Patterns of Artistic Development in Children

Patterns of Artistic Development in Children
Author: Constance Milbrath
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 444
Release: 1998-09-13
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780521443135

This book presents several original studies of artistically talented children and their less-talented peers. The focus is on the spontaneous drawings children produce and on the types of compositions children generate when given materials to compose. Milbrath's model of artistic talent attributes individual differences to the figurative abilities of talented children, and her theory is richly supported by original examples of children's artwork.

Child Development in Art

Child Development in Art
Author: Anna M. Kindler
Publisher: National Art Education Association (NAEA)
Total Pages: 212
Release: 1997
Genre: Education
ISBN:

Symbolic and Social Constraints on the Development of Children's Artistic Style

Symbolic and Social Constraints on the Development of Children's Artistic Style
Author: Chris J. Boyatzis
Publisher: Jossey-Bass
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2001-01-26
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9780787912574

This issue presents original research that illuminates symbolic and social processes at work in the artistic development of children spanning the toddler years to early adolescence. Through longitudinal case studies, consensual assessment, and prospective and retrospective designs, the authors analyze children's artwork for symbolic sequences and development as well as the impact of social and cultural context on the children's artistic development. A great deal of emphasis is placed on whether or not children have discernable artistic styles, what criteria and methods can be used to define and judge these styles and if and how a child's style changes over childhood and adolescence. Authors also discuss the interplay of endogenous skill and social support as well as the nature of style, continuity, and discontinuity in development. This issue will serve as an invaluable resource to art development researchers and scholars involved in many other developmental domains. This is the 90th issue of the quarterly journal New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development.

Drawing and Painting

Drawing and Painting
Author: John Matthews
Publisher: SAGE
Total Pages: 242
Release: 2003-03-19
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1412932866

`This book is a tremendous resource for any early years setting. It enables us and encourages us to explore the process of artistic development through a fresh and inclusive lens′ - Nursery World `This book is a welcome update of an informative text describing the process of children′s mark making as a visual, physical and interactive process urging us to consider how we as adults perceive and support young children′s mark making activities both at home and school. John Matthews demonstrates the cognitive function of this early mark making in relation to general individual development′ - Early Years `A thought-provoking and informative book, this is essential reading for anyone involved in the education of young children′ - Times Educational Supplement - Teacher `Drawing and Painting is a fascinating and delightful read for tutors, practitioners and students and is highly recommended an essential text for early years courses at level 3 and above′- Under Five This book has been revised to reflect recent developments in early childhood education, in developmental psychology and in our understanding of children′s development in the arts. The author shows how this new model of children′s development in visual representation has important implications for education. The author examines children′s development in visual expression and suggests how this development might be supported. The book takes issue with the inherited wisdom about children′s development in visual representation. The traditional approach describes children′s development in terms of supposed deficits in which children progress from `primitive′ earlier stages to `superior′ ones, until the `defects′ in their representational thinking are overcome and they arrive at an endpoint of `visual realism′. This approach is the pervasive influence on curricular planning, in arts education and in early years education. The author explains recent different models of development in visual expression. Instead of measuring children′s efforts against an adult paradigm, the new models identify the modes of representation used by children as consequences of children′s own intentions, motivations and priorities. The writing is accessible and assumes no specialist knowledge of psychological theory, art, its history or interpretation. This book is essential reading for early childhood educators, at nursery and pre-school level, for other professionals who work with very young children and parents, as well as students and tutors on early years courses. This is a revised edition of Helping Children to Draw and Paint: Children and Visual Representation, originally published in 1994.

The Child's Creation of A Pictorial World

The Child's Creation of A Pictorial World
Author: Claire Golomb
Publisher: Psychology Press
Total Pages: 410
Release: 2003-10-17
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1135629455

This book places child art within the broader context of children's creative intelligence and intrinsic motivation to invent a pictorial world. It examines the development of drawing and painting from several currently dominant theoretical perspectives. This is followed by an extensive examination of empirical data on the art work of children who are ordinary, talented, emotionally disturbed, and atypically developed due to mental disability or autism. The Child's Creation of a Pictorial World uses a developmental framework that combines theoretical sophistication with rigorous empirical investigations into the mental processes that underlie the child's drawings. It delineates the evolution of forms, the pictorial differentiation of figures and their spatial relations, the role of color in narrative descriptions, and its expressive function. Artistic development across all these dimensions is seen as a meaningful mental activity that serves cognitive, affective, and aesthetic functions.

The Development of Artistically Gifted Children

The Development of Artistically Gifted Children
Author: Claire Golomb
Publisher: Psychology Press
Total Pages: 260
Release: 1995
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9780805815245

The literature on the development of gifted child artists is sparse and very little is known of the developmental antecedents of giftedness in the visual arts. Although children's drawings have received a great deal of attention, the development of artistically gifted children has been a neglected topic due to the paucity of available data, which has led some investigators to argue that there are no child prodigies in this domain. Researchers are faced with many unanswered questions regarding the course of artistic development including: * Is it similar to that seen in ordinary children or does it follow a different developmental trajectory? * What, if any, continuities can we discern over development, and how can we account for discontinuities? * What motivates young children to pursue their art making, and what characterizes the gifted child who pursues an artistic career in adulthood? * What are the socio-cultural conditions that foster artistic development, and how do we define artistic talent or giftedness? Consisting of six case studies, the present collection is a first in that it traces the development of each artist from a very early age on through adulthood. The longitudinally based studies provide an insight into the evolution of a universal graphic language that is also highly subjective and reflects the individuality of the young artist. The material is unique in that the authors had access to comprehensive collections of gifted childrens' drawings, which enabled them to begin to fill the gap in understanding their development. The development of artistically gifted children is examined from a variety of perspectives by authors who are artists, art educators and historians, and developmental and clinical psychologists. The children's collections studied afford detailed analyses of the drawings which shed light on the developmental origins and antecedents of giftedness in the visual arts. These studies elucidate the meaning of the early graphic forms, their evolution into a graphic language, and the child's early sense of aesthetics. In addition, they provide insight into continuities and discontinuities of style and subject matter, and the motivation to pursue art in childhood and adulthood. They also offer clues to the importance of socio-cultural factors that affect the choice of an artistic career. The diverse perspectives of the authors highlight the importance of theory for deepening the understanding of artistic development and its significance for human concerns.