High School Grade  Project 3 weeks

Zentangle Polyhedron Mobile Magic

Rita A
Updated
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Purpose

Students investigate how geometric structure, balance, and Zentangle pattern can work together to create a visually harmonious hanging sculpture. Over three weeks, they move through a launch cycle of sketching, building, critique, and revision while documenting decisions in a process portfolio with sketches, test photos, material notes, and an artist statement. The work connects art, geometry, and design through feedback from an architect and makerspace staff who support safe construction and real-world understanding of polyhedral forms. The experience culminates in the Balance in Motion gallery walk, where students present their mobile series, explain how their ideas changed over time, and reflect on craftsmanship and collaboration.

Learning goals

Students will analyze how polyhedral forms, load balance, and hanging structure work together to create a stable mobile, using feedback from an architect or architecture firm and maker space staff to refine their designs. They will develop Zentangle-style patterning by creating repeated and varied motifs that build visual rhythm and harmony across multiple geometric faces. Students will strengthen craftsmanship, collaboration, and revision habits through critique circles, test builds, and next-step planning documented in a process portfolio. They will communicate artistic and design decisions through sketches, test photos, material notes, and an artist statement prepared for the Balance in Motion gallery walk.

Products

Students will create a process portfolio that includes early design sketches, a first test photo, material notes, critique feedback, revision plans, and a final artist statement explaining how pattern, balance, and structure evolved. Throughout the project, they will produce Zentangle pattern studies, polyhedron nets or prototypes, and hanging balance tests that document craftsmanship and collaboration decisions. By the end, each student will complete a suspended series of polyhedron mobiles with Zentangle-patterned faces for the Balance in Motion gallery walk. The final display will pair each mobile with the student’s artist statement and curated process portfolio.

Launch

Open with a fast gallery hook by showing several hanging forms and patterned objects, then ask students to notice what makes them feel balanced, stable, and visually connected. In a Sketch, Build, Reflect launch, students create one quick polyhedron sketch, build a small paper prototype, and take one test photo for their process portfolio. Follow with a short critique circle where each student names one strength and one next step related to craftsmanship and teamwork, then records a next-step note. If possible, include a brief live or virtual kickoff from an architect or maker space staff member to connect geometric structure, load balance, and safe construction to the work ahead.

Exhibition

Host a gallery walk called Balance in Motion where suspended polyhedron mobiles hang at varied heights so visitors can walk around them and observe balance, structure, and Zentangle patterning from multiple angles. Display each mobile with a short artist statement and a process portfolio featuring design sketches, test photos, material notes, and revisions that show how the work developed over time. Invite families, school staff, and partners from the architecture firm and makerspace to view the exhibition and ask students about their geometric choices, craftsmanship, and problem-solving. Add a brief student-led reflection moment during the event where each student names one design success and one revision that improved the final piece.