Nature’s Masterpieces

Introduction

What if a painting could make sound? What would that sound be? Would it sing, speak, make musical sounds? Using the artwork of Indigenous artist Alex Janvier, students will interpret images they see in his paintings with a variety of musical sounds.

Just as dancers communicate with their bodies and musicians communicate with their music, artists use their art to communicate and express their thoughts and emotions without words. The viewer responds and interprets the art and imagines what the artist is trying to say in the art. There is no right or wrong answer because each person’s interpretation is unique in how they see and feel about the art.

Skills and concepts: Expression, moving, creating experimental sounds, playing instruments

Objective(s): Students will create a musical interpretation of paintings by Alex Janvier by using vocal sounds, instruments, and movement.

Target grades: 4-6

Materials

Paintings by Alex Janvier: Beautiful Culture and Earth Movement

Instruments: pitched and non-pitched (if available)

Projector

Four copies of Janvier’s Earth Movement artwork, printed on card stock in colour and laminated. Add a directional arrow to the back of each copy, pointing outward. Each copy should have its arrow in a different quadrant, representing north, south, east, and west.

The Four Directions

Information about The Four Directions to share with students: The Four Directions circle is an important symbol for Indigenous people as it represents many things, such as the four seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), the four natural elements (earth, fire, water, air), cycles of life (birth, adolescence, adulthood, elder), and the four directions (north, east, south, west).

Visit Four Directions Teachings for more information.

About Alex Janvier

Born of Dene Suline and Saulteaux descent in 1935, Alex Janvier was raised in the nurturing care of his family until the age of eight. At this age, the young Janvier was uprooted from his home and sent to the Blue Quills Indian Residential School near St. Paul, Alberta. Although Janvier speaks of having a creative instinct from as far back as he can remember, it was at the residential school that he was given the tools to create his first paintings. Unlike many aboriginal artists of his time, Janvier received formal art training from the Alberta College of Art in Calgary and graduated with honours in 1960. Immediately after graduation, Janvier took up an opportunity to instruct art at the University of Alberta.

While Alex recognizes the artists Wassily Kandinsky (Russian) and Paul Klee (Swiss) as influences, his style is unique. Many of his masterpieces involve an eloquent blend of both abstract and representational images with bright, often symbolic colours. As a First Nations person emerging from a history of oppression and many struggles for cultural empowerment, Janvier paints both the challenges and celebrations that he has encountered in his lifetime. Alex proudly credits the beadwork and birch bark basketry of his mother and other relatives as influencing his art.

In 2016, Alex Janvier won a commission to have one of his paintings turned into a mosaic tile installation on the floor of the entrance to Roger’s Place arena, the new home of the Edmonton Oilers. The piece is called tsa tsa ke k’e, which means “iron-footed place”.

Source: www.alexjanvier.com

In addition to his official website, here are some other interesting news articles about Alex Janvier:

Activity 1: Beautiful Culture

Step 1. Ask students if they have ever imagined: What if a painting could speak? What would it say? What if a painting could make music? What would it be?

Step 2. Project the artwork Beautiful Culture (below). Share with students Alex Janvier’s biography (above). After reviewing the biography, share with students the title Beautiful Culture.

Ask: What do you see in this painting? (Allow for several answers.) What colours do you see in the painting? How does the painting make you feel? (Happy, sad, etc.)?

Step 3. Students will add sound to the colours in the picture! Have students pick one colour in the picture. Ask: What emotion does that colour make you feel in this painting? (Examples of the students’ colour words could include happy, sad, excited, joyful, angry, etc.)

Step 4. Decide who will be the conductor: the teacher or a student. When the conductor points to your colour in the painting, say your word using your chosen expression. Try “conducting” the painting three times in different ways or with different conductors.

Step 5. Have students decide on a vocal sound other than their colour word. What sound would it make in the painting? (e.g., sad = sigh, happy = a high-pitched “ah”, angry = low-pitched “hmph” or whatever the students come up with on their own!)

Activity 2: Earth Movement

Step 1. Divide students into four groups. Pass out the four pictures of Earth Movement by Alex Janvier. Tell the students the title.

Step 2. Discuss the following: Indigenous people are deeply connected and rooted to nature and believe that all things are connected. The earth beneath our feet, the air we breathe, the plants, trees, and animals and all things in nature, are connected to us and each other. How does the painting depict this? What colours do you see in this painting that represents nature?

Step 3. Have students turn their painting over and notice the arrow. This arrow is in a different spot for each group. Your arrow will show a rotation within the four directions. Briefly discuss the significance of the four directions with the students. Have students point the arrow to the top. It will mark the starting point for each group’s rotation.

Step 4. Each group will have a different task to interpret their painting. Choose from the following options:

  1. Brainstorm words in nature or from the elements that you see in the painting (you may not see these things represented literally, but colours and shapes can remind students of various natural elements). Choose an emotion that fits each word, as in the first activity. Decide who will be the conductor of the painting. Perform the painting, as in the first activity.
  2. Create a group movement that best interprets your rotation of the painting. Use Janvier’s beautiful flowing and connected shapes and lines as a springboard.
  3. With pitched instruments, recorders, barred instruments etc. discover a way to interpret your rotation of the painting. Consider the lines or colours that go from large to small (loud to soft, high to low, big to small, dark colour to light colour, etc) as you decide on your instruments. Is there a colour that is more dominant? Perhaps that can serve as repeated pattern on a bass instrument? Use your imagination.
  4. Use non-pitched percussion instruments such as drums, shakers, woods, metals, or found instruments to create a soundscape to interpret your rotation of the painting.
  5. Inspired by The Four Directions of Earth, Water, Fire, Air, create nature sounds using your voice, or body percussion that interprets the painting (e.g., green is earth, dark blue is water, red is fire, light blue is air, etc.)

Closing activity

Step 1. Have students share their interpretations with each other, and try this variation:

Step 2. Have students rotate their painting by 45 degrees (a quarter-turn, which is one rotation within the Medicine Wheel), so that the arrow points in a different direction. They’ll then perform their piece again, still starting from the “top” of the painting (the top will now be in a different place).

Step 3. Discuss the following: Does it sound different? Do the 45 degree rotation two more times, performing the piece from the new “top” of the painting each time. How does the performance change based on how the lines and colours are in different places as you rotate the painting?

Adaptations for younger grades

Instead of splitting into four groups, choose four activities to try as an entire class.