In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
From Mess to Mastery: The Art of Experiment
The Process Portfolio isn't just a scrapbook of your best bits; it's the story of your artistic thinking. 'Sustained experimentation' means showing examiners how you purposefully tested materials and ideas, learned from the process, and used those discoveries to create more meaningful art.
Think of yourself as a chef developing a new signature dish. You don't just follow a recipe; you experiment. You try different spices (materials), test cooking techniques (processes), and taste the results (critique). You'd keep notes on what worked, what didn't, and why, until you synthesise these experiments into a final, brilliant dish. Your Process Portfolio is your recipe development book.
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Begin with a clear intention or question related to your artistic theme. What do you want to explore or communicate?
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Systematically test the properties and possibilities of your chosen media. Push the materials beyond their conventional use.
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Document everything with clear photos and concise, analytical annotations. Explain what you did, what happened, and what you learned.
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Synthesise your findings. Select the most successful experiments and explain how they have informed the development of your artworks.
Explore the concept
Use the live diagram and synced steps — play it or tap a step card to walk through.
Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
What is 'Sustained Experimentation' in the IB's Eyes?
To score in the top band for Criterion B (10-12 marks), you must demonstrate a 'sustained and purposeful experimentation with a range of media' that shows 'highly developed skills' and 'independent, informed decision-making'. Let's break this down:
- Sustained: This implies an investigation that unfolds over several screens of your portfolio. It's not a one-off test. It shows you returning to an idea or material, building on previous findings, and pushing it further. It's a narrative of inquiry.
- Purposeful: Your experiments are not random. They are driven by your conceptual intentions. You must always be able to answer the question: 'Why am I doing this experiment?' The purpose is to find the best material language to express your ideas.
- Range of media: This doesn't mean you have to be an expert in everything. It can mean exploring the range within a single medium (e.g., different types of charcoal on different surfaces) or exploring a few different, but related, media to solve an artistic problem.
- Independent, informed decision-making: This is the synthesis part. You take what you've learned from your experiments and make conscious choices about how to proceed in developing your artwork. You can justify your decisions based on evidence from your own research.
Documenting Your Experiments: Making the Invisible Visible
An examiner cannot read your mind. Your Process Portfolio screens must visually and textually communicate your thinking process. Poor documentation can make brilliant experimentation seem superficial. The goal is to create a clear, concise, and visually engaging record of your investigation.
High-Quality Photography: Take clear, well-lit photos. Capture the process step-by-step, not just the final result. Include close-ups (macros) to show texture and detail. Show the materials and tools you used.
Concise & Analytical Annotations: Use specific vocabulary. Don't just describe ('I poured ink on paper'). Analyse ('The unpredictable bleed of the sumi ink on the wet watercolour paper effectively mirrors the lack of control I am exploring in my theme of anxiety').
Show, Don't Just Tell: Instead of writing a long paragraph, can you show the process through a sequence of 3-4 annotated images? Use arrows and diagrams to clarify your actions and thoughts.
Reflect on Success and Failure: Explicitly state what worked, what didn't, and most importantly, why. A screen showing a 'failed' experiment with strong reflective annotation is evidence of learning and critical thinking.
Connecting Media to Meaning: The Conceptual Link
The highest-achieving students move beyond technical exploration to a deep consideration of materiality. The choice of medium is not arbitrary; it is an integral part of the artwork's message. You must demonstrate that you have considered the inherent properties and cultural connotations of your materials.
Justify Your Choices: In your annotations, always explain why you chose a particular material for a particular idea. 'I used clay because its malleability represents personal growth.'
Consider Material Connotations: What ideas or feelings are associated with your materials? Steel can suggest strength or coldness; silk can suggest luxury or fragility. How can you use or subvert these associations?
Analyse Artist Influences: When you research other artists, don't just look at their final artworks. Investigate their process. How did Anselm Kiefer use straw and lead to talk about German history? How did Eva Hesse use latex to explore the body?
Let the Concept Guide the Media: Instead of thinking 'I want to make a painting', think 'My concept is about digital surveillance. What materials could express this? Glitchy video? Layered transparencies? A painting made with QR codes?'
Document your 'failures' with pride. A screen that shows an experiment gone wrong, accompanied by insightful reflection on what was learned and how it will inform your next steps, is far more valuable to an examiner than a screen showing a simple, successful outcome with no analysis. It demonstrates resilience, critical thinking, and a genuine process of inquiry—the very essence of the Process Portfolio.
From Experimentation to Resolution: The Role of Synthesis
Towards the end of a line of inquiry, your portfolio should show evidence of synthesis. This is where you pull together the threads of your experimentation. You have tested variables, reflected on outcomes, and now you must make informed decisions to move towards a more resolved artwork. A screen showing synthesis might feature you combining two previously separate successful techniques, or applying a refined experimental method to a larger, more ambitious composition. It is the moment you demonstrate that the process of experimentation has directly informed the final form and content of your art.
Worked examples
See the formulas applied — reveal one step at a time, like the exam.
A student is exploring the theme of 'memory and fragmentation'. Show how they could document their experimentation with image transfers onto broken ceramics for their Process Portfolio.
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(This would be presented as a visual PP screen, but is described here in text)
Analyse this hypothetical Process Portfolio screen description. How does it demonstrate a synthesis of technical skills and conceptual understanding through material experimentation, aligning with the top markband for Criterion B?
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Hypothetical Screen Description: A student exploring 'communication breakdown' experiments with digital tools. The screen shows a progression. First, they use Photoshop's 'Content-Aware Fill' to remove figures from photographs, leaving digital 'scars'. They annotate this as 'too clean'. Next, they experiment with a data-moshing application to intentionally corrupt the image files, creating glitch art. The final image on the screen is a portrait that has been data-moshed, printed, then physically scanned back into the computer multiple times, degrading its quality with each iteration.
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
Try to recall each definition before you reveal it.
Quick check
Answer in your head first — then tap to check. No pressure.
Revision flashcards
Flip the card. Test yourself before the exam.
Sustained Experimentation
A continuous and purposeful investigation into media, materials, and techniques over time, showing development and reflection, not just isolated tests.
Key takeaways
Review these before you close the topic — retrieval beats re-reading.
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High-Quality Photography: Take clear, well-lit photos. Capture the process step-by-step, not just the final result. Include close-ups (macros) to show texture and detail. Show the materials and tools you used.
- ✓
Concise & Analytical Annotations: Use specific vocabulary. Don't just describe ('I poured ink on paper'). Analyse ('The unpredictable bleed of the sumi ink on the wet watercolour paper effectively mirrors the lack of control I am exploring in my theme of anxiety').
- ✓
Show, Don't Just Tell: Instead of writing a long paragraph, can you show the process through a sequence of 3-4 annotated images? Use arrows and diagrams to clarify your actions and thoughts.
- ✓
Reflect on Success and Failure: Explicitly state what worked, what didn't, and most importantly, why. A screen showing a 'failed' experiment with strong reflective annotation is evidence of learning and critical thinking.
Practice — then mark it
The whole point: a real Cambridge question, marked mark-by-mark.
Test Your Process Portfolio Skills
Test Your Process Portfolio Skills
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 Process Portfolio Skills on paper, snap a photo, and get examiner-style feedback on exactly where you win and lose marks.