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Concepts for creating a Northern lights-inspired painting

Inspired by sightings of the Aurora Borealis in the UK last week, here’s an idea for a technique you can use to make Northern Lights art for kids.


Elements of the Art Room

Hi, and welcome to our art room! This site is dedicated to the awesome elementary artists I teach, and is a little window into our world of art. Hope you enjoy!

Thank goodness we live in an age where we can get inspiration from teachers all over the world! Most art teachers are alone in their building, so we do not have the opportunity to collaborate with our peers as much as the other teachers do. I’m so blessed to live in an age where an art teacher clear across the country or world is accessible in mere seconds! We can all share our great ideas, and not have to leave the comfort of our pj’s if we don’t want to! Anyway. As I was scrolling through Instagram, I came across this beautiful project from Art with Mrs. E. Her 4th graders did such a great job, I wanted to try it out with ours as well!

We will be starting this when we come back from Christmas break!

I love this technique of spreading chalk to create the look of the Northern Lights. Here’s how I did it.

Materials:
9×12″ Tru-Ray construction paper

First start with black paper, and a piece of 90lb white paper. Tear that 90lb piece of paper 3 or 4 different ways horizontally. Then, use chalk pastels to add color to the top of the tear. Rub in an upward motion to spread the chalk onto the black paper. Oh, and add a thick white line in chalk for the snowy ground!

Add more color than I did in this picture! I realized I didn’t add enough when I starting spreading it, and not much color was coming off!

Here’s a new video showing how to
color and spread the chalk onto your black paper

For some reason the warm colors spread and colored better than the cool did.

I did 4 layers, but you could do more or less, or even do them going in a different direction! Maybe vertical instead of horizontal! I’ll try that next!

The next class the students can add paint to their picture, by painting black evergreen trees, their reflection in the water, and stars or snow in the background. Now that I’ve completed mine, I’ll do the stars before I do the trees next time! Whoops! Guess my trees will just have snow on them!

When I instruct the students to do the stars, we will rub the bristles with our fingers to create the stars, so our paint dots are much smaller!

After they paint the black trees, add the reflection of the lights with chalk to the water, in a horizontal motion. Then, add the reflection of the trees in a horizontal motion with black tempera paint.

Stay tuned for some awesome art!
Hope you and yours have the happiest of holidays, and a wonderful New Year!

Last week we had a 1-2 hour delay, each day, so I haven’t had 4th grade until today! Mrs. Fambrough’s class is off to a wonderful start, and as usual, Mrs. Stacey is so very proud of them!!

Dr. Fambrough’s class did a great job today, too!

“Lauren Stacey is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon . com .”

Norse myths and legends

The Northern Lights have inspired some of the most dramatic tales in Norse mythology. The Vikings celebrated the lights, believing they were earthly manifestations of their gods. Other Norse people feared them, telling stories of the dangers they posed and developing superstitions to protect themselves.

Whichever fantastical tale captures your imagination, one thing is certain: the Northern Lights were assigned great power and significance by the peoples of ancient Nordic societies. Whether a harbinger of good or evil, the lights were as magical and revered as they continue to be today.

Heroes lighting up the sky

Odin was the chief god and ruler of Asgard, revered by all Vikings. They believed that during every battle on Earth, Odin would pick the warriors who would die and join him in Valhalla, where he lived.

The Valkyries – female warriors on horseback who wore armour and carried spears and shields – were tasked with leading Odin’s chosen warriors to Valhalla. The Vikings believed the Northern Lights illuminating the sky were the reflections of the Valkyries’ armour as they led the warriors to Odin.

Other Nordic legends claim the aurora was the breath of brave soldiers who died in combat. In other stories, the aurora was believed to be the ‘Bifrost Bridge’, a glowing, pulsing arch which led fallen warriors to their final resting place in Valhalla.

  • Photo: Shutterstock

Danger in the lights?

For the Sámi, the indigenous Finno-Ugric people of northern Scandinavia, the lights didn’t tell stories of heroism and bravery; instead, they were to be feared and respected in equal measure. The appearance of the Northern Lights was a bad omen.

Thought to be the souls of the dead, the Sámi believed you shouldn’t talk about the Northern Lights. It was also dangerous to tease them by waving, whistling, or singing under them, as this would alert the lights to your presence.

The belief was that if you caught their attention, the lights could reach down and carry you up into the sky – or even slice off your head! To this day, many Sámi stay indoors when the Northern Lights are illuminating the sky, just to be on the safe side.

Mythical fire foxes

In Finland, the Northern Lights are known as ‘revontulet’, which can be literally translated as ‘fire fox’. The name comes from the rather beautiful myth that Arctic foxes were responsible for creating the aurora. They would run through the sky so fast that when their large, furry tails brushed against the mountains, they created sparks that lit up the sky.

A similar version of this story tells that as the fire foxes ran, their tails swept snowflakes up into the sky, which caught the moonlight and created the Northern Lights. This would have also helped explain why the lights were visible only in winter, as there is no snowfall in the summer months.

  • Photo: Shutterstock

Child light

In Icelandic folklore, the Northern Lights were thought to help ease the pain of childbirth, but pregnant women were not to look directly at them or their child would be born cross-eyed.

In Greenland, people held the bittersweet belief that the lights were the spirits of babies who had died in childbirth, dancing across the sky, while in Norway, the Northern Lights were believed to be the souls of old maids dancing in the heavens and waving at those below.

North American myths and legends

Many of the stories surrounding the Northern Lights in North American communities arose from the belief that they were the souls of departed ancestors.

It was even thought that the lights might be the spirits of the animals they hunted. But not all North American legends painted the Northern Lights as quite so benevolent.

The circle of life

Some Native American stories depict the Northern Lights as torches held by spirits who were tasked with leading the souls of the recently deceased over the abyss to the land of brightness and plenty. To communicate with people on Earth, they believed the Northern Lights made a whistling sound, which was to be answered by humans with whispers.

Eskimo tribes believed they could summon the Aurora to converse with their dead relatives. Cree Indians believed strongly in the ‘circle of life’. They also believed the lights were a way of communicating with their ancestors, and when dogs barked at the lights, it was because they recognised their lost companions.

In Canada and northern Michigan, Algonquin tribes believed the creator of the Earth, Nanabozho, moved to the far north and lit a huge fire to let his people know that even though he was far away, he was still thinking of them. The aurora was a reflection of this fire.

The Menominee Indians of Wisconsin believed what they saw were gentle giants fishing at night, and that the lights were created by their torches as they fished.

The Inuits of northern Greenland believed the lights were the spirits of the dead playing celestial games with a walrus skull, though other local Inuit communities believed it was the walruses playing games with a human skull.

  • Photo: Stian Klo

Omens of death

Not all native communities in North America were comforted by the presence of the Northern Lights and many believed they were an evil omen.

The Great Plains Indians also believed the lights were the reflection of large fires, but not one made by a loving creator. Theirs were the reflections of giant flames under huge cooking pots, lit by northern tribes to cook their enemies.

In Wisconsin, the Fox Indians thought the Northern Lights were the restless spirits of their slain enemies attempting to rise again for revenge – and were an omen of pestilence and war. In Alaska, Inuit communities also feared the lights and carried knives to ward themselves against the evil spirits of the aurora.


European myths and legends

While the Northern Lights are most frequently and intensely seen in the Auroral Oval above the Arctic Circle, they do also make occasional appearances further south, whenever there’s a burst of solar activity.

Across history, there have been many auroral sightings in Europe, which has given us a rich trove of myths and tales.

Omens of bloodshed

When the aurora appears further south in Europe, the lights often take on a deep, reddish hue. This would explain why, in continental Europe, many considered the dancing, crimson streaks of the aurora to be an evil omen, a portent of war, or other dangers.

The red sky: aurora borealis over Bavaria, Germany

  • Photo: Jens Mayer

For instance, in the late 18th century, the onset of the French Revolution threw the country into turmoil. In the weeks before the monarchy was overthrown, a bright red aurora was seen in the skies over England and Scotland and locals reported hearing huge armies battling in the skies. The frightened onlookers believed it foretold of impending war and death.

Although the Scots gave them Northern Lights the cheery nickname of “Merry Dancers”, the ‘dancers’ depicted fallen angels or sky warriors engaged in an epic battle. In the Hebrides, bloodstones are a common sight and these beautiful green heliotropes are speckled with red. The Scots believed these red specks were drops of blood that fell from the sky onto the stones as the Merry Dancers engaged in battle.

Positive premonitions

But not everybody saw the aurora as a harbinger of doom. Estonians, for example, believed that the Northern Lights were wonderful sleighs taking guests to a spectacular wedding celebration in the heavens.

Similarly, in Greco-Roman mythology, Aurora is the personification of the dawn, and the sister of the sun and the moon. The ancient Greeks and Romans believed that every day Aurora raced across the sky in her chariot, alerting her brother and sister to the breaking of the new day. Watching the Northern Lights stretch across the sky, it’s easy to imagine how this story took form.

Wild ideas

Often myths explained the lights using stories about animals and nature. Some spoke of the aurora appearing when whales were playing games, while the Danes believed the lights were caused by swans competing to see who could fly further north. According to legend, some of the swans became trapped in the ice and, as they tried to escape, they flapped their wings creating flurries of light in the sky.

Swedish fishermen looked forward to seeing the aurora, as they thought the lights were the reflections of giant schools of herring swimming nearby. For them, an aurora sighting brought good fortune and the promise of a hefty catch.

Click here to get free art lessons and printables!

Wax crayons combined with water colours makes a great art technique to create a stary night picture and it’s what we adapted to create our Aurora Boralis pictures.

northern lights painting

play academy play academy

What are the Northern Lights?

Firstly, we did some research to find out what the Northern Lights actually are. The children described them as a party in the sky – where particles from the sun get the Earth’s gases all giddy and make them start to glow!

For some more scientific details we used this BBC Science explanation of the Northern Lights

The children watched this Northern Lights video on repeat as they drew and it was a great inspiration for their art. They thought the music matched the dancing lights really well – and did some dancing of their own!

kids art wax crayons

We used this Wiki guide to aurora to learn about the different colours of lights in different parts of the sky – and selected our wax crayons to match: red for glowing oxygen high in the sky, green for lower down.

watercolour kids art technique

To create our northern lights art we used watercolour paper. We began by drawing our lights across the page in coloured wax crayons. We used dots of white wax crayon to add in little stars.

northern lights for kids

Then, using a black watercolour paint, we washed right over the page.

aurora borealis art for kids

The wax crayon markings resist the water colour, giving the effect of the dark night sky with the aurora borealis dancing across it.

northern lights art for kids

To create a foreground and show the scale of the lights, you can cut out a landscape from black or snowy white card.

art for kids night sky

We kept our design simple, but you might add a forest or houses. You can glue it along the bottom of your watercolour paper to finish your northern lights art.

northern lights for kids painting

Comments

  1. Jaimi@TheStay-at-Home-MomSurvivalGuide says 04/03/2014 at 1:12 pm

This is a beautiful mult-disciplinary activity! I lived far enough north in the US for a time to see the Aurora Borealis regularly, and you captured it in a wonderful way for children to explore. Crayon-resist art is so fun!

I love this activity. I am studying the Northern lights withy students and I will do this with them for sure. Thank you.

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Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

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