The Psychology of Children's Drawings
eBook - ePub

The Psychology of Children's Drawings

From the First Stroke to the Coloured Drawing

  1. 264 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Psychology of Children's Drawings

From the First Stroke to the Coloured Drawing

About this book

This is Volume VII of thirty-two of collection of works on Developmental Psychology. Initially published in 1931 it offers a look at the psychology based in children's drawings from the first stroke to the development of coloured work at eight years of age.

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Yes, you can access The Psychology of Children's Drawings by Helga Eng in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Medicine & Health Care Delivery. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2013
eBook ISBN
9781136313356
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF CHILDREN’S DRAWINGS
THE DRAWING OF A CHILD FROM THE FIRST STROKE TO COLOURED DRAWINGS MADE AT EIGHT YEARS OF AGE
SINCE the Italian historian C. Ricci1 published, in the year 1887, his famous pamphlet on the art of children, a number of works have appeared which have made known to us the main characteristics of the free drawings of children. In order to enlarge and deepen this knowledge, particularly in the psychological direction, it is necessary, as many psychologists have pointed out, to make exact and complete observations of the development of the drawings of a single child. The following study is a contribution in this direction and concerns the drawing of a child from the first to the eighth year.
I was able to observe the drawing of my little niece Margaret from the first stroke to the comparatively complicated compositions of her seventh to eighth year, and collect examples of it. Her early bodily and mental development had nothing unusual about it ; she learnt to walk and talk, as most children do, at the age of one. She had no brothers or sisters, and was not influenced in her drawing by playmates, a fact which was particularly favourable for the study of her. Luquet, who followed the drawing of his eldest. daughter Simonne with great profit, found the results of the observation of her younger brother, whose spontaneous drawing was continually influenced by the example, criticism, and advice of his sister, much more scanty.2 Margaret had no instruction in drawing, but every now and then a drawing was made in front of her, in the first two and three years quite frequently, later on seldom, in the last years, almost never. This was usually done only at her own wish, and the drawing generally represented an object which she had chosen. Nobody asked her to draw, or kept her at it, nor were her drawings corrected and her mistakes pointed out. Nor did anyone ask her about her drawings ; if in this respect exceptions occurred the fact will be mentioned later. All that was done was to see that pencil and paper were always present whenever she wanted to draw ; when she was drawing she was observed, and all her spontaneous remarks, in fact everything that had in any way to do with the drawing, were written down. Usually she chattered while she was drawing and explained Tier artistic products, nevertheless she had no notion that observations were being made of her activities, until she discovered, when she was over six years old, that I was collecting her drawings. This discovery may have somewhat stimulated her interest in drawing in the latter part of the time. She had plenty of opportunity for looking at pictures and picture-books, and her surroundings were always such as to incite her to pictorial representations, but the reception and digestion of her impressions in this respect were entirely spontaneous, without any direct influence on the part of her family.
In the first three years I also observed the development of her speech.
Only a part of the drawings which were collected and preserved during the course of the years will be discussed and reproduced here. In making my choice I kept in mind the object of giving, by means of examples of each noteworthy step in progress, a complete view of the development of her drawing.
FIRST AND SECOND YEAR
Margaret made her first stroke before she began to speak, at the age of ten months. I drew for her a little girl, which she looked at attentively ; the pencil was put in her hand and she put it on the paper and made two small lines, which she looked at with much interest (Fig. 1).
FIG. 1.—THE FIRST STROKE, O ; IO. I/I.
The experiment was not repeated for’ some time, and there is no further progress to record until she was a year and some months old.
At I ; 2, 2 (at the age of one year, two months, and two days— I shall make use of this way of giving the age in what follows), she drew a few uncertain strokes, which appear to exhibit typical wavy scribbling, the usual result of the first attempts of a child to draw (Fig. 2). A week later (I ; 2,8), she produced strong and clear wavy scribbling in the following way : she moved her hand quickly outwards and described a slightly curved line, then reversed and drew a curved line inwards, in the opposite direction, and so on. At the turning-point the line is often pointed, but generally somewhat rounded, now and then making a loop. Each new line is usually drawn under the previous one, but often over it, or irregularly. Wavy scribbling is, in the first period, the fundamental form of a child’s drawing, although not exclusively produced. Shorter strokes, points, angles, bent lines, also often occur. On the other hand, we never meet with circles, zig-zag lines, spirals and so on. Wavy scribbling has nothing to do with intelligible representation, and does not express the child’s ideas, but it naturally contributes to the child’s practice in understanding and drawing lines, by training eye and hand.
FIG. 2.—FIRST ATTEMPT AT SCRIBBLING, 1 ; 2, 2. 5/6.
Fig, 3.—WAVY SCRIBBLING. FRAGMENT, 1 ; 4, 10. ABOUT 1/2.
At first Margaret often took hold of the pencil the wrong way round, but from the age of 1 ; 2, 9, she generally managed to hold it correctly. At the beginning she sometimes used the right and sometimes the left hand, but from the age of 1 ; 4, 10, she drew only with the right hand, although she was not told to do so. Wavy scribbling continued for about four months until x ; 6, without any further visible improvement apart from the line becoming firmer and surer. A typical example of well-developed wavy scribbling is given in Fig. 3 (1 ; 4,10). It was usually placed on the paper as a dense compact mass.
Major and Dix have also observed that wavy scribbling is the first step in the drawing of children. The first drawings of Major’s son, at 1 ; 0, 1 ; 1, 1 ; 2, 1 ; 4, 1 ; 6, have exactly the same character as the drawings of Margaret at about the same age.3 Dix also, whose son Walther-Heinz began to draw at the age of 11 months, mentions wavy scribbling.4 Krötzsch gives an example of wavy scribbling at 1 ; 7.5
At 1 ; 6, Margaret changed to circular scribbling (Fig. 4). The change took place fairly suddenly. At 1 ; 6, 15, she scribbled in well-defined circles, while in the days just preceding this she had produced unusually clear and pure wavy scribbling. The change may be the result of imitation. Her father had drawn for her on that day about a dozen different objects, among which were several rounded figures such as a watch, a ball, wheel, and so on. Round and oval scribbling in dense masses in the middle of the paper characterized her drawing for the following couple of months.
At 1 ; 8, she commenced a new phase which may be called variegated scribbling (Fig. 5). Along with circular and wavy scribbling we now have straight lines, angles, crosses, zig-zag lines and loops, forming altogether a tangle of lines. About the same time, a new development appears, viz., from scribbling in masses to scattered scribbling. In the following period the lines are loosened up as it were, and are put on paper more widely separated from one another. At 1 ; 8, 18, her scribbling was put for the first time on to the surface of the paper in little groups, and thenceforth the various forms and lines were more consciously drawn, and repeated.
About three weeks later a further step forward was made ; a meaning was given to the scribbling. At 1 ; 9, 10, Margaret drew a few lines crossing one another, and said : “ flag ”, “ flower ”, “ dress ”, “ apron ”, “ wall ”. She thus connected for the first time an idea with what she had drawn.
FIG. 4.—CIRCULAR SCRIBBLING, 1; 6, 15. ABOUT 1/2.
A few days later, 1 ; 9, 13, as she was engaged in scribbling, she said : “ draw Mama She drew a few small zig-zag lines which ended in a longer line and said : “ that’s Mama ”, then she said : “ draw flag ”—made a straight line—“ that’s flag She continued : “ draw dress ”—a few’lines scribbled together. In the same way she drew the floor, a cock-a-doodle-doo, a mirror, and so on. She thus announced beforehand what she was going to draw. She generally produced a small dense zig-zag scribble ending m a longer line (rig. 6), the whole forming a connected mass of lines running all over the paper. Ekki Krötzsch called a similar figure a man at 2 ; 1.6
FIG 5–SCATTERED VARIEGATED SCRIBBLING.
In the Middle circular Scribble. Various groups of lines were called “Mama”, “Flag”, etc. 1; 9, 3. About 1/2.
FIG 6.–“MAMA.” 1 ; 9, 13 1/1
Margaret thus came quite on her own initiative to use her drawing as a means of expression. We had already noticed six months previously that she understood the meaning of pictures and drawings ; at 1 ; 4, 8 she spoke her own name when she noticed the child on a picture of the Madonna, and described a picture of a dog as a “ bow-wow ”. She was probably able to understand pictures and drawings earlier than that. This confirms what has been observed in other parts of a child’s mental development, that the receptive side of an activity is developed earlier than the productive.
FIG 7– “MAMA” 1; 9, 22 1/2.
A few weeks later, at 1 ; 9, 22, she made a further step forward in separating Mama and bow-wow, each drawn as a clear and simple group of lines ; both drawings have the same form and consist of two curves linked together, finishi...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Table of Contents
  5. Preface
  6. The Drawing of a Child from the First Stroke to Coloured Drawings Made at Eight Years of Age
  7. General Account of the Development and Psychology of Children’S Drawings
  8. Children’S Drawing as an Expression of Their Mental Development
  9. Children’S Drawing and Folk-Art
  10. Bibliography
  11. Index