Skills List

©NATASHA STONE 2004

1)  Festival Giant  Floats and Lanterns

Cane that is used in crayfish pots is shaped into giant figures that can reach 6 metres in height and depth.  Tissue paper is stretched over the cane and mixed with a Bondcrete mixture.  Light weight.  Used in many festivals currently.  Lanterns made from finer cane and papier mache.  Organisation and Administration of Multi Arts Festivals.

 

2)  Cartooning and Animation

In Natasha’s fun classes, students take their own characters on a very funny comic book journey, using their own or copied cartoon characters.

Children can  make their characters jump, skate and sneak their way through different landscapes - such as the inside a  baseball hat, a tin can or an ocean floor.  We will learn drawing concepts of perspective, movement, and composition on a very basic and fun level.

Important to younger students is a sense of ease in developing a character to drawing in backgrounds and contexts for humour.  Cartooning does not have to be difficult.  

Learning pencil control, and how to erase properly and join up lines.

Published cartooning styles are examined and ways to draw easily without prior drawing skill.  We look at how cartooning has evolved historically.  A study of a contemporary cartoon book prompts basic fine art drawing skills that anyone can do.


The importance of drawing simply and boldly, and tricks that cartoonists used to ease workload and complicated style.   A full page personal logo is produced using interlinked typography and illustration.  An exciting and dynamic cartoon page is produced, using the skills learnt.

Discussion about how story-telling in cartooning works.  How to create interest and humour without having to resort to the  violent content often seen in cartooning.  There is scope for students to produce a 3 dimensional framed work at completion, for school acquisition.

3)  Cartoon Funny Picture Shops – Miniature Stages

This one is great for any age - watch your imagination popping out all over the place!  Think of the funniest thing that ever happened to you, or even the funniest thing you’ve scene in a film or cartoon and make a miniature stage set that can fold up.  It can include slides, doors, fridges, pictures of your dad - anything!

4)  Cartooning the Forest

Take your own pouched, winged, or scaley creatures on a two day animated journey through the bush.  We’ll make our characters creep, slither and sneak their way through different landscapes - such as through the dark and damp forest floor of a jarrah forest, and high up in the canopy to reach the sun. Only an interest in drawing and cartooning is required.(Learning concepts such as perspective, composition, movement and trying some drawing of native species such as black cockatoo, python and chuditch. An appreciation of webs of life will come out of this workshop as well as a lot of laughter!  This project attracts high numbers)

 

 5)  3D Animation  - 3D Plasticine Animation Scene

A miniature TV studio set is created from Plasticine, complete with cast, backdrop, flats and props.  Inspirations drawn from cartoons and favourite TV shows. 

Class discussion:  How clay animation is produced and  a video of a clay animation such as ‘The Red and the Blue’.

6)  Printmaking Techniques -  Make Your Own Wrapping Paper, decorative boxes and greeting cards, and book covers

Printmaking is not only challenging and fun but has a sense of wonder about it as the final product is revealed!   Marbelling, block printing, natural materials, found objects and stenciling to create fantastic fantasy landscapes and patterns.  Take home your own wrapping paper and greeting cards to use for gift giving  or book wrapping.’

Transparent and opaque papers using a Japanese system, or found organic materials.

Class discussion/prep:  Students bring in wrapping papers and examples from magazines of fabric patterns. Design sources: natural environment, contemporary graphic motifs (e.g surfing, hip hop culture) and found objects.  Observing how colours complement and clash and the dynamics of pattern.

7)  Drawing - Still Life and Portraits

Using the principles of ‘Right Side of the Brain’ drawing, we will learn together how to bring out the very best of  your drawing ability in the form of a still life or portrait.  

Continue with your striking art piece while learning design elements such as texture, colour and experimentation, using fabrics, special papers and textures.

8)  Painting

Colour theory.  Use of Acrylics.  Learn to paint on silk. Contemporary Survey.  Traditional technique.  Use of canvas.  Mixing colour

9)  Glass Painting

Paint beautiful bottles and jars made from coloured recycled glass with French Glass Paints.

10)  Photography 

Photographing on the themes of movement, depth, contrast etc. encourage thoughts about design.  Children bring in cameras, or disposable cameras are purchased and colour film is used for instant processing.

11)  Collage   

Photographic collage as a follow on from the above session, drawing on examples of famous collage artists.  Mural or individual collages.  Temporary or permanent.  Tracing outlines of individual participants and putting them to backgrounds and contexts formed by group discussion.

12)  Card and Paper Work – Dinosaurs

Make a brilliantly coloured card dinosaur from a choice of 6 designs and create a habitat to put it in.

13)  Textiles- Fabric printing techniques from India, Japan and Indonesia

Shiburi, a Japanese tie-dying form, a simplified form of batik and block prints are used to create lengths of fabric.

Class discussion:  Examples of the following textiles are shown to the students with discussions of techniques. 

India:                            Block printing.

Japan:               Shiboi, Aidone, and Kasuri (kimono printing techniques).

Indonesia:                     Batik, regional examples, both block and canting.   Ikat, regional examples.   

14)  Funky Found Object Jewellery from the Bush

Make awsome brooches, badges and pendants for both boys and girls.  Using various media such as feathers, natural seaside materials even plastic electrical wiring.  We will explore the various systems of jewelry made today by craftspeople around the world and try some of their techniques.

14)  Treasure Hunting the Forest - Funky Jewellery and Bush Sculpture

Both boys and girls can make these awsome brooches, badges and pendants.  Help artist Natasha Stone scour the bush for found treasures such as feathers, nuts and twigs and learn some interesting jewellery techniques using clay.

Then we will be making a giant bush creature together from twigs, grasses and bindings that will live at the Forest for a while - under the trees!

Children under 7 will need to bring an adult helper.

Max 15 children ages 6 and up.

Contemporary Jewellery

Make awsome jewellery such as necklaces, brooches, badges and pendants similar to those seen in the year 2000.

If you like, bring your own found objects such as beads, small feathers, shells or river stones – some of these will be provided on the day by the tutor, along with jewellery wire and fittings.

15)  Paper and Card Work - Awesome Pop Up Greeting Cards and Cool Gift Tags

Use stunning colours and shapes to transform an ordinary gift into a piece of drama and imagination made uniquely by you.

16)  West Australian Marine Animals – Simplified Origami

‘Know more about what’s under and above the water line here in West Australia.  Choose as your theme  a fur-seal, starfish, crab or tropical fish by  folding coloured cards and adding markings.  You can hang them in your room or make a habitat to put your animal in. ‘  A simplified form of origami will be taught to create these creatures and the children determine what sort of habitat and markings to use.     

17)  Sculpture – Wire armature making and wire 3D sculpture mounted. Plaster sculpture, clay and other media.

18)  Clay Work - Feeling and Expressing Natural Worlds through Art - 

Nature Inscribed Pottery Tiles

(to Hang on the Garden Fence or place in the Garden Path)

By sculpting and smoothing the surface of  the terracotta clay, designs of nature appear to marry perfectly with the natural environment.  After tracking down (NB seeing some?) real-life skinks or exploring the form of a seed pod, transfer charcoal designs of nature onto a pottery tile with the help of artist Natasha Stone. 

 

19)  Clay Work - Primitive Clay Animal Forms

After sharing some ancient tales about our favourite native species to inspire us, we’ll make a chuditch, python or dunnart from clay and it’s own  habitat from grasses, sticks, nuts, stones.  We will hand dye some silk to wrap it in as a protective pouch.  Then you can take an earth figure home to keep as your animal amulet!  Age:  Children and  or  families.

Make a simple hand built form of a chuditch, python or dunnart and gather materials for its habitat.  A hand dyed silk wrapping will be included to wrap your precious small animal in. Drawing the animals, spirits from the stories on paper or sand.  Learning about their habitats.) (Story sharing of Noongar tales about local species such as Chuditch.

20)  Clay for a Day or more

The option of fired or unfired clay work that may entail

•  detailing  with ochres and non toxic surface applications

•  creative free play and functional objects

•  distinctive contemporary young people’s interests – such as a brightly coloured dragon that actually smokes via an mosquito coil!

21)  Clay Work - Primitive Animal Amulets

After sharing some ancient tales about our favourite native species to inspire us, we’ll make a chuditch, python or dunnart form clay and it’s own habitat from grasses, sticks, nuts and stones.  We will hand dye some silk to wrap it in as a protective pouch.  Then you can take an earth figure home to keep as your animal amulet!

22)  Clay Amulets and talismen objects with Hand dyed Hemp/Silk Pouch/Wrapping

Using a  firing-pot, make small primitive fired objects while making our amulet pouches in our own way. A  hand made hemp/silk pouch to protect it in. Skills learnt include clay pottery, shaping, molding, firing, dye-ing, embellishing, wrapping, binding, sewing, hand-dying with cool or fiery colours.

23)  Masks and Shields - Festivals and Parades Around the World  - Masks – Carnivale Exotica

Using card, plaster or papier mache create a mask of your choice from a inspiring variety of examples, opera, primitive, or  bird styles to copy. See examples of masks from other cultures.  Many different media to choose from.

The masks are decorated with a choice of coloured card and feathers, leaves and bark and clay, or spangles and sequins, coloured card, feathers, leaves and bark ,clay and sparkly bits.

Using various materials create a mask or shield of your choice from a inspiring variety of examples, opera, primitive, or  bird styles. See examples of masks from other cultures.

Masquerade Half Masks

Highly decorated masks made from various coloured card with lots of curly bits sticking out.

Papier mache half masks

From the Italian opera traditions.

24)  Papier Mache Wild and Wacky Giant Colourful Native Flowers and Birds.

This is Papier Mache like you’ve never seen.  Using intensely coloured tissue paper wrapped over a frame work - a wild wacky bird can be finished in the 2 hours or a fantastic flower  if both sessions chosen.  Reinterpret the colourful wildflowers we see or make a colourful Port Lincoln Parrot. Make a giant Port Lincoln parrot or black cockatoo or tiger snake in stunning colours.  No painting required - the colour comes from the papers used.

25)  Papier Mache

By recycling cardboard packing cases and using papier mache techniques with gold paints and decorative additions make highly creative frames, clocks and mirrors.  Learning decorative painting technique and embellishing.

26)  Plaster Casting of Sea Creatures

Create a plaque of a seaside treasure to hang on the wall.

27)  Snow Domes

What’s a ‘snow dome’?  Plastic bubbles often found in souvenir shops with water and snowflakes inside? Glitter or snowflakes fall down on a snowman or scene when you shake them?  Create your own style snow dome. 

* Bring along a well-sealing glass jar and a cornflake packet toy to put inside. 

Max of 20 children.  Suitable for Ages 6 – 12

 

1.       Winter Snow Domes

Do you know the plastic bubbles found in souvenir shops called Snow Domes?  Create your own style snow dome with a native animal scene inside. Snowflakes in water will fall down on your own illustrated native bush scene when you shake it.

* Bring along a large jam jar with a lid that will fit a gumnut creature inside. 

Max of 20 children.  Suitable for Ages 6 – 12

(All children need to bring along * above)

28)  Kites

Make a simple windsock-style kite, inspired by those traditionally found in Asian countries.  Create your own rainbow serpent then attach your creation to a bamboo pole to take home and fly in your garden.

Underwater Treasure Box

Amaze your friends and family with artwork with a 3D feel!  Using sand, shells, seaweed and beachy bits and pieces we’ll use some fantastic paint techniques to cover a box to keep your little toys and treasures in!

Furry Fings

Make a furry notebook or furry pencil and gift cards to match. Other little sparkly bits available to add!  What a great present for your best friend’s birthday!   We’ll do draw some awesome cartoon characters to put in the book as well.

29 a)  Public Art Work  -  Bush Creations and Basketry

Using bush sculpture and basketry techniques, transform native grasses, rushes, sticks and wrappings into semi permanent public art works for display in a local park or shopping area even. 

29 b) Public Art Work – Mural Mania

Art and photographs by community members transposed onto walls, fences and buildings or a combination of my own artwork with the former.

30) Mosaic - Small Tiles

Using broken crockery, floor tiles, glass beads, shells, crystals etc. to create stunning mosaic pots, platters or house numbers.

31)  Small Papier Mache Family – make a set of small figures such as a family, cartoon characters of stage set – they will all be wearing different clothes and striking different poses.

32) Australian bush creature pots

Make an Australian bush creature from clay with art tutor Natasha Stone.  It will be painted  with clay colours and nestled in eucalyptus leaves.  Come dressed for clay!

Smoke fuming dragons

Clay dragons are hand built by children of any age above 5.  The finished product can include an incense cone underneath which forces smoke out of the nostrils of the dragon.

Puppets and Dolls from Nomad Tribes

Using the skills of the nomads of faraway lands, learn to wrap, bind and use found objects to make these strange and wonderful characters to take home with you.  Bring what you can find (not buy) such as old bits of coloured string, buttons, even small bits of coloured plastic for gluing on.

Winged Doll Creatures

Take the dolls of your childhood and I will help you transform them into the flying monsters of your scariest nightmares!  Hang them from the trees for all the world to see at a festival or at your home!

Amazing Miniature Surprise Boxes

Enjoy a laugh and make a friend squirm with these crazy paper jack-in-the-boxes.

Mosaic for Adults

A course that will include design and preparation, looking at colours and applying of tiles to make platters, tiles and plaques.  Make your own choice of project!  Please phone Natasha for materials requirements.

Children’s and Parent’s Art Class Series

Come to these happy and instructive classes to learn fine art subjects such as ink gestural drawing, painting on fabric, puppetry, sculpture with clay, and mask making.  All materials provided. 

Organic Forms to Surfing Dogs - Clay Sculpture for Young Adults

Enter the third dimension in clay.  Learn to design clay sculpture using visual diaries, and look at a contemporary sculptors’ work.

Lots of freedom to explore themes throughout the term while learning fine art skills.  Beneficial for portfolio preparation for tertiary entry.

Shadow Puppetry

Make a stage and shadow characters that are lit up from behind.  Introductory talk about shadow puppetry around the world.  Looking at a fable to incorporate into a shadow puppet show.

Concludes with group show, which includes taped music and possibly taped dialogue.

Sand Sculpture

Create a 5 metre many coloured dragon or sea snake on the beach using non pollutant colours and sand.  Multiple layers of decoration will be added and a photographic image of the snake and its makers will be posted to participants.  Environmentally safe, and very successful as a Rottnest Interpretation Acitivity.

2 hour project for all ages.

Machine – Group Project

Make a cardboard toy machine together which you can stand inside and operate.

Bring your own cardboard boxes, egg cartons and other stick onable things.

Fantastical Insects

Following our great insect talk and walk,  make a fantasy jewel beetle, shield bug or other West Australian insect.  We will look at pictures of our insects and interpret them using provided bush materials.  If you want, you can also bring your own small nuts, twigs and leaves small enough to fit in your two hands.

Clay Bearded Dragons

Make a bearded dragon that may live at Piney Lakes Reserve.  This dragon will shelter a little tea-light and it can be fired or air dried.

Designed by Art of Fun Copyright (C) 2002 Art of Fun