Monday, November 21, 2011

Win a Week at Summer Camp While Making Great Gifts for the Holidays!

Arctic Fox at the San Diego Zoo, Sun., Nov.20, 2011
Photo by Perrin Weston Coman
I enjoyed another awesome animal drawing class at the San Diego Zoo Sunday with Watts Atelier Instructor Tom Babbey. This gorgeous little Arctic Fox lives in his enclosure near the Polar Bears.

As a reminder, Carlsbad Art Farm is holding Art Farm for the Holidays during the first three weekends in December for students currently enrolled in Grades 2-8.

Students are invited to come to Art Farm to make gifts for the holidays, visit with our farm animals, indulge in sugary holiday treats and hot cider, and enjoy being at Art Farm during this beautiful season of the year. The recent rains have brought much greenery to our 10-acre woodland preserve making it a perfect holiday setting.

All paid students attending Art Farm for the Holidays open studio sessions will be put in a drawing for a chance to win a week at Carlsbad Art Farm Summer Camp 2012 (value $400). Camps begin in June and continue through mid-August. Camps are one-week, Monday through Friday, 9 A.M. to 3:30 P.M. The drawing will follow the last open-house session the third weekend in December. Note: Students must be entering grades 2 or higher in fall 2012 to attend summer camp.
Polar Bear at the San Diego Zoo, Sun., Nov. 12, 2011
Photo by Perrin Weston Coman




Carlsbad Art Farm is located on Sunny Creek Road near the Village of Carlsbad. We are known for our wonderful sold-out summer camps and year-round studio art, visual literacy and natural science enrichment classes for youth Grades 2-8. Students study drawing and painting technique in our outdoor studios, often using our farm animals as live models. Our habitat is riparian, with a year-round running creek which we use to educate students about conservation and respect for the natural world. This November, we welcomed two wonderful groups of Kelly Elementary School second-graders who came to Art Farm for a field trip to study pond life.

Art Farm for the Holidays open studio times and dates are detailed in our previous post (see "Art Farm for the Holidays" below). RSVPs are mandatory. The fee is $40 per 4-hour session per student. An additional fee of $5-$15 per gift made (cost depends on materials used) applies. Payment is by cash or check payable to Carlsbad Art Farm on the day of the event. We anticipate that students will be able to complete 2-3 projects per visit depending on what projects they choose and how long it takes to complete the project.

To RSVP for Art Farm for the Holidays, check dates and times on our previous post and follow link for contacting us. Questions may be directed to Owner/Director Perrin Weston Coman at director@CarlsbadArtFarm.com. Please type "Art Farm Holiday" in the subject head so we don't delete your email as spam.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Art Farm for the Holidays

An Indonesian Eclectus Parrot, right, and his unidentified
friend enjoy their lunch at the San Diego Zoo yesterday.
(Photo by Perrin Weston)
Carlsbad Art Farm is hosting six open house studio events for students Grades 2-8 over the first three weekends in December. Students are invited to come to Art Farm  to make presents for family and friends for the holidays while enjoying our 10-acres preserve in central Carlsbad. Please look at our schedule below for event dates and times (click headline for complete post). Attendance is by RSVP only. Space is limited so early reservations are recommended. Fee is $40 per student per session date, plus and additional $5-$15 per project completed. Parents enrolling siblings concurrently will receive a discount enrollment rate of $25 per each additional child. The per project fee remains the same. Depending on the projects selected, students will have time to finish 1-3 projects per visit.

In addition to making holiday gifts for friends and family, students will have time to simply enjoy Art Farm. Visits with our farm animals, time on our tire swing, walks down the creek-side trail (weather permitting), and sinfully delicious holiday treats are all part of the fun. And naturally, it's always fun to come with friends so don't be shy about getting the word out for us.

For more information and to make your reservation, please click here. In the subject heading, please type "Art Farm for the Holidays" (so we don't delete your email as spam). Provide the first names and current grade level of your student(s), and your preferred open house session date. Payment is by check or cash only on the day of the event.

In the event of rain, we will cancel or postpone an open house on any given date. We will email you prior to any cancellation so if the weather looks iffy check your email prior to coming out the day of your  reservation.

Open House Dates: Sat, Dec. 3, 1:30 PM-5:30 PM; Sun, Dec. 4, 11 AM-3 PM; Sat, Dec. 10, 1:30 PM-5:30 PM; Sun, Dec. 11, 11 AM-3 PM; Sat, Dec17, 1:30 PM-5:30 PM; Sun, Dec. 18, 11 AM-3 PM.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Drawing at the San Diego Zoo

I'm enjoying a 10-week San Diego Zoo drawing drawing class for adults with Instructor Tom Babbey through Watts Atelier (based in Encinitas). Tom is an awesome animal artist (link to his sketch blog at bottom of post). If you can find a class offered by him jump at the opportunity. Tips for Young students: Animal models generally move a lot (even the Galapagos tortoise pictured here), so animal artists have to develop a visual memory of their subjects so they can keep drawing while waiting for their subjects to strike a similar pose. 
One week we were drawing Grevy's Zebras (also pictured here), and for almost three hours these animals conspired against us artists by keeping their faces obscured in troughs of hay. Much of my zebra's head that day was drawn using my "visual memory" of what a zebra's head looks like.
If you are serious about learning to draw animals well, it helps to have a good camera with zoom lens and fast shutter speed so you can develop your own image library. If you don't have a camera or can't get to the zoo, visit the San Diego Zoo website and find an image there to draw. The images here were taken by me over a period of several weeks at the San Diego Zoo. I also took many close-up "detail shots" of different parts of the animal such as legs, hoofs, eyes, muzzles, ears, etc.

Tips for Young Students: Make a habit of keeping a daily sketchbook where you practice, practice, practice! When you go to the zoo or any other place where you can view animals, practice drawing them from life in your sketchbook. Over time, as you flip through your book, you will be amazed at your improvements. 

You are welcome to print out these zoo pictures and sketch them.

Students: With parent permission, we invite you to send a scanned image of artwork made by you of one of the pictures in this blog post. Send your image file to us at director@carlsbadartfarm.com. We just might exhibit your art on our blog! Remember to include your first name only and your age.





Tom Babbey Animal Sketch Blog

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Wire Sculpting

Students at the Carlsbad ArtFarm were asked to express their favorite animals through abstract wire form.  Having many favorites, students decided to combine them together to create a new breed.  Instructor Andrew Sinclair discusses how to explain form through abstract thought and reasoning.  Students formulated explanations behind the metamorphosis of their new animal to express themselves during critic.  The term that were used throughout the class relating to, structure, abstract form, and artistic influences. 
based upon its form this student titled her sculpture
Dr. Seuss
The combination of a duck and horse influenced the birth of
Doris
  

Earth Energy



Earth energy is an installation done by the alpaca students of the Carlsbad ArtFarm.  The intentions from the students was to expose the aura’s of the earth and understand conceptual cycles from where we, as humans, gain our power and strength.  Students used minimal materials to create bursts of earth energy shooting out of the ground to represent the different emotional auras of the earth.  After the installation was complete students discussed the powers of the earth and how we benefit from its different cycles of energy.

Human Goat Project

The Human Goat Project is a collaborative effort of over 100 Art Farm students who experimented with the up and coming idea of street art.  Using different colored string to create graffiti, students express their own style and unique ability to work together to color the walls of the new sanctuary for Picasso, the resident miniature mule of the Art Farm.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Art Farm Sculptures Inspired by Deborah Butterfield



Art Farm Summer Camp Season is off to a great start! Last week our middle school-age students studied Deborah Butterfield, an American artist known for her larger-than-life-sized sculptures of horses made from found objects such as metal and wood. Students watched a short video of her work, in which Butterfield talks about her technique and her life as an artist.

Following the video, students set about collaboratively creating primitive, larger-than-life sized sculptures of Art Farm's very own alpacas, Harry Potter and Mr. Weasley. The goal was to use as few tools as possible. Other than a ball of twine, all materials were found within Art Farm's habitat. Art Farm Instructor Andrew Sinclair, an accomplished sculptor himself, used the lesson to teach art concepts including the roles of negative space, tension, and texture in creating a 3-dimensional work of art.

Pictured here is a Butterfield sculpture (top) and the alpaca sculptures (bottom). Click on the images to see a larger view. 

Deborah Kay Butterfield
!Palomino Horse by Deborah Butterfield




Saturday, April 23, 2011

Great Friends

Picasso, Art Farm's resident mini-mule, was great friends with our wonderful German Shepherd Hilda, who passed away too young in 2010. I had forgotten about this video, which captures Picasso doing his best to get Hilda to play with him, but she would have none of it. At other times she was game. It was clear  after Hilda died that Picasso missed her. He stood in his corral with his head hung low and was not much interested in his food (highly unusual for him). Picasso is not one to wear his heart on his sleeve, so it was touching.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Meet Art Farm's Newest Arrivals!

Meet Carlsbad Art Farm's newest arrivals, Zeus and Hobbes. Zeus and Hobbes are baby Nigerian dwarf goats. Zeus is just over 2-months old and little Hobbes (the black & white one) is just 5-days old. Both are bottle babies. Students coming to Art Farm summer camp are encouraged to help in the care and feeding of our animals, so if you've never bottle-fed a baby goat before, now's your chance. Nigerian dwarf goats are a small dairy breed known as great producers of milk for their size. The sweetish milk is high in butterfat. A full-grown Nigerian dwarf goat is equivalent to a medium-sized dog, with adult weight topping out at between 40-60 pounds. They are extremely people friendly and inquisitive. They come in a wide range of colors and fur patterns. At Art Farm, we use our animals as art models, so it is nice to have a variety of looks. In early May we will be welcoming another newborn, to be named Calvin.

Art Farm's weekly summer day camps enroll throughout the summer season, starting June 13 and continuing through mid-August. All the information and registration forms are available on our website. For Session 1 only, we will be enrolling students entering Grade 1 in fall 2011. During all other sessions, students must be entering Grades 2-8 in the fall.

If you simply can't make summer camp, we have a year-round Saturday morning art drawing class from 10:30 A.M to Noon. For more information, contact Director/Owner Perrin Weston Coman. Oh, and if you think Calvin and Hobbes are funny, cool, interesting, or any of the other options listed below, please let us know.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

The Mighty Zeus and Why Students Should Learn to Draw With Charcoal


At the college-level, studio art students learn to draw and paint from life using human models. At Carlsbad Art Farm, we use farm animals as our models and each year we acquire new animals for this purpose. We strive for a variety, and when possible, we like to rescue animals.

My first goat, a Nubian mix, was bought for $20 at the local humane society. We now have alpacas, a mini-mule, a variety of chickens, two dogs, and others. Here is our most recent arrival, a baby Nigerian Dwarf Goat named Zeus. Zeus came to us at less than a week old as a bottle baby (for some reason his mom wasn't letting him nurse), requiring six bottle feedings daily, each bottle containing 2-ounces of milk.

Zeus is now six-weeks old and drinks four bottles of 8-ounces daily, supplemented with goat feed, orchard hay, and alfalfa. He is full of himself. He loves playing with our rescue shepherd, going for walks on a leash, and practicing his head butting on our ankles. He has already started modeling for students.

Wolf in charcoal by Rose, Age 11
One of the challenges for students drawing animals from life is that animals move, unlike human art models who are paid to pose absolutely still. It's an interesting challenge. So what do you do? Well, animal artists develop visual memories of the animals they draw. Once the initial gesture line is committed to paper, and if they have an understanding of the animal's anatomy and how it moves, then they work from both the living model and memory. Additionally, they can use photographs as visual aides. Most animal artists have a library of books on animal anatomy. As with any discipline, the more you practice, the better you get.

The wolf drawing above (be sure to click on images to get their full effect), by Rose, Grade 5, started out as a drawing from a black-and-white photograph of a wolf. She then used our German Shepherd as a live model (alas, we do not have an actual wolf at Art Farm), as a source for more realistic hair texturing, rendering of volume, and rendering of detail in the eyes, muzzle, and so on. The animal really lifts off the page.

So why not just work off of photographs exclusively and skip the problems inherent in drawing an animal from life? For one, photographs flatten 3-dimensional objects and this shows in drawings made exclusively from photos. Also, the drawings look static, as if you were drawing something with no life in it. This is fine for buildings, but undesirable in an animal drawing where the goal is to render a flesh-and-blood creature. Obviously not everyone has a farm full of animal models, so working from photos is certainly a good option. But almost everyone has access to a dog, or cat, or zoo. My daughter, 12, and I have visited the zoo for years just to park in front of an animal and draw. She gets lots of compliments from passersby, and this encourages her as an artist.

Wolf Head in charcoal by Brian, Age 9
In my experience teaching children, the best medium for learning to draw animals is charcoal. It is fun to use, very forgiving, and "painterly." It gets students away from working in sharpie and pencil, which are not "loose" mediums. A good animal drawing avoids being wooden and instead captures a sense of the animal's movement, making it appear more life-like.

Charcoal is an excellent medium for doing precisely this. It encourages experimentation with texture, smudges, and line quality. It is great for creating atmosphere around the animals. Smudges and lines can be used to create a sense that the animal is in a woods, or that the time of day is early morning or dusk, without literally drawing a coloring book-style tree next to the animal with a cartoon-ish sun in the sky. These effects can be used to create perspective to great effect.

Rabbit in charcoal by Samantha, Age 9
Like no other medium, charcoal is very helpful for teaching the concept of value in drawing and painting. Understanding value and it's uses is the gateway to more sophisticated drawing and painting

For example, the bunny at left has a sense of volume, created by how the charcoal is laid down on the paper. The shifts in value are subtle in the dark and light areas of the animals body, but those shifts are why the animal seems three dimensional. Also, the animal's form is not completely encased in a hard, dark line all around the contours of the body. The line width and value alters, sometimes disappears, and this is what makes the image exciting to look at. Also, the shadow thrown by the bunny's ear lets the viewer know there is a sun in the sky, slightly off center of the animal, without drawing a distracting circle with squiggly lines depicting rays of light. While this is wonderful in a preschool or early primary school drawing, it is empowering for a developing young artist to tap into more complex "artist's tricks."

Moose Walking, Charcoal, by Canadian Artist Geordie Millar
At right is an outstanding example of an animal rendered in charcoal by Canadian artist and art professor Geordie Millar.

The drawing, from a series titled "Moose Walking", is huge (76X60). The image beautifully showcases the artist's understanding of the animal he was drawing, from life, in the Canadian wilderness. It also showcases the great versatility of charcoal as a medium: the velvety textures juxtaposed against hard lines to suggest the softness of the animal's fur while clearly showing the hard lines of its underlying anatomy; the smudging to create atmosphere and a sense that the animal is moving through space; the rich blacks that pencil cannot match; and again, the "painterly" quality of the image. This moose, to me, looks like a living, breathing, entity. When I view the student charcoal drawings above, I can see they are starting to pick-up on the concepts that Millar, as a mature artist, exhibits so masterfully. Imagine what might happen if these young students kept at it!

The "Moose Walking" series, and an equally breathtaking study of two horses by Millar titled "Procession", are nicely presented as a slide show on Millar's website.

Carlsbad Art Farm is now enrolling for summer camp 2011. Visit our website today for information and enrollment forms. And while your visiting our website, click our Facebook Page icon, and then click "like" to become a fan of our Facebook Page. As a fan, you will receive notifications of classes, seminars, discounts,  Art Farm BBQs, and such. We don't post all that much (we, at Art Farm, are too busy taking care of all the critters to post too much and, when we do, we usually include cute pictures of animal models - like Zeus!)



For questions about Art Farm, send us an email and we will get back to you shortly.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Get Connected to Carlsbad Art Farm Events!

Carlsbad Art Farm summer art and natural science camp enrollment is underway! For information and registration, visit our website or contact us.

Student Drawing, Grade 5
Whether you are new to Art Farm, or one of our many fans, or a teacher, we recommend that you become a follower on our blog (click icon, lower left) to receive kid-friendly postings about our animal friends at Art Farm and information about great websites and blogs by artists, museums, and other Internet resources, for kids, teens, and adults. We sift through what's out there so you don't have to.

Art Farm Outdoor Studio Drawing Class
If you are on Facebook, we also recommend that you visit our Art Farm Facebook Page and click the "Like" icon. Art Farm Facebook Page members will receive notifications of discounts, ongoing and new art classes, special events such as the Spring Art Farm Family BBQ, and other animal/art oriented postings. Art Farm won't annoy you with overly frequent posts. We just want to get occasional info to you and delight you with short missives and animal pictures from the Art Farm front. Give it try. You can always Unlike us.

To sign-up for the Art Farm Facebook Page, visit our website, click the Facebook icon, and then click the "Like" Icon. That's all there is to it.

Girl Scout getting kiss from Art Farm's Hairy Potter
At this time, we do plan to continue our Saturday morning Art class during the summer. Art class is from 9:30 A.M to Noon. Instruction makes use of live animal farm models to teach traditional drawing technique. Class is open to students in Grades 2-8. If you are not certain your child would like our class, we allow one-time class audits for $25.

Carlsbad Art Farm, recently featured in Carlsbad Magazine, Ranch & Coast Magazine, The Coast News, and the La Jolla Patch, as a premier destination for summer camp-bound youth,  is proud to be a 2010 Nickelodeon Parents' Pick Nominee. We are also proud of supporting local schools and organizations, such as Rady's Children Hospital, through our annual silent Auction donations of a week at Carlsbad Art Farm Summer Camp.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Second Annual Project Wildlife Baby Shower Event


If you enjoy cute baby animals and birds, and supporting wildlife rescue and conservation, don't miss Project Wildlife's Second Annual Wildlife Baby Shower this coming Saturday, March 19, 2011. The event begins at 10 A.M. and continues to 4 P.M.

Project Wildlife, a non-profit dedicated to the rescue and rehabilitation of orphaned and injured wildlife, is located in San Diego at 887-1/2 Sherman Street, just off Sea World Drive Exit 21, toward Tecolote Road.

The event is free to the public and no reservations are necessary. Visitors will be treated to a behind-the-scenes tour of Project Wildlife's intake center, meet many of Project Wildlife's animal ambassadors, enter drawings for great prizes, sample cuisine from the Cohn restaurant group's mobile food truck, "Ms. Patty Melt," and shop for arts and crafts all hand-made by Project Wildlife's army of dedicated volunteers.

Carlsbad Art Farm Owner/Director Perrin Weston Coman is a former Project Wildlife home rehabilitator on the duck team.

Care Center tours are not recommended for pregnant women or immune compromised individuals. For all the information you need to attend the event, or about Project Wildlife, click here.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Art Farm Now Enrolling for Summer Camp 2011


It's been a busy year at Art Farm, and it's hard to believe that we've allowed so much time to pass without posting. But now we're ready to rock and roll. Art Farm is gearing up for our Summer Camp 2011 Season. The big news this summer is we are going full day. Weekly camp are Monday through Friday, 9:30 A.M. to 3:30 P.M. We have an early drop-off and late pick-up option for busy families.

We are also welcoming some new animal models this summer: three baby Nigerian Dwarf Goats and a new crop of spring chicks. One goat, a bottle-baby named Zeus, is already here and causing all sorts of mischief (pictures of Zeus coming soon!). To enroll in camp, visit our website at www.CarlsbadArtFarm.com. Become a fan at our Carlsbad Art Farm Facebook page to receive special offers, discounts, invites to our locally famous Art Farm BBQ, open houses, and whatever other fun stuff we dream up.

Also, consider becoming a fan of this blog. We keep it youth friendly and it's our way of sharing with you the goings on with our Art Farm critters and introducing young students to great website pages about art and natural science.

We hope to see you all soon at Art Farm.