In today's tutorial, it was a bit of a briefing on the interim submission and the practical element of the project.
I had some questions about the structure of my essay that were answered, which I think will help me to write more fluently and finish my draft for the submission on Sunday.
Campbell and Jung should be addressed in my introduction, so that I can reference back to them in my Chapter 3 without having to define them.
I am feeling confident in my practical ideas, but I know that I'm behind on my blog, and I don't have all that much development work. I've struggled with managing my time and splitting it between the two elements of this module.
I feel as though I've been spending a lot of time on writing and I definitely should have spent more on producing practical work.
It's been suggested that alongside our practical proposals, we have a plan b. Just in case some things don't go to plan. Check print bookings before and after xmas. Have a 'worst case scenario'.
My whole project is about quality and presentation
So what is my minimum amount of outcomes necessary that still convey what I want them to? E.g. If - worst case - I can't get 12 prints made, can I focus on making 6 really beautifully refined ones? Might mean that I'm not rushing and that they are of a higher quality.
What do I need to have to answer my brief?
Consider my propositions - e.g. an exhibition of prints. I don't have to plan an exhibition, just propose in some way.
Consider final presentation of prints. Do they come with a transcript?
For interim submission:
Introduction
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Bullet point Chapter 4
Bullet point Conclusion
To do:
For practical, get up to date with blogging
Consider timescales and access to print facilities
Consider print quantity and scale
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