A Simple Illustration Exercise

by pam on November 8, 2009


The value of these exercises consists largely in fostering the inventive faculty of the child, in bringing out his individual ingenuity. The teacher should let the pupil depend on his own imagination entirely, afterwards suggesting improvements and pointing out the most palpable errors.

The Subjects - The stories illustrated may be original, or from suggestions offered by simple nursery tales and rhymes. For instance:

John flew a kite, but the wind was so strong that the string broke and the kite fell towards the ground. But it never reached the ground. It was caught in a tree and stayed there for a long time, so long, indeed, that there was nothing left of the kite except a few rotting sticks. Did John cry? No, he went home and made another kite.

To illustrate this, one or more pictures may be made. Examples: A boy flying a kite. The kite falling (upside-down). The kite lodged in a tree.

Reverse the Operation – For instance, draw a picture and write a little story about it.

As for example: A picture of a bird feeding a little bird in a nest. The story: “One day a bird fed its little one and then flew away to get another meal, but the mother bird never came back. A bad boy threw a stone at it just as it was picking up a nice little worm for the birdling’s luncheon. Wouldn’t the bad little boy feel sorry if he knew that the little bird in the nest starved to death because its mother never came back?”

Many of the Mother Goose Melodies provide easy, yet interesting, material for simple illustrations, thus:

MOTHER GOOSE MELODIES SIMPLY ILLUSTRATED

Anniversaries – On holidays, national anniversaries and other seasonable occasions, or rather for some days preceding them, it is well to direct the pupil’s energies toward the symbols and pictures by which these events and persons are commemorated.

New Year’s Day suggests Father Time, his scythe and hour glass. The New Year itself, as portrayed by a child, illustrating the new born year with the date thereof made prominent. Good resolutions – someone writing in a diary, etc.

February presents Washington’s and Lincoln’s birthdays as subjects, besides St. Valentine’s day. Events in the Jives of the two great patriots are good subjects, or simply their portraits surmounted by or surmounting, for instance, a hatchet and a cherry tree trunk, or a rail fence or broken shackles, made into a frame – as the case may be.

SEPTEMBER – Draw Autumn flowers, such as the golden-rod, sunflower, and others found in your locality, grasses, grains, bushes and trees.

OCTOBER – Draw fruits, Autumn leaves, pumpkins and ‘Jack-o’ lanterns.

NOVEMBER – Draw objects suggested by Thanksgiving – The May flower. Indians. wigwams, turkeys and corn.

DECEMBER – Subjects suggested by Christmas, such as Christmas trees, stars, holly, Santa Claus and reindeer, toys of all kinds.

JANUARY – Eskimo huts, snow forts, snow men, snow crystals, skating and coasting.

FEBRUARY – Subjects suggested by Lincoln’s and Washington’s birthdays and Valentine Day. .

MARCH – Draw kites. windmills, boats and pussy-willows.

APRIL – Draw buds and twigs, tulips and other early Spring flowers, umbrellas & ducks.

MAY – Draw baskets, birds and their nests and eggs, trees, flowers and simple landscapes.

JUNE – Draw flowers, vacation scenes, landscapes.

The Months – The illustration below offers a suggestion for each month of the year. The designs are intended for those who are well advanced as well as for beginners. The latter may use them as copies, while the former may find in them bases for improvement in form and idea.

Here are three suggestions for simple story pictures:

MEMORY DRAWING

Practice drawing from memory. Take a single figure, a simple subject, and, having drawn it two or three times from the original, lay both aside and then, by no aid except that of your memory, draw the object once more. Then compare it with the original and see how near it you have made the sketch. This is an interesting as well as a practically helpful exercise.

CORRECTING ERRORS

The pupil will be benefited if he will frequently criticize his own work from his own viewpoint. Thus only is improvement possible.

It is a mistake to suppose that it is necessary to have separate instructions for drawing each form or even each group of forms. Certain fixed niles govern drawing, and, once these are mastered, they can be applied to almost anything that can be represented by pen, pencil or brush.

Pen-drawing, the study of perspective, composition, light and shade, nature sketching, charcoal and crayon work, and other studies may be taken in accordance with the provisions of the state course of study.

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