Thursday, 12 January 2012

Post 16 Art Students Visit the Saatchi Gallery




During the jolly season of Christmas, a group of Year 12 and 13 A Level Art students embarked upon a trip to the Saatchi Gallery of South West London; previously accredited the fifth most visited exhibition in London. With the standard and quantity of work presented this year, how entry is still free is beyond me. The current theme displaying until 30th April 2012 is Gesamtkunstwerk: New Art from Germany featuring 24 German artists generously spread across 14 substantial galleries, each confusing the viewer in one way or another. To say the Germans adore junk is an understatement; with artists such as Ida Ekblad throwing together random bath utilities and roadside residue into concrete, I wouldn’t be surprised if her clothing accessories consisted of materials she couldn’t be bothered to recycle. But it works. This unconventional art is what makes Saatchi special, it’s far from boring which keeps us as viewers intrigued and find ourselves fascinated by simplistic objects made extraordinary. Elsewhere, inevitably, there is some strong two-dimensional work. AndrĂ© Butzer representing nothing other than the epitome of Expressionism art boasts 12 large scaled impasto paintings, the majority so rackety that Butzer refused to offer them a title. Generally, I felt the sculptors had the largest effect; Markus Selg inspired my artwork, justifying my use of organic materials to add a little umph to my clay. Nevertheless, I found myself excited by the experimentation and invention on show in almost every single room.

Once we had finished perusing, the students were taken into a small room which provided us with magazines, newspapers, scissors and glue. Inspired by Kirstine Roepstorff, our task was to create our own interpretation of ‘You Are Being Lied To’ with relevance to the theme we were currently studying. Even though the concept of cutting and sticking onto a piece of paper seems a little amateur even for Primary school kids, we were forced to use the full potential of our imagination. We had limited resources available to represent our themes and make this obvious to our audience. Even Roepstorff used this technique but couldn’t elicit a definite interpretation. In our pairs, we worked together combining our themes: Year 12 students represented their idea of Sanctuary while the Year 13s represented their individual Unit 3 themes. I paired with Matilda whose theme at the time was ‘Gluttony’. My theme being ‘Religious Controversy’ didn’t exactly merge in with Matilda’s very well, but we made it work. Gathering whatever scraps we could of food, greed, ostentatious objects, religious symbols and anything depicting ‘followers’ (we used sheep) were glued onto a forced-Hockney-style background. In the end, the collage was vague but with our explanation of the themes, the piece became effective. I valued this experience because it showed that we can truly make art out of anything, we just have to rummage through our complicated minds to make it relevant.















Thursday, 8 December 2011

ENCOUNTERS






Year 12 BTEC Art and Design students were invited to contribute a piece of work each to be displayed in an exhibition entitled ‘Encounters’. We were invited to select a piece of artwork by one of the Masters and recreate this in our own style.



The exhibition showcases the original piece of artwork, positioned next to our student response. This allows visitors to the exhibition to both see and compare how contemporary artists are influenced by famous pieces of art.





Our work for the Encounters exhibition will help to demonstrate how art of the present continues to speak about art of the past.

Tuesday, 5 July 2011

Gifted and Talented Academy - Cineclub



Two of our Year 13 BTEC Media students led these four ‘Cineclub’ Saturday’s in April. Eight primary school students were put through their film making paces; pitching their idea for a short film, planning, filming and editing with the guidance of year 13, year 11 Media students and Media G&T year 9 students. The sessions were planned and led completely by students. The project was very successful and all the primary students loved the experience and the 6th formers (Tim Ward and Alessandro D’Attoma).





Monday, 4 July 2011

Ravensbourne students SHINE through!!

The Shine School Media Awards hosted their first ever competition as an attempt to involve as many schools, from as many communities, with as many pupils as possible. For The Ravensbourne School; the aim was to involve as many different students that had a passion or talent in a particular subject area and show them that there is more to life than just being purely academically capable. The competition enabled them to appreciate that that, with hard work, comes reward, in terms of both the final product and recognition, not only from the Shine judges but the recognition received from our schools community.
After a day of planning and preparing details such as the name of the magazine, the roles of each individual and the difficult decision to make of our overall aim, each student and teacher was able to understand that there is far more that goes into the making of a magazine than initially appears. We became journalists, photographers, graphic designers, marketing researchers, editors, co-editors but most importantly we were a team working towards the same goal: to create ‘OUTLINE’, a magazine aimed at Year 6 students’ transition into Year 7 with a twist! One of our many aims was to ensure that the magazine wasn’t based purely on exams and school trips, because we know that everyone needs a break from school and, being young people, we knew that young people like to hear about celebrities, TV programmes, jokes and even cooking! So whilst making the magazine very school orientated, we were able to bring in a sense of fun and reality into it, in a way that was (in some cases) an attempt to be funny and in others, dramatic but knowledgeable. We didn’t want to belittle the Year 6’s with intimidating language; we just wanted to show them that there is more to get involved in if you are willing to get involved. And we did exactly that.
After many ‘draining’ months of tapping at keyboards, modelling for photo shoots and interviewing students we began to realise, that this was actually a lot of fun! It brought students from all year groups together to produce a final product that was, quite simply, amazing. And we were not the only ones who thought so.
We were shortlisted for 3 categories: Best Cover, Best Design Layout and Best Commercial Strategy. We were then shortlisted again and put into the top three for Best Cover. This meant that we were able to attend the Award Ceremony at Stationers Hall to see if we had won or were runners up. And after taking a train to London on an unbearably hot Monday morning and waiting anxiously whilst visiting various amazing workshops, the time came for us to see if we’d won.
Out of almost 200 schools, The Ravensbourne came out on top and took home Best Cover. Amazing!
Not only did we win first place for Best Cover, but at the end of the ceremony a raffle was held. By sheer luck we had won again! Our prize was a high specification Xerox printer/photocopier and Quark graphic design software. The day could not have been any better, and we would all love to be involved in it again next year!
Cydney Honour







Friday, 1 July 2011

MediaArts and Technology Summer Show

Guests at the Private View of this year’s MediaArts and Technology Summer Show were treated to a surprise, courtesy of the Media department. Mr Morrell and Mr Williams had transformed the stairway with blackout fabric, lights and dry ice to create a dramatic introduction to the exhibition. This was complimented with the iconic TV theme tune from the ‘Take Hart’ Gallery to completely set the scene!

As ever, the exhibition showcased a diverse range of vibrant and original work from our talented Year 11, 12 and 13 students. Inventive use of new technologies were clearly evident this year. Textiles students had made exciting use of the laser cutter to embellish garments and accessories which we supported by beautifully presented sketchbooks. Film makers from both A-level and BTEC Media courses engaged their audience with original scriptwriting and professional production skills including some breath-taking special effects. Art students went interactive with numerous installations, kinetic pieces, magnetic mazes and even a living sculpture who stopped to have a chat with Mr Murphy!

The evening was very well attended by members of the school and wider community. It is always so rewarding to see large audiences turn-up to support our students’ achievements.We are proud to report that a large number of our Year 13 artists and designers have been successful in gaining their first choice place at colleges and university. Good Luck to all who graduate from TRS this summer and we look forward to hearing of your successes in years to come!


Tuesday, 7 June 2011

Shine School Media Awards

We are very excited to announce that The Ravensbourne School has been selected as one of the 16 finalists of the inaugural ‘Shine School Media Awards’. Our publication: ‘OUTLINE’ has been shortlisted for the Best Cover award.

The Shine project required schools to create a magazine or online publication written by students for students. Our press gang was made up of well motivated photographers, journalists, business managers and editors from years 7 to 13 who worked extremely well together on a weekly basis.

The ceremony will take place on Monday 27 June where the winners will be announced and prizes presented. All finalists will receive either winning or highly commended certificates and the winners of the Gold, Silver and Bronze awards will receive a cash prize as well as a fabulous media workshop day for three students at the Times Educational Supplement.

The Reception and Awards Ceremony is being held at Stationers’ Hall, in the shadow of St Paul’s Cathedral in London. Schools from across England, Wales and the Falkland Islands have been invited and it is anticipated that around 150 students, teachers and publishing industry guests will be attending what is sure to be a memorable and exciting event.

Congratulations go to all involved. Please look out for an article to celebrate the success of our students in the ‘News Shopper’.
The MediaArts Faculty would like to congratulate Mhairi Wyles-Lang and Gabrielle Simon on being shortlisted and exhibited on the prestigious Royal Academy A-level online exhibition.
Over 950 submissions from schools and colleges across the country were entered and 108 have been shortlisted. This is a highly competitive competition and we are very proud to have both Mhairi and Gabrielle’s outstanding work to represent the Faculty at this level.

Year 13 Mhairi Wyles-Lang film piece ‘Welcome to Earth’
http://www.royalacademy.org.uk/education/students-and-teachers/a-level-summer-exhibition-online/a-level-summer-exhibition-online-2011/2011-shortlist,17,GAL.html

Year 12 Gabrielle Simon photography piece ‘Glass – the Only Barrier’
http://www.royalacademy.org.uk/education/students-and-teachers/a-level-summer-exhibition-online/a-level-summer-exhibition-online-2011/2011-shortlist,17,GAL.html