This year’s program ended successfully with a unique variety of lesson plans. Here are some highlights:
ACT Charter
Alex Mendez, Art
Creating healing machines similar to those of Emery Blagdon and use sound art as a vehicle for healing.
Through this lesson, students learned about the life and work of Emery Blagdon (1954-1986, Nebraska). They also looked at Judith Scott, who was known for wrapping objects with yarn. Inspired by both, they created artworks with a sound component, made of wire and tin or yarn, and other easily accessible materials. The project also engaged students in the art making process while addressing social issues, actual problems, and things that are relative to student’s lives. Like Blagdon’s work, the student projects were intended to be healing devices for such issues. In addition, the wooden boards not only focused on the healing element of art, but also on the influence of Math in the designs of Blagdon’s boards.

Judith Scott's "Untitled (Blue Bird Pod)" Courtesy: Intuit: The Center for Intuitive and Outsider Art
Orozco Academy
Grades 4-7
Ed Pino, Art
Alicia Song, Spanish
Lesson plan that uses the art of Martín Ramírez for inspiration
Students made a painting about a memory or imagination based on the art of Martín Ramírez. The teacher introduced the mechanisms of Ramirez’s work, such as, the repeating textures and rhythm, and the central character in a stage like setting. The students were encouraged to reinvent these elements to reflect their personality and interests.
Martin Ramirez, 1895 – 1963, Mexico
Martin Ramirez created nearly 300 drawings of remarkable visual clarity and expressive power within the confines of DeWitt State Hospital in northern California, where he resided the last 15 years of his life. Ramirez has been codified primarily as a “schizophrenic artist”; this project goes beyond the boundaries of Ramirez’s diagnosis of mental illness and considers the artistic quality and merit of his artwork. In this way, Ramirez’s works are understood - and appreciated - for the complex, multilayered drawings that they are. (Source: American Folk Art Museum)

Martin Ramirez's Untitled (Courtyard) Courtesy of The Anthony Petullo Collection of Self-Taught and Outsider Art
Parker Elementary
Eric Hill, Art Instructor
Watercolor “Architectural Symbolizations” as Homage to Someone Dear To You
The lesson helps students understand the sensory elements, organizational principles, and expressive qualities in outsider art, specifically the artist A.G. Rizzoli and his “Architectural Symbolizations” that pay homage to his acquaintances. Students visited Intuit to view the exhibition. In the classroom, they were asked to create a sketch of an “Architectural Symbolization” of someone dear to them (mother, brother, father sister, grandparent, cousin, and so on). They will also analyze and read about the “Architectural Symbolizations” created by A.G. Rizzoli and understand the artworks function in history, society, and everyday life and how it relates to other architectural landmarks in society today.
Parker Student Examples:







