Much preschooler art is of the
"accidental" variety. Not that the
process wasn't purposeful, but the end result, the product, is an accident of the
scientific method of the universal child. And nevertheless there are times when that process produces a product of great beauty, sometimes even great truth. Every play-based preschool teacher knows what I'm talking about: those pieces that when you are left alone with them, or that you discover some days later, move and inspire you, or that are spot-on re-tellings of the story of its own creation.
This blog is full of examples of "accidental" art: the art of process.
Here's one, and
another, and
another, but everyone who has spent any time making art with children knows what I'm talking about. It's a piece you just can't throw away. We had many such pieces at
the old place up on Phinney Ridge, artwork that had become permanent installations, but I've been pretty brutal in this move to our new home, sending most of it to the dumpster. (Or in the case of
Luella's Painting, it has gone to her family; perhaps the greatest of all the things we've ever accidentally made together.)
As I was preparing our new space for habitation these past few weeks, I dismantled some of the work of the summer program to clear the decks for the new school year, one part of which was
the scarecrow. The scarecrow hadn't been the big success it had been the previous summer, largely because it didn't emerge from
children with a vision, but rather as a project I suggested based upon the memory of previous brilliance.
Still, there had been that moment right at the end of making this summer's scarecrow, when the children
did make it their own, much of which involved the
styrofoam head I'd offered up for their use. Then they put that painted hat on her and we left her in the weather to become the strange beauty you see here.
Oh, we've loved these
styrofoam heads. At one point we had eight of them; their history is a story I know, but will not tell. We entered summer with four of them remaining, one of which we still own but in the form of this artwork.
I think this one is destined to live with us, at least for awhile. I don't have her in the classroom during the first week of school due to the fact that there is something slightly disturbing about her (perhaps it's the beer bottle cap eyes) but I intend to find a permanent place for her because she's also quite beautiful. The purplish paint has remained on her cheeks and neck in marble-izing swirls, but as you get closer you find it's cracked, giving her the appearance of a kind of reptile shedding an old skin.
This is a kind of art that acts as evidence, I think, a documentation of a process that clicked on all cylinders, one during which very young children, perhaps by accident, but with purpose, create a masterpiece. We might not always create a masterpiece, but that's to be expected, even the greatest artists make some average art between their works of genius.
It is a masterpiece, our masterpiece, the existence of which proves to me the genius of a play-based curriculum.
I put a lot of time and effort into this blog. If you'd like to support me please consider a small contribution to the cause. Thank you!
How interesting! She reminds me of Neil Gaiman's Coraline...the mother with the button eyes.
ReplyDeleteI recently discovered your blog and as a mom to an almost-4-year-old, its wonderful and inspiring! Thank you!
We cut loose on HUGE paper with lots of paint today...self-portraits...so wonderful! I have some funny stories of a beloved styrofoam head, too...makes me smile to think of her history! You couldn't have created this beauty if you'd been setting out to do it...her appeal is haphazard and therefore wonderful!
ReplyDeleteOur class, decided on a representation of the giant Abiyoyo. We were enthralled by the size along with the "long nails cuz he didn't cut them". It was truly horribly beautiful. He accompanied us through the year and graduated and obviously went on to "the big school" along with his close personal friends.
ReplyDelete