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How To Create Moody One Color Paintings

This exploration is for all ages, as the colored smilies show. You can do the one color paintings with your whole family together!

1st thru 4th grades
5th thru 8th grades
9th thru 12th grades

Art Elements from Layers of Learning.

One color paintings are an art project from Art Elements, part of the Art Beginnings Course. You learn about color as one of the elements of art. Layers of Learning has hands-on art projects in every unit of this family-friendly curriculum. Learn more about Layers of Learning.

Color is one of the basic elements of art. Whenever we view art, we are affected by the colors within it, whether we realize it or not. Colors spark emotions. Artists play and experiment with colors and the emotions they evoke.

Pablo Picasso was a famous painter who played with color. He is most famous for his cubism, but before he painted in that style he went through his “blue period.” He focused on painting images that were lonely or sad, and he used the color blue to help express those emotions. Click here to check out PabloPicasso.org and view the self-portrait he painted during his blue period. Everything in the portrait is a various shade of blue.  Even his skin has a blue tint to it.  His colors make the portrait seem sullen and forlorn.

This is another Blue Period painting by Picasso called “La Soupe” (The Soup)

Step 1: Library Research

Before you begin exploring, read a book or two about color. Here are some suggestions, but if you can’t find these, look for books at your library about color. The colored smilies above each book tell you what age level they’re recommended for.

As Amazon affiliates, the recommended books and products below kick back a tiny percentage of your purchase to us. It doesn’t affect your cost and it helps us run our website. We thank you!

White Rabbit’s Color Book

by Alan Baker

Very basic color mixing within a kid-friendly story

A Book About Color

by Mark Gonyea

Covers mixing, value, complementary colors, and more

Color

by Betty Edwards

Advanced methods for looking at color and explanations of how to use color in art

Step 2: One Color Paintings

For this art project, you’ll need art paper, lots of crayons, and watercolor paints.

Choose a color that you want to have as the focus for your picture.  You’ll be using a monochromatic color scheme, which means you’ll only be using one color, but within each hue there are many tints and shades. Gather all the crayons of that one hue that you can find and use them to draw a simple picture of one item. You can use a how-to-draw tutorial from the internet if you want help with your drawing.

Make sure to incorporate the various tints and shades of your color in your drawing, but also leave white space in places too. You’ll be painting later and you want to leave some areas for the paint too.

Once you’ve finished coloring your picture, it’s time to paint. You can mix watercolor paints and play with the amount of water to make it either lighter or darker as you go.  The more water you use, the lighter the paint color will be. More paint will create a darker hue. You can even mix several hues together to get even more shades and varieties within a hue.

Once the picture is completely covered with paints, let it dry.  You may even want to mount it on a sheet of matching card stock or construction paper to carry the tone of the painting even further.

Step 3: Show What You Know

Show off your one color paintings to an audience and tell them what you drew and the various tints and shades of the hue you used. Describe some words that go along with your color. For example, when I look at the purple tiger, I think he is majestic, dark, brooding, powerful, and grand. Talk about colors and what each color symbolizes and communicates to you personally. Tell how you think it changed your picture because you used a monochromatic color scheme (just one color).

Additional Layers

Additional Layers are extra activities you can do or tangents you can take off on. You will find them in the sidebars of each Layers of Learning unit. They are optional, so just choose what interests you.

Writer’s Notebook

Besides Picasso’s “blue period,” he also had a rose period in which he used warmer colors.  

This is “Maternite” by Pablo Picasso, painted in 1905.

Did you notice that the tone and emotions in your paintings differed depending on whether you used warm or cool colors? Write about how warm colors (red, orange, yellow, brown) make you feel and about how cool colors (green, blue, purple) make you feel.

Memorization Station

Memorize “Nothing Gold Can Stay”, a poem by Robert Frost:

Nature’s first green is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay
.

Additional Layer

As you’re painting over the crayon picture, you can also talk about how you are making a wax resist painting.  The wax of the crayon resists the watercolor paints and won’t really stick there. The watercolors only fill in the spots in the areas you didn’t apply crayon wax.

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