Complete your daily required Schoology Warm UP.
DP Art next year. There is now an SL option where you only take the DP Art for one year.
Task#1: Final Reflection Set UP
Create 3 slides after your wrapped process slide.
REMINDER THE CRITERIA IS NOT THE SAME AS LAST UNIT
- First Slide: Label as Final Wrapped Project and add a picture of your completed Wrapped Project. Make sure the image is in the correct orientation, cropped/edited and is as large as possible.
- Second Slide: Reflection Part 1-Composition and Value (see below for reflection details)
- Third Slide: Reflection Part 2-Media Exploration/Application and Craftsmanship/Presentation (see below for reflection details)
For each criteria: REMINDER THE CRITERIA IS NOT THE SAME AS LAST UNIT
- Evaluate your work by giving your self a score of 1-4(1-needs improvement, 2-developing, 3-profecient, 4-exemplary)
- Reflect on process (using higher level art vocabulary for this unit)
- Discuss strengths and weakness (using higher level art vocabulary for this unit)
- Elaborate on areas for improvement/ future application (using higher level art vocabulary for this unit)
Label Refection. See example below from last unit
Due by 11:59PM Wednesday (4/14). You do not need to upload to schoology.
- Create a new Unit Folder in your shared google drive folder for my class.
- Call this unit -"Unit 3: Mass Media/Social Commentary"
- Create a Unit 3 Google Slide Presentation
- Call this Presentation-"Your Name Mass Media/Social Commentary"
- Put this on your first slide as well-"Your Name Mass Media/Social Commentary"
- Take a screen shot of your completed folder w/ slide presentation
- Upload to schoology by 11:59 Thursday 4/15
- "Google Drive Unit 3"
Video #1 instructions for Mind Map
Take notes on this lecture. I will record it and add the link to this post after class.
You will need to create a Mind Map from your notes (or take your notes in a Mind Map format. See below reminder/examples for Mind Maps: MindMaps will be due on Wednesday 4/21 at 11:59PM.
Link to Videos of the Lecture:
Video #2 of lecture
What Is Printmaking? A Look at the History of Creating Art in Multiples
Printmaking changed viewers access to visual art; replicating images multiple time allows the work to be exposed to a larger audience.
Printmaking is the artistic practice of transferring ink from a matrix onto material—typically paper—making multiple impressions of the same image. While there are different printmaking techniques (each having its own distinct characteristics), the end result is the ability to make several impressions of a single image.
Tanja Softić
https://tanjasoftic.com/
http://halsey.cofc.edu/travel-exhibitions/migrant-universe/
https://youtu.be/asX6ZlTkVVg
https://youtu.be/_09UdscPJiY
https://www.ryanmcginness.com/
https://www.vmfa.museum/learn/resources/ryan-mcginness-vmfa/
https://www.digitalamerica.org/brooke-inman-q/
https://studiotwothree.tumblr.com/post/81787742629/artist-spotlight-brooke-inman
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/338825571967037528/
https://studiotwothree.org/
Adaptation #1: Collagraph
Collagraphy is a printmaking process introduced in 1955 by Glen Alps in which materials are applied to a rigid substrate. The word is derived from the Greek word koll or kolla, meaning glue, and graph, meaning the activity of drawing
https://www.annacurtius.com/blog/how-to-make-a-collagraph-print-in-four-steps
Anna Curtius Process Video
A collagraph print is made by gluing different materials to cardboard and creating a kind of collage. During the inking process the ink will rub off surfaces that are smooth or higher and stay on surfaces that hold more ink, at edges and at lower points thus creating the image. (Anna Curtius)
Video #3 of Lecture
https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/f/frottage
Frottage is a surrealist and ‘automatic’ method of creative production that involves creating a rubbing of a textured surface using a pencil or other drawing material
Frottage Technique Video
Extended Version: Max Ernst Texture Tile
How to Frottage
The monoprint is a form of printmaking where the image can only be made once, unlike most printmaking which allows for multiple originals
https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/m/monoprint
Low Budget Monoprinting
Paul Klee Technique
Jim Dine: making small common place objects MONUMENTAL (transcending)