They moved from the country into big cities, and many went from working on farms to working in cities and in industry. They had to get used to a whole new way of life in the city. It came to be called the Great Migration, and Jacob Lawrence’s parents were part of it.
When you look at Jacob Lawrence’s work, you see he liked to use solid shapes of strong colors, instead of using lots of texture and shading.
JACOB LAWRENCE QUOTES
"The community [in Harlem] let me develop...I painted the only way I knew how to paint...I tried to put the images down the way I related to the community...I was being taught...to see."
"My pictures express my life and experiences. I paint the things I know about and the things I have experienced. The things I have experienced extend into my national, racial and class group. So I paint about the American Negro working class."
"If at times my artworks do not express the conventionally beautiful, there is always an effort to express the universal beauty of man's continuous struggle to life his social position and to add dimension to his spiritual being."
"I have always liked a certain kind of structure that happens to be geometric. It's clean. To me, it has a cleanness about it, a neatness. Maybe that's it. A certain neatness. I keep my studio, try to keep my studio and home the same way...And in teaching I emphasize this aspect."
"My work is abstract in the sense of having been designed and composed but it is not abstract in the sense of having no human content."
"I am part of the Black community, so I am the Black community speaking."
"I like to think I've expanded my interest to include not just the Negro theme but man generally and maybe this speaks through the Negro I think this is valid also...I would like to think of it as dealing with all people, the struggle of man to always better his condition and to move forward..."
"I never use the term 'protest' in connection with my paintings. They just deal with the social scene...They're how I feel about things."
"I've always been involved with content...and form, I think form is just as important [as content]."
MORE ART FROM LAWRENCE
Ant
and Grasshopper
Brooklyn
Stoop
Great
Migration Plate 31
Great Migration Plate 38
Great
Migration Plate 58
Great
Migration Plate 5
He wrote long descriptive captions to go along with his paintings as was common in magazines and books in the 1930s and 1940s. Additionally, Lawrence used tone down colors in large flat surfaced that had the quality of print graphics. Like newspapers.
For our art project today, we will be making relief prints with a press. Prints are bold and graphic, like Jacob Lawrence’s paintings.
Templeton Elementary School Art
Literacy Program
Jacob Lawrence Printmaking Project
This project will be easier
if there is a second adult to help. All
the kids will have to take turns inking and printing their artwork, and there
needs to be help and supervision. The ink is water based and washes off hands
with water. But it may get messy.
Getting
ready
Presenters, first
thing, please sign onto the Art Lit cart sign-out sheet on the wall. That way we know where the art carts are at
any time. Presenters should only be
coming in at a time they have officially signed up for. Next, please check the Art Lit cart for the
supplies you will need. The presentation
folders and the tools should all be kept on the carts. You will need to take a stack of paper sheets
and a bag of foam sheets from the counter.
These are the supplies you will need:
On the cart and if not on cart Take
from the counter:
~Presentation folder and art samples
~1 bag of white foam sheets (30)
~Desk protector sheets (30)
~1 stack of
white paper (about 80 sheets)
~Bag of ballpoint pens (30)
~Drying rack
~4 ink rollers (brayers)
~4 metal pans for rolling out ink and inking
prints
~1 jar of black ink, and 2 jars of
colored inks
~Plastic knives for scooping ink from
jars
~1 printing press with a felt pad (please keep it in the box when not in use)
~Cleaning items: Plastic basin for water, bottle of water,
rag, and roll of paper towels
If dry
prints are left on the drying rack, please put them into a folder. The person before you should have set a
folder with their teacher’s name by their class’s work so we can tell where it
goes. If you are going to a portable
classroom, make sure you have water in the bottle.
In the
classroom, each student starts out with a desk protector and a ballpoint
pen. Don’t hand out the foam until you
have talked to the kids and they are ready for it. (The foam is easy to break,
and we do not have extra for fiddly hands.)
Set up a
large table or set of desks as the area for inking and printing. You need space for the press, and 3 metal
trays. The tray in the center will be
where the ink is rolled out, and two kids at a time can ink their projects next
to the rolling tray. When you finish
with the black ink, you replace the dirty tray and rollers with the fresh ones.
Suggested printing set up
Drying rack and pencil Printing press Tray for a kid to ink on Tray
for rolling out ink Tray for second kid
to ink on
Set up a
separate area to wash off the print plates in between colors. If you are in a K-2 class, use the sink. If you are in a portable, set up the basin
with a little water and the rag in it, and the paper towels next to it. If the class has a paper towel dispenser, try
to use those. If not, try to use the
towels we have sparingly.
The
Project
(Things
you might want to say to the kids are in purple.)
Try to think of questions to ask the kids as you go
along. Present Jacob Lawrence’s work to
the kids, then show them the samples of our project. Put the page of city street pictures on the
docucam.
There
is also a 2-page set of illustrated instructions, which may make this more
clear if you didn’t see it in person at the training.
Part 1 – The Black and
White Print
Today
we are going to learn to make relief prints.
“Relief” means a surface that has
a design cut into it. We are going to
use thin sheets of foam as our printing plates.
You will draw your design on the foam with ballpoint pens, and the pens will
press a line into the foam. Then we
will roll ink onto the foam. The ink will cover the high spots and will
not go into the lines you have drawn.
Then we’ll print them onto paper in a press.
The
places you draw lines will come out white, because the printing ink doesn’t go
into the lines, and the places you don’t make marks on will come out
black. The picture will also come out in
reverse.
Step 1 – Hand out the foam sheets.
The foam is not
very strong, so don’t bend it or tear it, because it will break. You could still print a torn one, but it will
be better if it’s in one piece. We are
going to think about the subjects Jacob Lawrence liked to paint. The theme of this project is The City. You can draw buildings, streets, people,
cars, streetlights, a park – anything you’d find in a city. You can look at these pictures (the
ones on the docucam) for ideas, but draw what you
want to draw. You need to draw
carefully, because your lines need to indent into the foam to make a print, but
if you press too hard it can tear.
Step 2 –
When the kids have their pictures
indented into their foam sheets, get the ink ready, and explain what you are
doing so the kids get an idea of how it works.
Now
we are going to print your pictures.
First we take some ink and spread it on the inking plate.
Use the knife to scoop a small amount of ink onto the
tray. It won’t work with too much. When you spread it with the brayer, if the
brayer slides around, it is too much. It
should feel a bit tacky as you roll it out.
We
use the brayer to spread the ink into a thin, sticky layer. It needs to be just enough ink that when you
roll it across the picture, it covers the flat areas, but not too much, or it
will get into the lines and the picture will not show up when we print it.
When
the ink looks good, you put your picture down on the inking pan, and roll the
brayer across it. You can go back and
forth a few times to get it covered. The
flat parts should look solid black.
When
the picture is inked, you put a piece of paper into the press, then carefully
lay your inked picture upside down on the paper. Try to get it centered. Don’t move it around once it is on the paper,
or you will get a smudged print. Now lay
the felt pad on top of the foam sheet, and press the print. Watch out for your fingers. Press the handle down firmly, but not too
hard. You don’t have to put all your
weight on it. We don’t want to break the
press.
After
pressing the print, take off the felt pad, and take out the print. Carefully peel the printed paper off the
foam. Your print is done! Write your name at the bottom in pencil, and
put it on the drying rack.
After
a few prints are rolled, more ink will need to be added to maintain enough for
the kids to get a solid roll.
Part 2 – The Colored
Split Fountain Print
If you have
time, you can move on to doing the color prints. First the kids need to clean their foam print
plates, either in the sink or in the basin with some water and the rag. Remind them to not break the foam
plates. It doesn’t have to be very
clean, just the top layer of ink removed.
They should pat them dry-ish with a paper towel. Please conserve towels as much as possible.
Take away
the 2 dirty rollers and the dirty ink rolling pan, and get out the clean
ones. On the clean ink rolling pan, put
dabs of the two colored inks about 4 inches apart. Carefully roll up and down to spread the
ink. You want to go side to side just
enough to blend the two colors in the middle, but not so much that the two
colors get mixed into one color. Try to
get that across to the kids, or you will quickly have one mixed color to work
with. Tell the kids this is a really
cool printmaking effect called a “split fountain”.
Demonstrate
for the kids how to roll the color onto the foam printing plate in one
direction, so the color stays in two bands.
Print in the press the same as for the first prints.
Afterwards
/ Clean up
The foam
plates can be thrown away after making the prints, unless someone really wants
theirs. Please make sure to collect all
the placemats and ballpoint pens before you leave the room.
Stack the
dirty trays, rollers, plastic knives and wash basin to take back to the library
and wash in the sink. There should be a
scrubber there and paper towels in the dispenser. Please put items back onto the cart after
washing for the next person. A note about the brayers: Brayers are not supposed to be stored with
the rubber roller resting on a surface, as it can cause flat spots, so please
lay them roller-up. Thanks.
Put your
teacher’s name on a folder and set it next to the drying rack so the next
person knows what to do with your class’s prints after they are dry.
If we are running low on ink, email us! We have no idea how far the ink will go. We have some more, but a limited amount. If the black runs out, you may find blue on
the cart instead.
Thank you! February
2019
Laura Cox
Art Literacy – Step by Step Instructions for the Printmaking
Project
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Step 1. Draw a picture on the Styrofoam printing
plate with a ballpoint pen. Push hard
enough to indent, but not so hard you break through the foam sheet.
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Step 2. Use the knife to put a glob of ink onto the
metal tray. Don’t use too much at a
time. Keep adding more after each few
prints are rolled.
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Step 3
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Step 4. Place the foam print plate onto the clean
metal tray.
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Step 5. Roll the ink onto the print plate. Get a good layer so all the flat spots are
covered. You don’t want to put it on
too thickly, or the ink will fill the lines and ruin the print.
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Step 6. Place a clean sheet of paper onto the bed of the press, at the top edge where the weight will cover it.
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Step 7. Carefully place the inked print plate ink-side-down onto the paper. Try not to slide or shift it, or the print will come out smudged.
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Step 8. Lay the felt blanket on top of the foam print plate. (The felt will add pressure.)
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Step 9. Press down the handle on the press to make the print. Push firmly, but not too hard. We don’t want to break it.
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Step 10. Peel the print off the foam plate and see your print. Kids should write their names on the lower front corner in pencil at this point. Put prints on the drying rack to dry.
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Onward – to split fountain color
prints.
Step 11. Carefully wash the foam print plate in the sink or the basin with water and a rag, just to remove surface ink. (It will look dirty)
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Step 12. Pat the print plate dry with a paper towel. They are fragile, so be careful
.
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Step 13. Use the knife to put dabs of two colored
inks on the clean metal tray. Place
them maybe 4 inches apart.
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Step 14. Use the clean roller to roll out the inks, being careful to mostly roll only up and down. You want the colors to blend at the middle, but not be mixed together completely.
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Step 15. Roll the split fountain ink onto the foam
print plate, being careful to roll straight across it, so the ink colors
remain separated, only blending in the middle.
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Step 16. Print just as with black ink, then peel the
print off and see how it came out.
Write names, and put on drying rack.
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The final step is to
wash all the rollers, trays, and whatever else the ink got onto, but it is
waterbased, and washes off pretty easily.
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