Good Creative Morning |
You're subscribed to The Unstandardized Standard, the newsletter that'll help you learn about art and creativity. Here I share the most impactful creativity information and tips that are proven to work so that they'll rub off. Sustained Investigation. ExperimentationCreating a sustained investigation and documenting your process I'm talking about a sustained investigation through the lens of an advanced placement studio art course. However, you can apply the concept of a sustained investigation to anything in your life. The college board defines sustained investigation as: A section of your portfolio shows related works demonstrating an inquiry-based sustained investigation of materials, processes, and ideas through practice, experimentation, and revision. Let's break the above definition down a bit more.Portfolio: think of your portfolio as the container of your work. You might have multiple portfolios that hold varying bodies of work. Here are a few examples:
Body of work: a group or collection of work-related in some way. It may be related by theme, style, time period, etc. You put a body of work in a portfolio. Inquiry-based: Inquiry means to ask a question. Inquiry-based work implies that a question or curiosity drives your work. It starts with a question that informs what the work becomes. Materials: what you use to create your work, i.e., paint, clay, or found objects Processes: how you use the materials. i.e., you use a wet-on-wet process to apply the material of paint Ideas: what you're thinking about or exploring in your work Practice: doing something more than once, striving to learn and improve Experimentation: trying something new to inform a hypothesis that you have. Revision: Reflect on what you learned through practice and experimentation and adjust your process, material selection, or overall idea. Make the Mark, Make the Mistake, Make Bad ArtYou must be willing to create art you hate to make art you love. I started painting a reindeer; I know it's a bit past reindeer season, but I'm getting a head start on a project for the end of 2024. I've never painted a reindeer before, at least not that I can remember; perhaps I did at some point in elementary school. I didn't love how it looked, so I grabbed some new acrylic paint markers; adding them into the mix only made things worse; we had reached the point of no return, at least for the reindeer. It looked terrible, and there was no turning back; all that could be done was to turn to the other side of the paper and try again. And if that doesn't work, then the paper gets put into the collage paper pile... aka, I'll cut it apart and use the colors on the page to create something new. What is the lifecycle of your art that encourages you to try, try, and try again? Are you afraid of starting because you might fail? Are you worried that you're going to waste your limited materials? Apply these two ideas to help you make more art.
The best place to start when creating your portfolio is by making marks on a page and documenting those marks. It's really that simple. START. Shift your mindset from believing you failed to understand that everything is an experiment.Experimentation is vital to creating a sustained investigation. You've likely learned about the scientific method and how to run a science experiment but have yet to think about how that might apply to your artwork. The scientific method is completing tests and experiments to help you better understand something. The basic process requires you to make an observation, form a hypothesis, make a prediction, conduct an experiment, and then analyze the results. What experiment will you run this week? Based on the results, how will you document what you learned from your experiment and what you will do next? This email is sponsored by The Breakdown. For creatives striving to bring their ideas to life. This NEW 2 week email series will help you take action. It's 100% FREE. You'll be checking things off your list before you know it. Experiments with Marks, Materials, and MeaningAre you curious about how pictures are made? Do you want to get a better understanding of how to read visuals?
Use this book as a guide to be more confident in the images that you create, as well as how to read and understand the images that are all around you.
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I'm on a mission to help you design your day [dreams]. Amber Kane is an educator turned product manager who believes you can figure everything out one step at a time.
Sometimes, everything feels like a lot. Your boss wants you to redo a presentation a few hours before the presentation; a hurricane is headed your way, and you're trying to prepare while your kids run or crawl around the house because school and daycare are closed. You're trying to get work prepped for an upcoming exhibition and need to figure out how to best transport a giant frame without breaking the glass. And to top it off, a bird is flying around your house, or is that one just me? Did...
Create a Summer Experiment Summer is the perfect time to start a personal experiment. In April, I decided to complete 50 mini-weavings. Fifty seemed like an attainable number, yet one that would stretch me. I started strong, creating several weavings in a day, and then hit a point where I didn't like anything. Feeling stuck, I considered pulling the plug on the experiment. See more weavings After taking a few days off, I returned, reminding myself that the purpose of the experiment wasn't to...
Good Creative Morning You're subscribed to The Unstandardized Standard, the email that'll help you learn about art and creativity. Here I share the most impactful creativity information and tips that are proven to work so that they'll rub off. Educator, Illustrator, Textile Designer & Product Manager. Co-Founder of Reading Tree Publishing, and Author of Experiments with Marks, Materials and Meaning Creative Prompt: Mark Bradford While visiting The Broad in LA, I repeatedly found myself drawn...