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Line is the most basic Element of Art. It's so critical to understand it when designing school or business logos, fonts (the “way” we write letters), the clothes we wear, cars we drive, movie characters that we create, etc. There is an unspoken language that we can interpret and understand, but we don’t LEARN how to communicate with lines. Emotional Language. During the 1970s, psychologist Paul Eckman identified six basic emotions that he suggested were universally experienced in all human cultures. From there there are many mixtures of emotions, much like the mixtures of colors (a future lesson). Learning some basics will help kids express and understand how they feel, possibly before the understanding of how to write/speak the words. https://www.verywellmind.com/an-overv... Objective: Learning the Language of Art. TN Art Standard: MA:Cr3.1 “Create” Sub-Objective: Learning an Emotional Vocabulary. TN Art Standard: MA:Pr6.1 “Produce/Present” Common Mood Language - Lines Happy (content) = Wavy, smooth lines, curving up Playful and Calm = cute curly Q’s, even repeated patterns and shapes. Sad, Guilt, feeling “down” = very little line movement, curving down lines Calm or Boring = Straight, even Anger (Frustrated) = Jagged and chaotic, out of control scribbled (dark) Confusing = Circling and scribbly Surprised = Lines shoot outward, like an explosion (spaced well, not touching) Scary = jagged sharp shapes, zig-zag, dark lines, close lines, not touching pointing to one point Organized and Structured = boxy, geometric, or castle lines Fear/Nervous = quick jerky, scattered lines, up and down, curly Powerful = Triangle shapes, clean shapes, no touching lines Bold = Dark Heavy lines, long lines Shy or Scared = small dashes or writing, very lightly drawn lines Jealous = ? I found no language for this yet. Disgust = ? I found no language for this yet. Mood Lines (For Parents) Art therapist and Gestalt practitioner Jayne Rhyne actually conducted research on what she called "emotional constructs," studying individual's drawings of feeling states such as calm, angry, depressed, and other emotions. ...Interestingly enough, the results of Rhyne's study pointed to some consistency in visual elements within feelings categories. For example, "sad" and "melancholy" were generally expressed with downward curving lines; "happy," "joyous," and "cheerful" had curvilinear and upward movement. "Depressed" included downward movement, while "excited" included less constricted, more outward-reaching lines and shapes. ...drawing your feelings is just an exercise in deciphering your emotional state...but because art-making is a sensory experience that actually can lead to changes in mind and body, exploring both positive and negative feelings through image-making, accompanied by some good talk therapy, can refocus your emotional outlook… https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/bl...