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Description
In this project, the children have before them a piece of paper 42” high that is pinned to the wall. A child is given a length of bamboo about as long as they are tall, to which a brush has been inserted. Because the handle of the brush is so long, even a small movement of a child’s hand can create a startlingly long mark on their large paper. This is a thrilling experience for a child, and it offers the opportunity to create a very different vocabulary of marks than they could with a small brush.
Publication Date
1-2026
Keywords
children's art, creativity, artmaking, imagination
Disciplines
Art Education | Early Childhood Education
Recommended Citation
Goldberg, B. (2026). The Ink Drawing Project. https://educate.bankstreet.edu/partners/10
Comments
This work accompanies the Occasional Paper Series essay "Seeing Meaning"
Goldberg, B. (2014). Seeing meaning. Occasional Paper Series, (31). DOI: https://doi.org/10.58295/2375-3668.1025
All the art in this archive was created by children who were either four years old when the school year began or turned four within the school year. My hope is that the images and texts in this archive will serve as a resource and essential companion to the ideas found in the essay Seeing Meaning. Perhaps, while watching a child paint, a teacher will realize they are seeing a completely other means to making meaning, one that is rooted not in words but in the non-linear pathways of visual imagination, exploration, creativity, and invention. The archived projects are meant to stimulate ideas, as well as provide some practical advice. These are not ‘recipes’ to be followed. They are a point of departure for teachers who recognize visual thinking as something distinct and uniquely important.
Every teacher will approach this subject in their own way— have their own values, level of comfort, desire to explore, and willingness to take risks. They will also have the constraints of space, time, school budgets, and resources to materials, to name but a few. The most important aspect of the archived projects is that they underscore the central theme of Seeing Meaning that children making art are children thinking, using materials as the currency of their thought, and expressing their valuable ideas in the art they create.
Barry Goldberg