Module Information
Course Delivery
Assessment
Due to Covid-19 students should refer to the module Blackboard pages for assessment details
Assessment Type | Assessment length / details | Proportion |
---|---|---|
Semester Assessment | Portfolio Portfolio of artworks created during and following each of the 10 weekly practical sessions | 100% |
Supplementary Assessment | Supplementary assessment Portfolio of new artworks | 100% |
Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of this module students should be able to:
1 Display a basic technical competence and a reasonable fluency in a broad range of media as appropriate to Printmaking, Interdisciplinary Thinking and Making, and Drawing.
2 Understand the rationale behind the application of drawing skills to other areas of art practice.
3 Produce a body of work in interdisciplinary practice.
4 Demonstrate fundamental skills in the processes of intaglio and relief printmaking.
5 Make an informed and personal response within a prescriptive brief, and to articulate a response both towards your own work and that of others.
6 Apply drawing techniques in order to record and respond to landscape in its broadest sense.
Brief description
Through practical classes, workshops, demonstrations, lectures and assignments, this module offers an introduction to the language of drawing. It examines the relevance of drawing to all media, introducing techniques, processes, methods and materials.
Over ten weeks of essential practice in observational and measured drawing, students will be introduced to the vocabulary and grammar of drawing as an end in itself as well as its application in Printmaking and Interdisciplinary Thinking and Making. Through the study of original artworks in the School of Art Museum and Galleries, students will learn to identify and analyse a wide range of artists’ materials, techniques and approaches to drawing. Lectures will be delivered by staff from different disciplines to provide a greater appreciation of the rationale of drawing and its application to all media.
Using ‘landscape’ as the unifying theme complements the core art history module AH11520: Looking into Landscape: Reading, Researching, Responding which also runs during Semester 1. It reinforces the connection between history, theory and practice as well as provides a basis for project work, thus forming a more cohesive student learning experience.
The structure allows for the accumulative acquisition of skills as students ready themselves to draw the human form in Semester 2.
Content
1. Lecture: Introduction to Materials and Techniques.
Practical (Drawing): Mark-making and exploring drawing media.
Practical (Printmaking): Introduction to Intaglio: Drypoint, Hard and Soft Ground Etching, Coffee Lift (aquatint). Plate preparation: degreasing, applying and using ground. Approaches to drawing: drypoint, drawing with an etching needle, drawing with coffee lift.
2. Lecture: Line Drawing
Practical (Drawing): Seeking and Drawing Landscape Compositions.
Practical (Printmaking): Introduction to Intaglio: Etching plates, inking and wiping, printing in Black and White. Etching plates – using Ferric Chloride / Saline solution. Inking plates in black and white, wiping, using plate tone, printing.
3. Lecture: Drawing in Printmaking Lecture and Prints from the School of Art Museum Collection.
Practical (Drawing): Line and Measured Drawing.
Practical (Printmaking): Lecture on Printmaking (Printing ≠ Printmaking). Introduction to Printmaking: How successive technical advances in ‘printing’ have facilitated the transcription of line, tone, texture and colour in the development of ‘printmaking’.
4. Lecture: Chiaroscuro.
Practical (Drawing): Chiaroscuro.
Practical (Printmaking): Introduction to Relief Printing: Wood block, vinyl and or linocut. Designing for black and white woodcut and linocut. Approaches to cutting line and texture.
5. Lecture: Landscape in Illustration.
Practical (Drawing): Line and Tone.
Practical (Printmaking): Introduction to Relief Printing: Printing Blocks in Black and White. Inking blocks, printing by hand and using a press for printing. Experimenting with layering, using stencils and masks.
6. Tutorials and Group Tutorials.
7. Lecture: Contemporary Drawing.
Practical (Drawing): Recording Movement.
Practical (Interdisciplinary Thinking and Making): Introduction ‘On Not Standing Still’.
8. Lecture: Perspective Drawing.
Practical (Drawing): Perspective and ‘Non-Perspective’ 1.
Practical (IT&M): Student-led research seminar.
9. Lecture: Drawing with Ink.
Practical (Drawing): Perspective and ‘Non-Perspective’
2. Practical (IT&M): Workshop 1 in the Drawing Studio.
10. Lecture: Drawing with Paint.
Practical (Drawing): Drawing with Paint.
Practical (IT&M): Workshop 2.
11. Lecture: Responses to Landscape.
Practical (Drawing): Making a response in mixed media drawing.
Practical (IT&M): Student project presentations in the Project Room and Drawing studio.
Module Skills
Skills Type | Skills details |
---|---|
Application of Number | Students are gradually introduced to numerical technical information e.g. in chemical processes of printmaking, photography, perspective drawing, etc. |
Communication | Discussion of artwork in individual and group situations throughout semester. |
Improving own Learning and Performance | Mode of teaching during classes and tutorials provides feedback weekly during the semester giving students ample opportunity to respond to feedback. |
Information Technology | Research visual imagery and access email, Blackboard, etc. is explained and students referred to IS Helpdesk if necessary. |
Personal Development and Career planning | Students are encouraged to consider future options during Semester 1, with both a short- and long-term view. |
Problem solving | Problem solving is inherent and evidential in the production of artwork. |
Research skills | Students are introduced to our subject area librarian; instructed on keeping visual diary/logbook/sketchbook that necessitates research skills – these are introduced gradually throughout module. |
Subject Specific Skills | Techniques and methodology introduced as appropriate to each subject area throughout semester. |
Team work | Using subject specific equipment in dedicated studio space throughout the building requires teamwork. Small group tutorials and outdoor field work reinforces team/group ethos. |
Notes
This module is at CQFW Level 4