PREPARING A MONTESSORI ART ENVIRONMENT AT HOME

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Whether your child attends a Montessori school, or you are starting to homeschool using Montessori curriculum, one area you should consider teaching is visual arts.

Art is an often-overlooked aspect of Montessori education today. Even traditional Montessori classrooms struggle with providing art literacy.

Art Space Benefits

Teaching art lessons has a ton of benefits that go beyond beautiful art. There are some other important reasons to create an art environment in your home and give art lessons regularly. For example, art:

  • Supports problem-solving skills
  • Develops gross- and fine-motor skills
  • Supports implicit memory
  • Increases spatial awareness
  • Helps children regulate stress

Setting up an art environment might seem overwhelming if you don’t know how to teach art.

Have you dreamed of your child creating beautiful artwork but have no idea where to get started? As a first step, I recommend deciding on a place for your Montessori homeschool art space environment.

The secret to a good art environment is creating a space for working, uninterrupted. Additionally, you will want a space that offers children the freedom to explore and express ideas. After all, if you give them a space to make art, they will create!

Before we go into my art space tips, here’s a little perspective: If you don’t have a shelf filled with books, you won’t raise readers. You won’t raise a writer if you don’t have pens, papers, or a dictionary handy. So, guess what? You won’t raise an artist when you don’t have an art space filled with art supplies!

PREPARING A MONTESSORI ART ENVIRONMENT AT HOME | Homeschooling

ART ENVIRONMENT FEATURES

As an art studio designer, art teacher, and homeschooler, I have had numerous opportunities to create various Montessori art spaces. Here are the essential components I recommend for every Montessori home art environment:

  • Table: All activities should be conducted on a flat surface.
  • Chair: In addition to a sturdy table, children require a safe place to sit while working.
  • Floor Covering: This protects your floors from spills.
  • Light Source: A good light source is essential for children to work with colors effectively.
  • Storage: Art storage solutions vary in shapes and sizes, ranging from baskets, jars, plastic bins, shelves, to an art closet.
  • Sink: While the sink doesn’t need to be directly in the art space, it should be nearby and easily accessible. You can utilize a sink in a bathroom or kitchen for washing materials and hands.

WHERE SHOULD YOUR FAMILY’S ART SPACE BE?

Because an art space doesn’t need to be elaborate, you can set it up anywhere in your home. You can dedicate an entire room as an art space or choose a corner of your child’s bedroom, the family living room, the yard, the basement, or kitchen.

One of my dear homeschool-mom friends set up a simple desk for her children in her kitchen. I loved seeing what her daughter would create when I visited for tea!

 PREPARING A MONTESSORI ART ENVIRONMENT AT HOME

My own children’s art spaces have transitioned throughout the years. They moved around to different spots in our home. Now, my daughter likes to draw and paint in her bedroom, although when she was young, the kitchen table was where she liked to do art.

Before you unleash your little Picasso, be sure you and your child agree on the space where art will take place (the art environment). This is important! When I first started homeschooling, I was lax with this rule. Messes spread around our home. Eventually, my children stained my nice couch with paint and markers. Soon after, I decided there was only one space where art making was allowed!

ART AT HOME

PLANNING A MONTESSORI HOMESCHOOL ART SPACE ENVIRONMENT

Art space features to consider:

  • Where will the art space location stay?
  • Where will your child access their own art supplies?
  • Where will out-of-reach art supplies be stored?
  • Where will unfinished artworks be kept?
  • Where will artworks dry?
  • Which space will display current creations (home gallery)
  • Which sink will you allow your child to use to wash out paint, palettes, messy glue, and hands?

DESIGNING AN ART SPACE FOR INDEPENDENCE

You can support your child’s independence in the way the art space is prepared ahead of time. When planning this space, be sure it aligns with their level of fine-motor abilities. Arrange and prepare art materials that are easy for your child to reach but not for any toddler siblings to reach. Create a space with freedom of movement in mind. For children to become independent, there must be plenty of space to create freely.

Plan to demonstrate how the materials should be set up and put away. Also, plan to show your child how the mediums work and how to use them respectfully. I know when I have prepared an art space for independence, children can flow in and out of creative moments without me having to facilitate each activity.

PREPARING A MONTESSORI ART ENVIRONMENT AT HOME

For example, if I create a space for children to watercolor, I store materials in a handy way for them to gather, set up, and create. Eventually, they learn to set up and clean up without my assistance. Yes, I’m around for questions and new technique demonstrations, but my students feel like the space is an open, creative studio for creation when everything is initially set up for independence.

ART MATERIALS AND SUPPLY STORAGE

Storage can be challenging, particularly when your entire family shares a living space or workspace. Ensure you establish a system to store art supplies that children cannot access. Numerous art supplies can stain and pose hazards to younger siblings. It is simple for little ones to grab paints and transport them to areas where you wouldn’t want stains. You can store smaller plastic bins in cabinets or larger bins in a garage.

I trust that I have offered helpful tips and the information you require to set up your child’s at-home art room space.

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Kids Nature Journal Color Lessons

This blog post is a part of a three-month series: Montessori Art in the Natural World: Kids Nature Journal Color Lessons. This series is about growing kids’ knowledge about the natural world by taking them outside their home or classroom and challenging them to create focused art, based on the nature around them. Every aspect of nature—seasons, layers of the earth’s soil, energy, rocks and minerals, fossils, landforms, water, flora, fauna, the atmosphere—can all be represented and expressed through art lessons.

Nature Journaling Part lll

One of the most relaxing and rewarding parts of being in nature is experiencing its colors and beauty. Nature can teach us a lot about the color theory aspects of art and nature journaling, in particular, is a great way to teach Montessori art lessons.

Montessori Art in the Natural World: Kids Nature Journal Color Lessons

As an artist, art teacher, and naturalist, I find color so fascinating! Color inspires kids to gain new knowledge about the natural world. Nature journaling can be an amazing tool to lead outdoor exploration and discovery. Having your kids take their nature journals outdoors can enrich their learning experience and help them make a meaningful connection between science and art. 

Kids nature journaling activities give educators many chances to teach the Elements and Principles of Design while integrating science methods, such as observation. You can actually teach multiple Montessori color lessons using just the basic nature journal materials, a guided outdoor activity, and engaging your students’ imaginations.

Color in Art & Science

Color theory is a foundational area of visual arts studies. Understanding color and color theory is essential to developing art skills. All artists must learn how different colors complement each other; part of this means understanding the principles of the color wheel and creating mixtures of color values and intensities of different hues.

Beyond being an important part of art, color also plays a significant role in science! Did you know that Sir Isaac Newton not only discovered gravity, but he also observed how light bends as it passes through the prism—which was the first step in giving us what we now know as “ROY G BIV!” So, teaching kids about color is both artistically and scientifically important.

[For more details on creating an art journal and its benefits, read: Montessori Art in the Natural World: Kids Art Journaling, Part I]

Journals to Teach Color

Color theory lessons can be easily integrated into nature journaling. Nature journals offer kids the opportunity to investigate and observe color while recording their nature and outdoor observations.

When they’re completing their nature journals, have students describe the colors they observe with written words, and also by choosing specific color mediums (such as crayons, colored pencils, and/or paint) to represent the objects they see. For instance, they might doodle leaves, tree bark, ponds, or the atmosphere, and then assign these observation notes with descriptive color words.

Examples:

  • “The tree had small, bright green leaves growing.” 
  • “The bark on the tree had a cool feeling and looked dark brown.”
  • “A bird with reddish feathers flew by.”
Kids Nature Journal Color Lessons

Where to Start: Simple Nature Journal Color Prompts

It can be overwhelming to think about taking your class outside for an art lesson. Maybe the idea of rounding up your students and keeping them focused on lessons outside the classroom—when all they want to do is climb a tree or jump on fallen leaves—stresses you out. I get it and I’ve been there! Kids have minds of their own and once they’re outdoors, their playful instincts tend to take over. However, getting them to focus on Montessori color lessons can be done. 

Keeping young students’ attention comes down to giving them something specific to focus on while they’re outside. Color can be found in outdoor environments in all different shades, hues, and tones:

  • The colors of a rainbow (ROY G BIV)
  • The natural pigments found in flowers and minerals
  • The iridescent colors of a butterfly wing
  • The color differences in males and females of a species
  • The green tones in different types of tree leaves
Montessori Art in the Natural World: Kids Nature Journal Color Lessons

Color even plays a role in the survival of particular organisms in certain biomes! There are amazing teaching opportunities to point out how color is represented in the natural environment and different ecosystems. These kinds of observations can lead to fun and insightful scientific discussions in your classroom! Observing nature and recording natural color values are great ways to integrate science and art.  

Color Lesson Ideas

  • Warm and cool colors
  • Colors in plants
  • Colors of wildflowers
  • Colors in different species
  • Colored chemicals
  • Wavelengths of light
  • Pigments in rocks and minerals
  • Color adaptation in different species
  • How chlorophyll makes plants appear green
  • What causes the sky to appear blue

[To learn more about how to get your students started with a kids nature journal, read: Montessori Art in the Natural World: How to Teach Nature Journaling, Nature Journaling Part II]

One Step Further:

Using the prompts above will help give your students focus and purpose while they’re outdoors. While I focused on the importance of including color observations when students are recording in their nature journals, to make it a true scientific activity, students should include other datum and information as well.

Kids Nature Journal Color Lessons

This Outdoor Journal Checklist will help you guide your students and keep them on track to make sure they’re implementing both scientific and artistic principles during their expedition. You can print it out or save it on your phone so you have it with you the next time you lead your students outside to journal.

A Short Cut Just for You

I think nature journaling is the perfect way to introduce art to Montessori students, since it relies so heavily on natural and scientific observations. It opens to the door for so many more interesting art projects!

If you know that you want to bring art into your classroom but aren’t sure how to do it, check out my Theming Art & The Natural World

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