What is AP art portfolios: faqs?
AP Art and Design portfolios are evaluated on inquiry, experimentation, revision, and intentional decision-making. The guides collected here address the procedural and conceptual questions that trip students up at the submission stage, not the artmaking itself.
If you are unsure whether your source image is too close to the original, whether your photos will read clearly in the digital viewer, or whether your topic is too broad or cliche to support a clear Sustained Investigation, these three guides give you direct, actionable answers.
Plagiarism vs Appropriation
Using found images is allowed, but the work must reflect your own artistic choices, not the source. The 65% change rule of thumb is a useful starting point: if a viewer can still read the original image as the dominant presence, the work risks being flagged as plagiarism rather than appropriation.
Photographing Your Work
2D work must be photographed straight on to avoid distortion. 3D work needs multiple angles. You do not need a professional camera, but lighting, angle, and image clarity directly affect how readers experience your portfolio in the digital submission system.
Topics and Ideas to Avoid
Some portfolio topics make it structurally harder to demonstrate a personal Sustained Investigation. Topics that are too broad, too copied, or too inaccessible to outside viewers can weaken the portfolio before the work is even evaluated. This guide lists specific patterns to reconsider.
Portfolios are read for intentionalityAP readers are not just looking at finished pieces. They are tracing your inquiry, your revisions, and your decision-making across the whole portfolio. Every choice you make about sourcing, documentation, and topic framing either supports or undermines that reading.
AP Art Portfolios: FAQs review notes
5.1
Plagiarism vs Appropriation: How to Use the Guide
This guide is most useful when you are working from found or reference images and need to evaluate whether your transformation is substantial enough. Read the examples carefully and apply the 65% change benchmark to your own work before submission.
- Plagiarism (in portfolio context): Copying a source image too closely so that the original artist's choices, not yours, handle the final work. This can result in a score penalty or disqualification.
- Appropriation: Using a found source image or idea in a way that significantly transforms it to serve your own artistic purpose. The new work must clearly reflect your choices, not just the original.
- 65% change benchmark: A practical rule of thumb: a found source image should be changed enough that a viewer would not primarily recognize the original. This is not an official AP rule but a useful self-check.
- L.H.O.O.Q: Marcel Duchamp's appropriation of the Mona Lisa, adding a mustache and goatee to challenge ideas of originality and authorship. This is a canonical example of how transformation creates new meaning from an existing image.
Look at one piece in your portfolio that uses a found image. Could a viewer identify the source image as the dominant presence? If yes, you need to push the transformation further before submitting.
| Plagiarism | Appropriation |
|---|
| Source image is still clearly dominant | Source is transformed to serve your artistic intent |
| Your choices are not visible in the final work | Your decisions about composition, meaning, or medium are evident |
| Risk of disqualification | Accepted practice when transformation is substantial |
5.2
Photographing Work for Submission: How to Use the Guide
This guide walks you through the technical requirements for documenting both 2D and 3D work. Use it as a checklist before you upload anything. Poor documentation is one of the most preventable reasons a strong portfolio loses impact in the digital viewer.
- Straight-on photography (2D work): Flat work must be photographed directly from the front, not at an angle. Angled shots create distortion that makes the work harder to read and can misrepresent proportions.
- Multiple angles (3D work): Three-dimensional work should be documented from several viewpoints so readers can understand the full form, not just one face of the piece.
- Image clarity: Photos must be sharp and well-lit. Blurry or underexposed images make it impossible for readers to evaluate surface quality, detail, or contrast in the work.
Pull up your uploaded images in the submission portal and view them at the size they will appear to readers. Are they sharp, correctly oriented, and free of glare or shadow? Fix any that are not before the deadline.
| 2D Work | 3D Work |
|---|
| One straight-on shot required | Multiple angles required |
| Avoid angled or overhead shots | Capture full form from at least two or three viewpoints |
| Watch for glare on glass or glossy surfaces | Watch for shadows that obscure form |
5.3
Topics and Ideas to Avoid: How to Use the Guide
This guide is most useful early in the portfolio process, but it is worth reviewing before submission to check whether your Sustained Investigation reads as personal and inquiry-driven. If your topic appears on the patterns-to-avoid list, that does not mean your work is disqualified, but it does mean you need to make sure your individual voice and decision-making are unmistakably present.
- Sustained Investigation: The through-line of your portfolio: a body of work that demonstrates inquiry, practice, experimentation, and revision around a central idea or question. Readers evaluate whether your topic supports this kind of development.
- Cliche topic: A subject so commonly used in AP portfolios that it is difficult to distinguish your personal inquiry from the generic version. Examples include generic sunsets, hands, or eyes without a specific conceptual angle.
- Overly broad topic: A theme so wide that the work cannot demonstrate focused inquiry. 'Nature' or 'emotions' without a specific lens makes it hard for readers to trace your decision-making across pieces.
Write one sentence describing your Sustained Investigation as if explaining it to someone who has never seen your work. Does that sentence reflect a specific question or inquiry, or does it sound like a general subject? If it sounds generic, sharpen the framing before submission.
| Weaker Topic Framing | Stronger Topic Framing |
|---|
| 'My topic is nature' | 'I am investigating how urban green spaces create tension between control and wildness' |
| 'I draw eyes because they are expressive' | 'I am exploring how eye contact functions differently across cultural contexts' |
| Topic could belong to any student | Topic reflects a specific personal inquiry only you could pursue |