Sumingashi ~ Japanese Paper Marbling
Objectives
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Students will explore the ancient
Japanese traditional art of “suminagashi” or Japanese paper marbling.
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Students will use suminagashi as a
form of monotype printmaking.
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Students will use traditional and
contemporary materials to recreate a traditional non-western decorative
technique.
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Students will create spontaneous
designs using line through the experimenting with suminagashi.
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Students will use their marbled
paper in a future lesson on personal symbols
and Japanese motif design.
Materials
Plastic bins (at least 8.5 X 11”)
Water
Sumi brushes, or watercolor brushes
Small palettes
Sumi or India ink
Watercolor paper
Construction paper, white and a variety of colors
Cutting board
“Photoflo”
Motivation
Discussion of history of suminagashi.
Bulletin board with visual references and notes on suminagashi
Teacher demonstration of suminagashi technique
Procedure
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Discussion of sumingashi in circle group
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During discussion students write important features/notes on technique and
post on bulletin board started by teacher.
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Overview of materials (sumi/india ink, photoflo, brushes especially)
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Demonstration of technique
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Fill shallow plastic tub with about 1 – 2” of water
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Set up ink and photoflo in small palettes or empty film canisters
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Using two different brushes, gently dip one brush in photoflo and one brush in
ink
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Gently touch the tip of the ink brush onto the surface of the water.
IMPORTANT: do not dip the brush under the water, simply touch the surface
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The ink will form a circle
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Next take the photoflo brush and gently touch the inside of the ink circle
with the tip of the brush
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A clear ring will from ~ the photoflo repels and pushes away the ink, forming
a ring
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Repeat the ink and photoflo dipping process until the entire surface is
covered in rings
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The water will move during this process and create swirling patterns.
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You may also blow gently on the surface of the water to accentuate the
swirling patterns
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Once the water is covered in ink rings take a piece of paper…using two hands
quickly and gently put the paper onto the surface from corner to corner, never
leaving the paper on the surface for more than a second or two.
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This paper dipping should be done in one swift motion.
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Make sure students initial corner or back of each page they marble!
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Have students work in groups to create at least three sheets of suminagashi
paper.
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Continue the next day as a full workshop.
Conclusion
Visit each small group and troubleshoot any problems that arise.
Review vocabulary and history of the suminagashi marbling technique.
Evaluation
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Did students participate in
discussion on sumingashi?
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Did students use and clean all
materials properly?
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Did students create at least three
of their own marbled papers?
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Did students follow directions in
their suminagashi technique and not dip brush into pan?
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Did students form the typical
“rings”?
MA
Standards
1.9, 1.12, 3.9, 5.10, 7.2, 7.8, 8.7, 8.9,