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The critique is a dedicated time to discuss, review, examine and provide constructive feedback for artwork.
The Golden Rule of critique is: Always critique as you would want to be critiqued.
Critique Criteria:
We will touch upon the following areas with every example of student work. Everyone must provide feedback at some point during the critique process.
Technical - How the work is organized as a complete composition:
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How is the work constructed or planned (i.e., background, foreground, movements, sounds)?
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Identify some of the points of emphasis in the work. Is there any? Are there many?
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How does the sound design work with the images and motions?
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Do you feel that the piece "fills time" sufficiently?
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How much attention has been paid to craftsmanship?
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How would you guess the artist achieved a specific effect?
Interpretation - How the work makes you think or feel:
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What are expressive qualities you find in the work (i.e., funny, mysterious, irreverent, playful)?
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Describe the style of the piece – (retro, vintage, autobiographical, futuristic, dystopian,).
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What choices did the artist make to give the work these qualities?
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What open question does the work suggest to you – if any?
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Does the work remind you of other things you have experienced (i.e., analogy or metaphor)?
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Does the work relate to other ideas or events in the world and/or in your other studies?
Evaluation - Present your opinion of the work's success or failure:
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What is the most original or creative aspect of the work?
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What could make the work better?
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How original is the work? Why do you feel this work is original or not original?
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What qualities of the work make you feel it is a success or failure?