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Kid’s Art Activities and Encouraging Left-Brain Creativity

art activities

Left-brain art activities don’t have to be boring – they can be filled with exciting ways for enticing kids to tap into the benefits of combining the sides of their brains into one fun creative machine.  Often, kids let their dominant left-brain take charge forgetting their creative right-brain completely, leading to comments such as, “I can’t draw.” Encouraging creative left-brain art activities promotes self-confidence and the child’s brain to work together.

Children Aged 2 to 4

Young kids greatly benefit from activities that engage the left-brain in creative art projects. Introduce kids to shapes along with the math concept of pattern through a fun water resist art activity.

Children Aged 5 to 7

As children age and become more critical of their artwork, encouraging left-brain art reminds them that their artwork doesn’t have to solely rely on creativity but can be accomplished through using their left-brain skills, too. Create a geometric design with kids encouraging their basic math knowledge as well as their artistic skills.

Children Aged 8 to 13

Older children begin to lose interest in art as they age and due to art not being included in many middle schools and high schools as a required subject. Preteens are at risk of missing out on honing their creative skills and finding ways to remind their brains that merging their right and left-brain talents help form a complete human being. Challenge kids by creating a 3D sculpture from a piece of construction paper.

Young Adults

Once kids hit young adulthood, they become aware of their inabilities in the area of the arts. Most lean toward the feeling they aren’t creative, where in reality their creativity is hiding out in their right-brain.  By creating a mathematical grid drawing a child is able to easily and comfortably recreate an image without fear of mistake or disappointment along with reminding them of their tucked away creativity.

Chuck Close is an American artist that uses mathematical grids to recreate photographs into larger than life portraits using pointillism. Look at examples of his work with the teenager and discuss his techniques.

By encouraging kids to use their left-brain and their inner creativity, they will feel confident about their artwork and also feel ready to share their creativity with others.

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