Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Sunday, March 27, 2011
New Cast Drawing Class at Columbia University
The Columbia University class at work |
Course Description: Academic Cast Drawing
Students will connect with the very heart of the Western Art tradition, engaging in this critical activity that was the pillar of draftsmanship training from the Rennaissance on through the early Modern Era. This pursuit is the common thread that links artists from Michelangelo and Rubens to Van Gogh and Picasso. Rigorous studies will be executed from plaster casts of antique sculptures and pedagogical engravings. Students will confront foundational issues of academic training; assessing proportion and tonal value, structure and form. Hours will be spent on a single drawing pushing to the highest degree of accuracy in order develop a means for looking at nature. There is a focus on precision and gaining a thorough understanding of the interaction between light and a surface. This approach emphasizes drawing by understanding the subject and the physical world that defines it. While this training has allowed great representational artists of the past to unlock the poetry from the world around them and continues to inspire a surging new realist movement, it can also serve as a new way of seeing and a launching point for achieving creative goals.
Instructor Edward Minoff's demo sphere drawing |
The class runs through the entire semester, from February to April. The students began with the basics of measuring and shape relationships through copies of the block-in Bargue feature plates, soon moving on to the figure plates. They then switched to block-ins from the actual feature casts; while becoming introduced to form concepts by rendering spheres in graphite. When I visited, the class was just beginning to render their block-ins, which they will continue to do for the rest of the semester. We look forward to their continued progress!
Columbia University student drawing |
Friday, March 25, 2011
Lecture: Golden Ratio
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Joshua LaRock - New Paintings and Interview Part 2
See Part 1
The Grape Harvest |
Ale and Oysters |
Thursday, March 17, 2011
landscape painting exhibitions to see
George Inness in Italy at the Philadelphia Museum of Art (feb 19-may 15), and Venice: Canaletto and his Rivals at the National Gallery of Art in D.C. (Feb 20 - May 30)
Monday, March 14, 2011
Joshua LaRock - New Paintings and Interview Part 1
"Woe" by Joshua LaRock Click for Hi-Res |
Waiting to Cross |
Portrait of the Artist |
You can see more of Josh's work at : http://www.joshualarock.com/Welcome.html
Friday, March 11, 2011
Take Portrait Sketch with Ted & Travis!
by Travis Schlaht
Ted Minoff and Travis Schlaht , who co-teach the popular monthly (60 hr) Figure Drawing and Painting class at GCA known as TNT, are expanding the reach of their co-teaching empire this August. Sign up for their summer workshop: Portrait Sketch, August 1 – 5, 2011!
Spots are flying like hot cakes!
To sign up, email Joy at: gcaclasses@gmail.com
Course Description:
Each day will bring a new pose, building towards painting convincing and lifelike portrait sketches. We will approach the portrait sketch through a series of pedagogical steps beginning with portrait drawing in pencil, then charcoal, grisaille and finally we will spend the concluding days on portrait sketches in oil using a full color palette. There will be an emphasis on drawing throughout, discussing concepts of flat shape block-in, anatomy, structure and perspective as they relate to the portrait. Paint handling and color mixing will be discussed as the workshop graduates to oils. The class will employ a combination of demonstrations by the instructors and individual critiques to guide students to meet individual goals.
To sign up, email Joy at: gcaclasses@gmail.com
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Live music series, right here!
We have a window!
Friday, March 4, 2011
Study Landscape in the Catskills this July!
Along with the Hudson River Fellowship this year, GCA will be running two landscape painting workshops taught by Senior Fellows Erik Koeppel and Thomas Kegler. Workshop students (instructed daily) and Fellows (studying independently) will tread the same paths, and choose their subjects from among the same streams, root systems and sunsets (and downpours!)