In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
Curating a Conversation
Your choice of artworks is the foundation of your entire Comparative Study. A weak, random selection makes high-level analysis impossible. A strategic, thoughtful selection sets you up for success by creating a framework for deep investigation.
Think of yourself as a curator for a dinner party. You don't just invite three random people. You invite guests who, when brought together, will spark an interesting and profound conversation. Your artworks are the guests. Your job is to select a group whose similarities and differences in background (cultural context), personality (formal qualities), and life purpose (function) will lead to a fascinating discussion that you can analyse.
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Identify a Core Theme or Question: Don't start with artists. Start with an idea you want to explore, such as 'power and portraiture', 'the sacred in the everyday', or 'art as political protest'.
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Select Across Diverse Contexts: Choose at least two artworks from demonstrably different cultural contexts. This is a core requirement. Think different continents, centuries, social movements, or belief systems.
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Ensure Both Connection and Contrast: The artworks need enough common ground (e.g., theme, subject) to be comparable, but enough difference (e.g., medium, purpose, cultural values) to make the comparison insightful.
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Test Your Trio: Before committing, do a quick 'mini-analysis'. Can you write a few sentences about the formal qualities, function, purpose, and cultural context for each artwork? If you get stuck on one, it might be a weak link in your selection.
Explore the concept
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Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
Deconstructing the Task: Core Requirements
At its core, the IB requires you to select at least three artworks by at least two different artists, where at least two of the artworks are from demonstrably different cultural contexts. This 'different cultural contexts' rule is fundamental and designed to push you beyond a narrow, Eurocentric viewpoint. 'Culture' is a broad term; it can refer to national boundaries and time periods (e.g., 17th-century Netherlands vs. 20th-century Mexico), but also to distinct social movements (e.g., Feminism vs. Surrealism), belief systems (e.g., Buddhist art vs. Catholic art), or even technological paradigms (e.g., Renaissance fresco vs. contemporary virtual reality art).
Select a minimum of three artworks.
Include a minimum of two different artists.
Ensure at least two artworks come from different cultural contexts.
Your analysis must compare the artworks based on formal qualities, function/purpose, and cultural significance.
You must connect your findings to your own art-making practice.
The 'Why' Before the 'What': Developing a Thematic Rationale
The most successful Comparative Studies begin not with a list of favourite artists, but with a compelling theme, concept, or question. This provides a 'lens' through which you will select and analyse your artworks. Starting with a theme ensures your study has a clear focus and argument from the outset. It transforms your study from a descriptive list into a persuasive visual essay. For example, instead of just picking three portraits, you could investigate the theme 'How is portraiture used to construct or deconstruct identity?' This immediately gives your selection process a clear direction and purpose.
Balancing Similarity and Difference
The art of selection lies in the 'Goldilocks principle': your choices should not be too similar, nor too different. If they are too similar (e.g., three Impressionist landscapes), your analysis will be repetitive and lack depth. If they are too different (e.g., a teacup, a skyscraper, and a poem), you will struggle to find meaningful points of comparison. The key is to establish a strong conceptual or thematic link (the similarity) that allows you to explore fascinating contrasts in form, function, and context (the differences). The tension between these similarities and differences is where insightful analysis happens.
Similarity (The Anchor): Establish a clear, non-superficial link. This is often your theme, such as 'the representation of labour', 'the sublime in nature', or 'the body as a site of conflict'.
Difference (The Engine): Ensure your artworks approach this theme from varied perspectives. This is driven by their different cultural contexts, time periods, media, and intended functions.
Avoid 'Spot the Difference': Your goal is not to list differences but to analyse why they exist and what they mean. For example, why did Artist A use muted colours while Artist B used vibrant ones to depict the same subject? The answer will lie in their respective contexts and purposes.
Vary the Medium: A powerful way to create productive difference is to choose artworks in different media (e.g., a painting, a sculpture, and a piece of architecture or design). This forces you to analyse how the choice of medium affects meaning and function.
Examiners reward students who demonstrate independent thinking in their selections. Avoid the 'greatest hits' of art history unless you have a genuinely fresh and compelling reason to compare them. Choosing a lesser-known work, a piece of design, or a non-Western artwork alongside a canonical piece can showcase your research skills and lead to a more original and personal investigation.
Critiquing and Refining Your Selection
Selection is a process of refinement. Your first idea may not be your best one. It is crucial to critically evaluate your proposed group of artworks before you commit and begin extensive research. Ask yourself: Does this selection allow me to address all the assessment criteria effectively? Is there enough information available on each piece? Does the comparison feel forced, or does it reveal genuine insights? Don't be afraid to swap out an artwork if it strengthens the overall investigation.
Worked examples
See the formulas applied — reveal one step at a time, like the exam.
A student is interested in the theme of 'Ritual and Transformation'. Propose a potential trio of artworks and provide a rationale for the selection that aligns with the IB CS criteria.
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Artwork: Cut Piece (1964) by Yoko Ono.
Critique the following proposed selection for a Comparative Study on 'Power': Andy Warhol's Mao (1972), Jacques-Louis David's Napoleon Crossing the Alps (1801), and a photograph of the Tiananmen Square 'Tank Man' (1989) by Jeff Widener. How could this selection be improved?
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Critique: This is a solid thematic starting point. All three artworks clearly engage with the theme of 'Power'. The cultural contexts are distinct (18th-century France, 20th-century USA, 20th-century China), and the media are varied (painting, screenprint, photojournalism). The comparison between David's idealised propaganda and Warhol's pop-art commodification of a political icon is strong. The 'Tank Man' photograph introduces the idea of individual power against state power.
How it all connects
The big idea sits in the middle — tap a linked idea to explore the link.
Tap a linked idea to see how it connects back to the main topic — that connection is what examiners reward.
Glossary
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Quick check
Answer in your head first — then tap to check. No pressure.
Revision flashcards
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Comparative Study (CS)
An independent, critical, and contextual investigation that explores artworks from differing cultural contexts. It is one of the three externally assessed components for HL Visual Arts.
Key takeaways
Review these before you close the topic — retrieval beats re-reading.
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Select a minimum of three artworks.
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Include a minimum of two different artists.
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Ensure at least two artworks come from different cultural contexts.
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Your analysis must compare the artworks based on formal qualities, function/purpose, and cultural significance.
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You must connect your findings to your own art-making practice.
Practice — then mark it
The whole point: a real Cambridge question, marked mark-by-mark.
Test Your Selection Rationale
Test Your Selection Rationale
Extra simulations & links
PhET, GeoGebra and other curated tools — open in a new tab.
Frequently asked
Checkpoint
One marked question is worth ten re-reads — close the loop before you move on.
Reading it isn’t knowing it — prove it.
Before you move on: do Test Your Selection Rationale on paper, snap a photo, and get examiner-style feedback on exactly where you win and lose marks.