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Designing Food Sculptures

Art • Year 7 • 45 • Created with AI following Aligned with Australian Curriculum (F-10)

Art
7Year 7
45
27 April 2025

Designing Food Sculptures

Overview

Lesson Title: Designing and Creating Food Sculptures
Year Level: Year 7
Subject: Visual Arts
Australian Curriculum Reference:

  • Curriculum Area: The Arts – Visual Arts (Years 7–8)
  • Content Description:
    • ACAVAM121: Plan and design artworks that represent artistic intention.
    • ACAVAM122: Practise techniques and processes to enhance representation of ideas in their art-making.
    • ACAVAR123: Present artworks for display and describe how audiences will experience and react to them.

Lesson Details

Duration: 45 minutes
Number of Students: 20 students


Learning Intentions

  • Students will refine their sculpture designs inspired by Claes Oldenburg.
  • Students will explore different sculpting materials to best represent their chosen food item.
  • Students will collaborate, share ideas, and provide constructive feedback on their peers’ work.
  • Students will understand the relationship between material, scale, and artistic intention.

Success Criteria

By the end of the lesson, students will:

✔️ Sketch a detailed plan for their food sculpture.
✔️ Select suitable materials for their design.
✔️ Begin constructing their sculpture with attention to form, texture, and scale.
✔️ Offer and respond to feedback respectfully and thoughtfully.


Materials Required

  • A3 sketch paper
  • Pencils, erasers
  • Air-dry clay, papier-mâché, foam, wire, fabric scraps
  • Acrylic paints, brushes
  • Hot glue guns (teacher supervised), craft glue
  • Aprons or protective clothing
  • Visual references: examples of Oldenburg's oversized sculptures

Lesson Structure

1. Introduction (5 minutes)

  • Quick class discussion: "What did we learn last lesson about Claes Oldenburg?"
  • Show 2–3 quick slides/images of Oldenburg’s food sculptures for recap.
  • Pose key questions:
    • "Why do you think Oldenburg chose to make everyday foods so large?"
    • "What materials did he use to exaggerate the texture or form?"
  • Explain the day's focus: designing and starting to build personal food sculptures!

2. Brainstorm and Sketch (10 minutes)

  • Students individually brainstorm their favourite food and how they might exaggerate its size or texture.
  • Sketch design ideas on A3 paper:
    • Outline the food item
    • Annotate which materials might be used and why
    • Consider exaggerated textures, proportions, and colours
  • Prompt students to think big, bold, and playful just like Oldenburg.

Teacher Tip: Roam and comment supportively, asking questions like "How will the surface feel? What texture techniques could you use?"


3. Peer Feedback and Refinement (5 minutes)

  • Turn and talk: students share their sketches with a partner.

  • Partners offer ‘Two Stars and a Wish’ feedback method:

    • ⭐ Two things they like
    • 💭 One suggestion to improve
  • Students refine their sketches based on feedback.


4. Material Selection and Construction Preparation (5 minutes)

  • Students select materials they plan to use from the materials table.
  • Brief reminder about safe handling, especially hot glue guns.
  • Each student sets up their workspace efficiently with their chosen materials.

5. Beginning Sculpture Construction (15 minutes)

  • Start building the internal structure or forming the basic shapes.

  • Teacher circulates, offering scaffolded questioning:

    • "What part of your sculpture do you think needs the most emphasis?"
    • "How does your material choice represent the texture of your food?"
  • Encourage students to focus on the overall form first – details and painting will come next lesson.

Differentiation Strategy:

  • Provide templates for students who may struggle with free-form building.
  • Offer verbal scaffolding or peer support for students needing help visualising the form.

6. Reflection and Pack Up (5 minutes)

  • Students carefully store their sculptures and clean their areas.
  • Quick exit ticket activity: each student writes down one material they loved working with today and one skill they want to improve next lesson.
  • Collect sketches — these will be handy for continued construction and eventual Artist Statements.

Assessment

Formative Assessment:

  • Observation of participation during sketching, discussion, collaboration, and construction.
  • Quality and creativity of initial sketches.
  • Engagement with peer feedback.
  • Safe and respectful use of materials.

Teacher Notes

  • Ensure a strong emphasis on positivity and playfulness, reflecting Oldenburg’s spirit.
  • Prioritise process over perfection — this unit aims to nurture imagination and collaboration.
  • For students who finish early, encourage them to start crafting fine texture details or experiment with paint sample swatches.

Future Planning

In the next session, students will:

  • Complete construction as needed
  • Paint and decorate their food sculptures
  • Prepare a short Artist Statement describing their inspiration, process, material choices, and reflections.

Extension Opportunity: Showcase finished works in a class "Food Hall" gallery, inviting the school community to celebrate students' creative culinary delights!


Curriculum Links: Cross-Curricular Priorities

  • Critical and Creative Thinking: Students imagine possibilities and connect ideas.
  • Personal and Social Capability: Respecting peers’ artistic visions, peer collaboration.
  • Literacy: Annotating sketches, discussing artistic ideas, and writing reflective Artist Statements.

Final Thought

This lesson encourages Year 7 students to embrace creativity, collaboration, and critical thinking, tailored perfectly to Australian Curriculum standards. It develops both technical art skills and expressive capabilities while allowing students to have a heap of fun in a hands-on, transformative art experience. 🎨✨

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