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Recycled Robots
with teaching artist Matt McGee

Teaching artist Matt McGee demonstrates how to craft a unique robot using recycled materials found in the home, along with a few basic art supplies. 

Recommended for Grades 3-12

In this resource you will:

  • Create a robot using recycled materials found in your home
  • Use paint, markers, tape, and other art materials to add details to your robot 
  • Make artistic decisions to determine the aesthetic of your robot as you craft it

Getting Started

Vocabulary You Will Learn:

  • Recycle
  • Sculpture

Materials You Will Need:

  • Found materials that you’d usually put in the recycling, such as cardboard boxes, bottles, and cans 
  • Hot glue (if you have adult assistance!) or strong tape (like duct or masking tape)
  • Scissors
  • Tin foil
  • Permanent markers
  • Paint brushes
  • Paint

Recycled Robots with Matt McGee

Recycled Robots with Matt McGee

Try It Yourself

How to Create Your Own Recycled Robot

  1. Once you’ve gathered your materials, clean your containers thoroughly and remove the labels. 
  2. Next, start experimenting with how the containers you’ve gathered might fit together to create a robot. How can the various containers and lids you have connect to become a robot? You can experiment with putting them inside, on top of, or alongside each other. Be creative and use your imagination!
  3. Once you’ve decided how your pieces will fit together to create a robot, attach your pieces using hot glue (if you have adult assistance) or a strong tape, like masking or duct tape. 
  4. When the body of your robot is complete, think about how you can use some of the smaller materials you’ve gathered to add onto it. Does your robot have legs? Wheels? What about arms? You can use straws, old markers, or other tubing for this. If you don’t have any of that, you can use aluminum foil to craft any shape you like and attach it to your robot.
  1. If you’d like to make your robot even more detailed, look at some of the smaller pieces you have, like lids and bottle caps. You can also cut up cardboard or plastic to create smaller shapes. These materials can become buttons on a control panel, claws, treads, gears, eyes, or whatever other details you want to add to your robot!
  2. Once you’ve added all the details you want, you can give your robot an even more finished look by adding a coat of paint. You can make it look sleek and shiny, or old and dirty and rusty.
  3. Finally, be sure to clean up your materials!

Think About

In this video, Matt takes us through the process of creating our own robot using recycled containers and a few art supplies. If you want to go even further, think about these questions: 

  • What other materials in your house do you think you could use to create your robot? Do you have any old toys or other objects you don’t want anymore that you could take apart? What about pipe cleaners, or yarn, or glitter? 
  • Come up with a backstory for your robot. Is it brand new, or old and rusty? Does it live here on Earth, or on a distant planet? Does it have a job? How can you incorporate these details into how your robot looks?
  • Think about how your robot moves, what kinds of sounds it might make, and how it might perform a simple task. Can you use these details to act out a short scene with your robot?
  • Where does your robot live; what does its home look like? Can you use some of the leftover materials you have to create an environment for your robot?

Accessibility

Don't forget that you can turn on "Closed Captioning" to view the YouTube video with English captions.

 

More about the Teaching Artist

Matt McGee, a California native and longtime resident of Maryland, is an award-winning actor and puppet designer. Matt has taught students of all ages in schools, festivals, and summer camps to expand their creative abilities, stretch their imagination, and rely on greater resourcefulness through the process of craft-making. Whether it's puppets, props, masks, stop-motion animation, sculpture, or any other form of theatrical art, Matt's desire is to help others find the magic that can be made from the world around them to tell their own story. To learn more about Matt and his creations, visit his website at www.mattamagical.com.

  • Teaching Artist

    Matt McGee

  • Curriculum & Media Development

    Kennedy Center Education

  • Content Editor

    Laurie Ascoli

  • Revised

    January 14, 2024

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