BTEC
EXTENDED DIPLOMA IN ART & DESIGN 1ST YEAR
LIFE CYCLES - GRAPHIC
DESIGN
Unit 45
Graphics Media, Techniques and Technology
Unit 30:
Location Photography
RATIONALE
You
will experience the area of Graphic Design: how to mind map, develop slogans,
captions and take these through to a concept. This project requires you use
photography and create your own inventively manipulated imagery. It encourages you to explore different visual
language within Art & Design i.e. the difference between abstract
figuration, collage and photomontage.
TIME:
·
3 weeks normal teaching leave
Friday May 19th May
·
22nd May 1 week
study leave
·
(open days to Universities
begin, students to book up and visit)
·
29th May Half term
·
5th June study leave
continues
·
RETURN TO NORMAL LESSONS 12TH
JUNE
·
4 weeks of normal teaching
·
END OF TERM THURSDAY 13TH
JUNE
Project begins:
Wednesday 3rd May – Friday 19th May in existing base room.
Monday 12th June
normal timetable resumes in photography rooms as base rooms used for show.
DEADLINE: Monday 10 July .
·
Life
cycles project to be completed 2 summative units covered.
·
Visit
to New Designers to be confirmed unit 5 summative unit
·
Personal
statement written
·
UCAS
registration and applications underway
·
Holiday
work- Design diary summative unit 5, set in last few days.
·
College
breaks up Thursday 13th July.
AIM:
On the theme of ‘life cycles’ produce a 6 sided leaflet on 1 stage
in life . Within the leaflet you will
need to follow a grid format that will form part of your leaflet. You will use
workshops within lessons to explore a wide variety of techniques and processes.
- 3 weeks before study leave- Mindmapping, research, development of concepts,
photography shoots, drawing, workshop techniques
- Study leave 3 weeks including half term – a further location shoot , research and specific workshop techniques working from
your photographs .
- On your return 12th June,- developing producing mock ups, and
resolving the leaflet, evaluation
Materials
·
printmaking - monoprints,
gold card, letterpress
·
photography – 2 good shoots working within your theme, using
dramatic lighting and extreme viewpoints.
You must use locations photography and studio based experimentation
·
sewing machine
·
acetate collage
·
spraypaint stencils
·
collage
·
image transfer with emulsion
·
photomontage
·
food colouring/ink and
bleach
·
pencil/biro drawing
·
hand rendered slogans and
sayings
LIFE
CYCLES to choose from:
BIRTH
PARENTHOOD
TODDLER
DIVORCE
TEENAGER MIDLIFE
CRISIS
LOVE RETIREMENT
MARRIAGE DEATH
PROCEDURE: Week 1
1.
Produce at least 1
page of initial brainstorming for at least 2 of the life cycles
2. Choose 1 to
explore in as much depth as possible. Produce
6 pages that explores your ideas. This
should include: mind mapping, word
association, mood boards, photographs, photocopies of objects, magazine
cuttings, extracts from poems, slogans, observational drawings etc. Write down everything to do with
an idea not just a single word but everything to do with that theme: e.g. marriage could be mind mapped in the
following way: - an American Las Vegas
styled marriage.
Brainstorm: Las Vegas , the
chapel of love, Elvis impersonator, side burns, 1 armed bandits, double your
money, everyone a winner , poker, lots of tack gold, American flag, dollars
signs, Stretch Limousine Cadillacs, wedding lyrics, four weddings and a
funeral, white veil, Elvis white jumpsuit, renting a witness, best man, lady in
waiting lyrics from songs about getting married, honeymoon suites, the film
‘Leaving Las Vegas’ and famous sayings from this. All of these words could be visualised in
varying imagery, textures, found objects and marks – make yours as exciting as
possible!
3) Come up with a definite ‘concept’. A concept is a way into your life cycle that
makes us think in a certain way. i.e. different ways to get married to
might be :- a tacky wedding ceremony in Las
Vegas, an extreme parachuting/ bungee jumping experience or ‘my big fat gypsy wedding’ .
4) Begin to generate ideas for a photo-shoot by
producing storyboards showing extreme
viewpoints - close ups, low angle, high angle, things in and out focus,
shadows, lighting, action and movement.
Make it achievable for yourself by using friends and family easily
available in locations that you can return to if necessary. Produce an in depth storyboard showing
viewpoints, styling, ideal lighting, shadows etc and how location is appropriate to this idea.P2,M3,
5) Analyse the work of photographers who use
location in their work. 350 words each
photographer
ANSWER WHAT,
WHEN, WHO, HOW, WHY.
·
Give examples of their work and then analyse this
in depth using the questions below as starting points.
·
HOW DO THEY USE LOCATIONS
WITHIN THEIR WORK?
·
Who are they and what kind of photography are they known for.
·
Give brief biographical
background and tell us what work they have had published.
·
What ideas are they interested in?
·
What techniques or technology do these practitioners use to create
interesting photographs? ie lenses. shutter speed, camera tripod, ie dark room
black and white, digital, manipulation of this etc
·
What are they most known for, who have they worked for ?
·
How do they capture or utilise light, texture, movement of the place or
moment images are taken?
·
Do they use candid shoots or are these planned?
·
Do they work with colour or monochrome?
·
How do they work with the model and the location? What do they use to visually connect the two aspects
together? P1, M1, D1
Print
out wallet images of your unedited images and then edited ones that you feel
are the most effective.
Annotate
in your sketchbooks your use of :
- Composition
- Depth of field
- Contrast
- Texture
- Colour
- Sense of movement if appropriate
- Framing and Subject placement- how have
you placed your subjects with reference to the light source and location
- Lighting- spot lamp, soft, torch,
natural
4) Produce at least 2 sets of strong photo shoots of 10 images using
specific locations, considering light, props and camera angle. Use cameras from photography and consider the
use of tripods, filters and wide angled,
macro lenses. Translate these images in class and at home in
a variety of ways. P2,P3,,M2, P2,
P3,M2,M3, D2,D3,
5) Begin translating these images in a variety of
hand rendered ways. Produced a whole
range of mixed media pieces to utilise within the leaflet. P2,P3,M2,
6) Select apt slogans
to work with to relate to your life cycle and begin experimenting with techniques to enrich
your work. Begin to develop layouts, thumbnail sketches,
using text along with image . Develop positive or negative slogans to accompany
your images. Have a look at http://www.handmadefont.com/
7)
Make your own homemade font and photograph each letter separately using
found objects or materials on white paper. Make it appropriate to your idea and
use materials that are fitting to your theme ie an addiction theme for teenagers
may be made up from cigarette butts but toddler might use toy cars and
crayons. P2,P3,M2,
RESEARCH TO
BE DONE OVER STUDY LEAVE
- Research
2 well designed leaflets. Find examples
of creative leaflets. Annotate and answer the following: P1,M1
- How does information
flow from one panel to the next?
- How is colour, text and
image unified? Comment on the
layout
- Is there a regular
position/scale/ for the text on the page?
- How is the type face
integrated or contrasted with the other imagery?
- How is the front and
back cover connected?
- How many images are
used?
- What is the tone of the
the message? ie fun and feel good, shocking and serious etc
- Can you explain how
ideas and images have they been cleverly put together?
ARTISTS
Look at one artist or designer from each of the 8 lists.
Collect information on each
and analyse their work. P1, M1,
Answer the following questions:
- How have they composed their imagery?
- What media have they used?
- What processes and techniques have been
included and what do you think about them?
- What mood, idea or concept does it
reflect?
- Do you think the work is
successful? Why?
- What style would you say this work
reflects?
- What makes this work interesting?
- Work
in the style of 2 of these artists/designers and produce 4 images that reflect their work using
some of your own photos.
ARTIST\DESIGNER
REFERENCES.
1.Abstract Imagery
Jean
Michal Basquiat, John Hoyland,
Howard Hodgekin, Sean Scully,
Franz
Kline, De Kooning, Jackson
Pollock
2. Representational
Drawing
David Hockney,
Jenny
Saville, Egon Schiele, THS,
Kelly Roper, Tim
Tomkinson, David Foldvari
3. Collage
Kurt
Schwitters, , Katy Lemay
Eduardo
Recife, Sara Fanelli
Dawn
Dupree, Tim Marrs, Alex
Williamson
4. Photography.
Henri
Cartier Bresson, Bill Brant, Bill Viola, Martin Parr,
Cindy Sherman, Corrine
Day, Olivero Toscani, Mario Testino,
Nick Maplin, Robert Mapplethorpe
5. Pop
Art
Richard
Hamilton, Peter Blake,
Jasper
Johns, Robert Rauschenburg, Andy
Warhol, Roy Lichenstein
|
6. Linear
Drawing
Keith
Haring, Michael Craig-Martin,
Cy
Twombly, Jasper Johns,
Neasden
Control Centre
7. Photomontage
Eduardo Paolozzi, John Heartfield,
Raoul Haussmann, Helen Chadwick, David Mach, Terry Gillam
8. Text
Stefan
Sagmeister, David Carson, Fuel,
Why
Not Associates, Tomarto, Neville
Brody,
Barbra Krugar, Tom Hingston,
Designers Republic
|
N.B before Study Leave you
will be expected to clear out your drawers and take all work home. by Friday 19 May Be warned
anything left in drawers will be thrown!
6. Continue to develop ideas
within workshop sessions. You will need considerable
amount of experimental ideas and imagery to make your leaflet. P2,P2,P3,M2,
7. Having developed your images
begin to consider the format. You are to include a grid for one of your panels
within the leaflet. The size of your Leaflet should be 28 x 14cms. Within each Leaflet you should produce 1 page
that is equally divided into 8 sections [each section is 7 x 7cms] This can be on
any of the sides.It could be that the Leaflet is unfolded to reveal a central
page or be any other of the panels Other
panels can be developed as you wish but must look appropriate to the 8 grid
section. M2,M3,P4,P2,
8. For each of the boxes you should show a
developed image using the following in any order:
·
Abstract:
An image showing a section, portion or heavily
cropped image that has been developed using paint\expressive mark making.
·
Representational:
An image taken from observation or a photograph that
resembles an object or figure.
·
Linear:
An image using line only but can involve colour and
surface additionally.
·
Collage:
An image using found materials newspapers,
magazines, fabrics, metals etc.
·
Pop Art:
An image which uses symbols, signs and other well
understood images within our culture i.e. male ♂ and female ♀ symbols, x
and y chromosomes, kisses xxx, targets, +, =
signs → ? ♥ £ †
$, icons of popular culture, film
stars, pop stars, images of consumerism e.g. packaging labels, advertising,
domestic appliances.
·
Photographic:
This includes photogrammes, location shots, studio
set ups, black and white, colour, digital photography experiments with
Polaroids.
·
Photomontage:
Collage using photographic imagery cut and pasted
together. Humorous or satirical images
e.g. Monty Python’s Meaning of Life.
·
Text:
An image made up entirely from layered text using
provocative statements, information, famous sayings, a line from a poem,
personal important diary entry dates etc.
Your message should be clear and emphatic and come from your life cycle.
9. Produce at least 2 mock-ups for your leaflet. These should show scanned in print outs showing sections, details, heavily cropped
areas of interest etc. P3,M2,M3,
10. Before you start printing, make sure you are
completely happy with your outcome. Let
a tutor see your rough colour print outs before you print finally.
MINIMUM SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS
A
full sketchbook. The following should be
inside:
§ 1 page each of mind mapping for 2 life cycles .
§ 6 pages on 1 life cycle in more depth- mind mapping and mood boards,
§ 8 pages of research on artists’ work with
annotations and questions answered by the side
§ 6 responses to 2 of these
artists
§ 2 leaflets with research
answering questions.
§ 25 pages of
research, development and resolvement on your chosen life cycle. These
pages should show logical development and differing ways of presenting layouts
for your leaflets - i.e. mock ups, varying images together, differing captions
etc. This sketchbook should be highly
annotated
§ 1 final leaflet based on your
chosen life cycle
§ 2 evaluations – one
evaluating location photography and one summarising
the whole design process unit 45. This should cover techniques, artist
research, development and experimentation