Below you’ll find an easy step-by-step tutorial for a black history art project — learning to draw like artist W.H. Johnson. There’s much to learn about some artists that didn’t always get more attention while they were still around.
Draw like W. H. Johnson
Who was William H. Johnson?
William Henry Johnson was born in the segregated south in 1901. He ended up studying at the National Academy of Design in New York City, working with Charles Webster Hawthorne. He later lived and worked in France, where he learned about modernism. This black history art project was created to help students see what it’s like to draw in the simple folk art style that Mr. Johnson came to embrace in his later years.
If you have a chance to look at a few of Mr. Johnson’s paintings, you will notice that they are all look very flat. All the of the trees and buildings and fences look like simple cut out shapes. This is one of the features of folk art. It isn’t trying to make things look realistic, just portray them in the easy way that perhaps a child might draw them.
Teachers might also point out that the hands of the men and the women in Mr. Johnson’s paintings are consistently large in proportion to their bodies. It is thought he wanted to portray the strength that he saw in them.
This tutorial is designed to help students draw either a man, or a woman in William H. Johnson’s style. In doing so, they can hopefully come to a deeper appreciation for the amazing body of work he created in his lifetime.
Also Read : The Schoolyard Podcast Episode 15: Empowering Youth Through Career Tech Ed (CTE)
Subscribe to “The Daily Draw” below to get this instant download!
Johnson Man Coloring Page
Johnson Woman Coloring Page
W.H. Johnson Collaborative Mural Project
Materials for a Black History Art Project
Note: This post contains affiliate links. If you click and take action, I will be compensated a small amount at no expense to you.
- Drawing Paper. Don’t substitute it with copy paper or construction paper. The surface will get fuzzy, erasing might cause holes, and the colors will generally not look as bright.
- Stabilo Markers. The large pack provides lots of fun color choices, several shades of each color, including a few choices for skin. The tips are perfect for coloring, and there’s even a promise that they will work after being uncapped for 8 weeks!
- Pencil. The Ticonderoga brand are the most reliable, make nice dark lines when you need them, and are the easiest to erase.
- Eraser. Large ones you can hold in your hand do a much better job than just the pencil tips. Stabilo Markers. They have the best colors, the best tips, and last the longest.
- Black Sharpie Marker. These fine point permanent markers are great for making a crisp outline to your drawing. Use them when you want your outline show up, but not be so heavy that it detracts from other things.
Step by Step Directions
Already subscribed to “The Daily Draw”?
Great, then use the download button below to get your free William H. Johnson tutorial.
And thanks for wanting to bring more step-by-step, no-prep art lessons to your classroom!