Illumination Station
Mini Art Lessons offer open-ended opportunities for caregivers of young children (under 8) to explore art concepts playfully and intentionally.
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Best for Ages: 2+
Adult Supervision: Encouraged (for flashlight safety)
Brighten up the darkness with this colorful and playful Mini Art Lesson exploring light. Discover the science of light, shadows, and reflections through artful play. Bonus: you’ll need only a few materials to set the stage for extended play.
Tell Me More
This seems like science, not art! Tell me more.
Art and science intersect in many exciting ways. Both subjects require observation and experimentation. Art is often the expression of scientific ideas, like how light interacts with different types of objects or how colors mix.
What might kids do in this Mini Art Lesson? Kids and adults alike will enjoy making shadow compositions, building structures that interact with light, and discovering color-mixing reflections.
What might kids learn? They’ll:
- Deepen understanding of vocabulary, including shadow, opaque, and translucent
- Explore the properties of opacity and translucency and make discoveries about how those properties interact with light to create shadows and reflections
- Use problem solving to make three-dimensional creations that combine different parts
Get Started
Talk together: What is a shadow?
A shadow is the dark area created when an object blocks light. Anything can create a shadow. You can even make one with your body! Look at the shadows in this picture. What do you see?
Go outside on a sunny day or stand in front of a lamp inside. Can you find your shadow? How do you know it’s your shadow?
You might notice that your shadow is shaped like your body! Your whole body is blocking the light, so you see all its parts in the shadow.
Many artists make art that experiments with light. Let’s take a look at some and then make our own art!
Look at this artwork. What do you see? Describe the shapes and the colors.
What do you think this is? Compare the object to its shadow. Do they look the same?
This work is Hat Rack by artist Marcel Duchamp. It features an actual hat rack, which was used for hanging up hats when they weren’t being worn. Although a hat rack is usually an everyday object people use in their home, Duchamp transformed it into art by suspending it from a string. A bright light shines on the hat rack, creating a shadow that becomes part of the artwork.
Look closely. What do you see? Describe the objects, lines, and shapes.
This artwork is called Round Rainbow. It was made by the artist Olafur Eliasson. A round metal disk hangs from the ceiling. A large spotlight is projected on the shiny disk. As the disk moves, the light bouncing off it produces different reflections, which create circular rings of light in a rainbow spectrum.
Try It
Make your illumination station a place to visit and play multiple times. Begin with the basic materials invitation below, and then, over a few days or longer, try some (or all!) of the other invitations shared here. This approach of slowly changing out some materials will maintain interest in the topic and increase your child’s learning. Read on!
First find the right space. For any illumination station, you’ll want plenty of blank wall space in a room that can easily be darkened. A windowless room will work during the daytime, and any room will work after dark.
Always begin by introducing the flashlight. Have one flashlight or light source for each child. Practice holding the flashlight with the beam pointed toward the wall and away from any faces. Turn it on! Safety note: Never shine a flashlight in someone’s eyes, and never look directly at a light or the sun. Looking right at a light can damage your eyes!
Practice making a shadow.
What happens when you put a hand or finger in front of the beam of light? What happens if you move your hand?
BASIC SHADOW INVITATION
Set out a few opaque objects (opaque means light cannot shine through them), such as cardboard tubes, wood blocks, small toys or dolls, or animal figures.
Experiment with different arrangements of objects and angles of the light. Talk about each shadow’s shape and color.
SHADOW TOWER BUILDING INVITATION
Go big! Set out multiples of one opaque stackable material, such as wood blocks, cardboard tubes, or cereal boxes. How tall can you build? Then shine a light on your tower. How tall can you make the shadow tower? Can you make the shadow tower the same size as the real one? Can you make it smaller?
MULTIPLE LIGHTS INVITATION
For this invitation, use multiple flashlights or lamps. Shine the lights on your tower from different directions, heights, and angles. How many different shadows can you give your structure? In our model, we made two different shadows. Can you find them?
COLORFUL TRANSLUCENT OBJECTS INVITATION
Set out colorful translucent objects. (Translucent means some light shines through them.) You might try magnetic building blocks, colored cellophane, plastic wrap colored with permanent markers, or a clear glass filled with dyed water.
Talk about whether or not you can see through the object. Hold it up to your face. Does it block your vision, or can you still see the other person’s features? Make a prediction. What will happen when you shine the light through the object? Then try it! Make a composition or build a tower and test out the shadows!
WATERCOLOR MIXING INVITATION
Set out clear cups half filled with water. Add color by mixing in dyes (we recommend using only the primary colors: red, yellow, blue). Note: An adult may want to supervise color mixing, as some dyes may stain. A little goes a long way!
Place the cups in front of each other, and then shine a light through them. Notice where the light is blocked, resulting in a dark shadow. Notice where the light shines through them and shows their colors. Can you find where the yellow and blue mixed in our picture?
MIXED MATERIALS INVITATION
Experiment with combining and altering materials in new ways. We covered an opaque cardboard tube with a reflective piece of aluminum foil. Then we poked holes in the foil. Look at the interesting shadow it made! Experiment with mixing opaque, translucent, and reflective/ shiny materials together. What can you make?
SHADOW MESSAGES
Practice spelling and making shadows inspired by Invisible by Giovanni Anselmo. Try projecting your shadow message on different surfaces (walls, posterboard).
Note: Use Play-doh for tough-to-balance letters!
MOVING SHADOWS INVITATION
Make your shadows move! If you have one, a lazy susan can be a great staging area, allowing you to make your shadow composition move and change shape. You might experiment with creating your own turntable using recyclables like oatmeal containers, round pieces of cardboard, or old pie plates. You might also explore using toy cars or a record player to make shadows move.
STORY SCENE INVITATION
Put all your learning together with a theatrical production! Create scenery and props and make a shadow play. We created a mini shadowbox by cutting open one side of a shoebox. Then we attached a screen made of a blue cellophane sky, a yellow cellophane sun, and black paper tree cutouts. For our props, we placed blocks and figures inside the box. What can you make?