Free Spanish Art Lesson Plans – Where to Start

Why do students go silent in Spanish class? Get the free activity

Free Spanish lesson plan resources exist — there’s no shortage of them. TPT, Speaking Latino, teacher blogs, WikiArt, Google Arts and Culture — the internet is full of materials you can download and use at no cost.

The problem isn’t availability. It’s that free resources are almost always pieces, not systems. A biography here. A vocabulary list there. A discussion prompt someone else wrote for a different artwork. By the time you’ve found the right pieces and adapted them for your class, you’ve spent more time preparing than the lesson takes to run.

For art study specifically this is especially true. The artwork itself is free — WikiArt and Google Arts and Culture give you access to thousands of paintings and sculptures at no cost. The artist information is free — biographies, historical context, quotes are all available. What isn’t free is the system that turns all of that into a ready-to-teach lesson your students will actually respond to.

This post gives you the best free starting points for Spanish art lesson plans — and shows you exactly where free runs out.

Free Artwork Resources

These are the best places to find high quality artwork to display in class — free to use and easy to access.

WikiArt — wikiart.org

The most comprehensive free art database available. Searchable by artist, country, style, and period. Every artist covered on this site has a WikiArt gallery — Rivera, Botero, Kahlo, Picasso, Dalí, Velázquez, Goya — all there, all free, all high resolution. Start here for any artwork you plan to use in class.

Google Arts and Culture — artsandculture.google.com

Virtual museum tours, high resolution artwork, artist biographies, and cultural context — all free. Particularly useful for showing students where specific artworks are housed and giving them a sense of the physical scale of murals and sculptures.

Museum websites

Most major museums publish their permanent collections online at no cost. The Smithsonian, MoMA, the Prado, and the Detroit Institute of Arts all have searchable online collections with downloadable images. If you’re studying Rivera, the Detroit Institute of Arts website has extensive resources on his Detroit Industry Murals specifically.

Free Artist Information

These resources give you the biographical and historical context you need to introduce an artist confidently — even if you’ve never taught art before.

Grow Spanish artist posts

Each artist post on this site gives you a complete overview — biography in English and Spanish, style description, fun facts, quotes, and where to see the work. These posts are built specifically for Spanish teachers and are free to use as classroom reference material.

Diego Rivera — Mexican Muralist

Fernando Botero — Colombian Artist

Khan Academy Art History — khanacademy.org

Free video lessons on art history organized by period and artist. Particularly strong on European artists — Velázquez, Goya, Picasso, Dalí — with clear explanations of historical context that you can watch yourself or show to advanced classes.

Wikipedia

Underrated as a teacher resource. The Wikipedia pages for major artists are detailed, well-sourced, and regularly updated. Useful for quickly getting up to speed on an artist you haven’t taught before. Not a primary source — but a solid starting point.

Free Discussion Frameworks

These resources give you a starting structure for running an art discussion in Spanish — without building the framework from scratch.

Grow Spanish concept posts

The art study concept posts on this site give you free frameworks for every stage of a discussion session — describing, analyzing elements and principles, leading appreciation discussions. Each post includes vocabulary lists and discussion prompts you can use immediately.

How to Teach Students to Describe Art in Spanish
Elements of Art in Spanish
Principles of Art in Spanish
Spanish Art Vocabulary for Class Discussion

Visual Thinking Strategies (VTS) — vtshome.org

A free discussion methodology built around three questions: What’s going on in this picture? What do you see that makes you say that? What more can we find? Originally designed for art museum education but widely used in language classrooms. Works at any proficiency level and generates genuine student discussion.

Free Vocabulary Resources

Quizlet

Search “Spanish art vocabulary” and you’ll find dozens of free student-created sets covering elements of art, principles of art, description vocabulary, and artist-specific terms. Quality varies — check before assigning — but several solid sets exist.

The Grow Spanish – Spanish Art Vocabulary post

A free, organized vocabulary bank covering four categories — introducing the artwork, types of art, materials, and story description. Printable as a student reference sheet for any art study session.

Spanish Art Vocabulary for Class Discussion

Where Free Runs Out

Every resource listed above is genuinely useful. Together they give you the artwork, the artist information, the discussion framework, and the vocabulary — the raw ingredients for a strong art study lesson.

What they don’t give you is a complete ready-to-teach lesson.

Building one lesson from free resources typically looks like this: find the artwork on WikiArt, read the Wikipedia biography, watch a Khan Academy video, pull vocabulary from a Quizlet set, write your own discussion prompts, build your own slides, create your own student activity. That’s two to three hours of preparation for one session.

Done once, that’s manageable. Done consistently across a semester with different artists at different proficiency levels, the preparation time compounds quickly. Most teachers who start with free resources end up defaulting to the same two or three artworks they’ve already prepared — because building new sessions from scratch is too time-consuming to do regularly.

That’s the gap Historia de Arte fills. The discussion guide, vocabulary menu, interactive slides, and student notebook are already built — for any artwork you choose, at any proficiency level. You walk in ready. The free resources stay useful as reference and supplementary material. The paid system is what makes consistent art study possible.

A Simple Starting Point

If you want to run your first art study session this week using only free resources, here’s the shortest path:

Day 1 — Choose your artwork.

Go to WikiArt, search Fernando Botero, and choose one painting. Family and Mona Lisa, 12 Years Old both work well for first sessions.

Day 2 — Read the artist overview.

Read the Fernando Botero post on this site. You now have enough biographical context to introduce him confidently.

Day 3 — Prepare your prompts.

Use the five-step framework from the Describing Art in Spanish post — look, observe, describe, interpret, respond. Write two or three prompts for each step.

Day 4 — Run the session.

Display the artwork. Ask ¿Qué ves? Let the discussion build.

That’s it. One artwork. One artist. One framework. Forty-five minutes of genuine Spanish discussion — built entirely from free resources.

When you’re ready to do that consistently, with a different artist every few weeks, at multiple proficiency levels, without spending hours in preparation each time — that’s when Historia de Arte makes sense.

Keep Going →

Teach Spanish Through Art — the complete hub for art study in Spanish class Best Artists to Teach in Spanish Class — seven artists and what each one unlocks How to Teach Students to Describe Art in Spanish the five-step discussion framework