All grades  Project 4 weeks

Mood in My Selfie

Rita A
Updated
VA:Cn10.1.8a
VA:Re.7.1
VA:Re7.1.1a
Effective Communication
Academic Mindset
+ 3 more
1-pager

Purpose

Students explore how portraits can communicate emotion, identity, and belonging by creating expressive self-portraits that use facial features, pose, line, and color to represent their current feelings about school life. Through observation, mirror practice, peer exchange, and critique, they build artistic skill while strengthening empathy, reflection, and communication. The work leads to a public gallery with artist statements and oral sharing, where students present their thinking to families, teachers, and a museum partner. This experience helps students connect personal experience to artmaking and contribute to a shared understanding of group identity.

Learning goals

Students will analyze how artists use facial features, pose, line, and color to communicate emotion, then apply those techniques in an expressive self-portrait that reflects their current experience. They will build aesthetic and empathetic awareness by discussing portraits from their own lives and others’ lives, giving and using feedback during a mid-project mini-galleria, and revising their work to strengthen mood and meaning. Students will collaborate in partner and small-group routines, practice speaking clearly about artistic choices in an oral showcase, and create an artist statement for a public gallery walk. They will also reflect on identity, belonging, strengths, and challenges as they develop skills in observation, sketching, critique, and self-directed revision.

Standards
  • [National Core Arts Standards] VA:Cn10.1.8a - Make art collaboratively to reflect on and reinforce positive aspects of group identity.
  • [National Core Arts Standards] VA:Re.7.1 - Individual aesthetic and empathetic awareness developed through engagement with art can lead to understanding and appreciation of self, others, the natural world, and constructed environments.
  • [National Core Arts Standards] VA:Re7.1.1a - Select and describe works of art that illustrate daily life experiences of one’s self and others.
Competencies
  • Effective Communication - Students practice listening to understand, communicating with empathy, and share their learning through exhibiting, presenting and reflecting on their work.
  • Academic Mindset - Students establish a sense of place, identity, and belonging to increase self-efficacy while engaging in critical reflection and action.
  • Content Expertise - Students develop key competencies, skills, and dispositions with ample opportunities to apply knowledge and engage in work that matters to them.
  • Collaboration - Students co-design projects with peers, exercise shared-decision making, strengthen relational agency, resolve conflict, and assume leadership roles.
  • Self Directed Learning - Students use teacher and peer feedback and self-reflection to monitor and direct their own learning while building self knowledge both in and out of the classroom.

Products

Students create quick mirror gesture sketches, emotion studies, color-mood practice pieces, and a first-draft self-portrait as they explore how facial features, pose, line, and color communicate feeling. Midway through, they share works in progress during a mini-galleria and collect voice or sticky-note feedback to guide revisions. By the end, each student produces a finished expressive self-portrait that represents their current emotional state, plus a short artist statement explaining their emotion, color choices, and growth. The final collection is presented as a lobby or hallway Mood Gallery Walk for families, teachers, and the museum educator.

Launch

Begin with an Expressive Face Challenge: partners take turns making a facial expression in a mirror while the other student does a quick gesture sketch, then they switch and share one strength they notice and one challenge they are working through. Follow with a short portrait-viewing experience using artworks or images selected with a museum educator, prompting students to notice how color, facial features, pose, and line communicate mood. Close by introducing the question, “What are the emotions that I feel regarding my current school experiences?” and invite students to create a first fast self-portrait that captures one feeling they want to explore in the project.

Exhibition

Host a Crawford Showcase Mood Gallery Walk in the classroom, hallway, or lobby where students display their expressive self-portraits with short artist statements explaining the emotion, color choices, and one high school experience that influenced the work. Invite families, teachers, peers, and a community art museum educator to tour the gallery, ask questions, and leave sticky-note compliments focused on expression, mood, and use of color. During the event, each student gives a brief oral showcase at their portrait, naming the feeling represented, one new skill they learned, and one way they revised their work after feedback. To extend the exhibition, create a simple digital gallery or slideshow so the portraits and reflections can also be shared with the wider school community.