We're studying Vermeer for six weeks, one painting a week, and we came around to my favorite of the group: Woman Holding a Balance.
In second grade, I focus on developing three very basic skills: noticing the details and attributes of a work of art, recalling them, and describing them orally.
When we started art last year, I had Oscar look at a painting for two minutes; then I would turn it over and he would tell me as many things as he could remember about it; then we would look at it again and try to find a few more details he had forgotten.
Now I let him study the paintings longer, make notes about them, then dictate to me a narration describing the art. After he's done I sometimes point out additional details and we discuss them.
At the National Gallery of Art website, I found an interactive online presentation about Woman Holding a Balance. Oscar and I looked at it together for a while. I thought it was pretty good except for a bit of psychobabble on the first page of the "Composition" section:
Woman Holding a Balance embodies a spiritual principle that is often manifest in Vermeer's work: the need to lead a balanced life.
Um, yeah. The balance is all about "the need to lead a balanced life." That's why there's a painting of The Last Judgment on the wall behind her head.
Is "the need to lead a balanced life" really a major theme of Vermeer's work? I'm no expert. There are only 33 paintings certainly attributed to him; you decide.
Um, yeah. The balance is all about "the need to lead a balanced life." That's why there's a painting of The Last Judgment on the wall behind her head.
For some reason, I thought this was hilarious. :)
Posted by: Sarahndipity | 30 October 2007 at 08:35 AM
Glad you liked it. Seems kind of obvious to me...
Posted by: bearing | 31 October 2007 at 01:13 PM