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Year 11- Mark Making

Year 11- Mark Making. What is mark making?. Historical examples of mark making? Indigenous art- Early graffiti? Asian art and decoration Traditional painting/art Contemporary examples- stencilling/paste-ups/graffiti. Mark making and the narrative.

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Year 11- Mark Making

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  1. Year 11- Mark Making

  2. What is mark making? • Historical examples of mark making? • Indigenous art- Early graffiti? • Asian art and decoration • Traditional painting/art • Contemporary examples- stencilling/paste-ups/graffiti

  3. Mark making and the narrative • Mark making refers to story telling- a narrative about the historical context, passing on a story and the artist themselves • The manner and application of the art also reflects the artist and the period

  4. Symbols

  5. Symbols

  6. Symbols

  7. Create 2 stories • One using the indigenous symbols • One using your symbols detailing something from your life-E.g. how you got to school, a trip you went on, etc.

  8. Contemporary graffiti- week 2 • Grew out of the hip hop culture in NY in the 1970s- part of the four elements of the culture- breakdancing, graffiti, Mcing and Djing • How are these four elements reflected on other cultures- consider indigenous Australian culture. Cave painting, dance, song, instruments.

  9. Tagging/Pieces • Tagging- refer to applying your name/tag in a quick manner • A piece is a more detailed and colourful artwork • Throw-ups- A quick piece, usually characterised by “bubble” lettering with little detail • Being “All City” was the aim of early graffiti artists, applying their artwork to as many trains as possible so that people across the city could see their art/name.

  10. What’s in a name? • Think of your own penname • Design a tag for your name • Refine it

  11. Out for fame • To what degree do you believe contemporary graffiti artists are “out for fame” or to convey a pertinent social message?

  12. Definition of Graffiti • Graffiti (singular: graffito; the plural is used as a mass noun) is the name for images or lettering scratched, scrawled, painted or marked in any manner on property.

  13. Styles of graffiti • Bubble- complete alphabet • Wild Style- complete alphabet • Characters- represent the artist, often an adaptation of a popular cartoon character- simplistic portrait- something that can be completed quickly. • Colouring options- drip, spots, patterns, blocks.

  14. Style Wars • Beat Street

  15. Your environment… • Through the focus of Mark Making students investigate their local and personal environment • キInterior/exterior- street, home, bedroom, school, social hangout… • Complete a mind-map of your environment • Write 50 words on what does environment mean to you

  16. Quick sketch activity… • 5 minutes per sketch, plus journal • Classroom • Downstairs • Street • Mall • Homework- outside of home, then room- can be photographed

  17. Mindscape and dreamscape

  18. Built/Natural Environment

  19. Explorations of Multiplicity with representations of the local and student’s personal environment. • Historical, geographical, sociocultural, technological, personal perspectives

  20. Practice Exam • Analyse- to pull apart • Use third person (NO 1st person- I, me, you…) • It is clear that, it is obvious that, it is apparent, Evidently, • Consider the artist’s intention • Line, shape, colour, movement • What is in the painting? • Social context? • What is effective? Confusing?

  21. Homework- Collage activity/Mixed media • キLandscape and cityscape • Chose either a landscape or cityscape and create a collage that depicts the scene- used mixed media.

  22. Exam structure • 1. Introduce artist, title of work, year of completion, art movement the artist belonged to and social happenings • Discuss what is in the picture and some of the major features- not in too much detail. • Highlight the significance/importance of the work. This work is an excellent example of… • 2. Discuss the work in more detail- colour, line, shape, movement, detail, materials, effect • 3. What is the message/motivation/intention of the artist? • 4. What is effective? • 5. Conclusion- sum up your major points, discuss how the artist may continue to be analysed and influence other artists in the future

  23. Monday week 5 • Review homework- bedroom/house picture/sketch/photograph • Practice exam- Analyse this painting… • Weeping Woman- Picasso • 1. Draw the original • 2. Adapt your own

  24. Visual Diary • Are you experimenting with different media- photography, drawing, 3D, painting, printing, stencilling, collage, video…? • Are you reflecting on each activity- showing your journey, explaining your thought processes, sharing your viewpoints on art, finding examples of art that INSPIRES you? • In your work, is it clear where your influences are from? • Are you researching artists?

  25. Week 5 Friday • Exam next Friday • Practice exam on Monday • Dreamscape • Mindscape

  26. What do you dream of? • Surrealism discussion • Analysis of Dali’s work • Common dreams- often our fears- flying, falling, death, embarrassing situations, love, things we have to do… • Complete a brainstorm map with things you dream of

  27. Dreaming… • Sketch your ideas • Now plan your piece- either a painting, photograph, sketch, 3D… • Due next Friday- invite the viewer into your dreams…

  28. Consider… • The setting/scene- a beach, forest, desert, city, classroom • Distorting the image • Juxtaposition- putting images together that normally would not occur in real life • Explain your choices…

  29. Film clip examples • Bjork’s- Army of Me • The Beatles- Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds • Gwen Stefani- What you waiting for? • Album cover examples- Muse

  30. Monday week 6 practice exam • Refer to the elements of art…

  31. Week 6 Monday • Practice Exam • A) Page 48 - Peter Booth, “Painting” 1977 B) Page 93 “The Cleaner” Anne Zahalka  • Describe what you see in the artwork and what kind of landscape it could be: • What nationality could the person in the image be? What characteristics and principles help project this ideal? • List the elements of art that are present in this image and give an example of each:

  32. Elements • LINE:  • COLOUR:  • TEXTURE:   • SPACE:  • SHAPE:  • VALUE:  • Describe the emotions that are projected from this image: • PRINT ‘EXAM PREP’ DOC SEE MEGAN

  33. Homework • Research the following artists: • Janet Lawrence and Fiona Foley • Jeffrey Smart • Lin Onus • Sally Smart • Kathy Temin

  34. Mixed media piece due week 10 • Gouache painting- layer painting- inspired by music – week 7 • Collograph-cardboard tile- detailed close-up of one section of painting textured- stick on buttons, materials etc-week 8 • Combine elements of the two- add other elements- week 9 • Show examples from file

  35. Gouache Layered Painting • Instructions • Paint lines and shapes from the music and internal direction. No real images to be painted. No houses, love hearts

  36. etc. • In layers, you must use some of all the colours placed out (even if it is only one dot) • Keep to your individual process. Do not compare yourself to others. We are trying to create unique artworks. Do not comment on others artworks or make

  37. suggestions to them. They must have their own process. • The fourth layer remains. Take time to reflect on the shapes and lines that draw you (your own subconscious). Look at the painting from all sides, which direction feels right? Bring those particular images out. The images can be real (eg face) or abstract (eg patterns, lines etc). Be true to your developing style and mark making (do you tend to blend or have solid colour?). You will be allowed to use black and white in the final layer. • You might only outline images or you might completely repaint the images… • It is ok to not like the end product. Hopefully you learn something in the PROCESS that you can take into further work…

  38. Primary colours- red, yellow, blue • Secondary colours- green, purple, orange, • Black and white- • Outline/shading

  39. Lesson one- Primary colours • Hearts a mess- Gotye • To her door- Paul Kelly

  40. 12/3- Blacks/whites/outlines • Nigel,Jaycob exam • Listen to the next set of music • Add black/white to your piece • Add outlines to either specific shapes or the whole piece • No identifiable images • Do you need to turn the image? • Take photos- these will need to be printed/saved

  41. Reflect… • Take time to reflect on the shapes and lines that draw you (your own subconscious). Look at the painting from all sides, which direction feels right? Bring those particular images out. The images can be real (eg face) or abstract (eg patterns, lines etc). Be true to your developing style and mark making (do you tend to blend or have solid colour?). You will be allowed to use black and white in the final layer. • You might only outline images or you might completely repaint the images… • It is ok to not like the end product. Hopefully you learn something in the PROCESS that you can take into further work…

  42. Collograph • Choose one section of the painting • Create a collograph on this one section-include layers • Collograph-cardboard tile- detailed close-up of one section of painting textured- stick on buttons, materials etc-week 8 • Combine elements of the two- add other elements- week 9 • Show examples from file

  43. Combining the layered painting/collograph

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