GCSE Art Exam 2013

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Year 11 ART EXAM 2013


GCSE ART & DESIGN 2013 EXAMINATION • Jouneys • Effects of Light • Collections • Close up


Things you need to know… • You have just 8 weeks to prepare. • You must meet all 4 assessment objectives. (25% each, 20 marks) • You must present all work in a sketchbook or on design sheets. • Your work will be handed in on the 2nd day of the 10 hour exam (26th March) • Exam – 25th and 26th March


Tips  • Choose a question as soon as you can. • Research as many artists as you can and only choose ones who you feel you would like to influence you. • Use lesson time well. • Attend art club on Wednesdays and Thursdays. • DO NOT FALL BEHIND WITH YOUR WORK!! • MEET WEEKELY DEADLINES!!


Assessment Objectives AO1 - Develop ideas through investigations informed by contextual and other sources demonstrating analytical and cultural understanding • You need to look at the work of other artists from different times and places. • Make notes about their work explaining your thoughts and opinions. • Draw, take photos and use the internet to download images and information about art and artists. • Try to produce work using similar styles to the artists’ work you have looked at.


Assessment Objectives AO2 – Refine your ideas through experimenting and selecting appropriate resources, media, materials, techniques and processes. • You need to use lots of different materials and ways of making art and try to improve how your work looks as you continue to produce it. • Practise with a range of pencils, pens, chalk, paint, wire, clay, card and any other material used throughout the course. • Show lots of trying out and attempts in your books, never remove pages and keep all your work.


Assessment Objectives AO3 - Record ideas, observations and insights relevant to intentions in visual and/or other forms • You need to fill pages of your books with pictures which are to do with your art projects. • You need to draw objects in real life with any type of drawing material, pencil, pen etc. • You need to take photos and place these in your books and you also need to cut and stick pictures you have found in your books.


Assessment Objectives AO4 - Present a personal, informed and meaningful response demonstrating analytical and critical understanding, realising intentions and where appropriate, making connections between visual, written, oral or other elements. • You need to make a really good final piece of pieces of work for each project. • This work should show that you have linked it to the project title or theme and it should have something to do with artists or a culture.


Journeys

• Throughout history and across cultures, artists have responded to different kinds of journey. • Ancient Egyptians depicted mythical journeys, such as the daily journey of the sun god Ra. • The Inuit people of Greenland made three-dimensional tactile maps to help them navigate coastlines • Joseph Cornell created imagined journeys in his box constructions. • The work of artists Hamish Fulton and Richard Long documents journeys they have made.  Research appropriate sources and produce your own response to ONE of the following: EITHER (a) an imagined journey OR (b) a real journey.


Ancient Egyptian Mythical Journeys :


Inuit people of Greenland: • Tactile 3D maps created to help them navigate coastlines


Joseph Cornell • • •

Created imagined journeys in his box constructions All of Cornell's work was assembled from found pieces He filled them with images clipped out of magazines and objects he found during his thrift store crawls


Hamish Fulton •

In response to a walk; Fulton

created large wall texts and a series of drawings, collages and prints. These are reflections of the time he spent in this area.

Hamish Fulton – A 31 Day Road Walking Journey


Richard Long • • •

Art made by walking in landscapes. Photographs of sculptures made along the way Walks made into text works


Effects of Light • Impressionist painters were inspired by how the effects of light changed the appearance of their subjects. • More recently, artists Susan Derges and Garry Fabian Miller have exploited the effects of light to create camera-less photographs, and filmmaker Tacita Dean has explored the unique effects of projected light  Research appropriate sources and create your own work in response to Effects of Light.


Impressionist Painters Claude Monet When Monet painted the Rouen Cathedral series, he had long since been impressed with the way light imparts to a subject a distinctly different character at different times of the day and the year, and as atmospheric conditions change. For Monet, the effects of light on a subject became as important as the subject itself. His Series Paintings, in which he painted many views of the same subject under different lighting conditions, are an attempt to illustrate the importance of light in our perception of a subject at a given time and place

Rouen Cathedral, the West Portal, Dull Weather 1892

Rouen Cathedral, West Faรงade, Sunlight 1892

Rouen Cathedral ,red, Sunlight 1892

The portal and the tower of the saint-romain at morning sun, Harmony in Blue 1893


Susan Derges • •

Makes pictures without a camera; most often working with natural landscapes Captures the quintessence of that moment of creation: fixing images onto a surface

River Taw, 19 January 1999, photograph, 76.2cm x 30.5cm by Susan Derges


Garry Fabian Miller • Has made exclusively 'camera-less’ photographs since the mid 1980s. • He works in the darkroom, shining light through coloured glass vessels and over cut-paper shapes to create forms that record directly onto photographic paper.

‘Becoming Magma, New Year, January 2005' 2005 Water, light, dye destruction print

‘Becoming Magma 2' June 2004 Water, light, dye destruction print


Tacita Dean • Tacita Dean is a British artist now based in Berlin. • She is best known for her use of film. • Dean’s films act as portraits or depictions rather than conventional cinematic storytelling, capturing fleeting natural light or subtle shifts in movement. • Her static camera positions and long takes allow events to unfold unhurriedly.


Collections • Lisa Milroy’s paintings are based on collections of everyday objects. • Tony Cragg and Jean Shin have produced installations made from collections of found objects. • Chrsitian Boltanski often uses photographs of people and collections of related objects in his installations.  Study appropriate sources and produce your own response to ONE of the following: EITHER (a) a collection of related objects OR (b) a collection of found objects.


Lisa Milroy • Is a Anglo-Canadian painter who lives and works in the UK. • Lisa is known for painting everyday items such as clothes, shoes and vases in the form of collections. • She paints things in formations such as grids, groups, lines, rows and columns, which are often painted on plain backgrounds.

Shoes, 1985

Light bulbs, 1988

Melons, 1986


Tony Cragg • Is a British visual artist specialised in sculpture. • Many of Cragg's early works are made from found materials, discarded construction mate-disposed household materials.


Jean Shin • Jean Shin is an American artist who lives and works in New York City. She is best known for her labor-intensive, sculptural process of transforming accumulations of cast-off objects into visually alluring, conceptually rich works. Glass Block (Tacoma), 2006

Settings, 2010 Ceramic plates and tiles

Hide Series, 2004 Cut leather and suede (shoes), thread and shoelaces


Christian Boltanski • Is a French sculptor, photographer, painter and film maker. • In the 1970s, Boltanski started using mainly photography for expressing form, exploration of consciousness, and remembering. • After 1976, he started treating photography as painting, making collages of sliced photographs of still nature and everyday life banality in order to reflect collective aesthetic condition of modern civilization in ordinary, stereotypical way.


Close-up • Artists are sometimes inspired by the idea of close-up views of their subject. • For example, the Boyle family, Robert Cottingham, Alison Watt and the photographer Andreas Feininger have created unusual and sometimes abstract work from close-up views.  Research appropriate sources and create your own response to Close-up.



Boyle Family • • •

Boyle Family is a group of collaborative artists based in London. Boyle Family aims to make art that does not exclude anything as a potential subject. Over the years, subjects have included: earth, air, fire and water; animals, vegetables, minerals; insects, reptiles, water creatures; human beings and societies; physical elements and fluids from the human body. The media used have included performances and events; films and projections; sound recordings; photography; electron-microphotography; drawing; assemblage; painting; sculpture and installation. Projections of bodily fluids during the performance of Son et Lumiere for Bodily Fluids and Functions 1966

Images from the microprojector in the performance Son et Lumiere for Insects, Reptiles, & Water Creatures 1966


abstraction

pattern man made environment

collaborative

casts of earth’s surface

photography

natural world

tactile texture



Robert Cottingham •

Robert Cottingham is considered to be one of most important original Photorealist painters. Cottingham's work focuses on items associated as Americana.


photo-realism symbols

line shape

American Life

photography

colour typography

Robert Cottingham



Alison Watt •

Alison Watt OBE is a Scottish painter, born in Greenock on 11 December 1965. Alison Watt graduated from Glasgow School of Art in 1988. Pulse, 2006


painting

ALISON WATT

tone

emphasis contrast

form

composition abstraction monochrome

folds fabrics


the everyday

Domenico Gnoli hair

tone detail

clothing

cropping visual texture

form

Surrealism


abstraction disintegration

Michael Chase Area of Interest

colour photography visual texture

movement

digital manipulation


Sarah Graham

form tone

focal point

depth of field

childhood

colour photo-realism painting exaggeration


expression collaboration

Cara Thayer and Louie Van Patten

form the body the human condition

focal point tone texture


neutral colour palette

emphasis vessels Ronit Baranga

sculpture psychology

the human form

form

ceramics


Andreas Feininger •

Andreas Bernhard Lyonel Feininger was an American photographer and a writer on photographic technique. He was noted for his dynamic black-and-white scenes of Manhattan and for studies of the structures of natural objects.



Week 1 and 2 (5 lessons)

ASSESSMENT OBJECTIVE 1 RESEARCH – IMAGES & ARTISTS

Develop their ideas through investigations informed by contextual and other sources, demonstrating analytical and cultural understanding.


11 - 12 Marks: Grade C • A generally consistent ability to effectively develop ideas through investigations informed by contextual and other sources. • A generally consistent ability to demonstrate analytical and cultural understanding.

C • Facts about the artist. • Comments about what you like/dislike. • Reasons why. • Good layout – written on lines. • Images of artists work. • Well presented title. • How the artist could influence you.


13 – 16 Marks: Grade B and A • A consistent ability to effectively develop and explore ideas through investigations purposefully informed by contextual and other sources. • A consistent ability to demonstrate analytical and cultural understanding.

B and A • Personal response with feelings and mood mentioned. • Title reflecting the artist. • Colour/drawings in the border. • Background.


17 – 20 Marks: Grade A* • A highly developed ability to effectively develop and creatively explore ideas through investigations informed by • contextual and other sources. • A confident and highly developed ability to demonstrate analytical and cultural understanding.

A*

• Whole page reflecting the artist. • Personal response making connections to the work of others. • Drawings in the background. • Exceptional presentation. • In depth analysis.


Compulsory Tasks • Presenting at least 2 double page researches. • Create at least one ‘study’ of an artists work.


To obtain good marks… • Ask for feedback. • Draft work first if this will help you. • Be as personal as you can be and make visual links, say how the work will influence your work and how it inspires you. • Make all written work look beautiful, it is ART after all!!


First Homework • Bring Research your next lesson on an artist from the exam paper. • Be prepared to use lesson time to present research. • Start to present your pages


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