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Materials and Processes in Art Making

Art Making and Exhibiting
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Materials and Processes in Art Making

Art Making and Exhibiting
01 May 2026

Materials, Techniques and Processes Used to Make Artworks in Specific Art Forms

This key knowledge in Unit 3 AoS 2 focuses on the application of materials, techniques and processes in the actual making of artworks — moving beyond experimentation to deliberate, purposeful use in service of resolved artworks.

The Relationship Between Materials, Techniques and Processes

These three terms are closely related but distinct:

Term Definition Example
Materials The physical substances used Lino block, oil-based ink, Japanese paper
Techniques The specific methods of application Relief cutting, inking with a roller, rubbing to print
Processes The ordered sequence of actions Cutting the block → inking → registering → printing → signing the edition

In practice, materials, techniques and processes are always discussed together because each depends on the others.

Selecting Materials and Techniques for Specific Art Forms

The choice of specific art form determines which materials and techniques are available and appropriate. Students must demonstrate knowledge of:

Painting
- Ground preparation (canvas, board, paper; priming with gesso)
- Paint types and their properties: oil, acrylic, gouache, watercolour, tempera
- Application techniques: brush, palette knife, sponge, pouring, dripping
- Layering approaches: glazing (transparent layers), impasto (thick application), mixed media integration

Printmaking
- Surface preparation (lino, wood, zinc/copper plate, screen mesh)
- Image-making techniques (cutting, etching, drawing on stone/plate)
- Inking and printing procedures
- Edition production and numbering

Drawing
- Dry media: graphite, charcoal, conté, pastel
- Wet media: ink, watercolour wash
- Support selection (paper weight, texture, tone)
- Tonal and mark-making techniques

Ceramics
- Clay body selection and preparation
- Hand-building and wheel-throwing methods
- Kiln firing stages: bisque, glaze/glost
- Surface treatments: glazing, slip decoration, sgraffito, burnishing

Making Decisions During Art Making

The making process involves ongoing decision-making:
- when to stop developing an area and move on
- when a technique is not achieving the intended effect and must be changed
- how to resolve technical problems without losing the aesthetic quality sought
- when an artwork is sufficiently resolved

These decisions should be documented in the Visual Arts journal as they occur.

Connecting Technical Choices to Aesthetic Outcomes

Every material and technical choice produces specific aesthetic qualities:

  • Oil paint’s slow drying time enables blending that produces smooth tonal gradations — suitable for a realist aesthetic
  • Linocut’s resistance to fine detail forces a bold, graphic quality — suitable for high-contrast subject matter
  • Watercolour’s transparency allows layered luminosity — suitable for light-filled atmospheric effects

APPLICATION: “I chose oil paint for this work because its extended working time allowed me to develop the subtle tonal gradations in the figure’s skin without the edges drying before I could blend them, producing the soft, almost photographic quality I was seeking.”

KEY TAKEAWAY: In VCE AME, material and technique choices are never neutral — they determine what aesthetic qualities are achievable and what communicative effects are possible. Always justify your choices in terms of their outcomes.

EXAM TIP: If asked to “discuss the materials, techniques and processes used to make your artwork,” structure your response in order: name the material, explain its properties, describe the technique used, describe the process, and state the aesthetic quality produced. One paragraph per major material is a useful structure.

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