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  • Art and Design

    At Rainford Church of England Primary School we pride ourselves as being a school that engages, inspires and challenges pupils to become creative and cultured individuals, equipping them with the knowledge and skills to experiment and create their own works of art, craft and design. We intend for the children in our school to see the arts as part of their journey to self-discover into adulthood.

    A child in Rainford C of E Primary School will be able to:

    • Create a range of 2D and 3D art work,
    • Use a sketch book to develop their ideas over time,
    • Evaluate the works of famous artists/architects,
    • Use others art work to influence their own,
    • Experiment with a wide range of media and make suitable choices,
    • Appreciate the importance of art and how it changes through history

    We follow the aims of the 2014 National Curriculum for art, which state that children should:

    • Produce creative work, exploring their ideas and recording their experiences
    • Become proficient in drawing, painting, sculpture and other art, craft and design techniques
    • Evaluate and analyse creative works using the language of art, craft and design
    • Know about great artists, craft makers and designers, and understand the historical and cultural development of their art forms

    The curriculum content is sequenced to build learning over time. We have consulted with a specialist in the arts to ensure that the content is planned and sequenced so that knowledge and skills build on prior learning and towards clearly defined end points; curriculum content supports subsequent learning: within lessons, lesson sequences, topics, years and phases curriculum; planning identifies small enough component steps; and known gaps in knowledge and skills are addressed in the sequencing of lesson content. Cognitive Load Theory is at the heart of all of our curriculum design and pedagogy at Rainford CE and our art and design curriculum is no exception.

    Within the curriculum, lessons are planned with cross-curricular links with RE, history and geography. These links are clearly highlighted on the art and design curriculum mapping to ensure that children use all opportunities to deepen learning by making those explicit links across subjects. Our art and design curriculum ensures that art and design concepts are taught in blocks to ensure clear progression and deeper understanding. These blocks or modules include colour (painting and/or collage), sculpture, drawing and printing. Each year, three of the four modules are taught of which two will be a colour unit and a drawing unit. Printing and sculpture are taught every other year.

    The children will recap key skills, knowledge and vocabulary for each concept from the previous key stage which ensures that the modules are progressive throughout the key stages. All Rainford CE pupils will be confident in using artistic vocabulary to effectively communicate their ideas and they will select and apply their knowledge and skills from other subjects to further support in drawing their own ideas. Each module has been planned to ensure key art and design skills are built upon in each year and tasks show clear progression between key stages. Each module has 3 or 4 clearly identified endpoints which are made aware to the children at the beginning of each sequence of lessons.

    Drawing will be embedded in the design process across all topics (children will be encouraged to express themselves and explore their drawing using different media, both wet and dry, where appropriate). The first lesson in each topic, allows children to explore a range of concepts and allows time for children to experiment and practise/embed pre- taught skills, knowledge and vocabulary.

    Long term planning

    Art long term plan

     

    Autumn

    Spring

    Summer

    Preschool

    Self-portraits

    Using different colours to create colour monsters

    Autumn pictures-leaf printing/ painting with pinecones and conkers/Drawing hedgehogs /Bonfire and firework paintings

    Rangoli patterns for Divali from materials e.g. rice, lentils.

    Tye-dye t-shirts

    Easter Cards

    Mothers' Day Cards

    Making representations of ‘The Train Ride’ story using paper, collage, exploring colour, shape, texture +pattern making

    Investigate mixing colours - Link to Kandinsky

    Explore using a range of materials to paint with – e.g. twigs, brushes, sponges, fingers.

    Daffodil paintings

    Experiment with making marks using a wide range of resources e.g. felt pen, pencil, crayon, pastel, paint, chalk, charcoal. Children create the Hungry caterpillar.

    Reception

    Self-portraits

    Exploring mark making tools

    Art – 3D form – clay –

    Create little hedgehog

    Bonfire Night Firework Pictures-Colour mixing

    Make pictures and patterns by cutting, tearing and sticking a variety of materials

    Observational drawing and painting of natural beauty in our garden.

    Sea life pictures Hokusai – The Great Wave Picture – making our own versions with paper and collage

    Wax resistant painting, masking tape batik – underwater pictures

    Year 1

    Sculpture- Clay thumb pot

    Kathy Jeffers

    Drawing - Still life drawing of a plant

    Margaret Mee

    Colour- whole class collage

    LS Lowry

    Year 2

    Drawing- Still life drawing of insects and plant

    Maria Sibylla Merian

    Printing- Printed picture of London scene

    Andy Warhol, Barbara Rae

    Colour- Landscape painting of the sea

    JMW Tuner, Kenneth Shoesmith, David Hockney

    Year 3

    Printing- stone age art print

    Colour- collage of a rainforest

    Henri Rousseau

    Drawing- Sikhism portrait from observation

    Keerat Kaur

    Year 4

    Sculpture- Egyptian coil pot

    Drawing- School value portrait (created using words)

    Sarah King

    Colour- Vincent Van Gogh style landscape painting

    Vincent Van Gogh

    UKS2 Cycle 1

    Sculpture- Islamic clay sculpture

    Drawing- Imaginative abstract South American landscapes.

    Tarsila do Amaral

    Colour- abstract geometric paintings

    Beatriz Milhazes

    UKS2 Cycle 2

    Collage- monarch

    David Hockney. Arnold Machin

    Drawing- one point perspective

    LS Lowry

    Printing- abstract printing/booklet of what makes St Helens special to us.

    Tony Fitzpatrick, Teesha Moore

    Key Figures

    Our local context of a predominantly white British community leads to a need to celebrate the work of culturally-diverse notable people. Children, therefore, study a range of male and female artists of different ages and from different cultures.

     

    Autumn

    Spring

    Summer

    Year 1

    Kathy Jeffers- female, modern potter and clay sculptor since 1970

    Margaret Mee- female, English Botanical illustrator 1909

    LS Lowry- local male Salford artist 1880s – 1970s

    Year 2

    Maria Sibylla Merian- female scientific Illustrator and explorer 1640s-1710s

    Andy Warhol – male, American artist, film director, and producer who was a leading figure in the visual art movement known as pop art. 1920s-1980s

    Barbara Rae – female Scottish painter and printmaker 1943

    JMW Turner- male, English painter 1700s-1800s

    Kenneth Shoesmith – male, British artist 1890s-1930s

    David Hockney – male, British Painter born - 1937

    Year 3

     

    Henri Rousseau- male, French painter 1840-1910

    Keerat Kaur- modern female Sikh artist (graduated in 2012)

    Year 4

     

    Sarah King- female, English illustrator now living in Canada. 1981

    Vincent Van Gogh- male, Dutch painter 1850s- 1890s

    UKS2 Cycle 1

     

    Tarsila do Amaral- female Brazilian painter 1880s – 1970s

    Beatriz Milhazes- female female Brazilian painter 1880s – 1970s

    UKS2 Cycle 2

    David Hockney- male painter/printmaker 1937

    Arnold Machin – male stamp designer 1910s-1990s

    LS Lowry- local male Salford artist 1880s – 1970s

    Tony Fitzpatrick- male American artist 1958

    Teesha Moore – female American artist 1958