Invite students to explore the beauty of nature on a miniature scale with this Jen Aranyi inspired Tiny Outdoors art lesson. In this project, students create small landscape scenes inside simple shapes, bottles, or containers—capturing peaceful outdoor moments in a charming, compact format.
Inspired by the delicate, nature-focused work of artist Jen Aranyi, this lesson encourages students to observe the outdoors and translate it into simplified landscapes filled with thoughtful details, soft color palettes, and creative composition.
Perfect for upper elementary and middle school art classes, this project helps students practice drawing landscapes while thinking about scale, space, and storytelling within a small frame.
Students will design a tiny outdoor world—such as mountains, forests, lakes, or sunsets—contained within a simple outline. The result is a whimsical miniature landscape that feels like a little window into nature.
Step-by-step teacher instructions
Student visual examples
Project overview and objectives
Printable templates (if applicable)
Supply list
Helpful teaching tips
Landscape drawing
Composition and use of space
Color blending and layering
Observation of natural environments
Creative storytelling through imagery
Recommended for Grades 3–8, but easily adaptable for other grade levels.
Drawing paper or watercolor paper
Pencil and eraser
Black fine-tip marker or pen
Watercolor paints, colored pencils, or markers
Optional: white gel pen for highlights
Engaging and relaxing project for students
Encourages appreciation of nature
Works well with multiple media options
Creates beautiful, display-ready artwork
Easy to adapt for different grade levels
This lesson helps students slow down, focus on detail, and create their own tiny world inspired by the outdoors—all while developing strong drawing and composition skills.