Final Bling stage artwork from a collaborative art project for homeschooling, featuring bright layered patterns and the article title “Collaborative Art Projects for Homeschooling” overlaid with PaintingAroundisFun.com

Collaborative Art Projects for Homeschooling: A Step-by-Step Guide to the Utopia Paintings

Looking for meaningful, creative ways to connect as a homeschooling family or group? Collaborative art projects for homeschooling are a wonderful way to build people skills, develop fine and gross motor coordination, and grow creative confidence—together. In this article, we’ll explore a real-life example called the Utopia Painting, part of a six-artwork series created with my kids during school holidays.

Using a calming, cohesive colour scheme we call Utopia, this project follows the accessible and engaging process of Pattern Play Collaborative Art—my signature style designed for all ages and abilities. The steps are simple and fun:

  1. Messy Playing (mark-making and layering),
  2. Exploring (adding patterns and playful details), and
  3. Bling (final touches and colour pops).

Whether you’re a seasoned art-loving parent or a complete beginner, this guide will show how collaborative art can be a joyful, shared experience at home.

Collaborative Art Projects For Homeschooling: Utopia Underpainting

Underpainting stage of a collaborative art project for homeschooling, featuring bold brushstrokes and shared colour play. Pattern Play Collaborative Art in progress.
Underpainting stage of our collaborative art project.

We began by pushing the six square canvases together to create one large surface, then loosely brushed on amorphous blobs of colour in light blue and burgundy, flowing across the canvases as if they were one piece. This underpainting stage helps to get rid of the white space, unifying the background and setting the tone for what’s to come. Small glimpses of these base colours often peek through to the final layer, adding depth and texture. At this stage, I also like to add a few visual prompts to guide the group: a large circle, a spiral, a meandering line, or an arch starting from an edge—each one overlapping across several canvases to encourage connection and movement across the whole artwork.

Collaborative Art Projects For Homeschooling: Utopia Messy Playing

Messy Playing stage of a collaborative homeschool painting, with overlapping marks and expressive circles.
Fun and freedom during the Messy Playing stage.

In the next session, we moved into the Messy Playing stage—starting with just one colour: yellow. Using big brushes, we added circles, spirals, and playful marks right over the underpainting, treating the surface as if it were a blank canvas. This stage is all about loosening up, responding to what’s already there, and embracing the joy of overlapping. That was it for the day—a short, energising group activity that left the canvases glowing with motion and possibility. In the following session, we chose green and repeated the same process, layering new shapes and patterns over the yellow and underpainting below. Each layer adds richness and connection, and no single part is too precious—everything is part of the evolving whole.

Collaborative Art Projects For Homeschooling: Utopia Exploring

As we moved into the Exploring stage, the artworks really began to come alive. Each session, we chose just one colour to add new layers of simple patterns, shapes, and marks—building depth and a sense of quiet complexity. This stage is about responding rather than planning. The canvases are now mixed up and placed in a random order, so painters can’t focus on “their” section—they’re invited to see the whole artwork as shared space. Painters begin to outline interesting shapes they notice, or continue to overlap with fresh marks. They’re encouraged to add something to each canvas every session, to echo one another’s ideas in a different size or colour, and to experiment freely. Over time, the layers build and a lovely visual rhythm emerges, full of connection and surprise. This stage can go for as many layers as you like, the brushes getting smaller over the layers works well.

Collaborative Art Projects For Homeschooling: Utopia Bling

Finally, we arrive at the Bling stage—where the magic really starts to sparkle. We bring out paint pens in the colours of our Utopia scheme, starting with regular-sized tips and later switching to finer ones for extra detail. This is the time for ornamentation and decoration—outlining shapes, adding tiny patterns in rows or clusters, and playing with accents both inside and around existing marks. It’s a slower, more intentional stage that invites focus and care, while still being playful and collaborative. This is where we’re up to right now, and we’ll continue adding these final touches in the next school holidays. I can’t wait to see the finished artworks come together—this colour scheme is one of my absolute favourites at the moment!

My Easy Pattern Play Resources downloadable .pdf is full of the types of simplified patterns you can use to create an artwork like this with your friends, family, students, group, team or clients:

Easy Pattern Play resources for Beginners
inclusive pattern art prompts

Collaborative Art Projects For Homeschooling: In Conclusion

If you’re creating a series of artworks like our Utopia themed set of joint collaborative artworks, such collaborative art projects for homeschooling offer a rich and rewarding way to learn through play. By moving through the stages of Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling, kids (and adults!) build creative confidence, people skills, and shared memories—one layer at a time.


Discover simple tips about how collaborative art projects like these can be painted by YOU for your homeschooling needs. Join my Inner Circle email group. I’ll give you “Starting Your First Social Art Project at Home”, my free 7-page guide. It makes it effortless for you to paint a unique artwork using this fun style of collaborative art.

Happy Painting! Charndra, Your Inclusive Social Art Guide.


Let’s Chat:

Are you keen to try this form of collaborative social art? It’s called ‘Pattern Play Collaborative Art’ because we layer approachable and accessible patterns from my ‘Pattern Play’ visual resources. These resources are tools. They help you create unique and beautiful collaborative art projects. You can paint with groups of people in your life too.

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