|
About the Online Curriculum
Art is a valuable tool for developing and nurturing creativity, imagination, and critical thinking - elements integral to learning. Art helps us explore and connect science, math, history, and literature. It reflects our unique histories, encourages us to contemplate the human condition, raises important questions about society, and provides innovative suggestions for our future.
The Fabric Workshop and Museum's Online Curriculum utilizes the museum's collection as a vehicle for exploring interdisciplinary ideas and concepts. Designed for K-12 use, these lessons offer an array of interdisciplinary suggestions that will enliven and enrich your curriculum.
Please note that each lesson includes the following tools:
- Learning strategies based on National Education Standards
- Themes that connect art, language arts, math, science, and social studies
- Age and grade appropriate concepts
- Vocabulary
Four Themes
 |
Pattern and Rhythm – Pattern Collages
Designed for students in grades K-6, this lesson uses the Philadelphia architect Robert Venturi's
Grandmother fabric design as inspiration to teach about shape, color motifs, and
screen-printed patterns. Students will work together to create organic and geometric shape collage
artworks of their own.
|
 |
Art from New Materials – Create a Landscape Installation
This lesson intended for use with students in grades 4-8 uses Jim Hodges' work entitled, You,
which is created entirely from deconstructed silk flowers sewn together to form a sculptural floral
veil. The activities focus on how artists use new materials in their work, often recycling from
found objects or untraditional materials.
|
 |
Performance and Participation – Design a Performance Space
This lesson is designed for students in grades 2-8, and takes inspiration from Maria Fernanda Cardoso's
Cardoso Flea Circus, which simulates a real flea circus and incorporates research from these
nineteenth century novelty performances. The accompanying activities investigate ways that artists
may use performance to create environments and engage their viewers in the action.
|
 |
Art and Society – Social Critique Design
This lesson designed for high school students looks at how artists have critiqued their societies. It
focuses on Reneé Green's Mise-en-Scène: Commemorative Toile, an installation of
an upper class, French parlor, in which the artist has subtly altered a toile upholstery design to
deconstruct the institutional discourses of history. Students will create written responses to
Green's work and develop their own designs for toile patterns that combine imagery in order to
communicate concern about a social issue.
|
|