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Starting Points
Abstract
Working
Habitats
AQA GCSE Fine Art 2019 - Externally Set AssignmentCounts towards 30% of your final mark for your GCSE grade
After the prep. time, you will have
10 hours over 2 days
AO1 (Develop) -24 marksFind relevant artists to look atUse this work to inspire mini pieces of workMake personal comments about this workVisit museums, galleries, cities, spaces etc to inspire your work
AO2 (Experiment) – 24 marksExplore different media in your sketchbookUse different techniques and processesEvaluate how successful your experiments have been
AO3 (Record)- 24 marksCollect and present only relevant imageryProduce high quality drawings/sketches/ paintings etcTake your own photos Annotate your work thoroughly
AO4 (Present) – 24 marksProduce confident and high quality final piece/sEnsure your work links to your prep work and artists that you researched
Select ONE of the starting points
. AbstractMany artists, craftspeople and designers work in an abstract manner. Frank Gehry’s architectural designs are inspired by the abstract shapes
in Cubist paintings. John Hoyland made colourful abstract paintings and designer Michelle House creates abstract printed textiles. Henry Holmes Smith’s experimental photographs explore colour and light. Paul Rand made corporate logo designs inspired by Modernism, in particular
the paintings of Wassily Kandinsky. Alison Britton makes abstract ceramic vessels. Research appropriate sources and create your own work based on Abstract.
Working The act of working, the way something works and different working processes have interested many artists, craftspeople and
designers. The shipbuilding paintings of Stanley Spencer and Frank Brangwyn’s studies of industrial scenes illustrate hard manual work. J.C. Burrows’ photographs of Cornish mine workers capture the working conditions of nineteenth century tin mining. Jean
Tinguely created fantastic working machine sculptures and puppet makers Basil Jones and Adrian Kohler design working models of figures and animals for film and theatre. Textile artist Ann Goddard and installation artist Jessica Stockholder combine different
working processes in their artwork.
Research appropriate sources and create work based on your own interpretation of Working. Habitats
Many artists, craftspeople and designers are inspired by human, animal, marine and plant habitats. John Bratby painted domestic habitats. Catrin Mostyn Jones’ ceramics and jewellery are inspired by marine habitats. Nick Brandt’s photographic series ‘Inherit the Dust’ documents
the effect of human intervention on animal habitats and Tom Eckersley has designed posters for ‘The World Wide Fund for Nature’ about the impact of climate change on habitats. Edith Meusnier makes textile installations that interact with plant and animal habitats and Moshe Safdie
designed housing in his ‘Habitat 67’ project. Research appropriate sources and create your own work based on Habitats.
ExamIn the exam you will create your final piece that links with the
question you have chosen. The more you put into the prep the easier the exam will be! There will be no surprises and you will take it on confidently!
Star%ng Tasks….INTRODUCTION PAGEIn your sketchbook produce an introduc%on page based on your chosen theme.
Use your imagina7on with this page! Just make sure it includes the star7ng point 7tle somewhere on the page.
MIND MAPUsing a mind map, note down all the related words that come to mind when you think of your theme/ ques7on.Your mind map should be pleasing to the eye and contain a wide variety of ideas.
ARTIST INVESTIGATIONProduce an ar%st page on an at least 3 ar7sts that links to your chosen theme. You must select at least 2-3ar7sts from the hand-out given to you and if you can find one yourself.
Ensure your page includes the following:
- The ar7st’s name
- Images of the ar7st's work
- An analysis of the ar7st's work (using the prompt sheet as a guide)
- A copy/ study of a piece of the ar7st's work OR your own interpreta7on OR both!
Important Informa%on· You will be aiming to show that you have met all of the assessment objec7ves
in your prepara7on work as well as in the
work created in the 10 hours.· The controlled/exam condi7ons will be
spread over two days and total 10 hours. · The work you produce in your prep 7me and in the 10 hours will count towards the 60% of your final gradealongside other coursework.
Marking and Grading -A01 -Critical Studies
AO2 –Designs and Samples
A03 –Collecting of images and Drawings .
A04 – Final Piece.
Evidence of artists, designers work within the project and how it has influenced your work.
Ideas, sketches,Plans - workingtowards a final planfor a final piece.Material samplesand prototype forthe final piece.
Photographs and collected images based on a chosen theme. Drawings in various media and scale of a chosen topic.
A final outcome forthe project. Thiscould be ceramics,print, painting,sculpture.
Q. AbstractFrank Gehry’s architectural designs are inspired by the
abstract shapes in Cubist paintings.
Definitionexisting in thought or as an idea but not having a physical or concrete existence."abstract concepts such as love or beauty"
2.2.relating to or denoting art that does not attempt to represent external reality, but rather seeks to achieve its effect using shapes, colours, and textures."abstract pictures"
Q. Abstract architecture
Ian Murphy
Q. Abstract architecture
HundertwasserIan Murphy
Q. Abstract architecture
Hundertwasser-Austrian architect
Ian Murphy
Q. Abstract
Abstract – music
Q. Abstract- cells
ArtistsBruce Riley and klari Reis
Q. Abstract- fruit
Designer Michelle House creates abstract printed textiles. Q. Abstract
Henry Holmes Smith’s Wassily Kandinsky.
Q. Abstract Faces
Q. Abstract
Q. Abstract
Q2. Abstract - Pinterest
Gerhard Richter
Q. Abstract backgrounds