Catch your friends on the move! Create cartoon-like drawings of each other in the style of Pop artist Keith Haring.
1.
Keith Haring began his art career by drawing with chalk on blank boards in the New York City subway. He believed that art should be simple enough for everyone to understand and shouldn’t have deep hidden meanings. He also liked to use very simple drawings with thick outlines and colors inside them. Haring often drew with markers. If he made a mistake he just changed his idea, because erasable markers hadn’t been invented yet. Now, if you make a mistake, just erase!
2.
On white paper, use Crayola® Erasable Colored Pencils to outline people in active positions—dance, jump, play "Statue." Take turns posing with or for your friends! Erase lines until you get poses that are compelling.
3.
Look at your original drawings for ideas. Use Crayola Color Explosion™ Paper and Markers to create a collage of dancers and jumpers. The color is already there, so you can concentrate on outlining yourself and your friends!
Choose your favorite popular symbol. Repeat your pattern to see four times the excitement with awesome Color Explosion™!
Throw yourself back to the 60s with Pop Art! Let your whimsical side stand out in bigger-than-life sculptures of everyda
In a house no bigger than many bedrooms, Maud Lewis, a folk artist, created delightful paintings of her beloved Nova Sco
Tangle up your fingers! Finger Twist is definitely for dynamic digits! Do you dare try this game with your toes?
It’s easy to make Prairie-style designs, just like famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright did. Are any of his famous homes
Kids build confidence and pride in their accomplishments with these stylish printed paper portfolios.
Children feel especially important when they create useful crafts. Fill this frame with their art or picture-it's perfec