions, look deeply, and empathize in a way that only art can inspire.

Pictures coming soon!

As mentioned above, all Maury students created artwork inspired by African American artists during the month of February. Check out a months work of amazing creation below!

Preschool/PreKindergarten

snowdaybloggin 135Our preschool and preK artists brightened the halls with inspiration from DC artist, Sam Gilliam. Sam is internationally recognized as one of the foremost Color Field painters. Color Field painting is an abstract style of painting that emerged in New York City during the 1940s-50s. Color Field is characterized by large areas of flat color spread across or painted onto canvas.

snowdaybloggin 136Our youngest Maury artists experimented with two different color staining techniques. One method was to blur the color created with oil pastels by blending baby oil on top. The second was to stain paper towels with food coloring. We then draped the works of stained paper to create 3D creations.

snowdaybloggin 137Our work

Sam Gilliam Carousel Form II 1969_jpgSam’s work

Sam Gilliam also works on stretched, draped, or warped canvases and adds sculptural 3D elements to his paintings. Sam is recognized as the first artist to introduce the idea of a painted canvas hanging without being stretched flat. We like it when artists take bold risks to create new and inventive expressions of art. Way to go, Mr. Gilliam and thanks for the inspiration!

timmonsShowing us how to create suction with our fingers in order to suck food coloring up through the straw

B4Xmas 019Staining paper towels with food coloring

B4Xmas 018Brilliant colors-the signature for all color field paintings

Kindergarten 

The kindergarten artwork displayed on the second floor of the East building, right outside of the art studio, has been the talk of the town for some weeks now. Students spent many weeks exploring Jacob Lawrence’s Migration Series through film, story book, and interactive games from the Philip’s Collections comprehensive children’s website. From personal accounts of some of our own migrations due to a family move or change of school, to the heroic migration of our monarchs in the fall, we were able to tap into the emotion of Lawrence’s Migration of the Negro.

The Migration Series is made up of 60 panels depicting the epic movement of African Americans from the rural South to the urban North between World War I and World War II.

Lawrence spent months distilling the subject into captions and preliminary drawings and preparing 60 boards with the help of his wife, artist Gwendolyn Knight. He created the paintings in tempera, a water-base paint that dries rapidly. To keep the colors consistent, Lawrence applied one hue at a time to every painting where it was to appear, requiring him to plan all 60 paintings in detail at once.

The series was the subject of a solo show at the Downtown Gallery in Manhattan in 1941, making Lawrence the first black artist represented by a New York gallery. Interest in the series was intense. Ultimately, The Phillips Collection and New York’s Museum of Modern Art agreed to divide it, with the Phillips buying the odd-numbered paintings. (Source: The Philip’s Collection)

B4Xmas 021We worked hard to experience a process similar to Lawrence’s. We produced 30 of his panels, the odd numbers only, and painted on various sizes of recycled cardboard. We too used tempera paint and a limited color palette to piece together the visual story. Students blended the colors they would later share–hues like light grey, brick red, forest green, periwinkle, and royal blue.

B4Xmas 011Each child became an expert on their own panel. They observed it closely, made many preliminary sketches, drew in pencil first, then pastel, on the cardboard once they were feeling confident, and then set out to paint the contour lines of Lawrence’s uniquely shaped and faceless figures and scenes. We discussed how his work reads like a  comic book with each frame telling an important part of the story. Creating work in his style was also very much like filling in a coloring book. The clear outlines gave us specific shapes to fill with color.

snowdaybloggin 074Once painting was complete, Ms. Bomba went back to add the bold black outlines to help redefine the shape of the images. Captions from our storybook were added to enhance the illustrations.

snowdaybloggin 075Be sure to stop by and experience the triumphant journey of many African Americans from the fields of the South to the booming industrial cities of the north.

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1st Grade

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New York-based artist Mickalene Thomas is best known for her elaborate paintings composed of acrylic paint & rhinestones. Thomas introduces a complex vision of what it means to be a woman and expands common definitions of beauty and Identity. Her work stems from her long study of art history and the classical genres of portraiture, landscape, and still life.

Inspired by various sources that range from the 19th century Hudson River School to Romare Bearden, she continues to explore notions of beauty from a contemporary perspective infused with the more recent influences of popular culture and Pop.

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Maury 1st graders spent weeks looking at their faces in the mirror to pinpoint the features of their faces & personalities that make them feel most beautiful. We learned how to blend our own unique skin colors and a few tricks to improve our realistic portrait painting. Just like Mickalene Thomas draws technique and inspiration from the painters of the past, we explored the importance of realistic portraits throughout history as well.

We collaged the backgrounds of our portraits with shapes and colors that would help complement our personalities. Our last step was to use glitter to add emphasis, one of our principles of design, to the part of our portrait we felt most proud of.

It was fun to learn about such a talented, successful, and strong female artist as part of our black history month celebration. We all agreed that the more living artists we learn about, the more confident we feel about taking creative risks to become the next great artist of our time!

4blog 057We learned that you cannot bottle everyone’s skin color so students worked with brown, white, black, red and yellow palettes to create their own unique skin color. It was impressive to see just how accurate these young artists were at creating the colors they wanted to use in their self portraits.

4blog 055We used scrap paper to get excess water off our brushes and to test the colors we were making before using them on our final self portraits.

B4Xmas 047Our collaged backgrounds were very important to our finished pieces. Mickalene uses so many vivid colors, patterns and textures to add meaning to her work.

snowdaybloggin 133Variety is the spice of life! So is diversity for that matter!

snowdaybloggin 057We learned that eyelids and nostrils help our portraits look more realistic, where as small details like freckles help make us unique!

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snowdaybloggin 042snowdaybloggin 051I spy a First in Math badge in this portrait!

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2nd Grade

bstudioMy favorite portrait of artist, Romare Bearden and kitty

Second grade was also working on creating realistic self portraits using proper facial proportions and mirrors. Instead of painting in tempera paint like 1st grade, these artists experimented with watercolor. They too were working on creating their own unique skin tones and representing themselves as accurately as possible.

romare-bearden-pittsburgh-memory-1964

We looked long and hard at the way Romare Bearden so beautifully used the disjointed and broken quality of collage to express meaning in his art work. His work told of the African American struggle, nostalgia for his past, and uncertain futures. His work would not have made sense in the tranquil, smooth, and almost peaceful watercolor media.  Second graders began to understand that the media we choose to create our artwork, is one of the most important decisions we make when trying to express meaning in our work.

The twist came once their watercolor portraits were complete! Students were asked to then create a self portrait in collage using the same rules and techniques applied to their realistic portraits, like proper facial proportions. We compared what it was like to work abstractly, whether we preferred realism to abstraction, and which style was best for representing ourselves the way we’d like to be seen by the viewer. The results were mixed. What do you think?

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Below are a series of side by side comparisons of one artist represented realistically through watercolor and abstractly through collage

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3rd Grade

Here are the finished products of the 3rd grade, Glenn Ligon project discussed in an earlier blog post. I can’t tell you how many parents and teachers have asked if these works are up for sale. I must admit, I am also interested in owning some of these works for myself. They are the perfect combination of bauty and power!

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snowdaybloggin 117This one is Ms. George’s  I love when teachers choose to learn and create art along with their students. Ms. George gives up her planning period to tap into her creativity each week. It sets such a nice example for her students to see her taking risks, struggling, and succeeding along with them.

 

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4th/5th Grade

With Art Around the Corner concluded, our 4th and 5th graders are just now getting back into the weekly swing of things. They are finishing up their accordion books and artist trading cards featuring historic African Americans. This project has been a meaningful collaboration between art and library. Stay tuned!

Congratulations to our 7 Maury Note Card Competition winners!

Posted in All Grade Update, Happenings around Maury on November 11, 2012 by studiomaury

Congratulations, Artists!! You did it! Students leap and dance at a recent assembly hosted by Dance for Peace during Maury’s Peace Month

The Maury Note Card contest has undergone some major changes in the last year and I truly believe that they are all for the best! This year, EVERY Maury student submitted work to the contest! This allowed for much greater diversity, creativity, and representation among students. In addition, work for the contest was completed as an in school assignment and was academically aligned to our National Art Standards—a win-win for all! Instead of drawing, which was the criteria for past contests, students were asked to make an abstract collage illustrating one of our seven Art Elements. The expressive nature of collage allowed students to take greater risks, without fear of making something look realistic.

What are the Elements of Art, you ask? The Elements of Art are essentially the language of art. Every work of art ever created consists of at least one of the seven elements: line, color, shape, form, space, texture, and value. Students have become experts at identifying the Art Elements in famous works of art, their classmate’s work, as well as the world around them.

I love this graphic organizer of the Elements of Art. Graphic organizers are great ways for visual learners to make sense of information.

Each grade level was assigned one of the Art Elements. Preliminary judges narrowed down the field and finalists were sent to Capitol Hill Village for judging.

The results are in and I am pleased to announce our 2012-2013 winners!

COLOR, Preschool/PreK: Safya Biswal, Mrs. Mitchell
LINE, Kindergarten: Zora Taylor, Ms. Vick
SHAPE, 1st grade: Henry Zatkowski, Mrs. Dorsey
TEXTURE, 2nd Grade: Niah Gamble, Ms. Mallaney
VALUE, 3rd Grade: Taleyah Evans, Ms. George
SPACE, 4th Grade: Isaac Smoker, Mr. Havner
FORM, 5th Grade: Kareema Pernell, Mrs. Cooper

Look for packaged note cards on sale at Maury and other local businesses soon! Remember, purchasing these student made works of art help support our school!

Help Maury Artists Help the Hungry by Donating Canned Goods to the Studio First!

Posted in All Grade Update, Donations please, Happenings around Maury on November 11, 2012 by studiomaury

           

ART FOOD WINNING COMBO

I know you all have been generously donating items to our thanksgiving baskets and coat drive, however, I’m writing to hit you up for canned goods just one more time, only this time, your canned good will be turned into art and then donated (I promise!).

I am not the biggest fan of holiday craft projects, however, with Thanksgiving right around the corner and our Latin American Art Unit wrapping up just before the holiday, I wanted to come up with a mini project that celebrates the value of giving thanks in combination with the fine arts.

Students will be designing colorful labels to adorn a canned good, ala Pop Artist Andy Warhol, but this time, their design must incorporate what they are thankful for with a Pop Art feel. These creative canned goods will be on display in the lobby and will later become part of our thanksgiving gift baskets or be donated to a local canned food drive.

As many cans as you can muster, the sooner the better, would be wonderful. Donations can be brought to the studio or placed in the mail room with my name on it. Thank you all for being the most generous and supportive school community around.

Already full of thanks,

Ms. Bomba

Maury Loves DonorsChoose.org!

Posted in All Grade Update, Donations please, Happenings around Maury on September 9, 2012 by studiomaury

DonorsChoose.org is changing my life as an art teacher which means donorschoose.org is also changing your student’s life. Whoa! That’s deep!

What is DonorsChoose.org? Here’s what the website says,

“DonorsChoose.org is an online charity that makes it easy for anyone to help students in need.

Public school teachers from every corner of America post classroom project requests on DonorsChoose.org. Requests range from pencils for a poetry writing unit, to violins for a school recital, to microscope slides for a biology class.

Then, you can browse project requests and give any amount to the one that inspires you. Once a project reaches its funding goal, we deliver the materials to the school.

You’ll get photos of your project taking place, a thank-you letter from the teacher, and a cost report showing how each dollar was spent. If you give over $50, you’ll also receive hand-written thank-you letters from the students.

At DonorsChoose.org, you can give as little as $1 and get the same level of choice, transparency, and feedback that is traditionally reserved for someone who gives millions.We call it citizen philanthropy.”

Just recently, I posted a project asking for legit carving tools and rubber stamps for a unit on block printing  and relief sculpture. Due to the limited supply budget, the money allotted to the art studio is usually spent on essentials, such as paper and dry media. The supplies that I asked for on donorschoose.org are ones that serve to advance and authenticate your child’s art education. As an artist myself, I never had experience carving linoleum blocks for relief prints until I was in graduate school. Your child will be exposed to this form of art making in the 4th grade! Thank you donorschoose.

It took just two days , TWO, for someone to fund my $200.00 supply list! The best part about it– $150.00 of that donation came from an absolute stranger!!

A block-printed Frida thinks that’s awesome!

Last night I posted a second, larger, project to support the blossoming ceramics program at Maury. I am asking for terracotta clay and authentic potter’s glazes. With these supplies, I hope to kick off a grand unit on the history, tradition, and creation of face jugs–from Africa to the American South. Check out this in depth video to learn more about exactly why I am so personally fascinated with face jugs.

If you would like to make a donation to the art studio and more specifically, our quest for ceramic supplies, follow this link to my donorschoose page. Thanks in advance and I can’t wait to begin creation on these intriguing and imaginative ugly jugs!

Soy MRS. Bomba!

Posted in Donations please, Happenings around Maury on July 17, 2012 by studiomaury

It’s official, after 6 years of dating, Jeff and I are married! You can now officially call me MRS. Bomba!  Crazy! The festivities took place at a friend’s farm, outside, in the wonderful 106 degree North Carolina heat on June 30th! It was one for the books and a “barn burner” to say the least. Thanks  to the Maury family for all your well wishes and loving vibes sent our way. Although I don’t have any official pictures from the wedding to share yet, I promise I’ll post at least one once they’re in for you.

In other news..I miss my students!! Even with the pleasant distraction of the wedding and honeymoon, I am still having withdrawals from teaching and seeing the kiddies every day. I have proof of this because while in Colombia for our honeymoon, I couldn’t help but snap shots of school children–especially a group of four year olds at the Botero Museum in Bogota! There is nothing like 4 year olds learning about art, in Spanish, in matching sweat suits, at a museum, to tug on my heart strings.

Botero Museum, Bogota, Colombia

Lunch time! Students walk home for lunch in Villa de Leyva

I hope everyone has had a productive beginning to summer. I wanted to share a few summer happenings with you all in case you’re looking for a way to beat the heat.

Children Events at the national Gallery of Art

 STORIES IN ART
(ages 4 to 7) This series of programs uses storytelling to introduce children to works of art. Led by museum educators, each program includes reading a children’s book, looking at one work of art in the galleries, and completing a simple hands-on activity. The summer series is presented in a four-year cycle—Explore ItalyDiscover Dutch ArtTour de France, and American Adventure—with each topic highlighting a different part of the permanent collection. Approximately 60 minutes.
Sign-in for Stories in Art will take place in the West Building Rotunda, beginning at 10:00 a.m. on weekdays and at 11:00 a.m. on Sundays, and will continue until all spaces are filled.
Summer Story Series: Tour de France
Would you like to visit France this summer? Pack your imagination and travel to the National Gallery of Art! Explore scenes of France, from its countryside to the bustling urban center of Paris, through works of art in the French galleries. You’ll meet French artists in children’s books, investigate paintings, and make a souvenir to document each adventure. Participants will receive a passport to the summer story series and a stamp for each program attended. At the end of the summer, children with three or more stamps will receive a prize!

Auguste Renoir
The Cows Are Going to Paris by David Kirby and Allen Woodman, illustrated by Chris L. Demarest
July 15 at 11:30, 12:30, 1:30, 2:30, 3:30
July 16, 17 at 10:30, 11:30, 12:30, 1:30
Join a herd of cows in a sightseeing adventure in Paris. Visit the Eiffel Tower, the Pont Neuf, shops, and cafés, then explore they city through a painting by Auguste Renoir.

Claude Monet
The Magical Garden of Claude Monet by Laurence Anholt
July 22 at 11:30, 12:30, 1:30, 2:30, 3:30
July 23, 24 at 10:30, 11:30, 12:30, 1:30
Travel to the French countryside to learn about Claude Monet’s gardens, then create a colorful work of art with oil pastels.

Edgar Degas
Bijou, Bonbon & Beau: The Kittens Who Danced for Degas by Joan Sweeney, illustrated by Leslie Wu
July 29 at 11:30, 12:30, 1:30, 2:30, 3:30
July 30, 31 at 10:30, 11:30, 12:30, 1:30
Visit the Paris Opéra and learn about the ballerinas who inspired Edgar Degas, and then color your own theater scene.

Vincent van Gogh
Katie and the Sunflowers by James Mayhew
August 5 at 11:30, 12:30, 1:30, 2:30, 3:30
August 6, 7 at 10:30, 11:30, 12:30, 1:30
Join Katie’s imaginative adventure through museum masterpieces, explore Vincent van Gogh’s still-life paintings, and make your own flower-filled work of art to take home.
ARTFUL CONVERSATIONS
(ages 8 to 11) Designed for children and adults to participate in together, this series of programs uses observation and discussion to explore works of art in the collection. Led by museum educators, each program focuses on one work of art in the galleries.
Sign-in for Artful Conversations will take place in the West Building Rotunda, beginning at 11:30 a.m. on Sundays and Wednesdays, and will continue until all spaces are filled.
Artful Conversations Summer Series
Many museum visitors spend only seconds looking at a work of art. Find out what you can discover when you spend an hour exploring one work of art! Bring your observation skills, imagination, curiosity, and creativity to these guided discussions that delve deep into masterpieces from the Gallery’s collection. Each participant will receive a booklet to accompany this series and a stamp for each program attended. If you have three or more stamps at the end of the summer, you will receive a prize!

Week 1: American and British Art
July 15, 18 at 12:00, 2:00

Week 2: French Art
July 22, 25 at 12:00, 2:00

Week 3: Italian Art
July 29 at 12:00, 2:00
August 1 at 12:00, 2:00

Week 4: Dutch and Flemish Art
August 5, 8 at 12:00, 2:00
Subscribe to Our Free E-mail Newsletters
Stay up to date with the National Gallery of Art by subscribing to our free e-mail newsletters: CASVA, educators, exhibitions, family programs, fellowships/internships, film programs, gallery talks/lectures, music programs, shop, teen programs, and Web. Select as many updates as you wish to receive. To edit your subscriber information, please go to our subscription management page.

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What’s the Buzz?

Posted in A day in the life..., All Grade Update, Happenings around Maury on May 30, 2012 by studiomaury

I apologize to all my loyal studiomaury readers out there. There have just been so many exciting happenings at Maury that I can’t seem to upload pictures fast enough! Because the blog will likely take a rest this summer with less artists to document around school, I didn’t want to leave you all hanging quite so soon. Enjoy a brief and random recap of some of the latest and greatest work from Maury artists during the Spring of 2012!

Banyan Trees!

Kindergarten explores positive and negative space through their study of root and branch heavy Banyan Trees found in many parts of Asia

Third grade gets introduced to illusion artist, MC Escher,

students demonstrate the proper technique,

and before you know it, there are 22 illusionists creating deceptive 2D drawings that appear to be popping off the page!

Second grade has been hard at work designing and constructing vessels from everyday objects after studying the Zulu people of South Africa and their inventive new way of making baskets from recycled telephone wire.

Our vessels involved less weaving and tons more glue, tape, and paper mache!

4th and 5th grade are in the thick of their art history puppets thanks to many of your wonderful donations.

After weeks of construction and paper mache, I can’t wait to reveal the finished products soon!

Preschool and PreK have become experts on the moon as part of their rock study. We have mastered the lunar phases, created visual textures to mimic the rough terrain of our moon’s surface, and even carved the moon’s phases out of Oreos!

Fifth grade takes a field trip to pull screen prints at Lou Stovall’s home studio and visits his amazing printmaking exhibition at American University’s Katzen center

Lou reads his poetry before we tour the gallery

More to come soon on all art fronts. Stay tuned!

Be Water Wise DC Rain Barrel Decorating Contest

Posted in Happenings around Maury, Welcome to the Art Studio on May 8, 2012 by studiomaury

Three dedicated Maury student artists were selected to participate in a District wide rain barrel art contest through Be Water Wise DC. Under the supervision of Ms. Bomba and Mr. Rogers, these students developed an environmentally conscious deign for our rain barrel with unique images that convey the importance of water conservation and other pertinent local water issues. From April 27-May 18, all submissions will be on display at the District Department of the Environment located at 1200 First St. NE. Judges will be rating our finished product based on its aesthetic appeal, creativity, and most importantly, the educational value our barrel provides the viewer. The winners will be announced at a culminating Be Water Wise celebration.

Maury’s striking design was based on the elaborate silhouette work of contemporary artist, Kara Walker. Walker is an African American artist who explores powerful subject matter in her work. By displaying solid black cut outs on a stark white wall, she forces viewers to take a closer look at what the simple shapes are actually trying to communicate. Walker’s clean lines, stark contrast, and bold imagery served as inspiration for Maury’s rain barrel design. Students incorporated abstract symbols to represent permeable pavement, underground clean water storage tanks and elaborate pipe systems for filtering storm water runoff. Figures move across the monument laden city via green modes of transportation like skateboards and roller blades. Our cylindrical canvas demonstrates even the simplest duty–picking up after our pets to prevent waste from entering our watershed!
Our elaborate process of sanding, cleaning, priming, spray painting, designing and cutting handmade stencils, taping, spray painting again and peeling off our stencils to reveal designs in negative space was an authentic way for students to develop an idea and execute a concept from start to finish. Be sure to visit all rain barrel submissions starting April 27, at the DDOE!

Check out our step by step process below!

Step 1: Get inspired!

Step 2: Sketch BIG and sketch lots!

Step 3: Neatly cut your detailed designs into stencils

Step 4: Measure diameter of rain barrel and arrange homemade stencils accordingly

Step 5: Over the weekend, scrub that sucker on your back porch in the sun with water and denatured alcohol

Step 6: Invite a friend over to pass the time as you prime, let dry, then spray paint the rain barrel!

Step 7: Add a few coats of paint and make it shine!

Step 8: Bring rain barrel back to school and apply stencils with lots of painters tape

Step 9: Practice spraying your top coat and peeling away the stencils to be sure the negative of the image below is crisp and clear

Step 10: Head outside to spray paint every inch of the rain barrel black

Step 11: Peel away stencils–quick like  a band-aid

Step 12: Cross your fingers and thank your fabulous team for producing an educational and eye catching product from start to finish!

 

Georgia on my mind…

Posted in All Grade Update, Happenings around Maury on May 8, 2012 by studiomaury

All of Maury, from preschool to 5th grade, tried our hand at some Georgia O’Keeffe inspired art. We looked deeply at the beautiful and abstract ways that nature unfolds in Georgia’s work. Weird details, vivid colors, and smooth textures ruled both Georgia and Maury’s creative process. Take a look at the collaborative patchwork of organic flowers that students came up with. Every time I walk by, I find a new favorite and notice something I didn’t quite see the time before.

Chancellor Henderson tells Maury students “We Got This!” and We Do!

Posted in All Grade Update, Happenings around Maury on April 15, 2012 by studiomaury

I think every man, woman, child, ant, speck of dust–you name it–that graced the halls of Maury Elementary school on Friday afternoon are pumped and ready to take the DC CAS on Tuesday morning whether they have to or not! I know I am!

On Friday, after much planning by the DC CAS Pep Rally Committee, especially Ms. George, our students left for the long weekend feeling A bit less intimidated or dreadful about the high-steaks test that awaits them.

Guest speakers, such as the inspiring and student oriented Chancellor of DC Public Schools, Kaya Henderson and the Washington Wizard’s mascot, G-Man, helped our kids understand that the CAS is a way for students to prove how prepared and knowledgeable they are–not a time for self-doubt, insecurities, or fear. Like well trained singers or athletes, the CAS is a chance for them to strut their stuff and show what their teachers have worked hard to teach them; a chance to flex that brain muscle!

Kaya Henderson led students in a unified “we’ve got this!” chant and boosted their self -esteem by calling Maury Elementary students the brightest in all the District. As a former cheerleader, I couldn’t help but cheer along, clap and stomp, and feel proud to be a part of a school community that cares so much about the success of its students. Our kids are ready!

The winning Maury cheerleaders led us in a sassy routine, and can we talk about G-Man and Agent W  for a second? WoW! What a treat. Their sports are like school metaphor was powerful for our students to hear. Homework is our practice, school is our court, and the CAS is our championship. It takes effort to get the results we want. We don’t wake up one day doing 360 degree dunks and we don’t wake up one day acing tests without effort. Let us hope that our students carry the message that hard work pays off throughout life.

WE GOT THIS!

The mysterious G-Man getting the crowd pumped up!

High flying acrobatics by G-Man and Agent W–the beauty of team work!

Mrs. Battle setting up for the alley-oop!

Ramel and Agent W share a heart to heart and some positive words of encouragement before the CAS

Taking time out for the kids. Thanks Wizards, Chancellor Henderson, and all involved. Go Cougars!

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