I read that the Aboriginal
dot style of painting actually began in the 1970s when artists wanted
to make symbols of some of their ancient ceremonial rituals. Soil would
be cleared and smoothed over to use as a canvas. Designs were outlined
with dancing circles and often surrounded with a mass of dots. Afterward
the imprinted earth would be smoothed over, as if nothing had ever
taken place.
1. Start with a square of watercolor paper and paint it with one color.
2.
Using pencil crayons, draw a quick diamond somewhere on the page. Continue drawing
more diamonds inside, smaller and smaller, until out of room. The
smallest shape in the middle is filled in.
3. Continue to add
attached diamonds, or if short on space, triangles. Start with the large
shape first, and then work the smaller shapes inside until out of room.
Fill up the paper as much as possible.
4. Make a row of
dots to fill in each diamond, on both sides of the line. Use matching
colors for each diamond as the Aborigines seemed to make very organized
patterns, without a lot of random choices.
CA Visual Art Standard: Grade Two
3.3
Identify and discuss how art is used in events and celebrations
in various cultures, past and present, including the use in
their own lives.