It's been fascinating to watch the New Nailsea School being built through the safety of the art room windows. The implication that change is coming our way has led to many interesting discussions in and out of the classroom. Our AS Fine Art students have been developing a piece of public art that will express some of the feeling engendered by such a transition.
Street Art is a increasingly accessible and accepted form of fine art expression. The genre has its roots in graffiti and urban culture - democratic art of and for the people. The Tate Modern Gallery in London recently held a massive celebration of this art form, validating it in the eyes of many. The Tate's Street Art page has some really good links and context if you're looking for interesting practitioners and ideas. One of the featured artists, blu, is particularly ambitious and skillful.
Our AS fine art students looked at the work of Japanese graffiti collective Rinpa Eshidan to get stylistic ideas for their piece of public art. They decided to explore the viewpoints, feelings and moods created by the new school building, locating it on the hoarding separating the old and new schools.

Step one was to suggest an agreed mood and tone to the background of the hoarding. It was not at all messy work!
The students then transferred moods, tones and feelings into abstract mark-making. The collective compositional plan was started on the left by expressing feelings of anxiety, and ended on the right with calm and happy.
It was interesting for the AS students to receive feedback from other Nailsea pupils as they worked in such a public way. I'm pleased to write that these comments got increasingly positive as the work really began to take shape.
Visit our gallery to see all the photos of this work-in-progress.
R Davies