Customer Reviews


6 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
 
 
Only search this product's reviews
Most Helpful First | Newest First

13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars great for adults and kids, January 4, 2003
This review is from: Color Your Own Modern Art Masterpieces (Dover Art Coloring Book) (Paperback)
There are 30 different modern art masterpieces represented here, so it is definitely worth the price. All pieces are shown in color on the front and back covers, and each individual page has the name of the artist (years of their birth-death), title of the work, date created and type of medium used. So, it's educational and fun. I recommend it for all ages. Some of the artists included are: Picasso, Miro, Klee and Mondrian.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Modern Art Reproducibles, January 28, 2001
This review is from: Color Your Own Modern Art Masterpieces (Dover Art Coloring Book) (Paperback)
This is a fantastic resource for any children's art program. Whether you are writing your own lesson plans or connecting art with literature. This inexpensive resource is a must for your collection.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars looking at things from a different perspective, March 1, 2011
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Color Your Own Modern Art Masterpieces (Dover Art Coloring Book) (Paperback)
I have always loved to color and recently decided that it might be good therapy for me mentally as well as physically because I have been having a weakness in my left arm. This was one of the coloring books I recently purchased. I loved it for several reasons. You might say it took me out of my comfort zone. In my grade school, art was never really taught and so I have had very little background on art history. I found I was fascinated by one Picasso paiting recently. So I decided to purchase this. Allowing myself to "color" a person's face blue, and other out of the ordinary coloring was more therapeutic than I had anticipated. Each painting has a picture of the original and so I decided to look at and color with different colors ... because I was creating my own "masterpieces". I just had the outlines to guide me. It was a freeing and enjoyable experience. I have bought other "grown up"coloring books and made a commitment to myself to color at least one picture per day. With this book I have learned something about artist with whom I was very unfamiliar and explored new sides of myself. I have experimented with colored pencil, crayons and markers and recently trying to combine pencil and marker. It has been a fulfilling and "therapeutic" experience. I took advantage of the promotional offer of Dover's 4 for the price of 3. Well worth the cost.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great, but not the best, February 16, 2008
By 
This review is from: Color Your Own Modern Art Masterpieces (Dover Art Coloring Book) (Paperback)
I was looking forward to using this with my art students, and it is a really interesting way to introduce them to art pieces. The only reason I didn't give it 5 stars is because I've seen other books provide a brief intro before each piece that talks about the artist... not this one.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars the kids love it!, December 22, 2008
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Color Your Own Modern Art Masterpieces (Dover Art Coloring Book) (Paperback)
I bought this book to help w/ my monthly art project in my son's 1st grade class. the kids loved coloring the masterpieces! i wished there were more pages!
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thorough Exploration and Imagery, July 25, 2008
By 
AliMcJ (Dallas, Texas) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Color Your Own Modern Art Masterpieces (Dover Art Coloring Book) (Paperback)
I bought this book for its completeness and thoroughness, the very nature of which provide variety, for use in an applied study of color theory for people who work with color and are not necessarily graphically/two-dimensionally oriented. The line drawings are well done and "relevant," in that they are neither of the color-by-number variety nor are they too broad and general drawings of shapes.

Personally, I prefer to color on a smaller scale with prismacolors, just for fun (and do academic experimentation with color just for fun), and like to have a lighter line than black indicating the shapes and color areas, as it shows through the prismacolors. The paper is, however, thick enough to be painted on with opaque paints. For my purposes, then, I scan these, reduce them in size, and then lighten the black to a light grey.

This review started out as a shocked response to a post below, in which the reviewer states she/he had been "looking forward to using this with . . . art students" and didn't give it 5 stars because it didn't "provide a brief intro before each piece:"

Her/his review was mitigated by later posts from "amiemv" and The First Lutheran Church "Bookfairy" who got it right: the information is there, the teacher should have the background already and be able to provide the connections by integrating it into lessons/lesson plans.

These are reinforcement activities and/or enrichment activities when applied in an educational setting. For home use, they are those same kind of activities as well as springboards to finding out more about the artists. It is not an illustrated book, as that first reviewer might want; it is a collection of images made ready to color and to be used by people who have a use for those images for reasons of their own.

For that reason, no introduction to each artist is provided; it is assumed that people buying this book would already have that knowledge or would be motivated to find out the information.

A generic introduction to an artist and a coloring sheet for one of his/her pieces is no more than busywork if they are employed in the "art" classroom or in the general classroom for an "art activity" without connections to other knowledge bases being made, the least of which is the background knowledge of the artists and pieces being a part of the teacher's understanding, or a part of research assigned to accompany the busywork.

As mentioned at the start, these can be used as springboards to the exploration of design elements, color theory being an application I have found for them, the details of which are too long to go into here.

However, in response to that surprising 4-star post, I went on to suggest a use to which one of the images might be put in the art classroom, in the hopes that it would stimulate her/him to think more about how to use these, rather than see a fault in the lack of text. The "you" in the paragraphs below are, then, the personal "you" directed toward that poster; the content, however, of the use to which one image in the book may be put, is addressed to the general "you," as in the more formal "one" or as a substitute for the passive voice.

If anyone does apply this lesson plan, please contact me and show me some process images and finished product images.

This is a very fun activity to use in the classroom; I have used it in varying forms from 5th grade on up (I wouldn't go into the pointillism detail for students below high school level; other images with other ways of producing color -- even artist-specific in terms to technique (van Gogh and oil pastels, for example) and color selection -- would be more appropriate, and the research step might be a presentation by the teacher after the initial "free-style" approach, dealing with the artist's focus, followed by the grid/scale activity as reinforcement of that artist's choices in technique, color, paint application . . . .)

Here is what belongs more in this review than as a response to that post, and remember, don't take pointed comments personally: they are specific responses to one particular reviewer, and meant to be helpful:

For some ideas on how to apply artists' coloring sheets in the classroom, see back issues of _School Arts_ (your school library should have them; if not, at least one school in your district will have them), and by all means, secure yourself a subscription to this number one art educators' resource.

Just for one example, if you were to use George Seurat, would you introduce him as a pointillist and then suggest the students follow suit? Would you hand out the sheets first and have them color them, pin up the group, and then assign them research on Seurat after completion? Would you then, after completion, ask them to do another, using what they learned? Who knows.

What I would do, after completing individual images and pinning them up and having them do research, is explain the concept of pointillism and its relationship to the impressionist's concepts (light, changing light, and perception of light and color), grid and cut the coloring image up into squares, one for each student (or two -- depending on the number of students you have; if you have a lot of students, perhaps you would need to grid and cut up more than one copy and divide the class into two or three teams for this project). After the grid is cut, glue each square to the center of a square white paper or a 5" x 7" white index card and pass them out to the students, along with a blank white square 4" to 6" big. Then you will ask them to duplicate, in pencil line, the abstract image they have on those small squares on the larger square. When they have done that, tell the class that they are to color the abstract image they have using pointillism to make the colors.

When everyone is done, have them paste their squares onto a heretofore unveiled master grid (one for each team or for the class), making sure the top is up and the letter and number match the letter and number on the master grid. You will have a large pointillist painting of "Sunday Afternoon on the Grand Jatte," which is the image in the book, I believe.

Alternately, after they have made the line drawing that duplicates the layout on the uncolored line square, you may have made a color copy of the painting in the exact size and scale of the line drawing, and you can grid and cut this out into squares that exactly match the little black and white ones, and then you can hand out color squares pasted on index cards for the class to duplicate in pointillism: it will give them a starting point. Better yet, you could color in one of these yourself, matching Seurat's colors exactly, but in prismacolors, blended in the traditional color pencil blending technique. Then you could cut this (or those, if you need more than one for your class size) into squares and have the class duplicate the colors on their larger white squares, using pointillism to give the impression of the colors there.

If you are teaching art, you should have a working knowledge of all the artists and works in this book, from only your three general Survey of Art History classes: Prehistoric through Pre-Renaissance/Early Renaissance/Renaissance, Renaissance/Baroque through beginning of 20th century, and 20th Century/Contemporary Art History. These classes would have been completed before you received your B.A. in Art or in Art Education. If for some reason* you managed not to take them, go back to a community college and take them just for yourself; the knowledge you gain from these classes will serve you well in all fields throughout your life.

As to devising lesson plans, you should be able to pull these out after your two practical Art Education classes, in which you have had practice devising lesson plans. These classes would have been completed in your fifth year, before your student teaching.

*(some reason being perhaps being having taken Art Appreciation as a substitute or a specialized area of art history, Women's Art, for example, or even attending a school with a lack of oversight and stringency in standards)
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


Most Helpful First | Newest First

This product

Color Your Own Modern Art Masterpieces (Dover Art Coloring Book)
Color Your Own Modern Art Masterpieces (Dover Art Coloring Book) by Muncie Hendler (Paperback - October 21, 1996)
$3.95
In Stock
Add to cart Add to wishlist