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Monday, November 24, 2025

Kindergarten Mondrian Collages

 


Kindergarten is learning about Piet Mondrian and making a shape collage of primary colors and lines. This is a one day, 45 min project that they enjoyed doing! 
I showed them The Primary Colors video, and showed examples of Mondrian’s art, and then demonstrated how to assemble their collage. 
I used my favorite construction paper, and cut it up into shapes and strips for them. 
Then, I demonstrated using the glue stick and making sure we put the glue on the shape and not all over our white paper! 
They did a great job following directions and making their project their own! 
Here’s some great examples!
























Monday, November 10, 2025

2nd grade Fall Owl Collage

 


🦉 Fall Owl Art Project – Exploring Warm Colors & Texture! 🍁

This week in the art room, our young artists created adorable fall owls perched on colorful autumn branches, inspired by an Instagram post by @sv.artroom. This project allowed students to experiment with paint, learn art vocabulary, and practice cutting and assembling shapes.


Materials

Jack Richeson paint, My favorite paintbrushes, fave pencils, oil pastels, 90lb paper, scissors, and glue


Day 1: Warm Colors + Painting the Background

We began by talking about warm colors—red, orange, and yellow—and how they remind us of fall leaves and cozy autumn weather. Students used paint to create a tree trunk with branches and added dabs of warm color to represent leaves in the background.

We also discussed texture and how artists can make surfaces look rough, smooth, fuzzy, or patterned. Students painted a separate sheet of brown paper with layered brushstrokes to create a feathery texture for the owl’s body. This was a great way to explore how paint can be used to make patterns and movement.




Day 2: Building the Owl

On the second day, students transformed their painted papers into an owl. They cut out the body from their textured brown paper and glued it onto the background. Then we created the owl’s:

  • Big round eyes (because owls are excellent nighttime observers!)

  • Tiny orange beak

  • Triangle-shaped feet

Students practiced cutting circles, triangles, and curves—wonderful fine motor skills disguised as creative fun. They used shape tracers from amazon and I made owl tracers for them. 


What We Learned

✅ Warm vs. cool colors
✅ How to create texture with paint
✅ Cutting & gluing skills
✅ Following multi-step directions
✅ That art can be built in layers—just like real artists do!


The Finished Result

Each owl turned out full of personality—some are curious, some are silly, and some look very wise. No two owls are the same, and that’s what makes art amazing!

🦉🍂 We are so proud of our young artists and their colorful fall owls. Stay tuned for more creative adventures in the art room!