There are many different
meanings of these words
and how they can be
interpreted in Art.
THINK about what the different meanings of the word are
LOOK at many starting points for this question
DISCOVER artists and designers who could inspire you
with the topic
SHARE ideas with each other
For the exam you have to show evidence of:
ALL 4 of the AOs (Assessment Objectives)
AO1: Looking at other artists = 10%
AO2: Experimenting with media = 10%
AO3: Recording your ideas = 10%
AO4: Making a final piece = 10%
It is important that you begin working
on the EXAM Paper straight away.
SectionSection
ShareShare
CrackCrack
Portion
Portion
TraceTrace
TearTear
BitBitBiteBite
Part
Part
FlakeFlake
ChunkChunk Piece
Piece
CutCut
SmashSmash
PartPart
DivideDivide
GrainGrain
BreakBreak
ShardShard
DivisionDivision
SliceSlice
SampleSample
FractionFraction
DistantDistant
ShatterShatter EndEnd
JourneyJourney
GrainGrain
MemoriesMemories
CrackCrack
NarrativeNarrative
The artists on the next few slides are
suggestions to help you think about
possible ideas. You may already
have ideas of your own.
Keep an open mind at this point...
There is also a Beaumont Pinterest
Album of Artists and ideas to
support you with your project
Matt Wisniewski
Antonio Gutiérrez Pereira
Elise Wehle
Helen Sear
Sear’s work focuses on ideas
of vision, touch, and the re-
presentation of the nature of
experience.
Florian Nicolle
Andrew Newton
Jaye Schlesinger
Yebin
Mun
Lieke van der Vorst
Robert Delaunay
Samantha Cotterill
Mark Powell
Ron Mueck
Leonardo Da VinciLeonardo Da Vinci
Lisa Kokin
Amy Friend allows new light to pass
through found vintage images by altering
the surface with tiny pinholes
Amy Friend
Sophie Calle met people in Turkey who
despite living close to the coast had
never seen the sea. These films show
the first time they look at the ocean.
They were asked to turn around and
face the camera when they were ready.
Emotions range from elation to bitter
tears.
“Voir La Mer” (To see the sea)
Sophie Calle
A beautiful series of
photographs, inspired by what
she wants to experience.
Maia Flore
Thomas Saliot
Sherman’s photographs are portraits of
herself in various scenarios that parody
stereotypes of women. A panoply of
characters and settings are drawn from
sources of popular culture, old movies,
television soaps and pulp fiction.
Cindy Sherman
Greg Sand
Sally Mann
Chuck Close
Amy Rodchester
Rineke Dijkstra
Andrea
Costantini
Chelsea Bentley James
Charles
Hardaker
Ed Fairburn
“The Great Bear” 1992 – links people of popular culture together.
Simon Patterson
Waters - juxtaposing feminine and
masculine stereotypes
Scott Waters
Edward Hopper
Wolf photographs people in the
subway trains of the Japanese capital.
The result is breathtaking: an
emotional collection of commuting
individuals, with each portrait telling a
unique story.
Michael Wolf
Karen Stamper
The Spanish photographer Pep
Ventosa is “blending together
dozens of snapshots to create an
abstraction of the places we’ve
been and the things we’ve seen.
Pep Ventosa
Robert Rauschenberg
Mauren Brodbeck
Mauren Brodbeck’s concern
is tracing the individual and
personal history in the
seemingly banal, and
wresting anonymous places
from their recording and
surveillance grids.
Stephen
Wiltshire
The above photo taken in Hackney, Gill's most
important working area. After development and
printing some flowers from the same place are put
upon the photograph
Stephen Gill
Liesl Pfeffer
William Morris
Mikkel Rahr
Mortensen
Using a combination of Staedler
Graphite pencils ranging from 6H to
9B, tape and resin, Salxwedel creates
images that look like relics of nature
and other objects frozen in time.
Brooks Salzwedel
About the Landscape Series:  Powered
Pigment, Wax, Paint, Thread, Stuffing on
Canvas, Paper, and/or Fabric. The
landscapes along with the hand-stitched
artist books are inspired by William Turner’s
watercolor sketchbooks.
Kimberly Kersey
Asbury
Andre De Freitas
Sam Taylor Wood
series of photographs / rotting fruitPeter Lippmann
Andy Goldsworthy
Rain Shadow, 1984 St. Abbs, Scotland
Roni Horn
‘You are the Weather’
David
Hockney
‘Nature Fashion’Anna Kulachek
Damien Hirst
Things Come Apart
Todd Mclellan
Michael Craig-
Martin
Ursus Wehrli
‘My work
explores how
meaning, value,
and
associations are
placed upon
things in the
material realm.
I am interested
in how
seemingly
worthless
objects have the
potential for
whimsy and
how the
‘inanimate’
mundane can
reveal poetic
and narrative
possibilities’
Janice Wu
Everything I Have. A poster showing
every single possession of artist
Simon Evans
Miniaturisation in the style of a Russian Doll. Everything is made out of cardboard
Kyle Bean
Nick Gentry
Joseph Cornell
‘No Escape’ -images of flood scenes
had been transfer printed onto
children's dresses.
Goldsmith’s work uses textile materials and
processes as a metaphor for imagining how
psychological states, emotions and
memories associated with human fragility
and loss can be made visible in cloth.
Shelly Goldsmith
Martin Senn
Jessica Brilli
Barbara Dziadosz
Antony Gormley
WASTE MAN was made over a six-week period at the
end of summer 2006 out of about 30 tonnes of waste
materials that had been gathered by the Thanet waste
disposal services in Kent and by local people, and
deposited in Dreamland, the area of Margate next to the
sea and close to the station that had traditionally been
the site of a vast funfair.
Create a Pinterest board and
start pinning images relating
to your exam title
Create a broad A2 mood
board
Decide on a theme you want
to focus on. Print out images
of this theme and of an Artist
that links to this theme
Over Half Term….

Fragment gcse exam 18