Wednesday 4 September 2013

Foundation Diploma in Art & Design: Part One
Project Title: Drawing Programme (Museum Interpretation)

Units
UAL Level 3 Certificate in Drawing - Unit: 16
Foundation Diploma Units: 1, 2, 3 & 4
Refer to your Course Handbook for further information on units available on Moodle and Facebook
Deadline : Initial assessment – October 7th, Final Assesssment - December Assessment week
Tutor : All
Location Various studios and also off campus, Blackburn Museum and Art Gallery

Rationale
Central to the experience of any artist or designer is the process of drawing. We draw for all sorts of reasons, we draw to represent the world as we ‘see it’, or to express the way we ‘feel’ about it; we draw to communicate a complex idea, or to explain how something works; we draw to leave a trace of where we’ve been, or who we ‘are’. Sometimes we draw for no other reason than to take our minds of whatever else we’re doing. In the first few weeks of this course you will be exploring all manner of approaches to drawing, some of which may seem familiar, some entirely new, and some that seem to be totally strange and unpredictable. But each approach will build on the next, forming what many artists describe as a drawing vocabulary’. As you get to the end of these first few weeks you should have built up a range of strategies for drawing, which you will then begin to apply to your future projects.

To begin with you will be given the theme of Interpretation. Initially you will identify a piece of work by another well known artist or designer from the local museum collection. You are to interpret the work in a discipline of your choice. This may take the form of reproduction in a new medium or an updated version or even a conceptual response to the original proposition. You will be expected to produce a wide body of research to help you do this, you could explore the way other artists and practitioners have worked in a similar manner.


Throughout Part 1 you will be asked to experiment with a variety of different drawing process, and given the opportunity to work with different media to record and interpret the world around you. Your perceptions of what function drawing serves and your understanding of what makes a good or bad drawing will be challenged.
We believe that drawing is extremely important within contemporary art, design and media practice and is an art- form in its own right. It is clearly a fundamental skill in traditional areas such as illustration and representational painting but drawing, in one form or another, also plays an important part in disciplines where its contribution is less obvious. 
Drawing is useful as a means of:
Recording visual information
Developing an understanding of composition
Exploring and developing ideas
Developing an understanding of form and space
Expressing the invisible – emotion, for example
Presenting your ideas to others
Enhancing observational skills
Simplifying the visual world
Problem solving and planning.



Aims
UAL Foundation Diploma in Art & Design
Unit 1: To enable the candidate to develop a research method which demonstrates contextual awareness, ability to interpret and evaluate information and can be applied effectively.
Unit 2: To enable the candidate to develop ideas within the context of art and design using a broad range of approaches, appropriately and effectively.
Unit 3: To enable the candidate to develop the application of materials and methods to explore and solve creative solutions, safely and effectively.
Unit 4: To enable the candidate to develop planning, recording, analytical, reflective and evaluate skills which support their own learning.

UAL Level 3 Certificate in Drawing

Unit 16: To develop a critical understanding of drawing as a tool for interpretation and evaluation of research sources, information and ideas.






Objectives
By the end of the programme you should be able to:
Demonstrate how the use of measurement, proportion, composition and perspective can be used to improve your drawings.
Demonstrate how an understanding of different materials, marks, and approaches to drawing can be usefully employed to create more effective images.
Demonstrate how you can use drawing as a tool to research, record, express, visualize or interpret the world around you.
Show records of analysis and evaluation that record objectively what you have learnt in each session, and how you have taken that into work you do in your independent study time.
Provide examples of research that support what you have learnt in the sessions, and what you have done in your independent study time.

Assignment
You are asked to:
  • Outline a personal response to a work from the local collection.
  • Record and research the original in a suitable format
  • Produce a piece of writing ( 500 words) and describe your chosen work.
  • Consider and select what primary research might be useful to your project and what material/subjects/examples might be found.
  •  Consider and select appropriate drawing/recording methods to collect your primary research and prepare/collect drawing materials/tools in advance.
  •  Conduct effective and appropriate preliminary research.
  •  Build on your initial primary research, developing your ideas through to an exciting conclusion.
  • Extend initial contextual research with relevance to your chosen work




Constant reflection and evaluation of ideas, process, techniques and experiments through to final solution.


Assessment Evidence
Evidence from this project will be required for your Part 1 assessment and you may be asked to finish work that you have not completed. (See your handbook for more details) A group critique of your work will normally take place at the end of the project. This is an invaluable opportunity to engage with self and peer evaluation of your work and receive feedback. As a guide for assessment you might be expected to produce a body of work which consists of:
20 Drawings OR
30 Photographs (edited to 2 really good ones) OR
1 Three minute film OR
An installation with 5 working drawings OR
A textiles piece OR
A series of 10 drawings for two design ideas OR
A series of recordings mixed and placed on blog in response to a drawing or identified
Piece OR
Collage work OR
A series of prints OR
A typographic response

A substantial body of contextual research

These are simply suggestions or examples to give you an idea of the amount of work we expect at assessment. You may chose to do something that’s not listed here, if so use these as a guide. Besides the visual work you produce for this brief you will also need to document your progress and evaluate your outcomes. This will contribute to the work generated throughout Stage One.
Work presented at the Stage One assessments will typically consist of:
A sketchbook that coherently documents both visually and textually the development of the project. You should annotate your working methods and show your decision-making.
Analysis and evaluation: You should document your learning experience throughout the project in your Learning Journal / Blog Make notes daily and analyse your progress at the end of each week ensuring that you evaluate your strengths and weaknesses. You should use your journal / blog as a tool to help you plan effectively. Notes from tutorials and critiques should also be kept here.
Relevant research should be documented in your sketchbook. Examples of artists and designers work should be annotated using the appropriate academic citation system and a bibliography provided where appropriate.



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