Everybody knows... the four Everybody knows... the four AOs AOs
For the exam you have to show evidence of: ALL 4 of the AOs (Assessment Objectives)
AO1: Looking at other artists AO2: Experimenting with media AO3: Recording your ideas AO4: Making a final piece
It is important that you begin working on the EXAM Paper straight away.
START TODAY!
Exam dates….
14th, 15th and 18th May
Remember ….
The theme is merely a starting point to inspire you.
Feel free to take the project in any direction that you wish, provided that you can clearly justify and explain how the theme has inspired your thoughts and ideas.
affairaffair
bondbond
similaritysimilarity
growinggrowing
kinshipkinship
exchangeexchange
correlationcorrelation
accordaccord
linklink
ratioratio
tie-intie-in
tietie
similaritysimilarity
networknetwork
likenesslikenessparallelparallel
contactcontact
dependencydependencyanalogyanalogy
increaseincrease
patternpattern
associationassociation
conjunctionconjunction
relativityrelativity
Contextual references
The artists on the next few slides are suggestions to help you think about possible ideas. You may already have ideas of your own.
Keep an open mind at this point...
There is also a Beaumont Pinterest Album of Artists and ideas to support you with your project
Ron Mueck
Mueck's sculptures faithfully reproduce the minute detail of the human body, but play with scale to produce disconcertingly jarring visual images.
Emily Blincoe Photographer Emily Blincoe's love of simplicity is evident in her series "Arrangements," an ode to colour, shape and impeccable prop styling.
Zander Olsen • ‘This is an on-going series of
constructed photographs rooted in the forest. These works, carried out in Surrey, Hampshire and Wales, involve site specific interventions in the landscape, ‘wrapping’ trees with white material to construct a visual relationship between tree, not-tree and the line of horizon according to the camera’s viewpoint’.
From 1969, Kiefer worked on book design. Some examples are worked-over photographs and his more recent books consist of sheets of lead layered with the artist's characteristic materials of paint, minerals, or dried plant matter. For example he assembled numerous lead books on steel shelves in libraries, as symbols of the stored, discarded knowledge of history
Anselm Kiefer
Chiharu ShiotaShiota explores the relationships between past and present, living and dying, and memories of people implanted into objects. To these she adds intricate, web-like threads of black and red.