Identify the question(s) or inquiry that guided your sustained investigation.
Describe how your sustained investigation shows evidence of practice, experimentation, and revision guided by your question(s) or inquiry.
Scroll down for more specific themes & ideas.
***Reminder*** Since we are still in a public school setting, some themes and social issues in these lists would need the use of more metaphorical imagery in order to be considered appropriate. Talk to your teacher to discuss how to navigate these serious topics.
For some students, a set starting point makes life easier; for others, it throws up a mental block: a paralyzing fear that they will not be able to produce anything original, or – worse –that they will be forced to draw/paint/photograph/design/sculpt something that is horrendously boring and which doesn’t interests them at all.
It is worth remembering, before you begin, that no topic is inherently boring and that even the most mundane can result in beautiful work. What matters is not the thing or even the idea, but the way it is interpreted; the way you respond to it, what it means to you and whether it wriggles inside and kicks at your soul. It is important to remember that the best art topics are those which:
Are significant and important to your life in some way
You know about or have first-hand experience of
You have access to quality first-hand source material
It should also be noted that ideas on this list are provided as an aid to the brainstorming process. They may or may not be appropriate for you, depending on your circumstance. Selection and exploration of ideas should occur only in conjunction with advice from your teacher.
Some artist model ideas have been included with the lists below. For additional ideas, please look through Student Art Guide's Pinterest Boards.
Encounters, Experiences and Meetings
The meeting between mother and child / adoption / birth;
The clashing of those who despise each other;
Friends in a bustling and crowded restaurant;
SEX and other forbidden encounters in a teenage world;
The shields we put up in our brains: the filter between ourselves and those we meet;
The joining (or meeting) of two halves;
Meetings between strangers…The million people we pass on a daily basis, but never connect with;
Encounters with god;
Online encounters and the changing social landscape of the world;
The clashing of cultures;
Meeting someone who has suffered a great loss;
Shameful encounters / those you regret;
A meeting room, filled with business people who go about their daily lives in a trance;
A boisterous meeting between children;
A birthday party;
Meeting at a skateboard park;
Reunion at an airport;
Meeting for the last time;
A life-changing moment;
Focus on the senses (an event experienced through sight / audio etc);
Something that made you cry;
A deja vu experience;
Remembering an experience a long time ago: the passing of time / generations;
The meeting of truth and lies;
The meeting of fiction and reality;
Encountering animals: the interaction between human and animal kind and our influence upon them (for good or bad);
Meeting your childhood self or yourself fifty years in the future;
The meeting of land and sea;
Physical meetings between two things: the boundaries and edges, perhaps at a cellular level (plunging into / stabbing / tearing apart);
The meeting of theory and practicality;
How our own biases, backgrounds and modify/influence every experience we have: the influence of the mind;
Truly seeing yourself as you really are;
Conception;
The aftermath of a meeting that never happened;
Meeting temptation: the battle of wills;
The meeting of technology and nature;
Ancient man meeting the modern world: the conflict between genes and the modern environment;
Terrorist encounter (see image to the right)
Combinations and Alliances
A young child holding the hand of their mother;
Bad influences (combinations of friends) and peer pressure;
A family unit, in alliance against the world;
The butterfly effect (how a combination of actions / behaviours leads from one thing to another until every tiny moment in a life is interwoven with all the moments that came before);
Political alliances;
How ‘good’ people can complete horrific acts when lead on by the wrong situation and the wrong company;
Still life combinations: salt and pepper, sweet and sour, fish & chips, apple and cinnamon; peanut butter and jam; the literal combination of ingredients used to make a meal;
Unpleasant combinations we would rather not be reminded of: chocolate and obesity; that cute lamb and the juicy steak;
The legal binding (combination) of lovers: marriage / civil unions;
Combination of genes: Darwin’s theory of evolution – how traits are passed on etc;
A study of two people (or animals), or people who care about each other;
A person and something that they use to embellish their identity (i.e. fast car, makeup, fashion accessories, label clothing, iPhones);
You and the one thing that defines you;
Twins;
Siblings;
Mismatched couples;
Unfortunate combinations: drugs and celebrities; childbirth and pain; cats and water; sugar and tooth decay;
Discipline and being cruel to be kind;
Combinations of exercises / sets / routines;
Mixing of light (light streaming through coloured glass windows etc);
Lock combinations;
Combinations of numbers – gambling, addiction;
An uneasy alliance: a dog about to break its chain;
Things that depend on each other for survival: a plant growing in dirt trapped in a hole in the rocks; tiny creatures that live in on the fur / skin of others – ticks on cows / hair lice / germs;
Vaccinations and the alliance of ‘good’ germs fighting against bad…
Eco-systems – the interconnection of water / life etc;
A trusted alliance: horse and rider; blind person and guide dog;
Business networks that rely on one another;
Uniting against a common enemy.
Society Today
Modern diet / processed food;
Digital technology and the impact it has on our lives;
Soaring depression levels / the psychiatric torment of modern man;
Soaring caesarean rates;
Drugs and mind-numbing forms of escape;
Slowing down;
More, more, more: ever increasing consumption;
The mechanized processes involved in the production of meat: pigs in tiny cages / battery hens / images from an abattoir;
Disconnection from the whole: i.e. a factory worker who spends his/her whole life assembling one tiny part of a product, without having any input into the big picture: disillusionment with life purpose.
Inside / Outside
Framing / windows;
Blurring of the boundary between inside and out;
Prisons / loss of freedom;
Breaking in the exterior barrier of things i.e. injuries in flesh resulting in the spilling out of insides;
Autopsy;
Opening a can of preserved fruit;
Pregnancy /birth;
Shelter from the rain;
The inconsistency between what is going on in the outside world and the inner turmoil of someone’s brain;
The change in state as something moves from outside to inside the human body (i.e. food > energy);
An environment that is devoid of ‘outside’ i.e. fluorescent lights / poor ventilation…lacking in plant life…unable to see nature outdoors…the dwindling human condition etc;
Apocalyptic future: what will happen if humans destroy the outdoor conditions; or a wall is erected to keep an infected virus-ridden population ‘outside’;
The peeling back of interesting things to expose what is underneath (inside)…i.e. banana skins, seedpods, envelopes.
Vegetables or interesting fruit sliced through to expose the insides (things with lots of seed / pips / bumpy skin etc);
Something opening to reveal something unexpected (i.e. inside a cardboard box);
The Impossible Staircase: indoors blending into outdoors in an indeterminable fashion / a blurring of dimensions;
Inside the human body: complex, organic form: the miracle of life (human anatomy drawings / x-rays;
Inside an animal carcass;
The human ‘outside’ – an exterior presented to those around us. The fixation we have on creating the best exterior possible: weight control/dieting; makeup; cosmetic surgery; latest fashions;
Inside the earth: minerals / geology / the underworld;
Sectional views through a landscape (i.e. showing a slice through the ground / inside the earth): mines / slips / erosion / quarries, with trucks and machinery taking soil and rocks away;
The soul: inside / outside – leaving the body;
Plays upon storage and scale, i.e. miniature ‘scaled down’ items inside other items, like large wild animals stored inside tiny jars;
Castings of the insides of objects – things you don’t normally think about – that are then exposed for all to see;
Walls / divisions / outsiders;
Deterioration that has occurred to something as a result of being left outside (i.e. an ice sculpture that is left in the sun or a decayed, rusted, weathered structure showing the long term effects of the elements);
Light streaming in a window from outside;
Kids in a daycare facility looking longingly outside;
Animals in a small enclosure: a sorry life in comparison to those wild and free outside;
Looking outside from an unusual perspective, i.e. as if you are a mouse looking through a small crack into a room;
Inside a bomb shelter;
Inside is meant to equal haven / shelter: what if inside is not this at all: a crime scene / an inside that has been violated;
In the palm of your hand;
The contents of something spilling out;
Shellfish or snails inside their shells.
Harmony and Discord
Love and hate relationships / fighting between families and loved ones;
The human mind, swinging from joy to misery and despair / schizophrenia / the meddling mind: our own worst enemy;
A whole lot of similar things, with one different thing that clashes with the rest;
Disturbing of the peace: a beautiful scene which is rudely interrupted (i.e. a hunter firing a bullet into a grazing herd of animals or someone pulling out a gun in a crowded shopping mall);
Musical interpretations: jazz bands / instruments / broken instruments;
Money: the root of good and evil;
The broken family / divorce / merged families;
The clashing of humans with the environment;
Something beautiful and ugly;
Meditation to escape the discord of modern day life;
Prescribed medication (happy pills) to minimize the discord in life – but eliminates the harmony?
A visual battle: a mess of clashing colours;
Things in the wrong environment: placing objects unexpectedly in different locations to create discord (or at least alertness and aliveness) a scene of apparent harmony.
Changed Landscape
Erosion;
Changing seasons;
The impact of human waste / litter on the environment;
Urban sprawl;
Forests cut down to make way for new developments;
The pattern of crops, farming and paddocks on the land.
Sky High
Sky High: Aerial views of swirling motorways by New Zealand painter Robert EllisBlack holes / stars / solar systems / the big bang;
Skateboarders or snowboarders;
A drug induced high;
Cloud formations / the science of rain;
Flying in sleep;
Views from an aeroplane window;
Sky High: Aerial landscape by Wayne Thiebaud
Patterns humans have made in the landscape – i.e. motorways / city grids;
Hang-gliding / hot air balloons / free fallings / parachuting;
Insects / birds flying;
Wing structures;
Airports;
Aftermath of a plane crash;
Superman / superheroes;
Things blowing into the air (old newspapers / an open briefcase / seed pods / dandelion seeds);
Falling off a high rise building;
Paper aeroplanes;
Giants / over-scaled items;
A inner cityscape of high rise buildings – glimpses through windows to people living lives contained in tiny capsules in skyscrapers;
Athletes / sports people leaping through air.
Shade
A beautiful photograph of a skateboarder and his shadow
An intricate still life that creates shadows which become an integral element of the composition;
Translucent sculptures;
Images containing only shadow (without the source object);
Woven shadows;
Overlapping shadows from multiple light sources;
Crumpled pieces of paper: manipulation of shadow
Shadows that are not of the object shown;
A dark alleyway or other location where the lighting conditions are dramatic;
Photographs of paper sculptures: artificial manipulation of form to explore light and shadow;
Skin colour;
A monochromatic subject, with the emphasis on tone (light & shade) rather than colour;
Sunhats and sunscreen / skin cancer;
Buildings with visible shading screens built into the facade.
Icons
Symbols in airports with crowds of people of multiple ethnicities (i.e. icons communicating without language);
An absurd aspect of a pop star’s life;
The worship of a pop star by an ordinary teen (posters peeling off a crowded bedroom wall etc);
Religious icons – relevance in a modern world;
Someone using icons to communicate;
The lie of the icon: a pop star with a public image that is nothing like they really are;
Sex symbols: the disparity between ‘real’ bodies and those portrayed in magazines…
Memorabilia
An obsessed fan’s memorabilia collection relating to a particular famous person;
Objects related to something negative that you don’t want to remember: i.e. a night out on the town (cigarette butts, empty beer bottles);
Memorabilia related to a famous wedding (i.e. Prince Charlies and Diana);
A collection of tacky plastic characters from a particular film, that lie forgotten and dusty in the bottom of a box;
War memorabilia, interspersed with photographs.
Neon
‘Sleazy’ signs from a dodgy part of town…with litter / other traces of human life / dark alleyways underneath;
A inner cityscape crowded with brightly lit signs – perhaps exploring things to do with the clutter of human life / overpopulation of space etc;
An decrepit sign (on an entertainment park or tired motel, for example) with broken bulbs / peeling paint;
Disassembling old neon signs and reassembling different signs together in tongue-and-cheek ways;
Inspiration drawn from the Neon Boneyard – where old neon signs go to die;
Focusing on the eye-catching aspect of neon colour to draw attention to unexpected subjects…
Playing
Young children playing with toys;
A family playing a card or board game;
Playing in water – or at the beach, with a bucket and spade in the sand;
Sports – competitive playing;
‘Playing the field’;
Dress up games;
A young child putting up make-up in the mirror (playing at the imitation of adults);
Wendy houses;
An early childhood education scene;
Playing gone wrong: an injured child / fighting children etc…
Journey
A physical journey from a particular destination to another (i.e. the mundane drive between your home and school…seeing beauty in the ordinary etc; your first visit to see something that moved you);
The transformational journey from old to new (old structure demolished for something new / old technology making way for new etc);
A journey through time, such as a person aging / physical changes, or a record of memorable occasions in a life;
Childhood to adulthood;
Getting through an emotional circumstance, such as a loved one passing away or overcoming illness;
Conception/pregnancy/birth;
A miniature journey (i.e. walking down your garden path – with viewpoint at your feet etc; brushing your teeth in the morning – the journey from arrival at the sink to bright white smile);
Achieving a goal;
An academic journey – through school etc (ambition / academic goals / failure / success / test papers / assignments / grades etc…as in the hurdles you need to get to university);
On a bus or a plane or a train;
Memorabilia related to a particular journey (i.e. an overseas trip);
A still life made from tickets, maps, timetables;
The journey of an animal (i.e. a bird or fish, swimming upstream);
The journey of an insect walking a short distance over interesting surfaces;
Terrorism and the journey you will never forget.
Domestic
Domesticated cat or other animal;
Domestic chores – focus on a mundane ordinary task such as doing the dishes (see Sylvia Siddell and Jo Bradney);
For more help with selecting a topic, you may like to read this blog post about what makes a good A Level Art idea. You may also be interested in the article about the 2013 Art exam topics.
Social Issues Arts in education Black Lives Matter Depression/ anxiety Texting and Driving Unemployment War Pirating Hunger Underage drinking Animal rights Save the rainforest Endangered Species Women’s rights Guns/ gun control AIDS World population Homelessness Child labor laws Slave labor Human trafficking Sweatshops Same sex marriage Gender rights Immigration Child pornography Education reform Educational debt Age discrimination Cloning Climate change Zoos-animal caging Over fishing Over population of pets Lower drinking ages Eating disorder Body Image Child obesity Hazing /school bullies Teen pregnancies Politics Save the planet Reforestation Gang violence Famine Homosexuality Civil rights Baby boomer issues Creationism Genetic engineering Heroin addiction Prescription drug abuse Violence in schools Terrorism Welfare abuse Affirmative action Capital punishment Doping in sports Healthcare reform Veteran’s healthcare Cyber bullying Social media addiction Outsourcing Election funding Abortion Right to die Pet control Poverty Female castration Legalization of marijuana Sexual identity Living green Veganism Vegetarianism Cruelty to animals Sexual harassment College rape crisis Racism Economy Right to vote Racial profiling Hunger Organic farming Illiteracy Elder care Teen suicide Animal overpopulation Fashion/ dress codes Social security Refugee crisis Child brides Equality in education Vaccination Sustainable energy Body Dismorphia Me Too Movement/Never AgainRebecca KostichAP Concentration: Sustained InvestigationFollow On Shade; a skateboarder and his shadow ‘Looking Through’ theme