A Room for Art

A Room for Art is a place to paint, draw, build, print, bind, glue and sculpt. Classes for children and adults are held in a sunny home studio in Arlington, MA. More than a room, it is time and space to work with your hands, enjoy materials and make your ideas concrete.

Location

A Room for Art is located in Arlington Heights at 115 Robbins Road. The Studio is down the driveway on the right side of the house.
Questions? Call
Ann 781 366 5955
annalburywynne56@gmail.com

Offerings

Classes for Children
Workshops for Adults
Birthday Parties
Open Studios
Vacation and Summer Camps

Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Paper Strips- 2D to 3D

Good Morning. The more I have to communicate through a screens the more I want to play with paper (or wax or paint...) I am going to try to focus on PAPER for the next while because it is so versatile!! Here's on way to make 2D paper into 3D.

You'll need colored paper (white is fine too), a glue stick, scissors and a piece of mat board or cardstock as a base.
1 Cut paper into strips (paper cutter, exact knife or scissors)
2 Play with a few strips experimenting how you can make it NOT FLAT- fold, roll squish, twist.
3 Glue parts of the strip, let the rest rise up form the page

Here's some student examples:




Monday, March 30, 2020

Accordian face!

Now that you know how to fold accordion book. Here is a simple use:

accordion fold 4 panels

book closed
book open




Sunday, March 29, 2020

Accordion Book

An accordion book is an easy book form once you practice a bit. Here's a folding method that works with any strip of paper to produce evenly size pages. You can probably google it and get more elegantly drawn instructions. I am including photos and my attempt at doing origami type illustrations.


81/2 x11 piece of paper cut in half lengthwise then glued together

fold in half

cut edge joins folded edge

both sides

opened up view

cut edge meets folded edge again

both sides

reverse the fold
join the mountains on the 2 larger panels
Ready to open up and draw!

Melted Crayons!

Remember that melted wax form a few days ago? With a candle and a blunt knife I made some weird birds. The colors in the sheets of wax seemed feather like. I heated the knife in the candle and used it to cut through the wax. I used the hot wax from the candle as glue. As you see I am just making this up. The wax broke, I dropped a whole bird I made and it fell apart!  I learned something about what wax melted into a thin sheet can do and not do. It was really fun.




Friday, March 27, 2020

Exploded Square

This is a simple cut paper exercise that I like to do. you need scissors, two pieces of paper of different colors. I like to choose really different colors (opposite or complimentary) One piece needs to be quite a bit larger than the other, the smaller piece needs to be a square.
steps:

1 Cut out pieces from each side, any shape
2 Arrange them as if you had flipped them out of the original paper
3 Glue all pieces

(I didn't glue them down )

Here's what mine looked like this time:




Thursday, March 26, 2020

Crayons

I tell the children in my preschool class that when I was a child there were no magic markers! We used crayons first, as our dry, go- to drawing medium. Now that I have my studio and its decades later, there are so many options of things to draw with! I have been given very generous donations of crayons! I have thousands!
Today I got some out to play with. (and learned- use lots of wax paper and fewer crayons and don't forget about them in the oven. Maybe 5 minutes? Watch them!!)

I put them in a pan with wax paper underneath
I put them in a pan at 250 degrees and then forgot about them
when cool the mass looked very brown from the top but...
Add but when I flipped the wax stuck to the paper over there was color
I peeled off the paper and have colorful pieces!



Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Sky

This morning running across the top of Robbins Farm I had a great view of the sunrise. I started thinking about colors gradually blending into each other like they do in so many natural places- a plant stem, a leaf, the sky, the skin of a frog or the fur of a cat.
On a clear day the sky is a reliable inspiration for this. I didn't capture it with my colored pencils but the the picture of Robbins Farm when there was snow a few years ago does! How delicate is the transition from blue to orange at the horizon.


Here's what I mean! Robbins Farm a winter when there was snow.