GRADES K-7
Community Stories Unit: Puppet-making
Community Stories Unit: Puppet-making
Learn and share stories of your community through puppets! Conduct research and interviews to develop a historical account and share oral history through performance-based productions. Seek untold stories to shine a light on, use your imagination to create a historical fiction based on your research, and/or tell a modern story of your own experiences. Practice your performance and share it with others live or on film. Consider how you may alter the telling of your story based on your audience. For example, you may wish to perform your stories for younger students. How might you change the dialogue? Create a set to enhance your story!
This unit is inspired by the work of students, educators, museum educators, and teaching artists in the Stories of the Land and Its People program.
Curricular Connections:
History
Creative Writing
Historical Fiction
Documentation
Elements of Storytelling: Plot, Setting + Characters
Elements of Storytelling: Beginning, Middle + End
Mood / Tone
Vocabulary:
Composition
Subject
Foreground / Middle-ground / Background
Mood / Tone
Landscape / Seascape
Vantage Point
Color
Line + Form
Farnsworth Collection:
Notice: Notice works of art in the Farnsworth collection. How are people and places represented? What elements might you draw on for your puppets and set-design?
Activity: Expedition + Inquiry
Expedition: Explore and notice places in your community. Observe the buildings, land formations, and people! Document what you see by sketching or by taking pictures with a camera. Remember to practice courteous photography etiquette, and ask before taking a person’s picture.
Curricular Connections: Take a moment for sensory writing. What do you see, smell, feel, taste, and hear? Use detailed language to describe what you notice. Consider how this may change with each season.
Community Stories: Puppet show
Curricular Connections: Research local history to learn about people and places in your community. Consider what stories are told and what stories or perspectives are not represented.
Reflect + Create: Based on your research, create a script to share a history set in your town. You may wish to create a historical fiction, a biography of an important person or people, or develop a historical documentary.
Create: Create puppets to perform your story. Notice other 3-dimensional objects like this sculpture by William Zorach. How does the artist use form and shape in constructing their work of art? How can you use found objects like artist Louise Nevelson to create your puppets?
Create: Consider voice and movement. You may want to practice conveying a feeling through movement by engaging with videos from the Art + Movement Unit. How can you “show” your story? What backdrops do you require?
Reflect: Consider issues of representation as you develop your puppets and stories. Who are your characters, and how are you choosing to depict them?
Stories students work with teaching artist Matt Curtis to block their puppet performances and prepare their props.
Reflect + Revise: Practice your performance! Give each other feedback and coordinate how you will move throughout each scene.
Exhibition: Share your story with a live performance or document it on video! Create a book to accompany your project.
Gallery of student work:
Activity: Notice
Notice a work of art. What story does it tell? What can we learn about the place or setting of the composition? What might it tell about the people who live there? How might one feel in that place? How does lighting, color, and shape impact our experience?
Follow along with museum educator Andrea Curtis as she notices this work of art by Marguerite Zorach. How does this work of art share a particular story of the land and its people? Notice who is included in this story, and who is excluded. Why might this be the case? What (or whose) other stories might we want to uplift?
Stories of the Land and Its People
The Stories of the Land and Its People program encourages student participants to learn about people and places in their community. For more student project examples, visit our Student Exhibitions page.
Developed by:
Contributors:
Developed by Andrea L. Curtis, Farnsworth Art Museum, Arts in Education Program, 2021
Community Unit: Architecture + History
Community Unit: Architecture + History
Explore structures and places in your community to learn the history of where you live. Partner with local historians to find historic ruins, walk down central areas to observe and capture important places, and consider what is no longer visible. What structures could there be in the future?
This unit is inspired by the work of students, educators, museum educators, and teaching artists in the Stories of the Land and Its People program.
Curricular Connections:
History
Creative Writing
Historical Fiction
Documentation
Measurements
Scale
Vocabulary:
Composition
Subject
Vantage Point
Foreground / Middle-ground / Background
Line + Form
Contrast
Horizon Line
community Map: History + Architecture
Expedition + Create: Visit or research different important structures in your town. Sketch or take photographs of buildings or places that are important to the history of your community.
Curricular Connections: Interview people, connect with local historians, and research the time period in which the buildings were built. Consider how they are being used today and how things have changed over time.
Create + Curricular Connections: Use your own photos or reference photos to create scaled drawings of your place.
Create: Create a 3-dimensional mural! Examine old and new maps to inspire your layout. Build structures out of recycled materials such as old cardboard boxes.
Exhibition: Share your research on exhibition labels or create your own book.
Reflect: How might your community look differently in the future? What new structures could you imagine? Create your own!
Activity:
Take a walking tour of your community. Photograph places of importance or that may be interesting to you. Research each location and see if you can find historic photos or works of art depicting that same location. Does the vantage point of your photograph match? Create a historic walking map of your town. Partner with your local historical society to learn more!
Stories students in Rockland Maine learned that Amelia Earhart once flew into an old airport that was located at the site of their school.
Farnsworth Collection:
Notice these works of art in the Farnsworth collection. How does the artist represent a sense of place? What vantage point or point of view is the viewer? How does composition, color, and technique impact how we feel about this place? What might be left unseen?
Activity: Notice
Notice a work of art. What story does it tell? What can we learn about the place or setting of the composition? What might it tell about the people who live there? How might one feel in that place? How does lighting, color, and shape impact our experience?
Follow along with museum educator Andrea Curtis as she notices this work of art by Marguerite Zorach. How does this work of art share a particular story of the land and its people? Notice who is included in this story, and who is excluded. Why might this be the case?
Stories of the Land and Its People
The Stories of the Land and Its People program encourages student participants to learn about people and places in their community. For more student project examples, visit our Student Exhibitions page.
Not pictured: Wendy Jacques, Classroom Educator, Farnsworth Stories Program
Contributors:
Developed by Andrea L. Curtis, Farnsworth Art Museum, Arts in Education Program, 2021