Showing posts with label Competitions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Competitions. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 February 2024

'Living the Dream' Nominations | SFCA Competition

 This year's Sixth Form College Association National Art Exhibition is themed 'Living the Dream'. This online exhibition will take place from the 14th to the 30th of June this year, and we have already made our nominations for our entries from the Exploring Media work submitted by our Y12 students! 

The brief for 'Living the Dream' is as follows:

"There are people we meet, things we do and places we go, that make the heart sing, whether a gentle melody or a full choral crescendo. They can be obviously delightful or surprisingly ordinary. But they have a particular significance and an importance, fleeting or long-lasting, in our lives.

What has made your heart sing this year? What has brought you joy? How might you convey the power of those feelings through your art?

Students’ work might depict actual people, events and places, or it might represent a more abstract expression of how it feels to be Living the Dream."

We have nominated one student per title for the exhibition. Congratulations folks!


Fine Art - Sophia Moseley

Graphics - Malgozata Urbas

Photography - Wade Lyons

Wednesday, 12 June 2019

Royal Academy Young Artists Summer Show | 2019

After the success of entering the RA Online Summer A Level Exhibition last year, we decided once again to enter some pieces of A2 work into the newly named Young Artists Summer Show. We entered 14 pieces of artwork, and as the show opened on the 10th of June, we were told 2 of our entries had been shortlisted by the judges! 

So a massive congratulations to... Olivia Hawley and Bushra Mahmood! Well done for being shortlisted from a whopping 6400 entries!


Altering of Self Perception as you Age

Olivia Hawley

Ephemeral Beauty

Bushra Mahmood

Here are the other pieces of artwork that were entered:

The State of our Seas

Tom Stocks



The State of our Seas

Tom Stocks



Altering of Self Perception as you Age

Olivia Hawley


Connections of Grief

Laura Turner


LGBT Otherness in the Media

Laura Turner


Cleansing a Negative Self-Perception

Klaudia Sobieska


Cleansing a Negative Self-Perception

Klaudia Sobieska


Eusocial Insects

Deimante Povilauskaite

The Structures Within us

Sophie Noble

Thursday, 28 March 2019

Sheffield Theatres 'Creating Connections' Exhibition | Connections Festival

Connections is a programme run by the National Theatre for budding young actors to perform in one of 10 new plays commisioned specifically by the National Theatre for the festival. This year, we were asked to submit work by our students to be exhibited in the Crucible in Sheffield, right at the heart of the Connections festival. The theme of the work we submitted had to explore the question of 'How do you express yourself?'. 

The festival ran from Monday the 25th of March until Saturday the 30th. The students that had their work displayed in the exhibition were:

Emily Burgin
Sophie Noble
Molly Scott
Laura Turner
Caitlin Earnshaw
Rachael Sinclair
Deimante Povilauskaite

Well done folks! 

Also thank you to Emily for taking the photographs of the exhibition for us :)


Tuesday, 3 July 2018

Royal Academy A Level Summer Online Exhibition | 2018

This year we had 12 students submit artwork to the Royal Academy A-Level Summer Exhibition. This is a prestigious exhibition that receives over 2,000 submissions, and artwork chosen is featured on the Royal Academy website. The deadline to enter was on the 11th of May, and we encouraged all our students to submit as many pieces as they wanted.
We then received some news when the exhibition opened on the 12th of June....

Chosen from over 2,000 submissions, Maddie Noble’s piece ‘Fagility and Decay’ was chosen to be exhibited in the online gallery, and Elisa Hurley’s ‘Safety Blanket’ was one of 19 commended works shortlisted by the judges. Well done!! This is a huge honour and a fantastic accomplishment!

Madeline Noble
'Fagility and Decay'
'I gathered inspiration from my own experiences with mental health as well as from Dutch still-life paintings that focus on deterioration of physical substances. The mind is extremely temperamental and can deteriorate very quickly, which I have portrayed by incorporating decay in my portraiture.'

Elisa Hurley
'Safety Blanket'
'I interpreted the appearance of people hiding away in fear behind this protection barrier. This is the reason for me to recreate the window that acts like a safety blanket to take the impact of the destruction instead of damaging the freedom that people have. I chose to incorporate a large piece of fabric coated in plaster to represent a curtain that is set in place to eliminate the destruction from reaching into people's lives. As I have worked with plaster, it is a substance which can be broken easily. This represents the hope that people had when it came to them hoping that they would have been able to escape.'

This story was also covered by the Rotherham Advertiser, who came in to photograph Maddie and Elisa with their work on the exhibition evening as well as a group picture of all the students that had attended:


Tuesday, 9 January 2018

Specialist Craft Catalogue Competition 2017 | Well Done Briony!

Back in July we entered several students work into the Specialist Craft catalogue competition. We entered 20 pieces overall, all from the A2 exhibition, but had to wait until 2018 to find out if any of our entrants would be included in the catalogue. And on our first day back after Christmas, we received a letter to say that our very own Briony Canning would be featured on the design and modelling page and had therefore won us a £25 gift voucher for the department! 

Briony is now studying Photography and Video at De Montfort University. We have sent her a big thank you and well done. 

We entered 3 of Brionys pieces and this is the one that was chosen:
Well done Briony!

Monday, 18 December 2017

The Bigger Picture Competition

We have had some stunning entries for 'The Bigger Picture' competition by the Economic and Social Research Council. This is the first year we have entered a competition run by the ESRC, and encouraged all our students - particularly A2 Photography - to enter. All that was required to enter was a photograph relating to one of five categories and a short statement describing the concept behind the image. The five categories were:

Being Me
Fragile Earth
Society in Chaos
New World Order
Age of Innovation

Here our entries - good luck!

James Grainger - 'A Tale of Two Cities'
Category: Society in Chaos
'This piece follows a strong theme of class divide. The photographs are taken in the city of Sheffield, but they contrast on the area of the city taken in - showing the wealthy city centre but also more deprived area, Shiregreen, using statistics about wealth inequality. In the centre of the piece is Jaray, who lives within Shiregreen and notices the large contrast and gap regarding wealth. The fragmented pieces of photographs used to collage in and around the photo borders were done by hand and digitally, this effect connoting the brokenness existing in society.' 


Charlotte Skingle - 'Forever Frozen Identity'
Category: Being Me
'Myself forever frozen, the life expressed by a combination of exposure to the atmosphere around me, isolated and distorted. The photograph can be perceived in a way that relates to imprisonment, the image is frosted beneath the dense layer of ice. Entrapping the emotion in the fragmented objects such as, the thread and how it is weaved within the frozen particles. The flowers and how they are slightly raised above the clouded ice represents that element of life which lingers on the surface. It can be recognised as an untouched feature of identity. No matter, how suppressed or damaged our true selves become there is always a strand, or piece left which is capable of keeping our essence animated.'


Steven Jones - Consumerism: It's Deteriorative Effect On The Environment
Category: Fragile Earth

'Driven by my distaste for humanities obsession with consumerist products and materialistic gimmicks, I created this triptych using unconventional darkroom techniques, to depict the detrimental effect of the world’s leading consumables – coca cola. Us humans discard the products empty plastic container that will inevitably not be re-used and will take over 100 years to finally decompose. This is unlike the natural environment as this form of beauty is already beginning to weaken and decay. The images were exposed through a bubbly layer of coca cola and left to soak in the sticky brown substance for over approximately 48 hours.'


Chloe Moulding - Looking through the Window of Time
Category: Society in Chaos

'The location for my photographs was a really significant part within my final outcome as the buildings that I revolved around were abandoned, vandalised and worn down, as well as having a significant history to them. I focused on derelict places that had eerie pasts and using specific techniques such as cyanotype printing to portray these haunting encounters. Cyanotype prints were really representative of my concept as the variety blue tones connoted mystery, misery and dark times, as well as the ghostly whites highlighting the hauntings from the history of the locations.'


Rhianne Hutton - The Disheveled Hands of the Mining Industry
Category: Society in Chaos

'My triptych image is looking at the hands of miners, capturing every dent, crack and ridge within the hands. I wanted to represent the wreck that the hands have become from the dangerous working conditions. This falls into the category of Society in Chaos due to the fact that these conditions that the miners are working in is effecting the workers life's physically and emotionally. Consequently, this will have an effect on how the miners will live outside the mines, causing the miners to be brought into isolation and they will start to react differently around the public and society.'


Nicole Nixon - A Place of Contemplation
Category: Being Me

'I was originally inspired by people being affected by their surroundings and how places brought out different personalities in a variety of people. This led me to consider what different places mean for different people and how these effected their thoughts and feelings. I have photographed a model laid on a plain, bare mattress, with an old blanket on it. my model wore their own pyjamas and had something personal with them. I did this because I wanted the photograph to look individual and showed their personality or background. I feel that people will be able to relate to this as everyone has their own place of contemplation.'


Ally Boldan - Women are a Piece of Meat
Category: Being Me

'My inspiration comes from the patriarchal society around us that we still have to tackle. A lot has changed in terms of gender equality over the years however we still face cultures and societies that do not quite conform to the gender norms. My work encapsulates the objectification and sexualisation of women; all ages and backgrounds and how they are treated as “pieces of meat” in all aspects of their life. My series of work is represented through raw beauty portrait shots of women with meat across their faces. They all link the idea of meat and women and how women can be represented as objects in different ways. Women are not a piece of meat, they are much more.'


Chantelle Humphreys - The Constraints of Domesticity
Category: Society in Chaos

'In the recent news a lot of women and men have been breaking the silence and sharing their stories of abuse in order to raise awareness and get justice. This movement inspired me in my photography work to create pieces which express the difficulties victims face everyday and the often prolonged struggle it takes to leave or speak out about the abuse. The strength of society shows 'Society in chaos' however it is a positive type of chaos as it creates attention towards an issue which needs it. I also believe my photographs express the chaos and confliction a victim may feel in their situation which is often trapped in the domesticity.'


Tuesday, 6 June 2017

Saatchi Art Prize 2017 Update | Congratulations Sohail!

The Saatchi Art Gallery has shortlisted 20 works from a tremendous 24,000 entries, and we are unbelievably thrilled to announce that our very own Sohail Khalil has been chosen as a shortlisted artist! This is an outstanding achievement for both Sohail and Thomas Rotherham College. His work was selected from a phenomenal amount of entries that were submitted from 66 countries around the world, and it will be exhibited with the other 19 pieces of artwork in the Saatchi Gallery in London between 4th-13th of July. 

Being part of this shortlist means we are in with a chance of winning one of these amazing prizes:
Overall winner: £10,000 to winning school, £2,000 to winning pupil 

Secondary school winner (ages 11-18): £5,000 to school, £1,000 to pupil 
Primary school winner (ages 4-11): £5,000 to school, £1,000 to pupil

The awards evening will take place at 7pm on the 4th of July, so we wish you all the luck Sohail! Well done on this exceptional accomplishment - we're very proud!

Visit the Saatchi Gallery website to see the full shortlist: http://www.saatchigallery.com/schools/prize/2017/

Sohail Khalil - 'Isolated Space'

Friday, 3 February 2017

Saatchi Art Prize Entries 2017

The entries have been sent off for this years Saatchi Art Prize! Thank you to everyone who spent the time to put their entries together despite being super busy preparing for the coursework hand in. We have had some STUNNING entries and we're so excited to show them off to everyone!



Here are is a list of the students that have entered:

Amy Gillott
'Painting Sounds'


Briony Canning
'Rams Skull'

Briony submitted 10 pieces of Art and Photography work to the competition, check out the website to see them in full

Charlie Yates
'Life and Loss'


Jacob Barker
'Mockery of Nature - Regeneration'

Jacob also submitted more than one entry, have a look on the website for more

Jade Bradley
'Time, Aging and Texture'


Megan Strutt
'Seamstress'


Riannon Davies
'Scars on the Skin'


Sohail Khalil
'Isolated Space'


Well done for some fabulous work! Good luck!

Friday, 2 December 2016

Upcycling Business Challenge Event and Results!

As mentioned in an earlier blog post - this year the Art Department decided to become a part of Business Challenge Event that is held by the Rotherham Youth Enterprise. The competition was called "The Upcycling Event" and it consisted of the students generating ideas on how they could recycle found materials in a unique, innovative and professional manner.

Patricia Burke came into the Art Department for a session in order to help the Art students on how to complete the business side of the competition. We had one student in the team who was studying Business but a part from Ella Shields, the other students have not gained experience in Business so this workshop was incredibly beneficial.

 Team Name: Luxury Lino
Members: Charlie Yates, Megan Strutt, Lauren Oxley, Leah May and Ella Shields

Initial Presentation

There were 11 teams that presented their ideas to a panel at Thomas Rotherham College. The panel then decided which three teams would attend the final event at the Rockingham Professional Development Centre. Luxury Lino came 1st place at this point in the competition as the judges thought the idea was innovative, feasible and well planned.



The Event

During the event at the Rockingham Professional Development Centre, each team were given an A1 display board which had three sides to it. The teams had to showcase their ideas and plans along with the products on these display boards and tables. Once each team was ready to present their ideas in front of their tables, the countdown begun. The teams had to present their ideas eight times to eight different groups of judges! That is a lot of talking for one day! At first the teams were nervous but once they got into the flow, they gave confident and well prepared presentations. Each of the presentation were to last for 15 minutes each which included time for the judges to ask relevant questions to the teams. Once the final presentation had finished, it was lunch time which the students got to enjoy a huge buffet of goodies! During lunch, the judges discussed the ideas and presentations with one another so they could allocate the prizes.









The Judges Critique

The judges said 'The team should be really proud of their performances on the day and what they achieved'.

Positives

  • Fab eco-friendly idea and a sellable product
  • Confident team work
  • Super presentation with great graphics
  • Good research and well planned
  • Room to expand
  • Can see the big impact on the environment
  • “I’ve placed my order”
  • “Would buy”
Things to work on

  • Would have liked to see an insert in their cards
  • Think about the quality of the product
The Results

Luxury Lino won 'Best Team Presentation' and £10 each. Congratulations guys!



We would also like to say a big well done to our very own Nicole Scarfe who won 3rd place and the 'Best Business Plan' award with the Business Studies team.