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Material Properties in Art Making

Art Making and Exhibiting
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Material Properties in Art Making

Art Making and Exhibiting
01 May 2026

Inherent Characteristics and Properties of Materials in Specific Art Forms

A deep understanding of materials — what they are, how they behave and what they can do — is central to art making in VCE AME. Students must demonstrate knowledge of the inherent characteristics of their chosen materials, not just describe how they used them.

What Are Inherent Characteristics and Properties?

Inherent characteristics are the intrinsic, physical qualities of a material that exist before any artistic intervention:

Property Explanation Examples
Physical state Solid, liquid, powder, fibre Oil paint (viscous liquid), charcoal (friable solid), clay (plastic solid)
Texture Surface quality at rest Smooth (acrylic gesso), rough (handmade paper), fibrous (hessian)
Opacity/transparency How light passes through Watercolour (transparent), gouache (opaque), oil (variable)
Permanence Resistance to change over time Encaustic (durable), watercolour (light-sensitive), organic materials (biodegradable)
Flexibility/rigidity Response to physical pressure Printmaking ink (flexible when dry), ceramic (rigid when fired)
Absorbency Capacity to take up liquid Unprimed canvas absorbs; gessoed board resists
Malleability Ability to be shaped Clay (highly malleable); fired ceramics (not malleable)
Reactivity Response to other materials Acid-etching in printmaking; oxidation in metalwork

Properties Across Art Forms

Drawing and Painting
- Graphite: smooth, smudgeable, buildable tonal range
- Charcoal: powdery, erasable, good for broad tonal work
- Acrylic paint: fast-drying, water-soluble when wet, flexible when dry, can be used thickly or thinly
- Oil paint: slow-drying, blendable, buildable layers (impasto to glazing)
- Watercolour: transparent, dilutable, responsive to wet/dry paper conditions

Printmaking
- Etching ground: acid-resistant wax compound
- Relief ink: thick, tacky; designed to sit on raised surfaces
- Lithographic ink: based on oil/water repulsion chemistry

Ceramics/Sculpture
- Clay: plastic and workable when wet; leather-hard in intermediate stage; bisque-fired to permanent ceramic state
- Glaze: glass-forming mixture that melts and bonds with clay body during firing

Photography/Digital
- Photographic paper: light-sensitive surface
- Digital sensors: pixel resolution determines detail and tonal range

Why Inherent Properties Matter in Art Making

Artists choose materials because of their properties. An artist working with fragile tissue paper is exploiting its translucency and vulnerability as conceptual material. An artist using industrial steel is working with its associations of weight, permanence and masculine labour.

Understanding properties allows artists to:
- predict how a material will respond in a technique
- select the right material for the intended aesthetic quality
- solve practical problems during making
- explain their material decisions in documentation and critique

REMEMBER: Material knowledge must be both practical (how does it behave?) and conceptual (what does it communicate?). In AME, these two dimensions are always linked.

EXAM TIP: When asked about materials in your own practice, always describe the inherent properties of the material (what it is and how it behaves), then connect those properties to why you chose it and what aesthetic qualities it produces. A two-sentence formula: “X has the inherent property of Y, which I exploited to achieve Z effect in my artwork.”

COMMON MISTAKE: Students describe what they did with a material rather than explaining the material’s properties. “I painted with acrylic” tells the examiner nothing useful — “acrylic paint’s fast drying time and flexibility allowed me to build opaque, textured layers without cracking” demonstrates genuine material knowledge.

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