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Kindergarten Paul Klee
Geometric Dreamscapes:
Kindergarten students explored the bold work of Swiss painter Paul Klee, who utilized large blocks of color and abstracted shapes to create dream cities and images of remembered gardens. The kindergarten students applied a study of color theory using primary, secondary, tertiary, analogous and complementary colors to create interesting combinations in their own work.
Ask yourself: What type of dreams do these paintings depict? If you could paint your dreams, what would they look like?
I've always loved photography but this is my first organized set of pictures. They are all from different seasons, as you can probably tell, and were taking in my backyard except for the sunset photo which was taking at my cousin's house in up-state New York.
RC can draw normal figures pretty well. Here he seems to get the
right body mass relative to legs and arms. Still no elbows or knees
though.
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My local currency is for the Upper East Side, which is home to more museums than any other neighborhood in New York City. The currency's name is the "Mula," which is an acronym for, "Museums: our Local Asset.” The currency comes in denominations of five, ten and twenty Mula, and each museum would put its art on a set of the three denominations, yielding upwards of thirty different designs. The design of the Mula is based on the golden section, and the colors used are the three primary and three secondary colors. The three typefaces on the Mula were all created by Hofler Frere-Jones, a New York City firm.