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GCSE ART and DESIGN Unit 2 (Fine Art) Start Date : Deadline date: Assessment date: 4 June 2018 3 December 2018 10 December 2018 Information for students These notes are to help you think, structure your thoughts, and plan how you will produce your work. Students should; Work in sketchbooks (Homework & School) Post twice a week to Wordpress Work from life (record using own photos) Research and think (Homework) Express and construct ideas Experiment with materials and methods Refer to the work of other artists Be interpretive rather than narrative or descriptive Start straight away When you have got an idea Try to explore your idea in words as well as drawings, photographs, etc. All this will help you to think. Even if you change your mind, keep all your notes. They will show how your idea has originated and developed and will get you more marks. Write down: Your idea. Your viewpoint, opinion, interests about the idea. Thoughts on artists and their work Care should be taken to ensure that any relevant preparatory, exploratory or supporting work is included in the assessment. Important Information The work you produce in your sketchbook and final piece/pieces are all assessed and marked by your teachers as well as the AQA Examiner. These marks go towards your final grade. Coursework is worth 60% of the final grade. Your coursework - Portfolio will include two themes one in the Fourth year - Portfolio Unit 1 and one in the Fifth year Portfolio Unit 2 this paper. Preparatory studies are vital in the assessment of the project as they will show how YOU have explored, developed, refined, recorded and presented your work. Good preparatory work will often be reflected in the final work. This preparatory work is a journey of exploration that will meet all assessment objectives. All work must be handed in for assessment on the dates included in this document.

Assessment Objectives Students will be expected to demonstrate a response to all of the assessment objectives. AO1 Develop ideas through investigations, demonstrating critical understanding of sources. AO2 Refine work by exploring ideas, selecting and experimenting with appropriate media, materials, techniques and processes. AO3 Record ideas, observations and insights relevant to intentions as work progresses. AO4 Present a personal and meaningful response that realises intentions and demonstrates understanding of visual language. Timings (17 school weeks -Total 27 weeks including holidays) Investigation Period (A01) 4 weeks (Artists ref. & Resources) Experimentation (A02) 3 weeks Development Period (A03) 3 weeks Final pieces Period (A04) 7 weeks You are to compile all you studies in your sketchbook using various media with a strong sense of design and post twice a week to Wordpress your progress. Your sketchbook is to be handed in for assessment on 3 December 2018 along with your final composition. This paper is to be issued to candidates on 4 June or as soon as possible after that date. All teacher-assessed marks to be completed by 14 December 2018 Time allowed A preparatory period working in your sketchbook followed by 10 hours of time on your final composition. Pupils to keep a log of time spent. Materials For this paper you must have: appropriate fine art materials and/or equipment Instructions Read the paper carefully. Before you start work, make sure you understand all the information. Choose one starting point and produce a personal response. You have a preparatory period to research, develop, refine and record your ideas. Your work during the preparatory period could be in sketchbooks, journals, design sheets, separate studies or in any other appropriate form, including digital media. You must make reference to appropriate sources such as the work of artists, craftspeople, designers and/or photographers. These can be those named in your chosen starting point and/or other relevant examples. You must identify and acknowledge sources that are not your own. Following the preparatory period, you will have 10 hours of time to complete your personal response. The work produced in the supervised time may take any appropriate form. You must clearly identify work produced during the supervised time. Information Your work will be marked out of 96. Advice You should discuss your ideas with your teacher before deciding on your starting point. You should make sure that all appropriate materials and/or equipment which you might need are available before you start the supervised sessions.

0 1 Landmarks - Buildings- Structures Landmarks are prominent natural or constructed features that have inspired artists such as John Sell Cotman and Thomas Girtin. Some artists, including Cezanne and Monet, responded to particular landmarks, making many studies of their chosen subjects over time. More recently the Land artists Michael Heizer and Robert Smithson have created earthworks that have become landmarks. Antony Gormley s sculpture Angel of the North and the installations on the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square have become contemporary landmarks. Vicki Ambery-Smith designs jewellery based on historic and contemporary buildings. Jenny Holzer presents her digital messages on buildings. Photographer and video artist Gordon Matta- Clark s series Building Cuts reinterprets sections of buildings. Painter Ian Murphy records the detail of eroded surfaces on Venetian buildings, and 18th century artist Giovanni Battista Piranesi made dramatic and fantastic drawings and prints detailing architectural features. Structures can be natural, architectural or manufactured. For example, many things in nature are supported by an internal or external structure. Architects design buildings using structural supports. Santiago Calatrava is an architect, engineer and artist who creates buildings and bridges as open structures. Investigate appropriate sources and develop a personal response to one of the following and produce your own work in any media based on: (a) a particular landmark/facade in your locality (b) a structure (c) an opportunity to design a sculpture to be placed in a prominent location of your choice.

0 2 The Human Condition - Self Image Artists such as Honore Daumier and Pieter de Hooch responded to the human condition in their paintings of everyday life. The installations of Christian Boltanski and Mona Hatoum often reflect personal concerns about the fragile nature of human existence. The use of film, photography and new media has led many artists, such as Richard Billingham, William Kentridge and Bill Viola, to explore contemporary ways of responding to the human condition. Self-image fascinates many artists. Chuck Close makes large-scale self-portraits. Gary Hill creates film installation work, recording close-up self-portrait details. Rembrandt painted himself over many years as a visual biography and Gerhard Richter uses photographs to construct his impersonal mysterious portraits. Research appropriate sources and produce your own work using any suitable media in response to The human condition or Self-Image.

0 3 Movement Some artists and photographers try to show movement in their work. For example, in his sculpture called Unique Forms of Continuity in Space, Boccioni tried to show the movement of the body through space. Take movement as your theme and investigate the ways in which artists, designers or photographers have shown movement in their work. Produce your own work based on the movement of people.

0 4 Popular Culture Pop Art originated in the l 950s and the movement was related to popular culture. British Pop artists Richard Hamilton, Eduardo Paolozzi and Peter Phillips made artworks by combining collage, print and painting. They have often used images and text taken from advertising, comic books, packaging and magazines of the period. Study the work of such artists and produce your own work based on one of the following: (a) icons and idols (b) here and now (c) still life.

0 5 Botanical Illustration Botanical artists and photographers observe plant forms very closely. Margaret Mee alerted us to the destruction and exploitation of the Amazon rainforest through her paintings of endangered species. Study appropriate artists such as the Bauer brothers, Georg D Ehret and Pierre-Joseph Redoute, or photographers such as Karl Blossfeld and Andreas Feininger and produce your own work based on one of the following: (a) native plants; (b) exotic plants; (c) fantastic plants.

0 6 Minimal Poster The result of minimalist poster design looks easy, but the work to get there is a hard slog. You need to define your message, cut it down to its bare essentials, and then come up with a design that works with one, two or three words and no more than a few design elements. It s a constant process of reduction to the absolute minimum. But the result is so striking that it is worth taking the time. Your key design elements are: colour, outlines, size, shapes, and lines. And you should not be using all of them at once. Take as your starting point a Movie or Book. Based on your research into any suitable artist(s), produce work of your own.

0 7 Landscape Investigate the ways that artists have responded to the environment. For example, O Keeffe focused on abstract elements, Constable on colour and Hokusai on pattern. Take as your starting point a rural or urban landscape, or the landscape of your mind. Based on your research into any suitable artist(s), produce work of your own.