It often depends on the type of art that the teacher was looking for. For example, if a ceramics teacher was looking for a coil pot, often times they will just hand out a rubric. Typically the requirements on art rubrics are loose- otherwise everybody's work would end up looking identical. For example, one requirement could just be "a couple rows of different coil designs" for a coil pot for full points on that assignment. Art teachers also grade based on a self-reflection form students may fill out. For more abstract pieces, the teacher might just grade based on why the student designed their artwork like that.
Hope that helped you.
they worship cats like Ankha
Julia studied animation and illustration at Kingston University then moved to the Royal College of Art for an MA in Animation. But she started piling up the awards and press articles long before she had even graduated. Both her very first short My First Crush and more recent film Belly have received praises and prizes from San Francisco to Amsterdam. She has since received commissions to make illustrations for magazines, music bands, fashion brands, big commercial names… Even for tattoos and tea towels!
Her films and drawings often present human experiences and existential questionings embodied and voiced by animal characters. There’s something bitter-sweet and unsettling in seeing cute animals voicing concerns associated with feelings of love, loneliness, passage to adulthood, struggling to find their place into the world.
plz mark me as brainliest :)