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Visual Arts: Illustration of Learning — 'Abstractable Me' unit

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  • Author :  admin
  • Date :  May 31, 2013
  • Views :  8675
  • Type :  2
  • Security:  image
  • Credits: 

    Sandra Gattenhof, Chief Writer

    Andrew Thomson, Videographer

    Acknowledgements:

    Thanks to the Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA), Brisbane

    The skin speaks a language not its own, by Bharti Kher, 2006

    Everything will fall into ruin series, (1999–2009) ©Yao Jui-Chung

    Columns, Zilvinas Kempinas, 2006

    Wolken (Clouds), Michael Sailstorfer, 2010

  • Tags :  Arts-POP, Visual Arts, making, responding

Visual Arts

Visual Arts
STUDENT LEARNING


Abstractable Me targets content descriptors for Band 5–6 for Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority's (ACARA) Australian Curriculum: The Arts in both the organising strands of Making and Responding. As stated in the Shape of the Australian Curriculum: The Arts (August 2011), this unit requires students to explore, create, make and present art with deliberate planning to increase their skills in selecting and manipulating processes and forms for their expressive needs. Students identify and manage increasing complexity in design elements, techniques and forms, as well as evaluate, review and refine decisions in art practice. They present their work with awareness of venue, space, purpose and context. Students respond to a range of artworks and styles. In this unit, the focus is on selected abstract artworks. Students apply aesthetic criteria and communicate reasons for their preferences about their own and others' works. Students also respond through art-based vocabulary (line, shape/form, colour, size, space and principles of composition, proportion/scale, pattern, appropriation, fragmentation, multiple points of view, assemblage and repetition) as artists, audiences and critics.

The Student Learning video features interviews with the school's arts teacher, the school principal, and the Program Officer, Education and Curriculum Programs from the Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA), Brisbane. They describe how students can engage in making, presenting and critiquing the two-dimensional and three-dimensional forms. The video shows students working through aspects of Lessons 6 and 7 in which they create a three-dimensional self-portrait. The video also shows students engaging with the exhibition at the Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA), Brisbane, and the post-exhibition responding task conducted at the gallery by the arts teacher. Student interviews are included in the video to show how they orally critique their own work and the work of others.


This project is funded by the Australian Government Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations.