Tuesday 18 July 2017

A Level Art and Design Pre-Course Work (for new 1st Years)

AS Art and Design
Coursework Part I – “Journey”

Outline: Over the first few weeks of the course we will explore a range of approaches, producing a series of images around the theme of “Journey”.
Through this project we hope to build on your existing skills and introduce new ways of working, the techniques you will learn will also set you up to succeed with the second part of the AS Coursework which starts in November.
The images we create in this project will explore different aspects of a journey – this could be something simple like a shopping trip into town or a visit to a friend or you might choose to explore a more complex journey such as a trip overseas. Access to a camera/decent cameraphone will be essential.

Pre-Course Preparation Work
In order to prepare for your first project entitled “JOURNEY” you will need to take some photographs to provide visual stimulus for your project. To gather your photographs you will need to take a journey. You can record any aspects of your journey you feel are significant/appropriate, but ensure you cover all the categories outlined below.

DO:

  •    Try to take visually interesting images.
  •   Consider camera angle/viewpoint (high angle/low angle can give striking shots).
  •   Consider composition/cropping - zooming in on details can give strong imagery.
  •    Try to take the photos in good light – look at the weather forecast and plan accordingly if you are shooting outside.
  •   Try to arrange your light sources in front of your subjects (rather than behind, which creates silhouettes and loses detail).
  •    Read the brief carefully and plan your journey so it offers good opportunities to capture all the required images.

DON’T

  •       Use secondary imagery from the internet – this is your project, own it!
  •       Use old photos you have saved, take new images with the project in mind.
  •       Leave the task to the last minute and rush it.

These photos are important and thoughtful completion of this task is essential to making a good start to the course. The quality of the imagery you work from has a significant effect on the quality of the work you produce! A few example images are included in the brief to hopefully inspire your own explorations of the theme. Take several photos of each of the following:

·      Where you start your journey from (your point of departure).




·  Images of people you encounter on your journey (these could be a friends, relatives, or someone unfamiliar like a bus driver or shopkeeper).



·   A group of objects that symbolise your journey, the contents of your bag/pockets might be a good starting point for this (e.g. bags, keys, tickets, phone, watch, cash, bank cards, make up, hats/gloves/scarves, receipts, newspapers/books/magazines, snacks/drinks/packaging, pens/pencils, found objects such as pebbles, feathers or leaves). Given thought to how you arrange and light the objects and consider cropping and camera angle carefully.



· Landmarks you pass on your journey (e.g. churches, pubs, monuments, signposts).


·  Your mode of transport (from your feet to a train/bus/car/bike).


·  Your path/road/route – these images may be more visually stimulating if you also include aspects the surrounding environment


·      
    Your destination.




A Level Art - Getting Ahead Work for New 1st Years 2017

So you want to know about contemporary Art?

Soak up some Culture and get enthused by visiting exhibitions and galleries in London. Have a great day out and visit some of these:

Julian Merrow-Smith - Self Portrait

NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY:
BP Portrait Award 2017 22 June – 24 September 2017
Admission Free
Selected from 2,580 entries by artists from 87 countries around the world, the BP Portrait Award 2017 represents the very best in contemporary portrait painting.


TATE MODERN:
Alberto Giacometti 10 May – 10 September 2017
Admission £16.50 (under 18s)
Admission to the permanent collection is free.
Celebrated as a sculptor, painter and draughtsman, Giacometti’s distinctive elongated figures are some of the most instantly recognisable works of modern art.


SERPENTINE GALLERY:
Grayson Perry 8 June – 10 September 2017
Admission Free
Grayson Perry, one of the most astute commentators on contemporary society, presents a major exhibition of new work. The works touch on many themes including popularity, masculinity and the current cultural landscape.

SAATCHI GALLERY
From Selfie to Self-Expression 31 March - 23 July 2017
Admission Free
This is the world’s first exhibition exploring the history of the selfie from the old masters to the present day, and celebrates the truly creative potential of a form of expression often derided for its inanity. 

If you really can’t get up to London…
Then do something else to extend your knowledge of contemporary Art:
Contribute: If you produce a fantastic creative piece of your own over the Summer, then photograph it and use the #iamartataltoncollege to add it to our Instagram page www.instagram.com/iamartataltoncollege 


Deadline: Ensure you’ve Read, Watched, Visited or Contributed something before term starts on 11th September, even better do all four!

2nd Year A Level Portraiture Project

So over the summer you should be aiming to complete all the portraiture work in the brief below. This means when you return in September you should have (as a minimum):
  • A good range of powerful source photography, printed out and included in your sketchbook.
  • Several sustained drawings (observational from the mirror and in response to your photographs).
  • Quick expressive drawings.
  • Some printmaking.
  • The research into portraits from different eras (as outlined in the brief that follows).
When we return we will be developing imagery and techniques towards producing final pieces before half term. We will also complement our work with some additional research that relates strongly to the work you are producing.

"Grandad" by Martha Dobson (Former Alton College student)
Project Outline
Over the remainder of this term you will start work on your A2 Coursework Unit. Starting this Unit now gives you the maximum time and opportunity to produce a really strong set of work.
As our starting point we will be looking at the common theme of Portraiture, although there will be a chance to explore alternative subject matter later in this Unit.
Our focus over the next few weeks will be to complete initial studies from direct observation, generate source imagery through photography and drawing and complement this with thoughtfully selected research.
To enrich your understanding you should all make a study visit to the BP portrait award at the National Portrait Gallery before we return in September.

Observational Drawing
We will all complete some self-portrait studies from direct observation in sketchbooks. You will be given instruction and guidance from your Tutors to help you, but remember that good observational drawing is dependent on you sustaining a focussed approach.

Photography
Your final portrait will be a representation of yourself or another subject, you could even choose to deal with more than one figure. When taking your Photographs you should consider the following:
  • Composition/cropping (how much of the figure/s you include in the frame).
  • Viewpoint. Unusual Viewpoints (e.g. high or low camera angle) can add interest.
  • Lighting (specific lighting can add drama).
  • Background: the setting and space around the figure/s.
  • Props (these can add meaning or tell the audience more about the subject)
  • Gesture and facial expression.
  • Formal or informal pose?
Research
Before you start work on your outcome you will benefit from looking at how some other Artists have approached the theme of Portraiture. You should look at a minimum of 6 portraits by 6 different Artists, try to identify some historical and contemporary examples.
Two examples from each of the following lists would be appropriate (but there are countless other possibilities):

Rembrandt - Self Portrait

Historical (pre 1870)
El Greco, Diego Velazquez, Caravaggio, Leonardo Da Vinci, Titian, Jan Van Eyck, Jan Vermeer, Theodore Gericault, Jacques-Louis David, Francisco Goya, Frans Hals, Rembrandt, Joseph Wright of Derby, Hans Holbein, Bellini.

Edvard Munch - The Artist and his Model

Modern (1870 – 1970)
Edgar Degas, Stanley Spencer, Chaim Soutine, Pablo Picasso, Vincent Van Gogh, Paul Gauguin, Edvard Munch, Egon Schiele, Francis Bacon, Oscar Kokoschka, Max Beckmann, Henri Matisse, Otto Dix, Amedeo Modigliani.

David Cobley - Blues, Beer and Rock & Roll

Contemporary (post 1970)
David Hockney, Lucian Freud, Frank Auerbach, Chuck Close, Tai-Shan Schierenberg, Alison Lambert, Jenny Saville, Tim Okamura, Eric Fischl, Paula Rego, David Hancock, Robert Bechtle, Franz Gertsch, Jason Brooks, Stuart Pearson Wright, David Cobley.

After you have selected your 6 portraits analyse each one in detail and make visual responses to at least one portrait in each category. Aspects of each portrait you should discuss include:
·         Use of colour.
·         Technique.
·         Scale.
·         Lighting.
·         Composition.
·         Atmosphere/mood.
·         Formal or informal portrait?
·         Was the painting commissioned by the sitter?
·         Any story behind the image?
You should also find out a little about the Artist and identify when the portrait was made. Make a sustained visual response to one Artist in each category in appropriate media.

Development
From your photographs use your sketchbook to produce a series of drawn studies that enable you to plan your final piece. You should pay particular attention to devising an effective composition, if your photographs were successful you will already be well along the path towards this, use your drawings to experiment, crop and refine your final image.
You should move onto experiments with printmaking and then explore colour and technique through a range of media as you develop your responses to your source photography.

Time Plan
Week beginning Mon. 12th June.
  • Studio: Observational Self Portraits.
  • Private Study: Source Photography (complete by Monday 20th June)
Week beginning Mon. 19th June.
  • Studio: Completion of observational pieces, developmental studies from photographs.
  • Private Study: Artist Research (select and analyse images)
Week beginning Mon. 26th June.
  • Studio: Drawings and printmaking based on photographs.
  • Private Study: Artist Research (visual responses to sources). Research should be complete by Mon. 5th July.
Weeks beginning Mon. 3rd & Mon. 10th July. Lessons finish Weds. 12th July.
  • Studio: Mixed media experimentation exploring colour and technique.
  • Private Study: Collation and presentation of all work in sketchbooks.
 
Mustafa Ozel - Portrait of Beyza (from BP Portrait Award)
Make arrangements to visit the BP Portrait Award at the National Portrait Gallery (just off Trafalgar Square in London). http://www.npg.org.uk/whatson/bp-portrait-award-2017/exhibition/

Free entrance, open 22nd June – 24th September 2017.