A central element of the VCE Art Creative Practice is the purposeful selection and use of materials, techniques, processes, and art forms. Students are expected to make deliberate, informed choices about the tools of their art practice — not just to produce a finished product, but throughout every stage of the Creative Practice.
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Materials | The physical substances used to make art (paint, clay, charcoal, fabric, found objects, digital tools) |
| Techniques | The specific methods or skills used to apply or manipulate materials (impasto, etching, layering, sewing) |
| Processes | The sequential steps or procedures followed in making an artwork (preparing, applying, editing, assembling) |
| Art forms | The broad categories or disciplines of art practice (painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, photography, digital media, textiles) |
KEY TAKEAWAY: Materials, techniques, processes and art forms are not separate concerns — they work together to create visual language and communicate ideas.
Students may work across a wide range of art forms, including:
The Creative Practice is a cyclical process. Materials, techniques and processes are used differently at each stage:
EXAM TIP: When writing about materials and techniques, use precise art vocabulary. Don’t just say “I used paint” — specify how you used it (e.g., “I applied thin washes of diluted acrylic to build luminous layers”).
The materials and techniques an artist chooses are not arbitrary — they communicate meaning:
Your folio documentation should show:
VCAA FOCUS: VCAA assesses not just the quality of your finished work, but your ability to justify your material and technique choices throughout the process. Show your decision-making.
When selecting an art form to work in, consider:
| Concept/Idea | Possible Material/Technique Choice |
|---|---|
| Memory and fragility | Tissue paper, wax, transparent layers |
| Strength and resilience | Metal, concrete, impasto paint |
| Environmental issues | Recycled materials, natural pigments |
| Identity and culture | Traditional materials from that culture |
| Technology and society | Digital media, screen printing |
APPLICATION: When analysing an artist’s work, always ask: Why did they choose these materials? And for your own work: How do my material choices reinforce my ideas?
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Medium | The specific material used (plural: media) |
| Mixed media | Using more than one material or technique |
| Impasto | Thick application of paint creating texture |
| Wash | Thin, diluted paint applied in transparent layers |
| Assemblage | 3D artwork made from found or recycled objects |
| Monoprint | Printmaking technique producing a single unique print |
| Glaze | Transparent layer applied over dried paint for depth |
STUDY HINT: Practise describing materials and techniques precisely in writing. In your exam, you’ll need to do this for both the artist you studied and your own work — using accurate, specific language is key to demonstrating understanding.