My First Art Book
My First Art Book
My First
Book of —
To start drawing you only need a pencil
and a little imagination...
OR
Draw the oval of the Draw a long, curled Color the drawing
body. Make a circle with trunk. Add an ear and add the face
four rectangular legs. and a tail. and paw nails.
Uh mold Vh pohi
Start by drawing a large oval for the Start by making the body with a large
body and a smaller one for the head. oval, and the head with a smaller one.
Add arms, legs and a curled tail. Join them with an elongated neck and
add some sticks for legs.
co rayd5 Dots
L lwiuza
Four Dancers, by Edgar Degas
This artist used soft, diffuse colors. You can achieve the
same effect with colored chalks.
Uh tree
Draw the tree with brown and green
chalk. Blur the green and it will give the
impression that they are the leaves seen
from a distance.
Puhtios
Oh heart
Use wavy brush strokes
to create a coral reef.
Mh little fish
Paint the body of the
fish with your finger
and add a triangle for
a tail. Paint stripes
with a brush.
A sea turtle
Paint with your finger an
oval shell-shaped figure.
Add the head, tail and some
rounded fins. Paint the eyes
and the shell drawing with
your fingertip.
A mequs
Paint the head with
your finger. Add the
eyes with your little
finger. Paint the
mouth and some
coiled tentacles with
a brush.
Uh
OCTOPUS
Paint a round head with your
finger. Stamp the entire finger
eight times to make eight
legs. Paint the face with a
brush and add two rosy
cheeks with your finger.
1
6
An elephant
Paint an oval body and add
the trunk and two legs.
Paint an ear in another
color, add the eyes with two
dots and, finally, draw the
tail.
Unn, cepr
Paint the body and neck. Add the
head, ears, four legs and the tip of
the tail.
A lion
Paint a round body and four legs.
Add a round mane of a darker
shade. Then paint the head and
ears on top and let it dry. Draw the
face and tail with a crayon.
Flowers on red fog, by Marc Chagall
1
9
Cold and melancholic blues
This artist has used many shades of light blue to paint
rain falling on a pond.
a 52288 o • je:
to
Surf
To paint waves, draw wavy lines
with white and blue crayons and
then, using a paintbrush, spread
watery blue paint over the top.
The pencils
Artists use brushes of different sizes and apply paint
with very diverse brush strokes.
Uh flmehco
Paint the body and neck of
the flamingo with a medium
brush. Add two long legs and
a beak with a finer brush.
X
This artist has painted a colorful tropical
landscape featuring monkeys. Create your own
jungle with these stamping techniques.
To stamp with a leaf, cover it with thick paint and press it onto a piece of
paper.
Carefully peel off the sheet to see the print it has left.
Create a jungle landscape with
leaves of different shapes and
sizes.
A butterfly
Stamp the imprint of a narrow,
elongated leaf to paint the body. Ha?
the four wings with another color and
paint the eyes with the tip of your
finger.
Vh bud
To paint a bud, stamp
three or four
overlapping petals and
add a stem and one or
two leaves.
Uh
parrot
Paint an oval body and a round
head. Add an eye and a beak.
Stamp the imprint of an
elongated leaf several times to
make the tail. Use a wider
sheet for the wings.
Beetles
Paint an oval and
add a line dividing it
in two. Paint the
eyes and moles
with the tip of your
finger.
Uh
caterpillar
Draw a wavy line.
Add an eye and many
legs.
Circles and figures
Stamp lines and shapes in
different colors to create
interesting compositions.
Uh owl
Stamp the eyes with the tip of a carrot
and a bottle cap. Add the beak with a
piece of cardboard.
Uha mhzh
Mold a pipe cleaner into the
shape of an apple. Glue two
blobs of sticky clay in the center
to make the seeds and a real leaf
on the stem.
Uh
bumblebee
'. ' ' 1 a brush in paint at 9. Let it dry. Then cut Cut out the eyes,
ada and shake it onto a out a body and two stripes and legs. Glue
piece of paper. wings. everything in place.
Daisies
Cut out some yellow circles to
make the centers and glue some
white petals around them.
The High Cycle 2, by Bridget Riley
Mosaics
Figurescombih
qs
Cut out circles and
rectangles
and distribute them
Painter Bridget Riley created this bold, brightly
colored painting by repeatedly using the same geometric shapes.
Get a similar effect with paper cutouts.
Cut out
lots of triangles from
colored paper or old magazines.
Try distributing
them in different ways.
Paper trees
Tear some squares of paper to make the
treetops. Then cut some strips in the
shape of trunks and branches and glue
them to the cups.
Uh old cantillo
Tear off a large rectangle to
make the tower and smaller ones
for the turrets. Add a window.
Uhs hortehsis
Tear off four small squares and
arrange them as shown in this
example to form a small flower.
t/R
*4
Glue lots of little flowers together to
make hydrangeas like these.
Here you will find more ideas to create scenes
with torn or cut-out paper figures.
Uh snowflake
Fold a square of paper in
half diagonally three
times.* Cut out shapes
around the edges and
unfold.
(HAN
DS
Combine different geometric shapes, such as Drops of cava
squares, rectangles and triangles, to form a
row of houses. Fold a small piece of paper in
half and cut it in a curve to
make a raindrop shape.
Then make some cuts • /
yed'
0J
Keg
Vh Butterfly -
Fold a piece of paper in half
and cut out a figure 8.
Vh
Tear upcaterpillar
many scent circles and
line them up to form a caterpillar.
Uh roboC
Make a figure by gluing several objects
together
Vh bird blahcíh
Flay artists who create mobile
sculptures. You can make one
too. Fold a paper plate in half,
paint it the color you like best
and add an eye and a beak.
Push it with your finger and
watch it swing.
Some artists work with fabrics.
Claes Oldenburg and Coosje
van Bruggen created this viola
from cloth.
Fill a cotton sock, tie the Tie another rubber band Cut a strip of cardboard,
end with a rubber band to the tip of the sock to wrap it around the sock
and cut off the excess. form a little ball that will and tape it in place.
be the icing on the cake.
Artist Niki de Saint-
Phalle created this
large, multi-coloured
sculpture.
by Nik¡ de Saint-Phalle
Ms figures
To make a salt dough figure, follow the
recipe on page 48.
comb, a watch
strap and several
buttons.
Currency Nut
Put the flour and salt in a bowl and add the water little by little, stirring until a soft dough forms. If it sticks too much, add
more flour. If it is too dry, add water.
Place the dough on a smooth surface and knead it for ten minutes until
acquire a homogeneous consistency
Let it sit for twenty minutes before using it.
1 The dough keeps well for a week if you store it
in the refrigerator or wrapped in cling film
Drying:
Let the figures air dry and they will be ready in 30 days. You can also bake them in
the oven at about 70 °C for 3 or 4 hours.
Thank you 4 7 .,
Project illustrations: Josephine Thompson, Antonia Miller and Katie Lovell 1 ¡ , fA\
Project Steps: Samantha Meredith % - E \ e2
Photography: Howard Allman - ( tee .3,.-
Photo manipulation: Nicle Wal — —•'• ’
Search for works: Ruth King and Sam Noonan
Written by: Jane Chisholm and Jenny Tyler
Art direction: Mary Cartwright
pH Personcje at night guided by the phosphorescent traces of carneols, by Joan Miró © Heirs of Miró/
ADACP, Paris, > DACS, London, 2010/Museum of Art of Philadelphia/CORBIS p6 Study of an Elephant, by Rembrandt
van Rijp © Adminisirodoree def British Museum ps Vr-dj^ devot sky 9 DACS 2010, photography © White
Ir ages/Sc ala, Florence, pious Four Indians Dancing on Stage, by Edgar Degas © The Callery Collection/Corbis. pl2 Desert Sweet Potato Fox (Véter Jupurrula Roes 6 2000 Victor Jupurrula Ross/DACS
2010/Courtesy of the Warlekurlangu Artists Aboriginal Corporation/British Museum, With thanks to Beatriz Waters pío Blackish blue fox, d,- 1 rar z More, Museum Vet der Heydt, Wuppertal
(Germany)/7he Bridgeman Art i ibrury. pl8 Flowers on a red background, by Mat-: Chagall © ADAOP, Paris, and DACS, London, 2010, image © Scala, Florence. p20 Rain, by Dovid Hockney, 1973, from
the Weather series, lithograph and silkscreen, edition 98, 99 x ~n,ro cm 6 David Hockney/Gemini GE L, image p ■ Gallery of the British Council Collection p22 Sunset by Rao I Dufy, artwork © ADAGP
Paris, and DACS, London, 2010 Museums and Pinacote cass, Leeds, UK, image 0 The Bridgeman Art Library p2H Tropical Forest with Monkeys by Henri Roussecu © Barnes Foundation/superst ck
p28 Composition VIII, by Wasaily Kandinsky and ADAOP, Paris, and DACS, London. 2010, image © Summit Labs/SuperStock p30 Printed fabric with Rabbit drawing by William Morris, digital image ©
The Museum of Modern Art, New York/Ocala, Florence, p32 The Parrot and the Mermaid by Henri Matisse © Heirs of H Matisee/DACS 2010, imager. © Stedelik Museum, Amsterdam p34 Nariz de
zonchoria, by Jean Dubufet © ADAGP, Paris, and DACS, Londrea 201 C /Scala, Florence, p36 El aito cielo 2, by Bridget Rley, 1992 E 2010 R-idoet Riley, all rights reserved. p38 Fragments of ddr'c ©
Werner Forman Archive/Scala, Florence p42 The Monkey and Her Baby, by Pablo Picasso © Heirs of Picasso/DACS. London. 2010/Musée Picasso de Paris (rancia)/Oiroudon/The Bridgeman Art
Library p44 Viola blonda, d' Claes Oldenbu rg and Coosje van Bruagen, photogro'd by Todd Eberle, courtesy of the Viola soft foundation by O'denburg van Bruggen © 2 002 Claes Oldenburg and Coosje
van Bruggen. Charlotte, by Niki de Soint-Phalle, artwork © ADAOP, Paris, and DACS, London, 2010, image © okg images/Dieter T. Hoppe p46 Palette, by Tony Cragg, 1986, plastic materials, approx 210
x 240 w. work © DACS, 20 0, phologography by Tony Cragg
System (Ir ion classification Melvil Dewe 1 1 K .MF
707
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2011 1 ickins, Rosie
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trans. (Emma Lonsodela Sierra. Mexici SEP:Ush < ( ) éano, 20 i 1.
48 p. : ill. — «I ib os del Rincón)
1 Art- Study \ teaching (elementary). ‘2. 1 children's edition. YO. ( onrtauld, Satah, coaul
. II. Oh HIM ' from the Sierra. (iemma, ii. III. t. YO\ . Be.
ISBN: 9/8-607-*9-84?-3
original image: \) first ee ej m
ISBN: 078 6017- 100 6331 6 Oceano de Mexic Fduo rial or ISBN:
Rosie Dickins is the author and editor of Je Books for Children. He
978 607 169-817 3 SEP
has focused on works dealing with art and artists. Among the
Providing reproduction by any means possible by means of an published works are: My little musk of beautiful art, Leonardo and
electron in the self-regulation of the electrons Drawing faces.
Printed in Mexico
Sarah ('.oartauid, originally from England, is a graphic designer,
D)t~IRv t 1 CRN inx Pzou v S! SISB
among the books she has illustrated are: the history of the esdaiim.:. E .
I'm on a pirate ship.
Ui prime bn of arl
It was printed in January of the (omission Nation I of Text (i books) in the
workshops of ED AMS \ Printings. S \ dle ( V., with address at w Hicialgo I 11, 4
nl. Friar (San Nicolás Tolentino headquarters, 09850. Mexico City, December
2011. GOVERNMEN
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1.1 Lue print run of 123,682 copies.
national
program
reading
in
USBORNE 1921-3*11