Overview
Whilst studying art at Totley Primary School, pupils develop the knowledge, skills and understanding needed to create, appreciate and evaluate a wide range of artworks. Art is valued as a vehicle for creativity, individual expression and the development of cultural capital, with significance and meaning for all children.
The curriculum is carefully sequenced so that pupils progressively build skills in drawing and mark-making, painting, printing and sculpture. Prior learning is revisited and built upon, supporting children to develop confidence and expertise as artists over time.
Pupils learn about a range of artists whose work exemplifies the techniques and styles being studied, equipping them with artistic vocabulary and the tools to critique, compare and evaluate artwork with confidence.
Teaching prioritises exploration, practice and the iterative creative process, with sketchbooks used from Year 2 onwards to record ideas, experimentation and development towards a final outcome. Digital media is used purposefully where it enhances the quality of children’s work.
Art lessons are engaging, inclusive and purposeful, making meaningful links across the curriculum so that learning is authentic, inspiring and challenging for all pupils.
Reception
Key focus
Exploration, pattern, colour and meaning
Key topics
Printing with pattern and texture
Colour mixing and self-portraits
Giving meaning to marks
Shape, pattern and texture in sculpture
Key artists
Damien Hirst (repetition and pattern)
Piet Mondrian (colour, line and shape)
Wassily Kandinsky (expressive marks and abstraction)
Barbara Hepworth (simple sculptural form)
Year 1
Key focus
Observation and basic technique
Key topics
Repeated printing and stamping
Colour mixing to create mood
Line, outline and pen drawing
Cutting, rolling and coiling clay
Key artists
Lynn Flavell (printing inspired by food and pattern)
Henri Matisse (colour and composition)
Maurice Sendak (expressive line and texture)
Andy Goldsworthy (natural sculpture)
Year 2
Key focus
Experimentation with tone, texture and mood
Key topics
Mono printing
Mood through colour and paint
Pastels, light and shadow
Combining coils and texture in clay
Key artists
Jan Tcega (monoprinting and nature)
Vincent van Gogh (colour, mood and mark-making)
Anne Kindl (pastel techniques)
Nuala O’Donovan (pattern and form in sculpture)
Year 3
Key focus
Observation, process and refinement
Key topics
Collagraph printing
Watercolour techniques and layering
Viewfinders and perspective through tone
Joining clay and understanding firing
Key artists
Hester Cox (collagraph printmaking)
Claude Monet (light and observation)
Georgia O’Keeffe (scale and focus)
Beth Cavener (expressive sculptural form)
Year 4
Key focus
Expressive choices and developing technique
Key topics
Printing blocks (adding and removing material)
Colour vs tone and tonal mixing
Mood and atmosphere through drawing
Maquettes and armatures
Key artists
John Banting (block printing)
Hester Berry (expressive landscapes)
Georges Seurat (tone and contrast)
Antoni Gaudí (decorative surface and form)
Year 5
Key focus
Composition, perspective and iteration
Key topics
Two-colour lino printing
En plein air painting
One-point perspective drawing
Sculpting from form using armatures
Key artists
Tony Bevan (relief and block printing)
Claude Monet (impressionism and en plein air)
Vincent van Gogh (perspective and space)
Beth Cavener (maquettes and expressive figures)
Year 6
Key focus
Artistic intent, proportion and impact
Key topics
Screen printing and propaganda
Media choice, composition and evaluation
Two-point perspective and advanced tone
Human form and proportion in sculpture
Key artists
Andy Warhol (screen printing and repetition)
John Singer Sargent (media and composition)
M. C. Escher (reflection and perspective)
Henry Moore (human form)
Antony Gormley (proportion, meaning and expression)