Beginner-friendly art includes creative projects that are easy to start, approachable for all skill levels, and designed to build confidence through the joy of making. These activities are perfect for participants who may be new to painting or group art, whether they are children, adults, or facilitators guiding others.
This tag covers a variety of projects, from simple painting exercises and pattern layering to collaborative small-scale murals and playful colour explorations. Each project is structured to encourage experimentation, self-expression, and creativity without pressure or the need for prior experience. Participants can focus on enjoying the process, connecting with others, and seeing tangible results in a supportive environment.
Beginner-friendly art projects are suitable for home sessions, classrooms, community workshops, or family gatherings. They are adaptable to different spaces, materials, and group sizes, making it easy for anyone to join in. By focusing on accessibility and fun, these activities help foster confidence, creativity, and a lifelong appreciation for art, proving that anyone can enjoy creating, regardless of experience.
All of these projects use my Pattern Play Collaborative Art approach — a fun, inclusive process that encourages Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling to help participants of all abilities create expressive, collaborative artworks. Get your free guide to start.
Accessible painting ideas for group art don’t have to be complicated to be fun, inclusive, and meaningful. In this post, I share 6 articles containing real life practical approaches drawn from facilitating 60+ community and school-based collaborative art projects with over 2,000 participants, using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. Your group can make unique artworks like these too.
How Can Accessible Painting Ideas Bring Groups Together?
Looking for accessible painting ideas for group art? These projects are designed to be simple, adaptable, and beginner-friendly, so everyone can join in and enjoy creating together. Whether you’re planning a classroom activity, a community workshop, or a family art day, these ideas help remove barriers, spark creativity, and encourage collaboration.
Using my Pattern Play Collaborative Art approach, participants of all ages and abilities can explore, experiment, and have fun while making expressive, shared artworks. Scroll down to discover inspiring group art projects and try them out yourself!
Discover More Accessible Painting Ideas for Group Art:
Accessible painting ideas for group art that help people of all ages and abilities join in with confidence. Simple, flexible projects using the Pattern Play approach.
A simple guide to creating inclusive collaborative artworks using structured, playful stages that support group participation.
Accessible painting ideas for group art make creativity inclusive, fun, and collaborative. With simple materials, playful techniques, and a focus on shared exploration rather than perfection, these projects help build confidence, connection, and joy in any group setting. Bring people together through art, and see how everyone’s creativity shines when participation is easy and welcoming.
These approaches work best in mixed-ability settings where participation is flexible and inclusive. You can explore the full collection of facilitation strategies and examples in the hub for facilitated collaborative art: Facilitated Collaborative Art for Mixed Ability Groups
Happy Painting,
Charndra
Your Inclusive Social Art Guide.
FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project
Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.
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‘King Leo’ — a collaborative lion artwork made by 30 children using spiral collage patterns, showcasing Accessible Painting Ideas for Group Art: Fun, Inclusive Projects for Everyone.
‘Safety’ — a cool-toned group painting created by teenagers, illustrating Accessible Painting Ideas for Group Art: Fun, Inclusive Projects for Everyone.
‘Myriad in Harmony’ — a warm-coloured collaborative artwork created by 80 participants, demonstrating Accessible Painting Ideas for Group Art: Fun, Inclusive Projects for Everyone.
Quick Takeaway Early childhood group art is a fun, beginner-friendly way for teachers and facilitators to help young children explore creativity together. In this post, you’ll discover an easy, play-based process using my Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework which I’ve developed from facilitating over 60 community and school-based projects with more than 2,000 participants. You’ll learn how to guide children through a fun, structured approach to shared painting that encourages confidence, social connection, and easy creative expression that is economical on resources and makes planning and preparation easier.
If you’re an early childhood educator or support worker, you know how much young children love to explore colour through paint. Early childhood group art projects give you the perfect way to channel that curiosity into something shared and meaningful. In this guide, you’ll learn an easy, play-based process for creating your first group artwork with preschool or kindergarten children – without the chaos! (or, controlled chaos) It’s all about connection, creativity, and fun.
How-to Guide for Early Childhood Group Art
Step 1: Messy Playing
Start with play. Using a limited colour scheme from one family (cool or warm) of three paints in cups that a child can hold, invite each child to use a large brush or sponge dipped into paint on a tray. Let them cover the surface with bold strokes, dots, circles of any type, and spirals. Encourage freedom and fun, not neatness. This early stage introduces children to the idea of collaboration: their marks mix and mingle to form a shared creation rather than separate artworks. Swap colour pots (keeping the brush with the same pot) so each child can explore all three colours.
Tip for educators:Begin with an underpainting—cover the white background using one colour from your set of three. Add a circle, a spiral, and some dots, perhaps an arch along an edge, to act as visual prompts and encourage hesitant painters to start.
Step 2: Exploring
Once the first layer dries, add pattern play. Use simple, child-friendly shapes – circles, wiggly worms, raindrops, or the playful Cat’s Ears: “V V.” You can draw inspiration from the Pattern Play resources in the free Beginner’s Guide or download my Pattern Play Pages from my collaborative art shop – economical and handy resources designed for print and play. In the following sessions, pick a different colour or process each time and apply it to the artwork. Children love discovering how new tools and materials change the look and feel of their shared creation.
Try ideas such as:
Adding cut or torn collage pieces and gluing them onto the artwork.
Using small balloons dipped in paint to make clusters of spots.
Rolling toy cars through paint and across the surface.
Applying foam stickers, then tracing around them with markers.
Standing the canvas vertically and dripping watery paint or ink down to explore gravity.
Making and using simple stencils to leave interesting shapes.
Adding clusters of stickers or stick-on gems for texture and sparkle.
Using bingo dotters or paint pens to add dots, draw patterns or outline shapes.
Including scribbly marks (called “spaghetti”) for lively movement.
On the final layer, rub chalk across the surface and blend with fingers—it looks amazing!
Tip for educators: Offer smaller brushes for each new painting layer so children can see how finer details build depth and interest. This stage helps them connect their individual contributions to the bigger picture – literally!
Step 3: Bling!
Add some sparkle and delight. Paint pens, stickers, or shiny gems are perfect for young children. They can outline shapes, trace over patterns, or cluster stickers for visual excitement. This “bling” stage brings the artwork together and gives every child a sense of pride in their shared creation.
Tip for educators:It’s also a cleaner, calmer stage for you – with new materials to keep children engaged and excited as they add their finishing touches. Suggest CLUSTERS of stickers, these look better than randomly scattering stickers everywhere. You can even provide a circle in chalk to contain them, which will dust off later.
Why This Benefits the Group
Ease of participation: Every child can join in, regardless of skill or confidence.
Creativity within structure: Gentle guidance helps children explore without overwhelm.
Group connection & engagement: Painting together builds teamwork, communication skills, and is always fun.
Conclusion
Early childhood group art projects are an easy, uplifting way to bring creativity and collaboration into your kindergarten and preschool classroom or childcare setting. With a few simple steps, children experience the joy of creating something bigger together. It’s great for educators as you can revisit the same artwork over time, which provides many comforting chances to revisit an activity, an opportunity for practicing recall and recognition, people and social skills in the young learners. Start your own group art sessions after downloading the free Beginner’s Guide to Pattern Play Collaborative Art using the form below.
While many collaborative art ideas can be explored informally in early childhood classrooms and childcare settings, centres in Adelaide, South Australia can also choose to take this further through a guided collaborative art experience.
This is where the process shifts from individual art activities into a shared collaborative artwork created over multiple sessions, supported by a clear facilitation approach.
The program is designed specifically for early childhood environments, making collaborative art simple, inclusive, and achievable within a busy centre setting.
If you’d like to explore how this works in practice, you can view my collaborative art program for early childhood centres here:
If you’d like to explore creating collaborative art projects yourself, you’re welcome to join my email list for ideas, inspiration, and creative resources.
FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project
Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.
You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.
Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.
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The ‘Circles’ early childhood group art project involved 20 preschoolers and their carers creating a vibrant, evolving artwork over a year of weekly sessions.
A close-up of ‘Hide and Seek,’ a multi-layered process artwork created with a preschooler through many sessions using a limited colour palette.
The ‘Arches’ early childhood group artwork combines collage, paint, stickers, nail polish, and chalk—created over a year by 20 children and carers.
Social art projects that spark connection bring people together through shared creativity, conversation, and play. In this post, you’ll discover five practical ways to paint together, drawn from my experience facilitating over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants, using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. I want to help you do the same with clear ideas and helpful digital resources that make inclusive group painting feel achievable and fun.
Discover inspiring social art ideas that bring people together through creativity, play, and purpose
Social art is more than just painting – it’s about connecting.
Kids, adults, and people of all abilities can all take part in social art projects that turn creativity into a shared experience. From inclusive preschool activities to uplifting art for adults with additional needs, these projects blend expression, connection, and community in every brushstroke.
In this round-up, we’re highlighting five posts that explore the power of social art. Each one offers a unique approach to collaborative creativity – perfect for facilitators, families, educators, or anyone looking to make art a social experience.
A gentle and empowering approach to creating group artworks that celebrate individuality and connection in adult disability support settings. disability is not inability – these projects show that.
Step-by-step guidance on building group paintings that welcome all ages and abilities, with tips for supporting diverse needs. Created during an exhibition with 80 people making their mark.
Explore how collaborative art can strengthen emotional expression and group interaction—perfect for schools and therapy groups. Build people skills with fun and story telling.
A vibrant, girl-powered group painting experience that shows how social art can be a confidence builder and a tool for empowerment. A ‘Work in Progress’ (WIP), see how your group art project can go on and on – much easier to manage than many individual projects!
🎨 Why try a social art project? (Or: The joy of collaborative creativity)
Social art projects are a wonderful way to build community, celebrate differences, and encourage meaningful connections. A shared painting activity helps people naturally practise important social skills—like giving compliments, compromising, cooperating, and creating together—all while having fun in a relaxed, non-threatening environment.
No matter the group, these creative projects offer a welcoming, beginner-friendly way to explore art and strengthen community through collaboration.
🧡 Inclusive art for all abilities: How Pattern Play supports everyone
One of the most wonderful things about Pattern Play Collaborative Art is how it naturally sparks connection and social interaction. It’s designed to be welcoming, relaxing, and easy for everyone to take part — no matter their age, experience, or comfort level with painting.
Here’s how it works:
1. Messy Playing
Begin with big brushes and playful, flowing marks like circles, spirals, arches, dots, and dashes. This stage encourages people to loosen up, have fun, and start chatting while they paint together — no pressure, just easy, social creativity.
2. Exploring
Layer in simple patterns using medium brushes and shapes from the Pattern Play Pages or Cards. As the patterns overlap and blend, people naturally start connecting and building a shared sense of flow and focus — seeing how their marks combine with others’. Use smaller brushes as the layers rise to create depth and visual sophistication.
3. Bling!
Finish with some playful touches — outlining, sparkles, stickers, or other details to highlight favourite parts of the artwork using paint pens or markers. This final step celebrates the group’s shared creation and leaves everyone with a sense of pride and togetherness.
✨ It’s a gentle, joyful way to help people relax, connect, and grow their social confidence — all through the simple magic of shared painting.
Want to try it with your group? Here’s where to start:
FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project
Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.
You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.
Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.
Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email. Unsubscribe anytime.
A Beginner-Friendly Collaborative Mural Process for Schools
Do you want to create an inclusive school mural project with your students or community group? My Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework can help you guide students through a fun, beginner-friendly mural process that encourages creativity, teamwork, and participation.
I’ve used this collaborative mural approach with primary schools, secondary schools, specialist schools, and mixed-age community groups to help participants create vibrant shared artworks together — even when many of the students were not currently studying art.
You don’t need advanced art skills or expensive materials to run a successful inclusive school mural project. With just three paint colours, three sizes of brushes, and a willingness to embrace experimentation, teachers and facilitators can guide students through a creative process that feels achievable, engaging, and genuinely collaborative.
As you read through this guide, imagine yourself stepping into the role of collaborative art guide — supporting students as they experiment, layer patterns, respond to each other’s ideas, and gradually build a mural together. This process works beautifully for art classes, wellbeing groups, intervention programs, cooperative classroom activities, vacation care programs, and community-building projects within schools.
Step-by-Step Guide to Creating a Collaborative School Mural
Below is a simple “how-to” guide for running an easy, beginner-friendly inclusive school mural project with classes or mixed-age groups.
Imagine you’re a teacher, school wellbeing leader, support worker, or community facilitator guiding students to create a small-scale mural together. This collaborative process works beautifully for walls at or below ceiling height — perfect for school corridors, shared learning spaces, libraries, wellbeing rooms, or outdoor play areas where no ladders or steps are required. Keeping the mural accessible and low-risk helps everyone focus on creativity, teamwork, and participation.
Preparation Stage: Underpainting
Begin by preparing your mural surface — this could be a primed school wall or large panels painted indoors and installed later. Use a three-part primer first to seal the surface, then apply a second coat tinted with your chosen base colours. Use large rollers, brushes, or sponges to create soft texture, movement, and energy.
Students build confidence and connection while creating the underpainting layer of a collaborative school mural.
This tinted underpainting transforms a blank wall into an inviting starting point that reduces the fear of “making the first mark.” Involving students in this early stage helps build ownership, confidence, and connection from the beginning of the inclusive school mural project. It also helps students relax into what can initially feel like a daunting experience — contributing to a public artwork that others will see every day.
The underpainting stage creates an inviting base layer that encourages participation and experimentation.
Step 1: Messy Playing
Hand out large brushes or house brushes and encourage students to paint bold, overlapping marks — circles, arches, spirals, and clusters of simple shapes like dots or dashes. Encourage students to move around the mural space, work in pairs or small groups for a while, then continue in a new area with different people or independently.
Use a limited palette of three to four harmonious colours per layer to keep the mural visually unified and beginner-friendly. Offer chalk prompts such as oversized circles, spirals, or arches around the edges to encourage large movements and playful experimentation.
This energetic first layer helps students relax, explore movement, and build confidence while contributing equally to the collaborative mural. Many students enjoy this stage the most because of the freedom, movement, and shared creativity involved.
Students explore movement, colour, and bold collaborative mark-making during the Messy Playing stage of the mural process.
Step 2: Exploring
Once the mural is filled with colour and movement, it’s time to layer in patterns and embrace overlapping. You can use Pattern Play Pages to spark ideas, or invite students to invent their own designs inspired by shapes and marks already emerging in the mural.
Encourage variation in size, rhythm, and layering to create depth and visual richness. Remind students to occasionally step back and look at the mural as a shared artwork rather than focusing only on their own section.
It’s also important to reinforce that other students may paint over parts of their work — and that this is part of the collaborative process. Students learn to see their marks as inspiration for others, while also responding creatively to the ideas around them.
Facilitator Tip:
As the mural develops, gradually introduce smaller brushes so students can refine details and patterns. This shift from large tools to smaller ones naturally creates depth and sophistication while keeping the mural process accessible and beginner-friendly.
Students layer patterns, colour, and movement together during the Exploring stage of the mural process.
Step 3: Bling!
Time to add the finishing touches. Students can use paint pens or small brushes to add decorative highlights with dots, dashes, outlines, and repeating patterns inspired by the earlier layers.
Encourage students to explore ornamentation and detail work that adds sparkle, personality, and contrast throughout the mural. These final touches help unify the artwork while still allowing individual contributions to shine through.
You can also add the mural’s name along an edge and subtly include the first names of participants hidden within the design — students absolutely love discovering their names later and showing them to friends and family.
This simple three-step process makes it easy for teachers, facilitators, and wellbeing teams to guide students through an engaging and inclusive school mural project that is creative, collaborative, and visually rich.
Painted on a classroom wall, outdoor learning area, or shared school space, collaborative murals help students build confidence, teamwork, communication, and creative thinking — while creating a lasting reflection of the school community itself.
The finished Bling stage adds decorative detail, personality, and unity to the collaborative mural.
Inclusive School Mural Project Case Study: “Find Your Courage”
“Find Your Courage” was a collaborative mural created with a group of teenage girls in a secondary school setting as part of a confidence-building and wellbeing-focused social art project. None of the students were studying art at the time, yet together they created a large-scale public mural using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework.
The mural began with a preparation and underpainting stage using tinted primer, large brushes, rollers, and textured sponges to build movement, texture, and confidence on the wall surface. Students explored expressive “Messy Playing” through bold marks, layered colour, and energetic movement across the mural space.
Next, the group began painting large and small circles while experimenting with blending, spirals, and accessible decorative patterns. As the mural developed, students layered increasingly detailed patterns and overlapping marks to create visual richness and sophistication. Smaller brushes were gradually introduced over time to support finer detail work and growing confidence.
In the final “Bling!” stage, students used paint pens and decorative pattern work to add highlights, flourishes, outlines, and intricate details inspired by each other’s marks throughout the mural. Each participant’s name was subtly hidden within the artwork for students to discover later.
The finished mural became an intricate and uplifting feature within a busy shared school space while giving students a fun and meaningful collaborative art experience. The project encouraged creativity, courage, teamwork, and the understanding that you do not need to see yourself as “good at art” to contribute to something visually powerful and important.
As an added bonus, the students also received SACE credits toward their high school certificate through participation in the project.
Final thoughts about creating an inclusive school mural project
Collaborative murals do far more than brighten a school wall. They create opportunities for students to connect, contribute, experiment, and feel part of something bigger than themselves. Through the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process, students of all confidence levels and abilities can participate in a shared creative experience that values process, participation, and exploration as much as the finished artwork itself.
An inclusive school mural project can become a lasting reminder of teamwork, courage, communication, and community spirit within your school. From the first expressive marks of Messy Playing through to the final decorative Bling stage, students learn that creativity grows through trying things, responding to each other’s ideas, and embracing the unexpected together.
You don’t need to be a trained mural artist to guide a collaborative mural project with students. With simple materials, a supportive approach, and a willingness to let the process unfold layer by layer, teachers and facilitators can help students create visually rich murals that feel energetic, meaningful, and genuinely shared.
I hope this guide helps you feel inspired to try your own inclusive school mural project with your students or community group.
Happy Painting!
Charndra,
Your Collaborative Art Guide
P.S. I can help you create a mural like the one above with your group of kids – simply join my email list.
FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project
Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.
You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.
Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.
Your free guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email. You can unsubscribe anytime.
Collaborative painting works so well in groups because it reduces pressure, builds connection, and gives every participant a clear way to contribute meaningfully. In this post, you’ll learn why this approach is so effective for teachers, backed by my experience facilitating over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants, using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. You’ll walk away with practical insight and confidence to try collaborative painting with your own students in a way that feels structured, inclusive, and fun.
‘Growing Together’ – a collaborative painting created by primary school students in cool colours using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
Why Collaborative Painting Works So Well in Groups
Collaborative painting is fun. It’s engaging, calming, and deeply connecting to paint alongside others. As students cooperate, build on each other’s ideas, and chat while they work, they naturally fall into a shared creative flow.
My Pattern Play Collaborative Art approach uses a simple three-stage process that helps students explore different ideas at each stage, with natural pauses in between. These breaks give space for reflection, conversation, and learning, helping students not only enjoy the experience but also grow through it together.
Collaborative painting naturally supports:
Inclusion
Students can participate at their own level – from simple marks and colour filling to more detailed patterns. They can pop in and out of the activity if needed.
Confidence
Because the responsibility is shared, there’s less fear of getting it “wrong.” Students really enjoy creating together – they don’t have so much fear of performance pressure or comparison anxiety from doing an individual painting, yet they are still developing their skills, eye and coordination.
Cooperation
Students learn to notice, adapt, and respond to each other’s contributions.
Creative Thinking
Seeing others’ ideas sparks new ones and encourages experimentation in a safe and cooperative way, as you encourage them to copy ideas they like, making their own interpretations.
This is why collaborative painting works so well in classrooms, community groups, therapy settings, and intergenerational spaces.
Simple Collaborative Painting Activity Ideas
1. Pattern-Based Collaborative Painting Activity
A pattern-based approach is one of the easiest ways to start.
How it works:
Begin with a coloured background
Introduce a small set of simple patterns (dots, circles, spirals and other simple shapes)
Students repeat or adapt patterns in different sizes and colours – but keep those colours limited!
This creates visual cohesion while leaving plenty of room for personal expression.
This type of collaborative painting activity is ideal for mixed abilities and ages.
‘Growing Together’ – a collaborative painting created by primary school students in cool colours using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
This approach brings structure and true collaboration. Multiple canvases are treated as one connected artwork.
They begin as a set — but quickly become something the whole group builds together.
How it works:
Start with several canvases arranged together as one larger artwork with a coloured underpainting.
Add visual prompts that overlap the joins between canvases to encourage kids to do the same.
Students rotate between canvases regularly
Canvases are moved, turned, or rearranged between sessions – no need to keep them ‘lined up’
Patterns and colours flow across surfaces as students build on each other’s marks
No one “owns” a canvas — every piece is shaped by many hands
Over time, the artwork develops a natural sense of movement and connection, because ideas are constantly being passed, continued, and transformed.
The key difference with Pattern Play Collaborative Art:
Every student contributes to every canvas.
By the end, each participant takes home one piece — but the artwork itself is genuinely shared. Each canvas holds the energy, marks, and ideas of the whole group. Kids love this (and so do adults).
During the Bling stage, we add patterns and decorative details collaboratively across the entire set using paint pens or markers. Then, at the final stage, each person is given a canvas to take home — choosing randomly works best.
From there, I offer dot stickers, gem stickers, or shiny paint pens so they can personalise their piece. This gives each participant a stronger personal sense of connection to the artwork, with their own finishing touches.
To keep the artwork visually strong, I guide them to place these details with intention — in clusters, around shapes, or along existing patterns — rather than scattering them randomly, where they can get lost visually.
That’s what makes it feel different.
It’s not a collection of individual works.
It’s a collaborative process that just happens to be divided at the end.
Close-up of ‘Our Fiery Circles’ showing layered patterns and colours created by students over three sessions. (Showing the Exploring stage underway)
3. Turn-Taking Cooperative Painting
Cooperative painting is all about responding to what others have already started.
How it works in this style:
One student begins with marks and patterns on their paper or canvas, then passes it on.
The next student responds by adding new marks, developing the ideas already there—using overlapping, repetition, size changes, or colour shifts.
The piece keeps moving around the group every 3–5 minutes, so each student contributes to multiple artworks.
When the work returns to the original student, they personalise it in the Bling stage, adding their finishing touches.
This mindful, cooperative process works especially well for small groups and relationship-building at any time of the year. To keep the final result clear and vibrant, limit each group to a cool or warm colour scheme (or switch schemes between sessions once the paint has dried, such as between lessons or breaks).
Below is an example of this approach in action. I printed a sugar skull design onto paper canvases and had the kids paint in a “musical chairs” style, rotating every 3–5 minutes so everyone contributed to each piece.
Next, they moved into a new technique — dry brushing white over the skull to build texture and contrast.
At the end, each child received one of the canvases to take home and began personalising it during the Bling stage, using pattern prompt sheets scattered around for inspiration.
They absolutely loved their final results. What’s really interesting is how this process naturally “averages out” ability levels — this group ranged from ages 5–12 — so every child feels proud and excited about what they create.
(That’s my daughter in the photo — she joined me for this Vacation Care program.)
Our theme was Día de los Muertos, and we explored Mexican culture as part of the project — celebrating the cultural heritage of some of the school’s students. We did this each holiday program, using a different cultural inspiration to guide our collaborative artwork. (It was tricky to design a skull that didn’t look ghoulish!)
Kids painting Día de los Muertos sugar skulls using a pass-the-canvas “musical chairs” approach — a fun, fast-paced collaborative painting idea for groups
What Is Cooperative Painting?
Cooperative painting is a type of collaborative painting that emphasises shared decision-making, interaction, cooperative fun, and joint creativity.
Students will:
Build on each other’s marks through overlap, added patterns, and repeated elements placed on, around, or in clusters on the canvas or paper
Agree on colour limits before starting (I suggest three colours in either a warm or cool colour scheme)
Paint at the same time on the artwork, or take turns using different colours
Cooperative painting is especially helpful when the goal is communication, teamwork, and trust. The best part is that it looks great, and the kids feel proud of their shared achievement. The key is to build several layers, and ideally move to smaller brushes as the layers build.
Tips for Successful Collaborative Painting Projects
Aim for clear structure + creative freedom — that’s the sweet spot for successful collaborative painting.
Keep instructions simple so everyone can join in easily.
Limit colour schemes to either cool or warm to avoid overwhelm and muddy mixes.
Emphasise exploration, not perfection, especially in the early stages.
Encourage participants to notice what others are doing, and to copy ideas in their own way as a starting point.
Allow the artwork to evolve naturally, with overlapping patterns to build visual depth.
Collaborative Painting in Classrooms and Community Settings
Collaborative painting projects work well in:
Primary and secondary classrooms
Vacation care and after-school programs
Community centres
Disability and inclusive art programs
Events and public spaces
They scale easily from small groups to hundreds of participants.
Final Thoughts
Collaborative painting is about more than making an artwork. It’s about creating a shared experience where everyone belongs, contributes, and discovers what’s possible when painting together. And yes — it’s fun!
With simple structures and a focus on cooperation, collaborative painting can transform how groups engage with art and with each other.
If you’d like support resources, pattern ideas, or colour schemes to make collaborative painting easier, explore the Pattern Play Collaborative Art approach by accessing the free Beginner’s Guide below, or visit the Shop if you prefer to purchase without signing up for additional support.
Happy Painting!
Charndra
Your Inclusive Social Art Guide
FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project
Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.
You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.
Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.
Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email. Unsubscribe anytime.
Explore more collaborative art ideas
If you’ve enjoyed reading “Why Collaborative Painting Works So Well in Groups”, there are plenty of other ways to explore collaborative painting. These posts offer tips, ideas, and inspiration to help your group paint with confidence and have fun:
This collaborative painting project with a community peer support group demonstrates how group art activities for adults can support relaxation, creativity, and connection. This collaborative painting project was created with a community peer support group using layered circles, patterns, colour, and embellishment techniques.
Project:
To create a collaborative painted artwork with the mums from the “My Time” carer peer support group. The project aimed to provide a relaxing and creative shared experience where participants could step away from the daily pressures of caring for children with additional needs and contribute to an artwork created especially for their community space.
Process:
The painting process began on a brightly coloured yellow canvas, creating an energetic and welcoming base for the artwork. Participants started by painting circles across the canvas, gradually moving around the artwork and overlapping shapes to build layers and connection between contributions.
Participants then outlined each other’s circles using contrasting colours before adding stencilled patterns, stamps, dots, and decorative marks throughout the painting. The evolving layers created increasing visual complexity and encouraged spontaneous creative exploration.
To complete the artwork, white and black paint was added for contrast and visual pop, along with colourful adhesive gems during the BLING stage. The collaborative painting was completed across multiple sessions to allow more carers to participate.
Results:
A richly layered and visually detailed collaborative artwork was created and is now displayed at Forbes Children’s Centre where the carers meet regularly for peer support.
The finished painting reflects many individual contributions combined into one connected artwork filled with colour, pattern, and texture. The mural continues to provide a welcoming visual reminder of creativity, participation, and community connection.
These approaches work best in mixed-ability settings where participation is flexible and inclusive. You can explore the full collection of facilitation strategies and examples in the hub for facilitated collaborative art: Facilitated Collaborative Art for Mixed Ability Groups
FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project
Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.
You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.
Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.
Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email. Unsubscribe anytime.
If you’re looking for school mural projects in Adelaide, it can be hard to picture what’s actually possible with a group of students.
Many murals you see are created by a single experienced artist. They’re often large-scale, highly detailed, and carefully planned — designed to create a strong visual impact and enhance the school environment.
These artist-led murals can be incredibly effective, especially when the goal is a polished, cohesive result.
Students may be involved in planning and developing ideas for the mural, helping to paint sections, or observing large-scale works being created at height — all meaningful ways of participating in the process.
Collaborative, student-led murals look quite different — because they’re designed for a different purpose.
The focus is on:
student ownership throughout the process
developing creative confidence and personal expression
participation across a wide range of abilities
A key practical difference is scale. These murals are also designed at a student-friendly scale, so everyone can safely contribute without ladders, steps or height work.
Students help shape the artwork as it evolves — a process that works best in schools open to letting ideas develop with students at the centre.
The projects below show a range of real murals created with students in primary schools, high schools, and specialist settings — each one shaped by the young people involved.
All of these projects were created using my Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework across schools in Adelaide.
A range of student collaborative mural projects
Specialist School – Sensory Garden Mural
Students created a layered, tactile-inspired mural using repeated Pattern Play motifs, building colour and texture across a shared space that reflects calm and connection.
This project involved students with diverse learning needs in a specialist school setting.
The focus was on:
accessible participation
layers of process art techniques
simple, repeatable patterns
building confidence through repeated contributions
Students engaged at their own ability — with the mural growing layer by layer.
The result was a vibrant, expressive artwork where every student’s contribution was visible. 100 students and staff contributed to this project – and every student’s name is included to find later…
Specialist school student collaborative mural in Adelaide, South Australia featuring a Sensory Garden design created with Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
Specialist School – Together We Thrive Mural
This collaborative piece was developed over time with students contributing at their own pace, gradually building a vibrant artwork through simple, accessible techniques.
In this setting, structure and predictability were key to supporting student engagement.
Students worked within a clear framework while still making their own creative choices with ‘this and that’ activities.
This allowed them to:
explore colour safely
repeat processes with confidence
contribute without pressure
The mural developed steadily over time, creating a calm but visually rich outcome shaped by the group. Over 100 students and staff contributed to this mural, and all the student’s names are hidden in plain site for them to hunt down during breaks.
Close-up detail of specialist school collaborative mural in Adelaide, South Australia showing layered Pattern Play Collaborative Art patterns.
Primary School – Soccer Kicking Wall Mural
Designed in the shape of a goal, this mural doubles as a functional kicking wall, where students added bold patterns and colour that can be used in play as well as display.
Students created layered patterns with warm colours, turning a practical space into something expressive and student-owned. Over 30 students participated in this mural project.
Primary school student collaborative mural in Adelaide, South Australia using Pattern Play Collaborative Art, designed as a functional soccer kicking wall.
Primary School – Voice of Kids Mural
Students from across the school layered patterns and colours that represented their individual voices coming together as one shared artwork, that the sports classes could use for tennis practice.
Led by student leaders, the project focused on collaboration and shared decision-making, as students worked together to shape a collective identity as the school’s “Voice of Kids.” Over 30 students participated in this mural project.
One of my friend’s daughters was in the Voice of Kids group that painted this tennis mural – and even though she has left that school for secondary education, she still proudly says “I painted that – my name is on that mural” many years later.
Primary school student collaborative mural in Adelaide, South Australia created using Pattern Play Collaborative Art representing shared student voice.
Primary School – Movement is Life Mural
Inspired by physical energy and activity, this mural incorporates flowing movement inspired by gymnastics, combined with repeated patterns and colour layering. The result captures a sense of energy and motion. Over 30 students participated in this mural project, plus some extras who joined in during a recess break, adding their own ‘Bling’ with paint pens.
Primary school student collaborative mural in Adelaide, South Australia featuring flowing movement-inspired patterns created with Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
High School – Find Your Confidence Mural
Over multiple sessions, students developed their own visual language through pattern and colour, gradually building confidence as their contributions became more independent. They actively participated throughout, making thoughtful decisions about how the mural evolved.
The artwork became a reflection of both creative growth and increasing confidence. About ten students and staff participated in this mural project.
Find Your Confidence mural created through Pattern Play Collaborative Art in a student-led school mural project in Adelaide, South Australia using vibrant warm colours over a cool background.
High School – Find Your Courage Mural
With a larger group of around 20 students, this mural explored stronger contrasts and layered design choices, encouraging risk-taking, expression, and growing self-assurance.
As the work progressed, students took increasing ownership of how it came together, shaping a bold mural with a strong shared visual identity.
Find Your Courage mural created through Pattern Play Collaborative Art in a student-led school mural project in Adelaide, South Australia using a galaxy-inspired colour scheme of purples, blues, aqua and pink.
What these school mural projects in Adelaide show
Across very different settings — specialist schools, primary schools and high schools — a few things remain consistent:
Everyone can contribute, at their own ability level
Confidence grows as the mural develops
The artwork reflects the group
No two murals look the same
The process matters as much as the outcome
What stays with me most is watching that shift in students — from hesitation to pride — as they create a public artwork together.
They’re contributing across the whole mural, making decisions, and seeing their ideas become part of something bigger. Kids benefit from that.
They are being artists – social artists!
It’s a different approach, and it relies on trust — in the process, and in the creativity of the students.
I think the students in your school would create something incredible too.
If you’d like to explore a mural project together, let’s have a chat.
If you’re based in Adelaide and would like to explore a collaborative mural project with your students, I can help guide the process from start to finish.
If you’d like a simple introduction to how these collaborative murals work, you can download the free Beginner’s Guide:
FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project
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Secondary school students painting a collaborative mural in Adelaide, South Australia using Pattern Play Collaborative Art, creating vibrant layered patterns in a student-led group art project.
Looking for collaborative art ideas for adults? I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school-based projects with more than 2,000 participants, using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. In this post, you’ll discover fun, approachable group projects for all skill levels—and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources.
🎧 This post has been adapted into Episode 40 of the Easy Collaborative Art Podcast — “What Are Some Easy Collaborative Art Ideas for Adults?” You can listen via the link below or search Easy Collaborative Art on your favourite podcast player. The full transcript is included below the post.
What Are Some Fun Collaborative Art Ideas for Adults?
Looking for creative and inclusive group activities for adults?
Whether you’re working with community groups, adult learners, NDIS participants, or simply gathering friends and family, these collaborative art ideas are designed to be easy to run, low-pressure, and genuinely fun.
Each project featured here offers a simple, structured way for adults to create together—no art experience needed. From expressive painting to guided group murals, these ideas focus on connection, creativity, and making something meaningful as a group.
Explore these inspiring articles for creative, beginner-friendly ways to enjoy collaborative art with adults:
This post shares ways to make collaborative painting truly inclusive—perfect for support workers, carers, and facilitators wanting to create meaningful connection through art.
Need an Adult Group Art Project? Expressive Activities for All Skill Levels From bold shapes to layered textures, this post offers practical, pressure-free activities designed for adult groups. Great for art therapy sessions, creative workshops, or NDIS community participation goals.
Team Building Art Ideas: Murals & Art Activities for Kids & Adults Whether you’re leading a corporate group, classroom, or mixed-age event, these mural and group art ideas help bring everyone together—kids and adults alike.
Fun Team Artwork Ideas: 3 Easy Painting Projects for Kids, Adults, and Inclusive Groups These beginner-safe, no-pressure projects are perfect for adult groups looking to unwind while making something beautiful together. Includes layered patterns, shared canvases, and flexible materials.
The Creative Purpose of Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling
Every stage of the Pattern Play Collaborative Art process has a purpose — and each one helps adults feel more at ease, creative, and connected as they paint together.
Here’s how it works:
Messy Playing This stage encourages adults to let go of pressure and perfection. Using big brushes and simple shapes like circles, spirals, and arches, participants explore freely, layering playful marks such as dots, dashes, waves, or x’s and o’s. It’s a great way to relax and settle into the creative flow.
Exploring Here, creativity begins to emerge more intentionally. Adults use smaller brushes to add layers of simple, accessible patterns, working from large to medium to small shapes. This stage often sparks new ideas as patterns overlap and build rhythm across the artwork. Tip: Use smaller brushes as the layers rise to create depth and visual sophistication.
Bling! The final stage is all about celebration and personal expression. Participants add finishing touches like outlining, stickers, sparkles, or paint pen details. This joyful step brings the whole artwork together and gives the group a shared sense of pride in what they’ve created.
✨ It’s a flexible, low-pressure process that adults of all backgrounds and abilities can enjoy — and it works beautifully in social, supportive group settings.
💬 Final Thoughts on Collaborative Art Ideas for Adults
Collaborative art is a powerful, flexible way to bring adults together—whether for wellbeing programs, team-building workshops, or community events. It creates space for connection, relaxation, and creative expression in a welcoming, social setting.
It will be an exciting addition if you’re organising a creative retreat, planning a community mural, or simply gathering friends for a casual painting session. These collaborative art ideas will help you get started with confidence, and finish with a beautiful and unique painting.
This beginner-friendly guide works beautifully in a wide range of group settings:
Perfect for: ✅ Community art groups ✅ Adult peer support groups ✅ Wellbeing and mental health workshops ✅ Workplace team-building activities ✅ Inclusive neighbourhood projects ✅ Social art gatherings for all abilities ✅ Disability support programs
Transcript for Episode 40 of the Easy Collaborative Art Podcast: What Are Some Easy Collaborative Art Ideas for Adults?
Easy Collaborative Art Episode Player:
🎙 Prefer another app? Search “Easy Collaborative Art” in your podcast player.
Episode Summary
In this episode of Easy Collaborative Art, I share simple and inclusive collaborative art ideas for adults that are easy to run and enjoyable for all skill levels.
Episode Highlights
Simple pattern-based painting for confident group participation
Layered art processes that reduce overwhelm
Creating a relaxed, social art experience for adults
Introduction
In this episode, I’m sharing some of my favourite collaborative art ideas for adults. These are all designed to be simple to run, inclusive, and enjoyable, even for people who don’t see themselves as creative.
If you’re working with a group—whether that’s a community group, adult learners, or just friends getting together—these ideas will help you create something meaningful together without it feeling complicated or overwhelming.
Idea 1 – How can adults join in without needing art skills?
One of the easiest ways to support adults in a group art setting is to start with simple, repeatable patterns.
Instead of asking people to draw something realistic, you’re inviting them to make small marks—like lines, dots, or shapes—and repeat them across the surface.
This removes a lot of pressure straight away. People don’t have to worry about getting it right, and they can focus on just enjoying the process.
I’ve found that even people who say they’re not creative quickly relax when they realise how simple it is to contribute. And as more patterns are added, the artwork naturally starts to come together in a really satisfying way.
Idea 2 – How do you keep a group project manageable?
Keeping things simple is key, and one of the best ways to do that is by building the artwork in layers.
You might start with a loose background, then come back and add patterns, and finally add a few details to bring everything together.
This step-by-step approach helps people feel more comfortable, because they’re only focusing on one part at a time.
It also works really well for groups that meet more than once, as each session can focus on a different stage of the artwork. That way, the project feels achievable and enjoyable from start to finish.
Idea 3 – How do you create a relaxed group art experience?
A big part of successful collaborative art with adults is creating a space that feels relaxed and social.
Rather than running it like a formal art class, it helps to offer a simple structure and then let people explore within that.
When people feel free to chat, move around, and take their time, they naturally become more engaged. The focus shifts from trying to produce something perfect to simply enjoying the experience of creating together.
And that’s often when the most meaningful moments happen.
Recap of Highlights
Start with simple patterns to remove pressure
Build the artwork in layers to keep it manageable
Create a relaxed, social environment for the group
Encouragement
If you’re thinking about trying a collaborative art activity with adults, keep it simple and approachable.
You don’t need complex materials or detailed plans to make it work. What matters most is creating a space where people feel comfortable to join in and enjoy the process.
Start small, trust the process, and allow the artwork to develop naturally as the group contributes.
Outro
Pattern Play Collaborative Art is a simple three-stage approach to creating art together—starting with Messy Playing to loosen up, moving into Exploring with patterns, and finishing with Bling to add those final details.
It’s designed to be beginner-friendly, flexible, and enjoyable for groups of all kinds.
Start Your Collaborative Art Journey — Free Guide + Mini Course
Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.
You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.
Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.
Your free guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email. You can unsubscribe anytime.
“Self Advocacy” – detail from a warm, expressive collaborative artwork made by 16 adults and children, including participants with intellectual disabilities.
“Peer Support” – A cool-hued collaborative artwork created by 16 adults and children, including participants with intellectual disabilities.
“Enhancing Voices” – one of a series of four collaborative artworks created by 96 adults and support staff at a statewide conference supporting people with intellectual disabilities.
Adults painting a vibrant collaborative artwork at a public art event — explore collaborative art ideas for adults of all skill levels.
If you’re looking for ways to involve students more meaningfully in a school mural, a student-led approach can completely change the experience.
Rather than filling in sections or following a fixed design, students take an active role in shaping the artwork – contributing ideas, patterns, and decisions as the mural grows.
In schools across Adelaide, I’ve seen how powerful this shift can be.
Students who might normally hang back begin to participate. Confident students step into leadership roles. And the mural becomes something the whole group feels connected to, as they were integral to it’s creation.
It gives students real ownership, trusting them to take a blank wall and turn it into something meaningful.
Creating something this visible, in a shared space, can be genuinely life-changing for students.
What “student-led” murals actually look like
A student-led mural doesn’t mean chaos or a free-for-all.
It means students are supported to make creative decisions within a clear, guided structure.
Depending on the group, students will often:
Influence the colour direction as the mural develops
Start by copying simple patterns, then adapt them into their own style
Share ideas and build on each other’s work in pairs or small groups
Help guide students as they join the project (I’ve even seen older students lifting little ones up so they can add to higher sections – so cute!)
Step back and decide how the mural should grow — developing their visual “eye”
Explain the mural and their ideas to curious passers-by
Share the finished work proudly with the wider community
Include the mural as a public art project in their resume
The result is a mural that feels alive with student input that is full of variation, personality, and shared ownership.
How student-led murals work in practice
My approach to student-led murals is based on Pattern Play Collaborative Art, a simple, structured process that supports spontaneous, creative painting without the chaos people often worry about.
It’s a three-stage framework:
Messy Playing – students make bold, free marks and explore materials without pressure
Exploring – simple patterns are introduced and repeated, building confidence and rhythm
Bling – final layers, details, and finishing touches bring the mural together visually
This structure gives students freedom within clear boundaries. It means they’re not copying a fixed design, but they’re also not left without guidance. They have freedom, and the mural looks great!
The result is guided creativity where students can make decisions, experiment spontaneously, and contribute meaningfully, while the mural still develops in a coherent and intentional way.
It’s this balance that allows student-led murals to work so effectively in schools: structure supports creativity, rather than restricting it.
Real examples from Adelaide schools
Here are three very different student-led mural projects, showing how this approach can work across ages and settings.
Find Your Confidence Mural (Teens in a Secondary School Collaborative Project)
In this project, a group of teenage students took increasing ownership of the mural over several sessions.
They began by exploring colour and pattern, then gradually:
Suggested new ideas
Developed their own repeating patterns
Helped each other refine what they were creating
By the end of each stage they were making thoughtful creative decisions and supporting each other through the process.
The mural became a reflection of their confidence as much as their creativity.
Find Your Confidence mural created through Pattern Play Collaborative Art in a student-led school mural project in Adelaide, South Australia using vibrant warm colours over a cool background.
Voice of Kids – Primary School Collaborative Mural
In a primary school setting, student-led doesn’t mean a chaotic mess or complex decisions, it means everyone can contribute in their own way, and with the Pattern Play Collaborative Art Method, it will look cohesive and beautiful.
In this mural:
Students worked at different levels of ability
Simple patterns allowed everyone to join in
The artwork grew layer by layer as each student added their part
Students added bold shapes, small details, personal flourishes, and every contribution mattered.
The finished mural was about participation, colour, and a shared painting experience.
Voice of Kids mural created by students using Pattern Play Collaborative Art in a student-led school mural project in Adelaide, South Australia with warm layered colours representing shared student voice.
Find Your Courage – High School Collaborative Mural
With larger groups, student-led murals create a strong sense of connection across the whole school.
In this type of project:
Many students contribute over time
Ideas spread naturally between participants
The mural evolves as a collective piece
Students in the school enjoyed walking past the mural during and after each session to see how the mural had changed.
It becomes part of the school environment, shared pride for all the students.
Find Your Courage mural created through Pattern Play Collaborative Art in a student-led school mural project in Adelaide, South Australia using a galaxy-inspired colour scheme of purples, blues, aqua and pink.
Why schools are choosing student-led murals
Schools are increasingly looking for mural projects that go beyond decoration.
A student-led approach supports:
Inclusive participation — students of all abilities can contribute
Creative confidence — students feel safe to try ideas
Collaboration — students build on each other’s work
Ownership — the mural genuinely belongs to the group
What happens while the mural is being created is just as important as the finished artwork and to me as an art teacher, where the real value lies – the growth and change within the students as a group and as individuals.
Happy Painting!
Charndra,
Your Collaborative Art Guide
Bringing a student-led mural to your school
If you’re based in Adelaide and would like to explore a student-led mural project for your school, I’d love to help.
I work with schools to guide students through a collaborative painting process that is:
Structured but flexible
Accessible for a wide range of abilities
Designed to build confidence and participation
Each mural is shaped by the students involved, making every project unique to your school community.
If you’d like a simple introduction to the collaborative art process behind these murals, you can download my free Beginner’s Guide:
FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project
Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.
You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.
Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.
Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email. Unsubscribe anytime.
Looking for more student-led school mural ideas?
If you’re still exploring what kind of mural might suit your school, you can learn more about my school mural projects here → Bring a Mural to Your School
Primary school students working together on a student-led school mural in Adelaide, South Australia using Pattern Play Collaborative Art with warm colours and playful patterns.
Collaborative art projects for kids and children are a fun, easy way to get young artists creating together. I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school-based projects with more than 2,000 participants using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. In this post, you’ll discover practical ideas, step-by-step approaches, and helpful digital resources to run your own group painting activities with confidence.
🎉 Looking for Creative Art Activities for Kids or Young Artists?
If you’re planning a fun and inclusive group art session with kids, you’re in the right place! Whether you’re teaching a preschool class some art skills, wanting to be organising a school mural, or simply want a joyful art idea to do at home with your kids or grandchildren, these posts are filled with ideas that children (and grown-ups!) love.
Here are some of my most-visited collaborative art blog posts that focus on kids, preschoolers, and children of all ages:
Creating ‘Our Fiery Circle Paintings’ Together 🎨 A step-by-step example showing how kids can contribute confidently to a bold, vibrant artwork in a fun group setting by putting a series of 20 small canvases together and painting them as one before personalising one and taking it home!
💡 This post offers three beginner-friendly projects ideal for kids, community groups, or mixed-ability sessions. Use them with your team for a fun, creative team session.
🖍️ Filled with hands-on ideas that make art sessions fun, calming, and engaging for the youngest artists. Try this in your childcare centre, kindergarten or playgroup.
👶 Discover why process art is perfect for children’s development and how to encourage self-expression in play-based settings.
Ready to start your first collaborative art project? Go for it!
These posts are packed with simple, joyful approaches to painting with kids in groups. They’re beginner-friendly and designed for success—no matter the age or ability. Try one today and let the creativity unfold slowly over a few sessions of creativity revisited!
👨👩👧👦 A Creative Process That Works for All Ages
This simple 3-step process is perfect for kids, families, teachers, and anyone who wants to create art together — no matter their age or skill level! Whether you’re painting with young children, teenagers, or a mix of ages, Pattern Play Collaborative Art makes it easy to relax and have fun together.
Here’s how it works:
1. Messy Playing Start with big brushes and loose, playful marks like circles, arches, spirals, and dots. This step helps everyone — from little kids to grown-ups — get comfortable with the paint and enjoy making marks together. Do three of each in three different colours with overlapping clusters of simple marks.
2. Exploring Layer in simple patterns using smaller brushes and shapes from the Pattern Play Cards or Pages. Everyone can repeat and overlap shapes to create interesting layers, adding colour and rhythm as the artwork grows.
3. Bling! Add a bit of sparkle! Use stickers, glitter glue, paint pens, or outlining to highlight favourite parts of the painting. This step brings out the details and celebrates the group’s shared creativity.
✨ It’s a fun, pressure-free way for kids and adults to paint side by side — and create something wonderful together!
Start Your Collaborative Art Journey – Free Guide + Mini Course
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Close-up view of the tennis mural with layered warm and cool colours.
Mermaid artwork in cool colours created by a family group of four.
Close-up of the Together We Thrive mural created by students and staff at Aspect Treetops School.