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19.4: Inscribing Our Environment - Assessment

  • Page ID
    248592
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    Assessment

    Select one of the following two options, and generate a tour guide or design a model with accompanying artist's statement, according to the instructor’s directions and rubric, if applicable.

    • Option 1
      • Step One: Explore and Document
        • Explore your neighborhood or another of your choice. Find two examples of public art (murals, sculpture, etc.). Take photos.
        • Describe how the subject matter (content) and formal elements (colors, textures, shapes, etc.) of each artwork function together to convey a message or mood to viewers.
      • Step Two: Reflect
        • Do either of the artworks seem to engage with themes relevant to that specific neighborhood space or community, or would either of them potentially fit just as well in another neighborhood context?
      • Step Three: Write and Create
        • Compile your observations and analyses with your photos in order to generate a brief tour guide pamphlet that will introduce others to the artworks you chose.

    "People viewing distorted image reflection, straight surreal shot, people, Cloud Gate, The Bean,
    a public sculpture by Indian-born British artist Sir Anish Kapoor, Plaza at Millennium Park,
    Loop community area, Chicago, Illinois, USA
    " by Wonderlane is marked with CC0 1.0. tourists gathered around shiny silver chrome curved form reflecting them and surrounding city buildings and sky

    OR

    • Option 2
      • Step One: Ponder and Design
        • Design a small-scale model of a public artwork that you would advocate for creating. Make it clear what materials would be used, what kind of form it would have, what subject matter (whether it’s representational or abstract) it would depict, and where you think the best place for it to be located would be.
      • Step Two: Write and Explain
        • Provide a title, and write two to three paragraphs (of 5-7 complete sentences each) to function as an artist's statement explaining the choices you made in designing the artwork and selecting its placement. Elaborate on whether viewers are primarily meant to appreciate its beauty, recognize a message about a cause that is important to you, etc.

    This page titled 19.4: Inscribing Our Environment - Assessment is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Erica McCormack and Jack Lindsay.