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Perspectives on Drawing Development in children

Maria de la Paz Fernandez Posdeley

Created on April 15, 2024

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Transcript

The crisis period

The beginning of adolescence marks the end of artistic development among most children, due to frustration at "getting things right". Those who do manage to weather the crisis and learn the "secret" of drawing will become absorbed in it. Edwards believes that proper teaching methods will help children learn to see and draw to prevent this crisis.

The preschematic stage

First conscious creation of form occurs around age three and provides a tangible record of the child's thinking process. The first representational attempt is a person, usually with a circle for head and two vertical lines for legs. Later other forms develop, clearly recognizable and often quite complex. Children continually search for are concepts, so symbols constantly change.

Pictures that tell stories

At four or five, the child begins to tell stories or work out problems with her drawings, changing basic forms as a needed to express meaning. Often, once the problem is expressed, the child feels better able to cope with it.

The stage of realism

The passion for realism is in full bloom. When drawings do not "come to right"(look real) they seek help to resolve the conflict between how the subject looks and previously stored information that prevents their seeing the object as is really looks. Struggle with perspective, foreshortening, and similar spatial issues as they learn how to see.

The scribbling stage

Random scribbles begin at age one-and-a-half, but quite quickly take in definite shapes. Circular movement is first because it is most natural anatomically.

Scribbling stage

First, disordered scribbles are simply records of enjoyable kinesthetic activity, not an attempt at portraying the visual world. After six months of scribbling, marks are more orderly as children become engrossed. Soon they begin to name scribbles, an important milestone in development

The gang stage: The drawing realism

The child finds that schematic generalization no longer suffices to express reality. This drawing of how things really look is usually expressed with more detail for individual parts, but is far from naturalism in drawing. Space is discovered and depicted with overlapping objects drawings and a horizon rather than a baseline. Children begin to compare their work and become more critical of it. While they are more independent of adults, they are more anxious to conform to their peers.

The pseudo-naturalistic stage

This stage marks the end of art as spontaneous activity, as children are increasingly critical of their drawings. The focus is now on the end product as they strive to create adult-lie naturalistic drawings. Light and shadow, folds, and motion are observed with mixed success, translated to paper. Space is depicted as a three-dimensional by diminishing the size of the objects that are further away.

The stage of symbols

After weeks of scribbling, children make the discovery of art: a drawn symbol can stand for a real thing in the environment. Circular form becomes a universal symbol for almost anything. Later symbols become more complex, reflecting the child’s observations on the world around him

The period of decision

Art at this stage of life is something to be done or left alone. Natural development will cease unless a conscious decision is made to improve drawing skills. Students are critically aware of the immaturity of their drawing and are easily discouraged. Lowenfeld's solution is to enlarge their concept of adult art to introduce non-representational art and art occupations besides painting (architecture, interior design, handcrafts, etc.)

The schematic stage

The child arrives at a "schema", a definite way of portraying an object, although it will be modified when he needs to portray something important. The schema represents the child's active knowledge of the subject. At this stage, there is definite order in space relationships: everything sits on the baseline.

The landscape

By five or six, children develop a set of symbols to create a landscape that eventually becomes a single variation repeated endlessly. A blue line and sun at the top of the page and a green line at the bottom become a symbolic representation of sky and ground. Landscapes are composed carefully, giving the impression that removing any single form would throw off balance of the whole picture.

The stage of complexity

At nine or ten years, children try for more detail, hoping to achieve greater realism, a prized goal. Concern for where things are in their drawing is replaced by concern for how things look; particularly tanks, dinosaurs superheroes, models , horses, landscapes, etc.