Please come prepared with a rough draft of your artist statement. You can email it to yourself, save it on a flash drive, or print it out and type it back in next class.
Artist statement TOPICS:
In 3-5 paragraphs of 3-5 sentences each, provide some information such as:
WHY YOU MAKE ART,
WHAT IT MEANS TO YOU,
WHAT WAS YOUR MOST SUCCESSFUL PIECE,
HOW YOU MADE IT,
WHAT PERSONAL CHOICES MADE YOUR WORK UNIQUELY YOURS,
WHAT MEDIA YOU ENJOY USING,
SOMETHING NEW YOU ENJOYED LEARNING,
WHAT YOU PLAN TO DO NEXT AS A RESULT OF THIS CLASS,
ETC...
Please refer specifically to the work and experiences from this year's GT program. Don't bog readers down, but rather entice them to want to know more. As with any good first impression, your statement should hook and invite further inquiry, like a really good story is about to unfold. Give too little, not too much.
Artist statement TOPICS:
In 3-5 paragraphs of 3-5 sentences each, provide some information such as:
WHY YOU MAKE ART,
WHAT IT MEANS TO YOU,
WHAT WAS YOUR MOST SUCCESSFUL PIECE,
HOW YOU MADE IT,
WHAT PERSONAL CHOICES MADE YOUR WORK UNIQUELY YOURS,
WHAT MEDIA YOU ENJOY USING,
SOMETHING NEW YOU ENJOYED LEARNING,
WHAT YOU PLAN TO DO NEXT AS A RESULT OF THIS CLASS,
ETC...
Please refer specifically to the work and experiences from this year's GT program. Don't bog readers down, but rather entice them to want to know more. As with any good first impression, your statement should hook and invite further inquiry, like a really good story is about to unfold. Give too little, not too much.