My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Talk to other parents about parenting a gifted child on this forum.

Gifted and talented

Artistically G&T

28 replies

Ikanon · 08/11/2017 22:54

My 4.8 year old DD has what my graphic designer friend describes as 'A - Level' talent at drawing. She draws better than me but I failed art at school so luckily I married DH.

What can I do to help her grow her talent? She draws every day but if I knew techniques to introduce to her to she could branch out a bit. I'm completely out of my depth!

OP posts:
Report
Couchpotato3 · 08/11/2017 23:04

I think at that age, I'd just let her enjoy experimenting with different materials and not worry too much about 'technique'. Maybe take her to see some art locally and encourage her to have a go at anything she fancies, kids' holiday workshops and that sort of thing. There are so many different kinds of art out there. How about a trip to your local Hobbycraft shop or something similar? She could try some modelling clay, painting pots, collage, drawing with pastels, chalks, charcoal....the possibilities are endless! Get her started with some simple sewing maybe? Exploring textiles? Photography?

Report
BobbiPins · 09/11/2017 00:08

I work in this field. So my advice to the parents of artistically gifted children:

  1. Show them a lot of great art. This is very important. Take them to the National Gallery, all the best museums, have art catalogues at home, nice posters with famous paintings around the house; it will help them develop a good taste, and show them what is possible.
  2. Admire their drawings; believe in their talent. The confidence you help them build will go a loooong way if they decide one day to work in a creative field.
  3. Have art materials available to them, and show them how to use it (for example, show them they need to rinse a brush switching colours if they want to keep they colours bright)
  4. You can do simple exercises with them that develop hand-eye coordination: drawing parallel lines, drawing rectangular shapes, drawing circles and ovals (can turn it into a game to make it more entertaining). Calligraphy is also good at any age.
  5. Professional training can start from about 10-12 years old (teaching about perspective, value, shading etc). In my opinion, there are no benefits whatsoever to start earlier than that. Professional training means significant effort. A child must really want to learn these things. Starting too early can kill the magic. Rembrandt did not start training until he was 15 years old (but he studied calligraphy earlier).

    Remember, you cannot force someone to be an artist. You can only create opportunities for their talent to blossom.
Report
Hauntedlobster · 09/11/2017 00:11

“So luckily I married DH”

Right, what?

Report
greyfriarskitty · 09/11/2017 10:13

I know a professional illustrator whose biggest bugbear is the quality of materials given to children. It's impossible to draw well with bad tools, so get her some interesting stuff like pastels and charcoal pencils, but also good quality felt tips, pencils and so on.

DD is not this kind of talent, but very interested in art, and there are so many workshops at weekends and in the holidays (even where we are in the sticks). She loves these and it has introduced her to different kinds of printing and ideas about art.

Report
BobbiPins · 09/11/2017 19:08

Greyfriar makes a good point about quality art materials.

Report
Ikanon · 10/11/2017 09:00

We have a huge (100 litre) craft box full of stuff but very good point made about quality. We've recently bought her quality pens thin ink ones as that's her preferred drawing pen. She had access to my random pen pot and consistently chose that one.

It never occurred to me to take her to see art but that's a great idea. We do go to a place that has an art gallery but we've never been in. We should. Because I'm not arty we tend to do things that interest us so hadn't considered that before.

We're both hugely supportive of her art and creations and she knows we're proud of her. She wrote a book this week with illustrations. The writing was readable but the illustrations were excellent.

I could help practice shape forming as at the moment it's drawing what she wants but I could direct her to perfect her shapes.

Hauntedlobster because DH is good (not amazing but better than me) at art and my whole family is notoriously poor at drawing. So I'm lucky I married a man and had a child with his genetic ability to draw rather than mine.

OP posts:
Report
Miniwerewolfhugs · 10/11/2017 09:05

My dd likes art and there are lots of resources on YouTube that she has used to teach herself to draw.

Report
BobbiPins · 10/11/2017 22:41

Ikanon, she wrote a book, that is so adorable!

Let her draw what she wants, don't push anything if she doesn't like it. Skills can be picked up later, let her enjoy drawing.

Report
user789653241 · 11/11/2017 06:49
Report
Ikanon · 11/11/2017 20:41

I took her to an art gallery exhibiting a children's illustrator today. She loved it! She loved the idea of creating things that people want to hang on their walls. Bless her she said she wanted to be an illustrator when she grows up. We gave her some new pens today which she's used to great effect. She was really interested in the idea of using different pens for different drawings. DH thinks we should get her watercolours but I think that's a bit of a step too far.

The book is lovely mix of all of her favourite interests at the moment Smile

OP posts:
Report
Ikanon · 11/11/2017 20:43

Irvine that's a great Christmas idea thank you

OP posts:
Report
Nix32 · 11/11/2017 20:55

We use water colours with 4 year olds at school - they pick it up really quickly. She sounds fab.

Report
user789653241 · 11/11/2017 21:31

We used this kind of water colour brush pens when ds was younger.

stationeryisland.com/collections/brush-pens/products/brush-pens-set-of-12-1-innovative-aqua-brush

Report
LIZS · 11/11/2017 21:35

There are books which explore famous paintings , Van Gogh's Sunflowers for example, and can tie in to gallery visits.

Report
ILoveDolly · 11/11/2017 21:40

Maybe she would enjoy art journaling

Report
LIZS · 11/11/2017 21:41
Report
Ikanon · 12/11/2017 15:34

Irvine she would love those pens!!!

OP posts:
Report
Ikanon · 12/11/2017 15:37

May I ask what art journalling is please?

She's also hugely into books so I can see another Christmas present being added there thank you.

OP posts:
Report
user789653241 · 12/11/2017 19:31

If you google art journal ideas/images, 100s of images comes up.

Report
Ikanon · 13/11/2017 17:31

Thank you. I think she's inadvertently started a few of these already but I think finding some quality paper books and materials would help.

OP posts:
Report
user789653241 · 14/11/2017 08:14

How exciting! Smile

Report
LordSugarWillSeeYouNow · 22/11/2017 08:04

My ds is exceptional at art and is doing it at GCSE now. His little sister is 6 and is starting to display the same amount of enthusiasm and talent and neither of them take after me, I'm useless Grin

This is one of dd's recent pics

Artistically G&T
Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

Ikanon · 21/04/2018 22:11

@irvineoneohone I just wanted to say thank you for your excellent recommendations. After a demo lesson from DH she's really got into watercolour landscapes which wasn't on her radar before.

We also got her this which I highly recommend to hone features of a style.

www.amazon.co.uk/Drawing-Artistically-Undiscovered-Klutz-Quentin/dp/1570543208?tag=mumsnet&ascsubtag=mnforum-21

Her eyes on pictures have come on leaps and bounds since practicing faces in this book.

OP posts:
Report
user789653241 · 26/04/2018 06:44

Thank you for update, Ikanon. I'm really happy to hear that she enjoys it. Smile

Report
user789653241 · 26/04/2018 15:11

@Ikanon , just wondered if she might like this interactive website.

weavesilk.com/

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.