The Social Struggles of Contemporary Black Art

CONTENTS OF CURRICULUM UNIT 22.03.04

  1. Unit Guide
  1. Overview
  2. Rationale
  3. Unit Content
  4. Teaching Strategies
  5. Classroom Activities
  6. Appendix on Implementing District Standards
  7. Resources
  8. Notes

Art as Advocacy: Explorations into Literary and Visual Art to Provoke Change

Perrine Punwani

Published September 2022

Tools for this Unit:

Guide Entry to 22.03.04

Given the loss of funding for the arts in many schools, it is imperative that other subject areas provide young people with opportunities to meaningfully engage in art. This unit dives into contemporary art from the United States and around the world that has been used to advocate a message. Students will begin by reading an essay about the dangers of silence by Audre Lorde, considering poetry from two writers, informational texts, and several works of visual art and new media. Throughout the unit, they will learn how to make meaning of art for themselves by internalizing thinking routines and building confidence in skills as critics and consumers of art. Further, they will study the creation of a historic art collective and its principles of design. Students will then apply this knowledge to create their own artist collectives and their own art based on the principles they collaboratively create. Their final audience for their art will be local and national changemakers who will be invited to an exhibit of their work.

(Developed for English Language Arts, grade 8; recommended for Visual Arts, Social Justice, English Language Arts, and Social Studies, grades 8-12)

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