Create an abstract painting using tempera or acrylic paints, brushes, sponges, and found objects to explore color mixing, texture, and creative expression.


Step-by-step guide to Abstract Painting 101
Step 1
Put on your apron or old shirt to protect your clothes.
Step 2
Cover your table with newspaper or an old sheet to keep the area clean.
Step 3
Put your canvas or thick watercolor paper flat on the table.
Step 4
Place paints paintbrushes sponges found objects palette cup of water and paper towels within reach.
Step 5
Squeeze small blobs of the colors you want onto your palette or paper plate.
Step 6
Mix two colors on the palette with a brush until you like the new shade.
Step 7
Dip a large brush or sponge into a paint color.
Step 8
Apply a base layer of color to the canvas using big strokes or dabs.
Step 9
Press a clean sponge or a found object into a paint color.
Step 10
Stamp the painted sponge or found object onto the canvas to add texture and shapes.
Step 11
Repeat mixing new colors and stamping to build up more layers of color and texture.
Step 12
Let the painting dry a little between layers before adding more paint.
Step 13
Add one final detail with a thin brush to finish your abstract painting.
Step 14
Share your finished creation on DIY.org
Final steps
You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!

Help!?
What can we use instead of a canvas, palette, or commercial sponges if they're hard to find?
Use sturdy cardboard or the back of a cereal box in place of a canvas, a paper plate as your palette, and cut kitchen sponges, bubble wrap, or crumpled paper as found-object stamps while following step 3 and the stamping steps.
My colors are smearing or turning muddy when I stamp—how can I fix that?
If stamped textures smear or colors get muddy, blot excess paint off sponges on a paper towel, rinse your brush or sponge between colors, and remember to let the painting dry a little between layers before adding more paint as instructed.
How can I simplify or increase the challenge of this activity for different ages?
For preschoolers use washable paints, big brushes or sponges and skip the thin-brush final detail, while older kids can practice mixing precise shades on the palette, layer more complex textures and add the thin-brush detail before sharing on DIY.org.
What are some creative ways to extend or personalize the abstract painting once it's finished?
After the painting dries, add collage pieces like fabric or leaves with glue, use masking tape before the base layer to create sharp shapes, apply metallic paint or varnish for shine, or press additional found-object stamps for more texture to personalize it before photographing for DIY.org.
Watch videos on how to Abstract Painting 101
Facts about painting techniques for kids
♻️ Found-object or 'readymade' art was popularized by Marcel Duchamp (think his 1917 work 'Fountain'), turning everyday items into artworks.
🖌️ Acrylic paint was developed in the 20th century and became popular with artists in the 1950s because it dries fast and cleans up with water.
🧽 Artists love using sponges, toothbrushes, combs, and other found objects to add unexpected textures and marks you can't get with a brush alone.
🥚 Traditional tempera (often made with egg yolk) was the primary medium for panel paintings before oil paints took over in the Renaissance.
🎨 Wassily Kandinsky is often credited with creating some of the first purely abstract paintings around 1910.


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