Description
This product has been archived and is no longer available for purchase.
A similar product with updated user permissions can be found at: https://ridgelightranch.com/product/painting-with-primary-colors-like-roy-lichtenstein-2nd-ed-lesson-plan/
This lesson plan is designed to teach students about Roy Lichtenstein. This lesson works well for the Classical Conversations’ Cycle 3, Week 17 (C3W17) fine arts.
This 9 page lesson plan includes:
- A condensed background on the artist and his style
- A short lesson on Ben-Day dots, the color wheel, and the context of color
- Color wheels to show students
- A carefully crafted summary sentence about Roy Lichtenstein (ideal for memorization)
- Vocabulary words and definitions
- A photo of the artist
- Links to a representative selection of 8 of Roy Lichtenstein’s pieces of artwork*
- Materials list
- Simple art project instructions for painting (or coloring) in primary colors like Roy Lichtenstein, including a line drawing of Lichtenstein’s Ohhh, Alright and Whaam.
- Suggestions for scaling the project to experience levels
*Most of my lesson plans include printable images of the artist’s work within the lesson plan. However, since Roy Lichtenstein’s art work is still under copyright, I can not include them in this product. You can easily follow the links provided where you will find printable images of his art.
This lesson is also available at a discount in the “Amazing American Artists Deluxe Package” which includes 6 lesson plans, plus extras, and is ideal for weeks 13-18 of Fine Arts in a cycle 3 Classical Conversations Foundations community.
(CC Directors: You have permission to purchase this package once for your community and share paper copies with each of your tutors! I’m a CC Director too so I know how important that is. You can read my full Terms of Use here.)
References to Classical Conversations do not constitute or imply endorsement by the company.
This is a PDF file, so you’ll need a PDF Reader to view and print it. Download a free PDF Reader here: https://get.adobe.com/reader/.
For more info and some extra photos, check out the blog post “Painting with Primary Colors Like Roy Lichtenstein” (coming soon!).