Pop Art Food Sculptures

A continual theme this year with 4th and 5th grade has been pop art. It is fun and easily tied to many of the areas we explored (see Lichtenstein portraits and Warhol inspired prints).

We looked at the work of Claes Oldenburg and Wayne Thiebaud as our inspiration. Every time I decide to do a clay project, I am apprehensive. One year, despite laying down ground rules and consequences for the class, I had a middle schooler deliberately throw clay onto the ceiling. The spot of impact remains to this day, and somehow all the kids have heard rumblings of the story. Needless to say, they still ask how it got there.

But clay is fun and worth it if it means a class will get in an annual 3D project. I showed the class the basic building techniques: building a clay cupcake using a pinch pot, coil and scratching and attaching the pieces together. I wanted to give them inspiration but also the freedom to create their own food sculpture. In the end I had a few cupcakes and other sweet delicacies, but also some variety.

We spent time sketching ideas before I passed out any clay. Building with clay took two or three classes, and then finished pieces were left out to dry. The final class was spent painting and decorating with puffy paint and glitter glue details.

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3 thoughts on “Pop Art Food Sculptures

  1. Joanne August 10, 2017 / 1:43 PM

    This project reminds me of plastic samples of meals displayed outside Tokyo restaurants, which are an art form themselves. Lots of photos available if you Google “plastic Japanese food”.

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