Drawing the Horizon
Overview
Year Level: Year 8
Subject: Visual Arts
Duration: 45 minutes
Unit Title: Perspective Through Personalisation
Lesson Title: Understanding Horizon Lines
Lesson Number: 2 of 20
Class Size: 20 students
Curriculum Alignment
Australian Curriculum: The Arts – Visual Arts (Years 7–8)
Strand: Making and Responding
Content Description (ACAVAM122):
- Practise techniques and processes to enhance representation of ideas in their art-making.
- Explore viewpoints and visual conventions, including perspective and composition.
Lesson Intent
Students will:
- Understand the fundamental role of the horizon line in one-point and two-point perspective.
- Explore how the placement of a horizon line changes the viewer’s perspective.
- Use sketching techniques to experiment with different horizon line positions.
- Express personal interpretation of space through placement of perspective lines.
Learning Objectives
By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:
- Define the term horizon line in the context of perspective drawing.
- Identify and sketch different placements of horizon lines (high, middle, and low).
- Begin constructing three simple scenes using various horizon line placements.
- Interpret how a change in horizon line affects the mood and focus of a composition.
Success Criteria
Students will:
✅ Correctly use the term horizon line when discussing drawings.
✅ Produce 3 quick sketches featuring different horizon lines.
✅ Show a visible change in viewpoint across their sketches.
✅ Participate in reflective discussion using appropriate visual arts language.
Materials Required
For each student:
- A3 cartridge paper (folded into three vertical panels)
- 2H and HB pencils
- Erasers
- Metal rulers
- Coloured pencils or fine liners for outlining
- Visual glossary handout (with key terms and diagram examples)
Teacher tools:
- Whiteboard and markers
- Digital projector and screen
- Visual reference slides (sunset photo, city skyline, street-level view)
- Timer or bell for segment transitions
Prior Knowledge
Students should already be familiar with:
- Basic visual arts terminology such as foreground, background, and composition.
- Using line and space to create depth.
This is the second lesson in the unit — Lesson 1 focused on using personal themes and identity in art compositions, which will be expanded upon in future lessons.
Lesson Structure (45 minutes)
⏱️ 0–5 mins | Welcome & Intent
- Greet class warmly and settle students into their seats with materials ready.
- Pose the question:
"How does the height of the viewer change what we see?"
- Use projected photos to show three perspectives: bird’s eye (high), eye-level (middle), and worm’s eye (low).
Students make 30-second verbal predictions in pairs.
🧠 Big Idea: Where the horizon line sits will drastically change what your viewer focuses on.
⏱️ 5–12 mins | Explicit Instruction
- Define ‘horizon line’ on the whiteboard and visually annotate using the projector:
- "Horizon line = viewer’s eye level in the picture."
- Demonstrate on screen using diagram overlays the effect of:
- High horizon line (viewer looks down)
- Middle horizon line (eye-level)
- Low horizon line (viewer looks up)
- Teacher shows three reference images with clear horizon lines.
📘 Distribute student visual glossary handouts.
⏱️ 12–25 mins | Guided Practice
🎯 Focus: Encourage use of vanishing points — optional introduction at this stage for faster groups.
🖌 Tip: Have students use a different colour to sketch horizon lines to keep them visually distinct.
Teacher circulates to support and redirect students who need help with ruler placement or scale.
⏱️ 25–35 mins | Independent Sketching
- Students independently sketch simple 3D objects in each panel using the different horizon lines.
- Prompt:
“How could this setting represent your favourite place from a new perspective?”
- Encourage use of subtle personalisation (home town buildings, a park, their favourite café etc).
Extension for fast finishers:
🎨 Add tone gradients below or above the horizon to begin creating a sense of depth and atmosphere.
⏱️ 35–42 mins | Reflection & Whole-Class Dialogue
- Ask students to pin up their sketches on a display wall or hold up their sheets.
- Group discussion:
“How does your low horizon sketch feel different than your high one?”
“Where would YOU stand in the scene you’ve drawn?”
- Use visual arts terminology: vanishing point, scale, depth, angle, personal meaning.
Teacher may spotlight 2–3 standout student works and prompt peer feedback.
⏱️ 42–45 mins | Conclusion & Clean-up
-
Recap key learning:
“The horizon line acts like our eyes within the scene — where we put it changes the story we tell.”
-
Quick-fire recap quiz (verbal or written):
✅ “What’s the horizon line?”
✅ “What happens with a high horizon line?”
✅ “How could you use horizon lines to show how YOU view the world?”
-
Pack up and prepare students for next lesson: Vanishing Points and Depth.
Adjustments & Differentiation
For EAL/D or students with literacy needs:
- Use annotated visuals and diagram demonstrations.
- Provide vocabulary cards with images.
For extension/enrichment students:
- Encourage single-point perspective object drawing with rules of convergence.
- Discuss emotional impact of point of view in famous artworks.
Assessment (Formative)
- Teacher observation of practical task completion.
- Use of correct terminology during discussion and reflection.
- Sketches demonstrate correct placement of horizon lines with some intent behind scene composition.
Reflection Prompt for Teacher (Post-Lesson)
- Did students begin to connect visual composition with personal expression?
- Were students able to visualise the importance of perspective through horizon placement?
- Which misconceptions appeared (e.g., horizon vs ground line)? How can these be addressed next time?
Looking Ahead
📌 Next Lesson: Vanishing Points and Depth (Lesson 3)
🧭 Students will begin plotting vanishing points and explore linear perspective to enhance realism and meaning in their works.
Let your students discover that where the eye goes, the story grows. 🌅