Wednesday, February 24, 2010

The Mysteries Of The Harris Burdick


This is my all time favourite picture book! In fact anything by Chris van Allsburg automatically goes into my library - I love everything he does. There is lots of stuff about using this stunning book as a stimulus for writing activities. But the drawings will open a whole new world of exploration for using black and white drawing media.
You can Google the title to find out more but if you don't know this book you need to get out of the cave you have been living in!
Activities:
1. Give children a whole range of graphite pencils to play with. You could challenge them to create as many tones as they can with them from pure white paper to the blackest black they can make.
2. Share the illustrations and talk about them extensively - there are lots of options here.
For example you could discuss what media has been used. How has Chris Van Allsburg shown things in three dimensions? Discuss the pictures in terms of whether they are realistic or not? Talk about how he has made them slightly surreal. Discuss the dreamlike/enigmatic/mysterious quality of them. This list is endless.
3. Challenge students to create a black and white image that tells a story like the images in this book. Can you make an image that uses all the tones you discovered?
Can you make an image that is like a dream? Can you make your image enigmatic/mysterious? Encourage students to use the media all over the surface like the illustrations. This could be part of the discussion. For example: Tell me about how much pencil has been used on the paper. What white spaces are left and what are they for?
4. I have a black and white pencil drawing I have done that I sometimes use with students. While it's not in the same class as Chris Van Allsburg's work, it does give students an idea about making a drawing that fills the space with media and making an image that appears realistic but incorporates the impossible.