Could you provide us with a timeline for the summer? My summer plan was to create five paintings based on my digital sketches but with the show going up July 31st, I’m not sure if I can create the amount of paintings I wanted to in only two weeks. Also, what would the remainder of the summer studio session look like?

Here are final finished prints for my ADHD research as part of a printmaking unit ( completed this am) From left to right, Rapper 300, pop artist Rhiana and entrepreneur, Steve Jobs. I have integrated elements of the experimental studio into the art room  (as suggested by Wexler) which encourages sensory experiences through material exploration.

Leaving a multitude of studio spaces available in our room for  students to engage with has proven particularly successful with this boy. I have an entire area devoted to objects, squeezy things and kooshes, a painting area, reading/ reference area, printmaking area etc. Thinking about his hyperactivity and impusivity, these stations help him organize himself in the morning and allows him control to manage his learning.

The complexity of this students personality is challenging, he is often self adsorbed and often feel as if he is in charge. He can be restlessness and destructive but throughout this unit, he was behaved and appropriate, he especially enjoys the carving process and the ink rolling. I think the printmaking process has really helped to organize his planning procedures, he knows exactly what tools and supplies he needs and can locate them easily. He is allowed to monitor his own behavior through self- evaluation, thus serves to exercise has meta-cognitive skills. He does want to continue with one more pop icon to have a finished series of four… I will post updates.

So, a few of my students placed for awards in this contest, has anyone heard or participated with this venue before, Soul on Fire? I heard through the grapevine that this gallery was previously a florist shop, and also it is only accessible on foot by crossing rt 55…. Im concerned for safety purposes… The opening is Thursday, Im also curious to know what the space may look like or what should I expect? Thank you in advance!

Now that I’ve come up with a better, more organized way of presenting my data, I have begun transferring previous data from past visits into the new format.

Thus far, I have been to MoMA 2 times and am anticipating being able to go at least 2 more times before summer.  It has been particularly interesting to see the changing of the exhibitions and the museum space itself. Even in the course of 2-3 weeks, an entirely new exhbition opened and took the place of one that I went to before. Having a direct comparison of two different shows was incredibly interesting to compare how the shows were arranged and presented.

I’ve been also noting the ways that museum chooses to organize it’s spaces/exhibits and my opinions of best practices in their exhibitions. As I have mentioned before, I have found that MoMA’s general approach in their online seminars has been encouraging deeper understanding of art through open-ended questions and letting the viewer feel free to explore an image how they see fit. As a result, it is not expected that every piece on display have a label going into depth about the artist/piece itself. By doing so and telling the viewer direct information, the viewers ability to separate their own thoughts/opinions of the work can be tied to the information they are given. However, that is not to say that this is always the best practice. As I’m sure we all know, Modern Art is extremely complex, with different eras and styles involved, all of which can have deeper meanings. There have been exhibitions that I have gone too at MoMA in which, as someone unfamiliar with the work being displayed, explanations would have helped me better understand various art styles and movements, and how the artists related to such movements.  It ultimately leads to a constant back and forth of just how much information should be given, and perhaps furthermore, in what way can it be presented. Put too much information, and the viewers can lose sight of their own interpretation or even become overwhelmed by the information presented. Likewise, having no information presented can easily overwhelm a viewer and create feelings of confusion and even doubt of understanding a piece. There is no one simple solution- it is all about being aware of your audience and how they can perceive information. The issue I have found at MoMA is with such a variety of different people visiting, the demographics of who sees a work is too vast to be able to specify one way of really learning/teaching.  Contrary, while my own students do differ in learning styles, I at least have the per-existing knowledge of what works best for each students.

This past week I was in a car accident that put me out of work for two days. As a result, I wasn’t able to spend as much time as I had wanted on my artwork. I’m planning this week on catching up with some more collages (in particular going back to physical collaging). I also thing it may be interesting to to do of the same collage, with one as a digital and one as a physical, and compare them to see how the process can work out for each.

I finally received my Emil Ferris “My Favorite Things Are Monsters” and I am in love, I have been really interested lately in combining ballpoint pen drawings that are intricate, in conjunction with my ink drawings. Andrea suggested Dawn Clements, and I love her work.

Dawn Clements is a contemporary artist born in Woburn, Massachusetts. Her primary mediums are sumi ink and ballpoint pen on small to large scale paper panels. In order to complete a drawing she cuts and pastes paper to edit things and achieve the desired scale. Her completed drawings show her process of editing and adding through wrinkles and folds.

So we finally exposed the cyanotype that my students have been getting ready and working on for months. We put in so much work, and everything ran so well. Some of my students were able to make the event, and for those who couldn’t, they were eager to see it today. We all had spent so much time on getting the entire thing together that I stayed at work for hours after I had to. So did some of my students. I’m getting ready to ask my students their reflective and post assessment questions tomorrow or the next day. I’m ready to start reviewing my data in the next week, and to gear up for the summer.