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'Drawing From Nature'
A SCIENCE AND ART LESSON FOR KIDS
This appeared on August 3, 2003 in the Los Angeles Times
THE KIDS’ READING ROOM
By Carol Felixson
Special to The Times
August 3, 2003
What large, colorful fish are often mistaken for giant goldfish? They are
called koi and can be found in freshwater ponds all over the world. Koi have
been bred in Japan and China for thousands of years. Their Japanese name is
nishikigoi (ni-shi-ki-GOY). Both koi and goldfish are members of the
carp family.
Because of their beauty, koi are often called "swimming flowers" or "living
jewels." They can live to be 70 years old and sometimes reach 100 or more.
You can tell their age by counting the rings on their scales.
After studying about koi, Natasha, 11 years old, decided to make
this sand painting of a koi pond. In sand painting, designs are made with
colored sand instead of paint. Native American and Tibetan people use sand
paintings in their healing and blessing ceremonies. Natasha wanted to be
sure her pond sparkled, so she used glitter for the koi and plants and sand
for the other parts.
Natasha first sketched her design on cardboard. She used a paintbrush to
fill an area with glue, then added either glitter or sand. When the glue
set, she lifted the cardboard and shook the loose particles into a
container. She repeated this process for each shape. Once the painting was
completely dry, she sealed it with hairspray.
Good job, Natasha!
Note: Japanese pronunciation provided by Mariko Bird of the UCLA
Center for Japanese Studies.
*
Carol Felixson is director of education and community outreach for UCLA
Stunt Ranch Reserve and UCLA Mathias Botanical Garden. Both sites offer
ideas for drawing from nature. To see previous lessons from this series, go
to
http://www.botgard.ucla.edu/kids.html
and
http://nrs.ucop.edu/Reserves/stunt/newsforkids.html.
The next lesson appears on this page on Sept 7.
Copyright 2003 Los Angeles Times
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