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Vocabulary of Drawings. To advance her studies, Mrs. Kellogg, 64, has gathered half a million children's drawings into her San Francisco house. The collection-by far the world's biggest-is mostly American, but also ranges through 32 foreign countries to places as far away as Nepal. Mrs. Kellogg's careful catalogues of the drawings provide massive evidence that children everywhere rely on a universal vocabulary of scribbles in their early drawings. She has noted 20 basic scribbles in six classic forms: cross, X, square, circle, triangle, closed free form...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The View from the Crib | 3/9/1962 | See Source »

...development of the scribbles into art's higher language is governed by "muscle play," Mrs. Kellogg says; the child discovers the circle when his arm tires of outward movement and he makes the corresponding line back toward himself. Then, by combining one form and another, the infant artist makes further discoveries about order and balance, all of them intuitive, and all drawn from imagination rather than observation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The View from the Crib | 3/9/1962 | See Source »

Thus it is that the "man" is eventually drawn. But children know that arms and legs do not extend from the head, Mrs. Kellogg notes, and, if they tried to draw a body, would not picture it that way. The figure is not a "man" at all, but a mandala (Sanskrit for magic circle), the circle-in-four that anthropologists have found central in design throughout history and a source of proof in much of C. G. Jung's "racial psychology...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The View from the Crib | 3/9/1962 | See Source »

...Adults. Mrs. Kellogg is wary of crystallizing her notions about child art into the language of cultural psychology -for example, the cultural-memory explanation that Jungians would give to the circle and mandala. But she is firm in be lieving that when adults invade the child's art world, a pernicious pattern results: the adult demands conformity to his rigid standards, grows impatient with the child's reluctance to depart his fine mandala world, shows anger. "Such human hos tility makes children into bad adults," Mrs. Kellogg says. "If we had more art and better art, there wouldn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The View from the Crib | 3/9/1962 | See Source »

...teach her lesson, Mrs. Kellogg cam paigns ceaselessly against coloring books, against "art lessons" before the age of ten, against art teachers who reward copying and discourage imagination, and against the parent's temptation to cry out: "It's a man!" "All children are natural artists," Mrs. Kellogg says, "so why not let them be? Their art has a natural esthetic qual ity. All of it is beautiful, and none of it is ugly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The View from the Crib | 3/9/1962 | See Source »

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