Large scale collaborative murals for kids
Earlier this year, my co-worker Jayne found the idea to make a collaborative school-wide paper mural based on the artwork of Thank YouX. The idea for a student mural originally came from Jenell Novello and you can see the lesson plan write-up on Artsonia. She also so generously provided the lesson plan and templates on Google docs. Thank You X got his name by accident. In 2009 Andy Warhol’s spray painted portrait was spotted on a city street in L.A.. … Read more... →
The more I look at Matisse's artwork, the more it really speaks to me. I love his vibrant colors and the way his artwork expresses such movement. Around this time last year, Chuck and I made Matisse Collages from construction paper. We had such fun making them together... that I thought we could take it to the next level... wall murals! Making Matisse Murals with Kids This post contains affiliate links. Thank you for your support! Yup. We made ourselves Matisse mural. The idea was inspired by this gorgeous kate zaremba wallpaper. (Love, love, loooove!) Here's how we did it! First, Chuck and I grabbed a bunch of paint chips and got cutting. (Two things I've learned recently... 1) Preschoolers LOVE scissors. So Chuck's totally on board anytime cutting is involved. 2) Paint chips are like construction paper... on steroids. They're seriously one of my favorite crafting materials. They come in fabulous, modern colors and they're free! Woot woot! That's why I used them to make a Christmas tree advent calendar and paint chip wall art.) Then, I taped a large piece of white craft paper onto the wall. Then we pulled out our trusty glue sticks, cutout shapes, and circle stickers and began making art! The circle stickers by far were his favorite to stick onto the wall. And we just kept going and going and going! I thought it would be fun to glue on super large googly eyes. While we got gluing, Chuck realized that he could also glue on glue sticks. While they didn't stay stuck for long, he enjoyed the diversion. And then we used washable markers to add finishing touches. (Side note: Thank goodness washable markers really are washable. I left him for just a moment and when I got back there was marker all over the wall too.) I loved how the results turned out, but the best part about this project for me was hearing Chuck say "Look mommy, I'm an artist." Yes you are, Chuck. Yes you are. If you're looking for more colorful artwork to make with the kids, check out my arts and craft page. I've also listed out several of our favorite activities below! fun with oil pastels melted crayon friendship rocks watercolor and crayon resist notebooks 2 ingredient homemade body paint spinning top marker art candy mosaic art Let's keep in Contact! Visit my Pinterest, Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter accounts! (Or subscribe to my email mailing list by filling out the pink bar at the top of your screen.) Happy making, friends!
I was inspired by the beautiful school portrait mural at smART Class, and thought we would give it a try here at Suffield. During our first week of art classes, we went over art room procedures and rules, and then we got down to the joyful business of creating artwork! We made these wonderful little portraits based in color theory in first through fifth grades. The students drew and then colored themselves based on the color of table where they sit. The younger grade levels colored themselves using the red, green, yellow, or blue color families and the older grade levels added an analogous color partner. I love this idea and am happy with the results! "Life is like a rainbow. You need both the sun and the rain to make its colors appear." -Author Unknown
I get A LOT of questions about transferring artwork to a mural-sized surface. This is (understandably) one of the most intimidating parts of beginning mural work for a lot of artists. Lucky for you, there’s a ton of options out there, and many of them are super-accessible to beginner muralists. Wha
Earlier this year, my co-worker Jayne found the idea to make a collaborative school-wide paper mural based on the artwork of Thank YouX. The idea for a student mural originally came from Jenell Novello and you can see the lesson plan write-up on Artsonia. She also so generously provided the lesson plan and templates on Google docs. Thank You X got his name by accident. In 2009 Andy Warhol’s spray painted portrait was spotted on a city street in L.A.. … Read more... →
Large Scale Mural Workshop for Kids
Our silhouette mural is finished! It went pretty quickly once we got started. Each of the figures represents different subject areas at school. Students in grades 4-6 did most of the painting and I had some students in 7-8 grade do touch-ups, edging and fine details. I made a video slideshow of the steps we made to paint the mural to show for the whole school. The school presentation has lots of photos of students in it. I made … Read more... →
Start the new year by building classroom community and cultivating a growth mindset with a collaborative mural. This SEL Art Project includes worksheets and printable templates to help your students explore important social-emotional skills like perseverance, cooperation, and respecting diversity. This community building Art Lesson is great for a back-to-school activity, New Years, Earth Day and Peace Day celebrations, or any time of the year. Perfect for upper elementary and middle school students to create a unique and vibrant mural that celebrates the spirit of community and unity while reinforcing the importance of working together! Included in this Artful Lesson: Teacher Guide (1 page) The Teacher Guide provides you with a list of art materials needed for the lesson as well as teaching suggestions and helpful tips. Opening Activity (1 page) Also available as an EASEL activity! The Strengths and Challenges activity helps students to understand that when we work together using our own personal strengths, we can learn from each other, solve problems and achieve goals. Teachers can extend this part of the lesson to discuss the importance of a growth mindset. Better Together Art Lesson (1 page) Also available as an EASEL activity! Students draw and paint a mandala and then transform their own personal artwork into a collaborative class mural. You may choose to print out this page for each student (available in both color and grayscale) or display the lesson on the interactive whiteboard. Class Mural Template (1 page) Sketch ideas with an EASEL activity! The students’ artworks are arranged together into a mural that celebrates diversity while promoting the importance of cooperation and solidarity. Your class mural can be displayed around common areas of the school including the entrance, hallway, cafeteria, classroom, etc. to celebrate collaboration and create a colorful, caring community. This lesson is also available in Spanish.
Today I wrapped up week #3 of school! Man oh man - do I miss the summer! Waking up at 5:15am every morning just isn't really my cup of tea.. This year my school had our students rotate through all 8 discovery (specials) classes during the first 8 days of school (normally we see them for a few days at a time). This was so that our students could meet all of their discovery teachers.. and get to see all of our classrooms. Last year I went 1 1/2 months before seeing some of my rotations, so this was a welcomed change! So during the first 8 days of school I introduced myself, went over my classroom rules, some procedures, and assigned seats for 48 separate classes! After all the boring introductory stuff, I also had my 2nd-5th grade students work on a collaborative mural project. This lesson comes from Don at Shine Brite Zamorano! We started by looking at the artist Libs Elliot. I showed students some examples of her work and then we briefly talked about how she was able to simultaneously create a sense of unity and variety in her artwork. After looking at some of her pieces, we landed on a slide which showed the GORGEOUS mural that Don had his students make, then I explained what we were going to do! Students were instructed to create a square patch with construction paper, that would be added to a nearly school-wide collaborative mural project inspired by the work of Libs Elliot. At each of my tables I put a basket filled with 6"x6" squares, large triangles (cut from 6"x6" squares), and 3"x3" squares in a number of different colors (colors were switched out for each rotation). Students were told they needed one large square, one large triangle, and two small squares (which could be cut into smaller triangles) - then the rest was up to them! I used the following schedule for my color rotations: Rotation 1- Scarlet, Magenta, White Rotation 2- Red, Scarlet, Orange (some), White Rotation 3- Orange, Gold, Red (some), White Rotation 4- Gold, Yellow, Light Yellow, Orange (some), White Rotation 5- Light Yellow, Hot Lime, Holiday Green (some), White Rotation 6- Hot Lime, Holiday Green, Turquoise, White Rotation 7- Turquoise, Royal Blue, Sky Blue, White Rotation 8- Royal Blue, Purple, Lilac, White I gotta be honest - the prep work for this one was INTENSE.. but the results are STUNNING! For this project (and really all my other projects), we used Tru-Ray Sulphite Construction Paper. If you haven't used it before - you haven't been living! Their paper comes in super vibrant colors AND it doesn't fade (which means this display will be up for a while)! To hang, I glued down the squares onto sheets of butcher paper, and then used packing tape and command strips to attach it to the wall. Command strips were ESSENTIAL to getting this to stay up!! The other specials teachers and I think that there is some kind of conspiracy going on in which the county is spraying something on our walls to make sure no tape sticks to it. I really think we're on to something!
I get A LOT of questions about transferring artwork to a mural-sized surface. This is (understandably) one of the most intimidating parts of beginning mural work for a lot of artists. Lucky for you, there’s a ton of options out there, and many of them are super-accessible to beginner muralists. Wha
I am back in the classroom at Keller Elementary in Green Bay after taking a year off to be home with my three little ones. I am blessed bey...
Earlier this year, my co-worker Jayne found the idea to make a collaborative school-wide paper mural based on the artwork of Thank YouX. The idea for a student mural originally came from Jenell Novello and you can see the lesson plan write-up on Artsonia. She also so generously provided the lesson plan and templates on Google docs. Thank You X got his name by accident. In 2009 Andy Warhol’s spray painted portrait was spotted on a city street in L.A.. … Read more... →
Collaborative projects! Collaborative projects are one of my favorite things. I love them at the start of the year and the end. I love doing them with the whole school or just a grade level. I love using songs, themes, artist-inspiration...you name it. I just love collaboratives! We've done a TON over the years and I thought I'd put them all together in one big ole blog post. So, here you go: my 20 Favorite Collabortive Projects. Be sure and click on the links, many of these have how-to videos. Check out this blog post on how we created several canvases in this style for our school and the school library! Students worked in table teams to create these positive four-letter words to describe our school! Here's a simple, fast and fun project using clothes pens, paint and words that describe who we are! A fun mural based on the book You Be You was created by nearly all of my students. You can learn about the process of creating our fish here. Read all about the making of the mural itself here! Another book we used for inspiration is the book by Todd Parr called It's Okay to be Different. You can check out how we created these collages here! The Our School Has Heart mural was a piece with a contribution from each student in the school. You can see the breakdown of who created what in this blog post. Our clay collaborative mural is a bright and shiny beauty that hangs in a prominent place in our school. Each student contributed something to this piece...you can read more about the process here. One year, we created a Village of Kindness as apart of our art show! Each student upcycled a milk carton that our cafeteria queen cleaned in the dishwasher. The students made little doors that opened and said kind words to those who peeked inside. Students worked together to create the landscape on the bulletin board. I love to do collaboratives at the start of the school year. I especially like ones where students celebrate our school and that set a postive tone. That was the idea behind this collaborative! Another fun way to start the school year is with some selfies! We've created them for a monochromatic mural. You can check out the video here. Inspired by the artist Romero Britto, this mural was created by my students when I was out for jury duty! My sub just played the video and when I returned, I assembled the mural! A collaborative mural that definitely made the rounds was this one! The kids loved creating the feathers and it was a beautiful thing while in the hallway but I will say...it was a lot of work to assemble. All the details here. My fourth graders created this collaborative one year that lives at the front entrance of our school. We even 'wrapped' it for Christmas and brought out admin out for them to unwrap it as it was hung on the wall of our school. We kicked off this school year with our What a Wonderful World collaborative mural. Details and video tour here. Here's another look of our school mural. Above that, you'll see our Learning for All collaborative! During our field day one year, my students rotated through many art stations. One of them was this alphabet and number series. My librarian requested them and we just love how they turned out. Click here to see them framed and hung in our school library. Much like our monochromatic collaborative, this map collaborative was created with a self-portrait of each of my students! We are the tigers at my school so we do tiger-themed artwork every so often. This mural was created by first graders of all of their tiger drawings. You can find a how-to video right here! In table teams, my third graders created a Rizzi City inspired by the artist James Rizzi. One year, we did super-sized works of art inspired by Andy Warhol and Vincent van Gogh! When these came together, they were stunning. All the details can be found here.
Earlier this year, my co-worker Jayne found the idea to make a collaborative school-wide paper mural based on the artwork of Thank YouX. The idea for a student mural originally came from Jenell Novello and you can see the lesson plan write-up on Artsonia. She also so generously provided the lesson plan and templates on Google docs. Thank You X got his name by accident. In 2009 Andy Warhol’s spray painted portrait was spotted on a city street in L.A.. … Read more... →
Jackson Pollack Art Mural for Kids
Hoje trazemos aqui uma série de artes do portfolio de Kalen Chock. Kalen é visual deveopment artist, e em...
Classroom Display Inspiration Share your amazing classroom displays on social media and have them magically appear below!Regularly add your photos to this
¡Descarga el vector libre de regalías afiches de diseño geométrico mínimos de los años 20, arte mural, plantilla, diseño con elementos de formas primitivas. fondo de patrón retro bauhaus, círculo abstracto vectorial, triángulo y arte de línea cuadrada. 19861342 de Vecteezy para su proyecto y explora más de un millón de otros vectores, iconos y gráficos clipart!
Murals are magical, and they're as mysterious as the ocean on a dark and stormy night. I mean, you and I walk past a wall, and we think,...
Floral Pursuits with Karla Jodoin: A detailed DIY guide to help you create the perfect, hand-painted wall mural! My goal with this guide is to give you the knowledge to confidently tackle your own indoor wall murals, floral or otherwise. You may have a project in mind but just don't know where to start. Maybe you want an inexpensive way to elevate a space in your home and are searching for some inspiration. Maybe you're unsure of whether you have the knowledge to paint your own mural and need some guidance. Maybe you have a portfolio of gorgeous line drawings and are looking for different ways to use them. Or maybe you've painted a mural before and are after time-saving tips or a different technique. If you can relate to any of these scenarios, this guide is for you. Over the past few years, I've painted several minimalistic, indoor floral murals. I've learned the hard way what works and what doesn't work for me. I've done the research and put it into practice. Now I want to share what I've learned with you. What do you get with this guide? ◌ a six-part, 50+ page guide to painting your own wall mural ◌ beautifully designed .pdf download for easy reading ◌ detailed material guide and supply list ◌ tips on designing your space ◌ how to prepare your walls for painting ◌ practical advice on how to draft your wall mural with visual examples ◌ comprehensive painting tips Please note, this is a digital download ONLY. You will be provided with a download link upon purchase.
Autour d’un travail sur Klimt. Chaque élève a un morceau du puzzle voire deux. Il le reproduise sur un carré plus grand. On assemble le tout et on voit ce que ça donne. Puis on découvre l’oeuvre de d
Austin is home to hundreds of murals that are just fun to look at and take photos with. Here are 10 fun murals to find - make it a fun time with family!
*Please Note* Please choose Tracked & Signed delivery service at checkout if you wish your order to be tracked. Happy, fun and colourful art for children and adults alike! A vibrant design featuring a collection of patterned Beetles. Print of an original Acrylic Painting by Amber Davenport. Details High quality inkjet print of an original acrylic painting. Printed with rich, vibrant pigment inks onto 300gsm white matte card. All artwork is printed in house with a professional large format printer. Each print will be hand signed and dated by Amber Davenport. Colours may vary due to monitor settings. Frame is not included. Sizes A5 (148 x 210 mm / 5.8 x 8.3 inches) A4 (210 x 297 mm / 8.3 x 11.7 inches) A3 (297 x 420 mm / 11.7 x 16.5 inches) A2 (420 x 594 mm / 16.53 x 23.39 inches) Shipping A5, A4 and A3 prints will be posted flat in a strong corrugated board envelope, this will ensure your artwork arrives in immaculate condition. Each print will be placed in a biodegradable cello bag along with a piece of strong cardboard, this will ensure the artwork stays flawless until you are ready to hang it. A2 prints will be packaged in a cello bag and rolled into a quality poster tube for added protection. Your artwork will be posted 1-3 business days after you place your order. I ship first class UK (arrives 1-2 days after dispatch) For the rest of the world I post Standard Airmail (This should take 5-10 working days after dispatch) Please note there is no tracking included in the standard shipping option. Please select tracked delivery at checkout if you'd like your order to be tracked. The Artist I'm Amber, an illustrator based in the North West of England. My work is vibrant, lively and filled with pattern. I work primarily with acrylic paints and am inspired by my love of plants, wildlife and travel. I launched my business from my bedroom whilst at University in Manchester. I was driven by my desire to fill people's homes with happiness, colour and escapism in the form of beautifully illustrated wall art and accessories. Since graduating in 2018, Amber Davenport has grown into a full time venture, with an ever growing product range. I am passionate about protecting the environment in which the plants and animals I paint live. Therefore I have been working towards using completely biodegradable and compostable packaging where possible. Everything is made in the UK and packed by hand in my studio. My art makes a great gift for a new home, a new baby, or maybe just a gift for yourself. I strive to produce products which are unique and thoughtful, I hope you find something you love! *PLEASE NOTE* Please choose Tracked & Signed delivery service at checkout if you wish your order to be tracked. Unfortunately due to COVID19 deliveries are taking a little longer than usual to get to you. UK deliveries are delayed by up to 3 days, and international deliveries by up to 10 days. Please be patient, I'll make sure they get to you safely. 💌 Sign up to our mailing list for 15% off your first order! Simply visit www.amberdavenport.co.uk/pages/mailing-list 💌
Hello - Hallo - Hola - Ciao - Bonjour - Namaste! :) I am more than happy to see you came across my shop. I hope you're gonna find something pretty for your home that will be appreciated by everyone who visits you! In this listing you can purchase the wallpaper printed on a removable or traditional material – you choose! Removable material is perfect for people who appreciate easy solutions. To install it you will need few simple tools and a friend to help you. :-) If you do not need a self-adhesive paper, I can offer you my traditional wallpaper material. I guarantee a satisfaction of both! Sizes: - 19.7" x 48" / 50 cm x 122 cm - 19.7" x 96" / 50 cm x 244 cm - 19.7" x 108" / 50 cm x 275 cm - 39.4" x 48" / 100 x 122 cm - 39.4" x 96" / 100 x 244 cm - 39.4" x 108" / 100 x 275 cm Please note, that depending on the width of the roll you choose, the pattern differs in size. If the order needs to match the previous one, please contact me before purchasing :) ** I gladly prepare custom orders! If you need different size than those listed above or any other modification do not hesitate to contact me! :-) ** Wall preparation: Correct wall preparation is a very important step before an installation. If you follow the instruction your wallpaper will serve you as a long-lasting home decoration! :-) For both materials the most important thing is to have your wall clean, free of dust and dry. It also cannot be freshly painted. I do not recommend applying the paper on a textured walls, adhesive may not work well on this kind of surface. A self-adhesive wallpaper should not be used on a surface painted with washable paints like acrylic or latex. Unfortunately a glue may not react well to this kind of paint. The main advantage of Peel&Stick material is that it can be stuck and removed multiple times. However, please keep in mind, that it works with solid surfaces only. Returns & exchanges: All of my products are made-to-order, but I’d like to provide you an excellent service. If you need to return the item for some reason – please, contact me. Returns&exchanges don’t apply to custom orders, so for an example these with color modifications or requested sizes. You have a 14-day window from the date of receipt to return the item, provided it remains unused and unassembled. The customer is responsible for the return shipping expenses. Please be advised that returns are not accepted for custom items or orders exceeding 1500€. If you are not sure which material will be better for you, I recommend ordering samples. You can do that here: https://www.etsy.com/listing/629260937/removable-wallpaper-sample-kit-pack-of-3 Please remember! Samples are not designated to check the colors - printing process may vary, slight differences in colors can occur. If you have any questions - I am here to help! Send me a message :-) Visit my socials: https://pinterest.com/marzipandays/ I'm there for you! Julia from MarzipanDays
My client tasked me with designing a modern kids gallery wall, and to say how much I love how this turned out is an understatement.
This giant 5 foot tall mosaic wall, inspired by Vincent Van Gogh's "Starry Night", was a collaborative project at the small hands big art Fall Festival.
Y'all. I realized recently that I never shared the finished product of our Todd Parr inspired It's Okay to be Different mural. Which wasn't an accident. It's been on my To-Do list to finish this beast (there are still 140 more selfies that will flank the sides of this bad boy) and when I exhaustedly sighed to my buddy the custodian this evening that I really should stick around and do it, he said, "Eh. Go home and put your feet up. Do it tomorrow." He's a super smart dude so I decided to take his advice and work on it later...but share it with y'all today! When you walk out of my art room door, this is the first thing you see, these silly, happy and different faces! I went through the process of just how the kids, kindergarten through fourth grade, created these painted and collaged pieces in this post so be sure to take a peak! Our inspo was this fun and colorful book. This book is short and sweet and perfect for my various age groups. It also packs a powerful message: it's okay to be different! I try my hardest to stress this, self-importance and uniqueness in my art room. All our lives, we are told to fit in, follow along, do whatever it is that Susie is doing that gets her oodles of praise from her teacher. But just how boring would life be if we were all Susies? You're YOU and nobody else...and that's simply wonderful! Not to mention totes adorbs. As the kids finished off their selfies, I started collecting them and laying them out on a huge roll of paper. We happen to have this 12' wide roll of paper at my school which I've pretty much claimed as Art Room Property. I love using it for murals like these so I can just start hot gluing these guys down. We've done several murals at my school (full list with links below) and I've been asked by a handful of art teacherin' types if the kids are ever sad that they don't often get their pieces returned to them. I explain to them at the start of the project that their handwork will be enjoyed by many for a long time (this piece will probably stay up until the start of the new school year and possibly beyond. I really love it!). I also snapped photos of them to eventually pop up onto ArtSonia so the kids will have the chance to share with family in their online gallery. However...I do have this wild and crazy idea. Once I [finally] get all of the pieces hung, I want to snap a couple of high resolution pics and have their work made into fabric on Spoonflower! AND THEN make a dress from it. Oh, but that's a secret. Don't tell los kiddos. Especially not the dude on the top right. He looks like he's having a bad day already. Big Ole School-Wide Collaboratives and Murals are super fun but, not gonna lie, a whole lotta work. I've shared many of mine in the past. Here's a lil list if you wanna take a look-see: Dot Day Collaboratives (a project for each grade level!) Henri Rousseau-inspired Mural Chalked Ceiling Tile Collaborative Magritte Mural The Johnson Elementary Legacy piece Our School Has Heart Mural Gallery of Gratitude Winter Program Collaborative Monet-Inspired Mural Wishful Winterwonderland Mural Warhol Soup Can Mural Heather Galler-Inspired Mural by first grade Whew! And if you just wanna read more about school-wide collaboratives, get yerself here, kids. And when your done clickin' on all them linky-loos, pop over here, check out these awesome blogs and throw a sympathy vote my way, would ya? Until next time, just remember, IT'S OKAY TO BE DIFFRENT*, er, DIFFERNT ;) [diffrent: when you pay a different rent then you and your landlord agreed upon. "C'mon, man. I told you the rent was $50 a night, not $45. Don't be pullin' no diffrent action!"]
Every blank wall is a canvas waiting to be filled.
The past few months my students have been making feathers for a group mural. This idea was inspired by my friend and celebrity in the art community, Cassie Stephens! Head on over to her blog and check out her magical art teacher'n treasures at Cassie Stephen's Blog!! Her original inspo was international street artist, Kelsey Montague. Her inspiring murals challenge people to ask the question "What Lifts you" "What makes your heart Soar?" My students are going to be writing about their passions and inspirations that "lifts" them! I want each student that comes to my art class to feel as though they are walking out with wings on their back, so they can bravely rise up to their dreams with courage and passion! I want them to feel confident in themselves and know that the sky is the limit! First, students painted on watercolor paper with tempera paint using a value gradient of tints and shades using one color plus black on the left and white on the right. They had to blend the colors so thet the different shades did not look like stripes One group did primary and secondary colors red, orange, yellow, green blue, and violet. The next group would paint intermediate colors, red-orange, yellow-orange, yellow-green, blue-green, blue-violet, and red=violet Fourth and fifth graders used 9' by 24' paper and 3rd graders used smaller paper the next class, students then traced different shapes of feathers using white prisma color pencils and cut them out then they decorated them with unique lines and designs with white prisma color pencils My wonderful and extremely talented student teacher, Naz Kaya Erdal and I layed them out on three large sheets of black butcher paper until the feathers looked symmetrical. Once we finished the shape, we taped each feather down to the paper with painter's tape Then I hung that bad boy with TONS and tons and TONS of staples!! The next morning the kids were SO excited to find their feathers turned into GIANT wings!!! I hope the parents who come to visit will snap a pic in front of the wings and post to #ArtisFly and #riseupandsoar hashtags for social media!
Inside you'll find an easy step-by-step how to draw a Minecraft Self Portrait & Minecraft Coloring Page. Stop by and grab yours for free.
Find tips & tricks and dos & don'ts on creating a gallery wall you'll love, from curating your art collection to planning layout & hanging it all up like a pro.
I am back in the classroom at Keller Elementary in Green Bay after taking a year off to be home with my three little ones. I am blessed bey...
Inside you'll find an easy Joan Miro Art Project and Miro Coloring Page. Stop by and grab yours for free.
Kids can make something pretty incredible when they pool their talents.
Teach your students about Frida Kahlo with these easy Frida Kahlo activities. Project ideas, book recommendations, videos and more!
Earlier this year, my co-worker Jayne found the idea to make a collaborative school-wide paper mural based on the artwork of Thank YouX. The idea for a student mural originally came from Jenell Novello and you can see the lesson plan write-up on Artsonia. She also so generously provided the lesson plan and templates on Google docs. Thank You X got his name by accident. In 2009 Andy Warhol’s spray painted portrait was spotted on a city street in L.A.. … Read more... →