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Child art

Child art is the drawings, paintings, or other artistic works created by children. The term was coined by Franz Cižek in the 1890s. The art of each child reflects their level of self-awareness and the degree to which they are integrated with their environment.[1]

Polish children street painting
Art by a three-year-old girl

Meanings edit

In its primary sense the term was created by Franz Cižek (1865–1946) in the 1890s. The following usages denote and connote different, sometimes parallel meanings:

  • In the world of contemporary fine art, "child art" refers to a subgenre of artists who depict children in their works;
  • "child art" implies art intended for viewing by children — illustrations perhaps in a book for juvenile readers, done by a child or by a professional adult illustrator;
  • as a synonym for juvenilia.

History edit

J.-J. Rousseau (1712–78), J.H. Pestalozzi (1746–1827), John Ruskin (1819–1900), and Herbert Spencer (1820–1903) laid the premises for understanding the importance of art for children.

Agenda of art education for children was discussed at the International Conference of 1884, held in London at the Health Exhibition. The discussion framework was largely shaped by the widespread of schools of design for professional training of children and youth in the UK, beginning from 1852. Some of the conference participants underlined the importance of creativity, imaginations and special methodology for development of children's artistic skills.[2] Ebenezer Cooke (1837–1913) has pointed out that "if a child follows its bent and draws animals its own way, in action, and repeats them, outlines them, and colours them too, he will produce a drawing which may be comparable to the archaic period of more than one historic school."[3] The proceedings of the conference, ed. by E. Cooke, were issued in the 1885–86 Journal of Education, published by the Society for the Development of the Science of Education.[4]

Robert Ablett (1848–1945) organized the first European exhibition of drawings by children in London, 1890.[5] The first collection of 1250 children's drawing and sculpture pieces was assembled by Corrado Ricci (1858–1934), an Italian art historian.[6]

Aesthetic appreciation of children's art as untainted by adult influence was extolled by Franz Cižek, who called a child's drawing "a marvelous and precious document". Discovery of the aesthetic quality of the unskilled visual expression by children was related to the aesthetics of modernism and, in case of Cižek, to the Vienna Secession.[7]

In 1897, Cižek opened the Juvenile Art Class, a weekend school upholding children creativity uninhibited by adult vocational standards. The initiative was supported by his Secession friends-artists and opposed by the traditional art teachers. The Class accepted pupils of 2 to 14 years old for two hours a week, free of charge, with no selection. Cižek claimed that he was working "as an artist, not as a teacher", and actually "learned and not taught". The work propagated the theory of developmental stages.[8]

Psychologists' interest in children's art was reflected in works by Georg Kerschensteiner (Die Entwickelung der Zeichnerischen Begabung, 1905, on the grounds of analysis of some 100,000 drawings), Georges-Henri Luquet (Les Dessins D’un Enfant, 1912, using 1500 drawings of the author's daughter from 3 to 8 years old), Georges Rouma (Le Langage Graphique de l’Enfant, Paris, 1913), Karl Bühler (1918 ff.), Florence Goodenough, Helga Eng, Robert Coles. According to D.D. Kelly, consequent domination of Piagetian theory of cognitive psychology largely marginalized the psychological studies of children's art, which were revitalized only towards the end of the 20th century.[9]

Stages of child art edit

As the child develops, their art passes through a number of stages. Four of them were for the first time defined by E. Cooke, under influence of Herbert Spencer's evolutionary theory.[10]

Presently, the stages are generally differentiated as follows:

Scribbling edit

A child scribbling
 
Scribble by one-year-old.

From about their first birthday children achieve the fine motor control to handle a crayon. At first they scribble. The youngest child scribbles with a series of left and right motions, later up, down and then circular motions are added. The child appears to get considerable pleasure from watching the line or the colours appear. Often however children do not pay attention to the edges of the page and the lines go beyond the confines of the page. Children are often also interested in body painting and, given the opportunity, will draw on their hands or smear paint on their faces.

Later, from about their second birthday, controlled scribbling starts. Children produce patterns of simple shapes: circles, crosses and star-bursts. They also become interested in arrangement and can produce simple collages of coloured paper, or place stones in patterns. Once children have established controlled scribbling they begin to name their scribbles.

Pre-symbolism edit

 
Smiling tadpole person (combined head and body), age 4½

From about age three, the child begins to combine circles and lines to make simple figures. At first, people are drawn without a body and with limbs emerging directly from the head. The eyes are often drawn large, filling up most of the face, and hands and feet are omitted. At this stage it may be impossible to identify the subject of the art without the child's help.

Later drawings from this stage show figures drawn floating in space and sized to reflect the child's view of their importance. Most children at this age are not concerned with producing a realistic picture.

Symbolism edit

 
Birch bark document 202,[11] showing symbolic drawing of people, age 6-7 (Onfim)

In this stage of a child's development, they create a vocabulary of images. Thus when a child draws a picture of a cat, they will always draw the same basic image, perhaps modified (one cat has stripes while another has dots, for example). This stage of drawing begins at around age five. The basic shapes are called symbols or schema.

Each child develops their own set of symbols, which are based on their understanding of what is being drawn rather than on observation. Each child's symbols are therefore unique to the child. By this age, most children develop a "person" symbol which has a properly defined head, trunk and limbs which are in some sort of rough proportion.

 
Two schematic figures on a green base line

Before this stage the objects that child would draw would appear to float in space, but at about five to six years old the child introduces a baseline with which to organize their space. This baseline is often a green line (representing grass) at the bottom of the paper. The figures stand on this line. Slightly older children may also add secondary baselines for background objects and a skyline to hold the sun and clouds.

It is at this stage that cultural influences become more important. Children not only draw from life, but also copy images in their surroundings. They may draw copies of cartoons. Children also become more aware of the story-telling possibilities in a picture. The earliest understanding of a more realistic representation of space, such as using perspective, usually comes from copying.

Realism edit

As children mature they begin to find their symbols limiting. They realize that their schema for a person is not flexible enough, and does not resemble the real thing. At this stage, which begins at nine or ten years old, the child will lend greater importance to whether the drawing looks like the object being drawn. This can be a frustrating time for some children, as their aspirations outstrip their abilities and knowledge. Some children give up on drawing almost entirely. However, others become skilled, and it is at this stage that formal artistic training can benefit the child most. The baseline is dropped and the child can learn to use rules such as perspective to organize space better. Story-telling also becomes more refined and children will start to use formal devices such as the comic strip.

Therapeutic edit

Art therapy can be an effective way for children to develop and connect with their emotions. Some children with autism have found that drawing can help them to express feelings that they have difficulty expressing otherwise. Similarly children who have faced horrors such as war can find it difficult to talk about what they have experienced directly. Art can help children come to terms with their emotions in these situations.

Criticism edit

After visiting a children's art display in San Francisco in the 1980s, educator John Holt stated that, "...An understanding of adultism might begin to explain what I mean when I say that much of what is known as children's art is an adult invention."[12]

Reliability edit

The reliability of children's art as evidence of their experiences is a matter of professional debate. In recent years courts around the world have become increasingly accepting of children's art being submitted as evidence. In 2004 the International Criminal Court accepted a group of approximately 500 children's drawings as evidence during investigations of crimes against humanity committed during the War in Darfur.[13]

Children's art as historical evidence edit

Children's art is also a valued source for historians seeking to understand children's lives in the past. In some instances, children's art can provide insight into their experiences. In 1945, the Swiss Red Cross encouraged children liberated from Auschwitz to draw pictures. Some of those drawings have been used by historian Nicholas Stargardt to construct Jewish children's experiences in concentration camps.[14] Historian Jack Hodgson argues that children's art will always come with ambiguity owing to the "need to interpret them" and that is often off-putting to discipline that remains logocentric, "thriving on precise textual details." However, Hodgson advocates for their use due to "enormous communicative potential", particularly regarding "unquantifiable feelings or emotions."[13]

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Anna Stetsenko (1995). "The psychological functions of children's drawing: A Vygotskian perspective". In C. Lange-Küttner & G. V. Thomas (Eds.), Drawing and Looking (pp. 147–158). New York etc.: Harvester Wheatsheaf. (Also in Italian: "La funzione psicologica del disegno infantile: una prospettiva Vygotskiana" (2000). In Bambini, Anno XVI, n. 4, pp. 19–31. Translation and foreword by Prof. Mariolina Bartolini-Bussi)
  • Arlene E. Richards. "The history of developmental stages of child art: 1857 to 1921". 1974.
  • Kelly, Donna Darling. Uncovering the History of Children's Drawing and Art. Greenwood Publishing Group, 2004.
  • Thorpe, Deborah Ellen. "Young hands, old books: Drawings by children in a fourteenth-century manuscript, LJS MS. 361", Cogent Arts & Humanities (2016), 3: 1196864. [1]

References edit

  1. ^ "Child art: A brief review of the developmental stages". www.cyc-net.org. Retrieved 2020-08-07.
  2. ^ Kelly, 60-66.
  3. ^ Kelly, 62.
  4. ^ Kelly, 63.
  5. ^ Kelly, 60.
  6. ^ Kelly, 93–4.
  7. ^ Kelly, 82–3.
  8. ^ Kelly, 83-5.
  9. ^ Kelly, 93-105
  10. ^ Kelly, 66.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-11-24. Retrieved 2008-11-15.
  12. ^ Holt, J. (Ed) Teach your own: The John Holt book of homeschooling. Perseus Publishing.
  13. ^ a b Hodgson, Jack (2021-05-27). "Accessing children's historical experiences through their art: four drawings of aerial warfare from the Spanish Civil War". Rethinking History. 25 (2): 145–165. doi:10.1080/13642529.2021.1928393. ISSN 1364-2529. S2CID 235465621.
  14. ^ Stargardt, Nicholas (2005-09-01). "Drawing the Holocaust in 1945". Holocaust Studies. 11 (2): 25–37. doi:10.1080/17504902.2005.11087153. ISSN 1750-4902. S2CID 142895854.

External links edit

  • Longitudinal study (N = 1) of drawing.

child, concept, mathematics, dessin, enfant, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books. For the concept in mathematics see Dessin d enfant This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Child art news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2007 Learn how and when to remove this message Child art is the drawings paintings or other artistic works created by children The term was coined by Franz Cizek in the 1890s The art of each child reflects their level of self awareness and the degree to which they are integrated with their environment 1 Polish children street painting Art by a three year old girl Contents 1 Meanings 2 History 3 Stages of child art 3 1 Scribbling 3 2 Pre symbolism 3 3 Symbolism 3 4 Realism 4 Therapeutic 5 Criticism 6 Reliability 6 1 Children s art as historical evidence 7 See also 8 Further reading 9 References 10 External linksMeanings editIn its primary sense the term was created by Franz Cizek 1865 1946 in the 1890s The following usages denote and connote different sometimes parallel meanings In the world of contemporary fine art child art refers to a subgenre of artists who depict children in their works child art implies art intended for viewing by children illustrations perhaps in a book for juvenile readers done by a child or by a professional adult illustrator as a synonym for juvenilia History editJ J Rousseau 1712 78 J H Pestalozzi 1746 1827 John Ruskin 1819 1900 and Herbert Spencer 1820 1903 laid the premises for understanding the importance of art for children Agenda of art education for children was discussed at the International Conference of 1884 held in London at the Health Exhibition The discussion framework was largely shaped by the widespread of schools of design for professional training of children and youth in the UK beginning from 1852 Some of the conference participants underlined the importance of creativity imaginations and special methodology for development of children s artistic skills 2 Ebenezer Cooke 1837 1913 has pointed out that if a child follows its bent and draws animals its own way in action and repeats them outlines them and colours them too he will produce a drawing which may be comparable to the archaic period of more than one historic school 3 The proceedings of the conference ed by E Cooke were issued in the 1885 86 Journal of Education published by the Society for the Development of the Science of Education 4 Robert Ablett 1848 1945 organized the first European exhibition of drawings by children in London 1890 5 The first collection of 1250 children s drawing and sculpture pieces was assembled by Corrado Ricci 1858 1934 an Italian art historian 6 Aesthetic appreciation of children s art as untainted by adult influence was extolled by Franz Cizek who called a child s drawing a marvelous and precious document Discovery of the aesthetic quality of the unskilled visual expression by children was related to the aesthetics of modernism and in case of Cizek to the Vienna Secession 7 In 1897 Cizek opened the Juvenile Art Class a weekend school upholding children creativity uninhibited by adult vocational standards The initiative was supported by his Secession friends artists and opposed by the traditional art teachers The Class accepted pupils of 2 to 14 years old for two hours a week free of charge with no selection Cizek claimed that he was working as an artist not as a teacher and actually learned and not taught The work propagated the theory of developmental stages 8 Psychologists interest in children s art was reflected in works by Georg Kerschensteiner Die Entwickelung der Zeichnerischen Begabung 1905 on the grounds of analysis of some 100 000 drawings Georges Henri Luquet Les Dessins D un Enfant 1912 using 1500 drawings of the author s daughter from 3 to 8 years old Georges Rouma Le Langage Graphique de l Enfant Paris 1913 Karl Buhler 1918 ff Florence Goodenough Helga Eng Robert Coles According to D D Kelly consequent domination of Piagetian theory of cognitive psychology largely marginalized the psychological studies of children s art which were revitalized only towards the end of the 20th century 9 Stages of child art editAs the child develops their art passes through a number of stages Four of them were for the first time defined by E Cooke under influence of Herbert Spencer s evolutionary theory 10 Presently the stages are generally differentiated as follows Scribbling edit source source source source source source source source A child scribbling nbsp Scribble by one year old From about their first birthday children achieve the fine motor control to handle a crayon At first they scribble The youngest child scribbles with a series of left and right motions later up down and then circular motions are added The child appears to get considerable pleasure from watching the line or the colours appear Often however children do not pay attention to the edges of the page and the lines go beyond the confines of the page Children are often also interested in body painting and given the opportunity will draw on their hands or smear paint on their faces Later from about their second birthday controlled scribbling starts Children produce patterns of simple shapes circles crosses and star bursts They also become interested in arrangement and can produce simple collages of coloured paper or place stones in patterns Once children have established controlled scribbling they begin to name their scribbles Pre symbolism edit nbsp Smiling tadpole person combined head and body age 4 From about age three the child begins to combine circles and lines to make simple figures At first people are drawn without a body and with limbs emerging directly from the head The eyes are often drawn large filling up most of the face and hands and feet are omitted At this stage it may be impossible to identify the subject of the art without the child s help Later drawings from this stage show figures drawn floating in space and sized to reflect the child s view of their importance Most children at this age are not concerned with producing a realistic picture Symbolism edit nbsp Birch bark document 202 11 showing symbolic drawing of people age 6 7 Onfim In this stage of a child s development they create a vocabulary of images Thus when a child draws a picture of a cat they will always draw the same basic image perhaps modified one cat has stripes while another has dots for example This stage of drawing begins at around age five The basic shapes are called symbols or schema Each child develops their own set of symbols which are based on their understanding of what is being drawn rather than on observation Each child s symbols are therefore unique to the child By this age most children develop a person symbol which has a properly defined head trunk and limbs which are in some sort of rough proportion nbsp Two schematic figures on a green base line Before this stage the objects that child would draw would appear to float in space but at about five to six years old the child introduces a baseline with which to organize their space This baseline is often a green line representing grass at the bottom of the paper The figures stand on this line Slightly older children may also add secondary baselines for background objects and a skyline to hold the sun and clouds It is at this stage that cultural influences become more important Children not only draw from life but also copy images in their surroundings They may draw copies of cartoons Children also become more aware of the story telling possibilities in a picture The earliest understanding of a more realistic representation of space such as using perspective usually comes from copying Realism edit As children mature they begin to find their symbols limiting They realize that their schema for a person is not flexible enough and does not resemble the real thing At this stage which begins at nine or ten years old the child will lend greater importance to whether the drawing looks like the object being drawn This can be a frustrating time for some children as their aspirations outstrip their abilities and knowledge Some children give up on drawing almost entirely However others become skilled and it is at this stage that formal artistic training can benefit the child most The baseline is dropped and the child can learn to use rules such as perspective to organize space better Story telling also becomes more refined and children will start to use formal devices such as the comic strip Therapeutic editArt therapy can be an effective way for children to develop and connect with their emotions Some children with autism have found that drawing can help them to express feelings that they have difficulty expressing otherwise Similarly children who have faced horrors such as war can find it difficult to talk about what they have experienced directly Art can help children come to terms with their emotions in these situations Criticism editAfter visiting a children s art display in San Francisco in the 1980s educator John Holt stated that An understanding of adultism might begin to explain what I mean when I say that much of what is known as children s art is an adult invention 12 Reliability editThe reliability of children s art as evidence of their experiences is a matter of professional debate In recent years courts around the world have become increasingly accepting of children s art being submitted as evidence In 2004 the International Criminal Court accepted a group of approximately 500 children s drawings as evidence during investigations of crimes against humanity committed during the War in Darfur 13 Children s art as historical evidence edit Children s art is also a valued source for historians seeking to understand children s lives in the past In some instances children s art can provide insight into their experiences In 1945 the Swiss Red Cross encouraged children liberated from Auschwitz to draw pictures Some of those drawings have been used by historian Nicholas Stargardt to construct Jewish children s experiences in concentration camps 14 Historian Jack Hodgson argues that children s art will always come with ambiguity owing to the need to interpret them and that is often off putting to discipline that remains logocentric thriving on precise textual details However Hodgson advocates for their use due to enormous communicative potential particularly regarding unquantifiable feelings or emotions 13 See also editChild psychology Childhood development of fine motor skills Naive art Outsider art PapaInk Wang Yani Visual artsFurther reading editAnna Stetsenko 1995 The psychological functions of children s drawing A Vygotskian perspective In C Lange Kuttner amp G V Thomas Eds Drawing and Looking pp 147 158 New York etc Harvester Wheatsheaf Also in Italian La funzione psicologica del disegno infantile una prospettiva Vygotskiana 2000 In Bambini Anno XVI n 4 pp 19 31 Translation and foreword by Prof Mariolina Bartolini Bussi Arlene E Richards The history of developmental stages of child art 1857 to 1921 1974 Kelly Donna Darling Uncovering the History of Children s Drawing and Art Greenwood Publishing Group 2004 Thorpe Deborah Ellen Young hands old books Drawings by children in a fourteenth century manuscript LJS MS 361 Cogent Arts amp Humanities 2016 3 1196864 1 References edit Child art A brief review of the developmental stages www cyc net org Retrieved 2020 08 07 Kelly 60 66 Kelly 62 Kelly 63 Kelly 60 Kelly 93 4 Kelly 82 3 Kelly 83 5 Kelly 93 105 Kelly 66 Drevnerusskie berestyanye gramoty Gramota 202 Archived from the original on 2015 11 24 Retrieved 2008 11 15 Holt J Ed Teach your own The John Holt book of homeschooling Perseus Publishing a b Hodgson Jack 2021 05 27 Accessing children s historical experiences through their art four drawings of aerial warfare from the Spanish Civil War Rethinking History 25 2 145 165 doi 10 1080 13642529 2021 1928393 ISSN 1364 2529 S2CID 235465621 Stargardt Nicholas 2005 09 01 Drawing the Holocaust in 1945 Holocaust Studies 11 2 25 37 doi 10 1080 17504902 2005 11087153 ISSN 1750 4902 S2CID 142895854 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Child art Longitudinal study N 1 of drawing Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Child art amp oldid 1219224513, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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