RSA Arrow Vale Academy Gcse Art Exam Student Planning Sheet: Target Grade
RSA Arrow Vale Academy Gcse Art Exam Student Planning Sheet: Target Grade
RSA Arrow Vale Academy Gcse Art Exam Student Planning Sheet: Target Grade
Your art exam is a practical 10 hour (2 day) exam, completed unaided under exam
conditions in the large art room. You will prepare for the exam over the next 9 school
weeks, researching artists and experimenting with media, techniques and processes
so that you can produce your best work. Your exam paper will contain 7 titles. You
will choose one of these. Exam dates T.B.C (likely to be the week commencing 5th
May).
This booklet has all the information that you need to complete your work effectively. It
contains classwork and homework tasks that you need to complete with checklists so
that you can cross off your work as you complete it.
Your prep work should take the viewer on a personal, creative journey from your initial
ideas to finished piece(s) via research, recording, experimentation, drawing,
development and analysis…
We would expect 4-6 full (carefully presented ) A1 design boards, or 10 A2 boards or
a full A3 sketchbook by the time you reach the exam. (Yes, a lot of work!)
During your preparatory period you will research, investigate and develop your ideas.
Your work could be in sketchbooks, or 3D models (maquettes), video work etc). We
recommend working on A1 or A2 design boards, as they display well and allow you to
present your work in a way that shows connection between your ideas. These will,
however, have to be at your own expense (Black A1 mount board £1.20 from art dpt.).
It may be best for you to work in a sketchbook at home and assemble on the mount-
board in school. A3 or A2 sketchbooks are a good portable alternative (best to work on
one side of page only).
The work submitted for this examination must be your own unaided work.
All secondary Source material submitted must have clear reference to where it came
from (if an image from the internet is used, try to get the author’s name and the URL)
You must hand in all the preparatory work with your final piece(s) and at the end of
the examination. All your work, (i.e. exam outcome and prep work), will be marked using
the 4 equally weighted Assessment Objectives (see back page) with a maximum of 80
marks in total. Your work must fulfil all four of these assessment objectives
(shown at the back of this booklet).
Advice :
You should discuss your ideas with your teacher before deciding on your starting point.
You should make sure that any materials or equipment which you might need are available
before you start your exam. You must take all your preparatory work into the examination
sessions and hand in at the end.
You should look at examples of the work of other artists, craftspeople and/or designers as
part of your research.
You may work on further supporting studies until you have completed your final piece(s). You
may use any appropriate medium, method(s) and materials, unless the question states
otherwise.
2. Complete a basic mind map based on the project title you have decided upon
(key headings only, this will be expanded to add detail and a wide range of ideas).
3. Initial Ideas
Consider the following: What images will I collect? How will I collect them? How many
images will I need in each section?
Remember -Taking your own photographs and sourcing your own, individual primary
research is essential.
It is a good idea to investigate more than one artist in the early stages of your project. Note
down the artists’ names and analyse their use of colour, composition, subject matter,
techniques, materials, and how the artists’ work relates to your project title.
MAKE SURE YOUR FINAL PIECE MAKES FULL, INFORMED CONNECTIONS WITH THE ARTISTS
WORK.
3.3 Media
List the different techniques that you might investigate throughout your preparatory work
and the media you may choose.
4. Statement of Intent
Using the notes you have completed, compose your introductory paragraph for your title
page using full sentences. For example; “Throughout this project I will be exploring the
theme of Still Life. I will be looking at the artist, ……………....., and developing my ideas
through………….…… techniques.”
When researching this project please remember the extra help available to you including:
The PowerPoints and images collected by the Art staff are on the computer system
Shared area / Art
Please use the extra lunchtime and after school sessions to complete work or discuss
ideas and issues relating to your project with your teacher.
Make an initial mind map of possible ideas for your chosen theme.
You can do a quick, rough version, where you get down every idea
and image that you could associate with your title, then analyse this
2 and re-order to create a clear mind map with images. Include a
‘Mood Board’ of secondary source images relating to your
theme.
Artist Research 1 - Complete half an A1 board
Background and title
Brief, Relevant biographical information
Analysis of artist’s work (see the annotation and analysis
3 sheets)
Why you have chosen to research this artist.
Quality Studies (drawings and paintings) and clear images of
their work.
Artist Research 2 - Complete half an A1 board
Background and title
Relevant biographical information
4 Analysis of artist’s work
Why you have chosen to research this artist
Studies and clear images of their work
5 Mount up all artist research onto your boards/into sketchbooks
For a Lvl 5-6 grade, complete at least one more piece of artist
research using the method described above
G4G For an lvl 8-9 grade, complete at least two more pieces of
artist research using the method described above and copy a piece
of two of the artists work ina technique you like.
Review and evaluate all your preparation work that you have
completed during the last five weeks. Design a final piece building on
the strengths of your ideas, sketches and experiments – choose your
best bits and improve upon them.
Plan what your final piece will look like in detail. Make tweaks to the
composition. Make sure that you know the scale of work, exactly what
media you intend to use and, in the case of a painting, what surface
1 you are working on.
Make sure that you are confident with the techniques you intend to
4 use. Include alternative compositions as well as a full colour version
planned out before the exam, showing your final composition (the
same format as your final piece if not the same size)
Make sure that you have discussed your intentions with your
Art Teacher.
PLEASE, NO SURPRISES! DO NOT SUDDENLY DECIDE TO WORK IN A
MEDIA THAT YOU HAVE NOT TRIED AND YOU HAVE NOT EXPERIMENTED
WITH – YOU WILL LOOSE MARKS!
If you need any photocopying or specialist materials, you must
let your teacher know at least a week before the exam.
Make a time plan for your ten hour exam. Make sure that you know
when your exam times are and arrive with all your prep work and
appropriate materials.
GOOD LUCK!
When annotating you need to try and make your written work as creative as your
drawings and present it in a way that is as visually stunning as your work.
With your written analysis remember to be specific and expressive. Avoid simply
saying what we can already see - “Here I have drawn my dog…” yes, I can see that.
You need to be articulate. Try to avoid repeating yourself e.g. ……I like this and I like
that……I really like the way …..and what I like most is……I get it, you like it……why?
Key words:
Media – dry (pencil, charcoal, chalk etc) or wet (paint, ink etc)
Composition, space, area, scale, proportion, perspective
Blending, shading, harmonising, balance, rhythm, motion.
Mark making, cross hatching, etching, sketching, drawing
Create, analyse, evaluate, explore. Experiment, investigate, develop, compare,
refine, adapt, consider, interpret, convey, apply, combine, express.
When analysing work by another artist, here are some other things to
consider:
Always use your own words and include the title, date and media for any image
How have they used lines, tone, shape, colour, rhythm etc. to create an
effect?
Where is my eye drawn to first? Next…? Is there a main focal point?
What are your own feelings and opinions about the artwork? Justify your
response.
What connections can you make between this Artist’s work and other artists
that you have seen?
How could this Artist’s work relate to your own work?
What do you think are the main concerns of the artist? What meaning or effect
do you think s/he wants to convey?
CONTEXTUAL RESEARCH
Context Means the relevant surrounding circumstances
e.g. cultural, social, (art) historical, geographical, political etc…
Address these questions, but keep information brief and relevant
Shown more than one idea? Used primary and secondary sources?
explored different ideas?
taken them in interesting and original and personal directions?
presented these different ideas clearly?
Shown how my ideas have developed on a clear journey?
experimented with and refined my skills using the media chosen for my
exam piece?
(e.g. does your use of acrylic paint capture a range of tones? Can you
blend colours effectively? Have you refined these skills?)
drawn a sketch that clearly shows my final image or sequence of images
and how I want them to look?
analysed and evaluated my own work, explaining what works well, or not
and why?
Explored different compositions through thumbnail sketches analysed
their effectiveness?
Created a detailed colour sketch/ model of my final composition?
Are you totally prepared with everything you need for the final exam?
GCSE ASSESSMENT OBJECTIVES
AO3: RECORD
Record ideas, observations and insights relevant to your
intentions in visual and/or other forms.
E.G MIND MAPS, DRAWINGS FROM LIFE, YOUR OWN PHOTOGRAPHS OR
SCULPTURES, ANNOTATIONS ETC. BASED ON YOUR IDEAS, IMAGINATION &
OBSERVATIONS.
I.E. HOW WELL HAVE YOU SHOWN THE PROCESS LEADING TO YOUR FINAL
PIECE(S)? HAVE YOU SHOWN YOUR CREATIVE JOURNEY? HOW SUCCESSFUL
ARE THESE PIECES? HOW WELL HAVE YOU REFLECTED ON THE PROCESS AND
MADE CONNECTIONS BETWEEN YOUR OWN WORK AND YOUR CONTEXTUAL
RESEARCH (ARTISTS ETC)?