Classes per Block during 2022-23
On this page you will find an overview of the actual classes scheduled for the academic year 2022-23, from Block 1 to 5.
Metàfora designs its course contents on a 2-year plan to ensure no students will experience repetition in course content. This is why this page can serve as an example of what will also be taught in the following year, as it gives a thorough idea of the course structure.
We will normally publish the program for the following year as summer approaches.
Note:
Metàfora works with practicing artists and curators from different contexts in Barcelona’s art world. This is a great privilege and brings our students close to the artworld. But sometimes it also means that they have to leave abruptly to participate in an exhibition, a residence or other art events.
For this reason, the program presented here may be subject to minor changes.
Jump straight to the Block you are interested in:
Click on the sections above to see detailed information about the classes taught in each blok.
You will find information about the classes for each level (Foundation Program and Certificate/Diploma) as well as the Tools & Techniques classes, which are open to all levels.
Block 1: 5th of September to 14th of October 2022
Block 2: 17th of October to 25th of November 2022
Block 3: 16th of January to 22nd of February 2023
BLOCK 1:
5th September – 14th October 2022
Specific classes,
Foundation Program (Year 1)
Theme: Scale is a Dynamic Concept
Every week we expose the student to different currents in Recent Art History. This class is obligatory for students on the Foundation program and open to all students. It is necessary to have passed this class to access the 2nd Year of Metàfora’s Studio Arts Program. This class gives the students a grounding in the most influential themes in contemporary art since 1945.
Scale is a Dynamic Concept (Recent Art History, Diana Padrón)
In this block we will explore the notion of Modernity in the avant-garde artistic of Abstract Art in the first half of the Twentieth Century up to the end of the 1970’s. From the late 19th C to the mid-20th C, primarily in Europe, we will examine the key modernist “isms”: Impressionism, Cubism, Dadaism, Surrealism, Suprematism, Purism, Constructivism, and Socialist Realism, as well as the rise of abstraction culminating in Abstract Expressionism. Finally we will look at how conceptual ideas filtered through the notion of land(scape) changing the definition of what an art work could be, much like the readymade had done earlier in the century, but in addition expanded the boundaries of art in terms of the material used and the siting of it. Whilst the key element of land art was often its monumentality and its position in a site-specific context, it also related closely to conceptual art in that the planning and photo documentation of execution and final results could often be exhibited in a gallery context, even if the work itself was located elsewhere.
At the end of the block students are asked to complete small test to demonstrate their knowledge on the material exposed. This class is obligatory for all Foundation students, and for Certificate and Diploma students who did not complete them during their first year.
Thinking and Making Workshop: Contemporary Painting and its Discourse
During every Block students on the Foundation Program have a compulsory workshop which helps students answer conceptual questions materially and material questions conceptually, so as to encourage them not to see a divide between art theory and art practice.
Contemporary Painting and its Discourse (Michael Lawton)
Some people want to start painting, but don’t know what to paint. Some people know what they want to paint, but don’t know why. This session introduces the topic of why we choose to paint today and suggests approaches for thinking about painting.
This contemporary painting class is about situating painting in a contemporary context. It helps with both practical questions such as how to work using imagination, abstraction, and combine colors but also theoretical questions such as what does it mean to make painting today, and what makes a painting look contemporary.
Specific classes,
Certificate / Diploma (Years 2-3)
Critical Theory: Postcolonial Theory
This class introduces students to the theory, philosophers and thinkers that have been, and are still, the most influential on contemporary art, aesthetics and visual culture.
Postcolonial Theory: Decolonization is not a metaphor (Lucia Piedra Galarraga)
Anticolonial theories are defined with criteria linked to political projects that lead to decolonization. But the question about what criteria and what projects are those that lead to decolonization, or what should we understand by decolonization? Or what are the practices that effectively challenge colonialism and coloniality? They are the subject of intense debate. Some suggest that the main goal of postcolonial feminist theory, for example, is to rebel against and counter the imperialist and colonizing impulses of hegemonic white feminist theories. Others think that anticolonial theory should have a greater impact in the field of politics. While others focus their analysis on the relationship between race, gender and colonization or on the analysis of the intersection between race, gender and the modern colonial state.
To place ourselves on the map of anticolonial theories, we will trace a path from postcolonial thought to decolonial thought. Thus drawing a genealogy where Web du Bois, Cesaire, Said, Spivak, Babba, de Ayala, Inca Garcilazo De la Vega, Quijano up to Maria Lugones are found in a topography that reveals the basic concepts of these theories.
WRKSHP: Installation and Sound
A practical class that ensures students are challenged and exposed to new methodologies even when they are in the 2nd or 3rd Year of the Studio Arts Program.
Installation and Sound (Laura Llaneli)
Sound art is an artistic discipline in which sound is utilised as a primary medium or material. Like many genres of contemporary art, sound art may be interdisciplinary in nature, or be used in hybrid forms.
Most of the time, when we do artistic works we give all the importance to what refers to the visual. We think about the video before we think about the sound or how we should place the speakers in the room, for example. This workshop is focused on opening the listening to understand that sound is a very useful tool in our projects.
À-Lab: Studio and Gallery Visits
Once a week we have a class which is dedicated to getting to know the local art scene, while at the same time helping students to develop and refine their artistic discourse: talking about art and getting to know local and no-so-local artists.
Open to all students, but obligatory to all 2nd and 3rd year students.
Tools & Techniques
for all students (years 1, 2-3)
Painting Urban Landscapes
Increase your confidence and skills by working through a full range of techniques and aspects of painting with watercolor and drawing. With exercises in color mixing, applying paint and using water washes, and along with plenty of tips, learn how color and composition can transform your painting.
Work the urban landscape using perspective, gesture and expression in painting, light and color and perspective; these exercises are designed to extend each student at their own level, both independently as well as one-on-one.
Clay Sculpting
Technical workshop to understand the characteristics of the clay as a sculpting material. The aim is to make several sculptures using clay in different ways. Modelling solid sculptures and making thin works with internal skeleton required. Instructions for drying, painting processes using specific ceramic enamels, and cooking on the kiln.
Introduction to Digital Photography
This course will introduce participants to photography in the context of contemporary visual culture. Each class is divided into two parts. The first one is informative and the second one is a practical exercise. The classes will be open to specific suggestions from one week to the next. For example, composition, lighting, staged photography, etc… could be considered if enough students are interested. The aim is to make students curious about the medium, and if possible, start specific projects related to some of the themes.
Other Techniques: Drawing
for all students (years 1, 2-3)
Drawing and Space
Students are invited to draw in various spaces within the school’s premises. The main proposal of this workshop is to show how simple architectural or structural elements of the room can suggest interesting and creative forms to appear.
Life Drawing
These classes form “the basics” for understanding model drawing: construction of the body, anatomy, composition, body expression. Over the academic year this class is a weekly ongoing event, and Piotr makes the most of this different dynamics to help students to develop their own expression and language in drawing.
BLOCK 2:
17th October – 25th November 2022
Specific classes,
Foundation Program (Year 1)
Theme: Only the Necessary
Every week we expose the student to different currents in Recent Art History. This class is obligatory for students on the Foundation program and open to all students. It is necessary to have passed this class to access the 2nd Year of Metàfora’s Studio Arts Program. This class gives the students a grounding in the most influential themes in contemporary art since 1945.
Only the Necessary (Recent Art History, Diana Padrón)
In this block we will pay attention to how Minimalism and the conceptual art movement of the 1960s and 1970s completely transformed our understanding of space and materials. Based primarily in New York, the artists involved started creating objects out of raw materials that consisted of basic geometric forms. The goal was to eliminate any kind of reference to the outside world in order to create works that referred only to themselves. For the conceptual artists, this meant that the idea itself could be the work of art. Artists: Frank Stella, Kenneth Nolan, Agnes Martin, Mary Corse, Carl André, Anne Truitt, Richard Serra, Donald Judd, Dan Flavin, James Turrell. When referring to Anti-Form or Post-minimalist works, we will take a close loo at the work of artists such as Eva Hesse or Lynda Benglis as well as: Giovanni Anselmo, Jannis Kounellis, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Mario Merz, Josef Kosuth, Robert Barry, Yoko Ono, Lawrence Weiner, Art & Language, Jirí Kovanda, Jenny Holzer amongst others.
At the end of the block students are asked to complete small test to demonstrate their knowledge on the material exposed. This class is obligatory for all Foundation students, and for Certificate and Diploma students who did not complete them during their first year.
Thinking and Making Workshop: Sculpture
During every Block students on the Foundation Program have a compulsory workshop which helps students answer conceptual questions materially and material questions conceptually, so as to encourage them not to see a divide between art theory and art practice.
Sculpture: Only the Necessary (Marc Larré)
The main purpose of the class is to give students tips to understand the relationship between resources and results in the production of an artwork. We will look at examples of impactful results with very few resources and the other way around. Only the necessary will help us to chart the strength of sparseness.
Specific classes,
Certificate / Diploma (Years 2-3)
Critical Theory: The Use of Semiotics for the Understanding of Visual Art
This class introduces students to the theory, philosophers and thinkers that have been, and are still, the most influential on contemporary art, aesthetics and visual culture.
The Use of Semiotics for the Understanding of Visual Art (Rubén Verdú)
One of the ways to crack the mechanics of communication is to analyze the inner works of the sign. Wait… communication? Why should we care? If anything, art is, above all, the manipulation of the sign, we could even say that art is the manipulation of the sign to the most extreme. The study
of meaning-making is at the core of all this. We are going to venture ourselves into how this works, into the multifaceted mechanics of semiotics and its entrapments, especially its entrapments, because at the end, as you will see, it is the entrapments that we love to delve in.
WRKSHP: Four Paintings and a Virginal
A practical class that ensures students are challenged and exposed to new methodologies even when they are in the 2nd or 3rd Year of the Studio Arts Program.
Four Paintings and a Virginal (Michael Lawton)
In this class students will be asked to answer a weekly question by making paintings, thinking about what it can be used for, and what it can’t; when is painting an appropriate medium to work with? If the answer is always, then what does it sound like when we speak in painting?
À-Lab: Make MACBA Yours
During the first block we will make the most out of our collaboration with Barcelona’s Contemporary Art Museum, MACBA. Every we go there to explore the collection in under the title “Make MACBA Yours”.
Open to all students, but obligatory to all 2nd and 3rd year students.
Tools & Techniques
for all students (years 1, 2-3)
Painting the Model
Piotr Perski will demonstrate fundamental techniques and guide you through a series of exercises to help you understand the structure of the human body, exploring ways of seeing the body in three dimensions.
Piotr’s innovative and entertaining methods will give you a solid start in understanding portraiture and basic painting. Throughout these classes you will work with live models and printed images of the human body. Students will use acrylic paint, explore “a la prima technique” and do a full colour large scale painting on canvas or wood.
Molds and Casting Techniques
In this class students will gain understanding of why, when and how to make a mold. The class will cover the different type of molds and their uses and the focus is on learning the process, step by step, of obtaining a good rigid or flexible mold. We will be working on testing diverse types of resins, choosing the right one depending of our project. there will be one part dedicated to understanding of the chemical reaction with hardeners, working and cure time, mixing ratio and managing methodology. Naturally, this block of classes include a range of items around safety habits for preserving health.
Printmaking
This workshop is dedicated to different printmaking techniques such as Screen Printing, Woodcut and Linocut, and Monotypes. We will learn concepts like image transfer, print edition, numbered copies, types of inks and supports, framing, and value on the market. There will even be a paper making lab. Students learn to use both traditional and contemporary tools, with the goal to gain basic skills for a professional edition project. Usually we end up with a “Printing Market Exchange” among all the participants.
Other Techniques: Drawing
for all students (years 1, 2-3)
Drawing Patterns and Geometric Forms
Working on the series of geometric patterns with ruler and handmade compass , overlap ( transparent and opaque forms), rhythm, movement and direction, order and balance, scale, composition
Life Drawing
These classes form “the basics” for understanding model drawing: construction of the body, anatomy, composition, body expression. Over the academic year this class is a weekly ongoing event, and Piotr makes the most of this different dynamics to help students to develop their own expression and language in drawing.
BLOCK 3:
16th of January to 22nd of February 2023
Specific classes,
Foundation Program (Year 1)
Theme: The Ground on Which We Stand
Every week we expose the student to different currents in Recent Art History. This class is obligatory for students on the Foundation program and open to all students. It is necessary to have passed this class to access the 2nd Year of Metàfora’s Studio Arts Program. This class gives the students a grounding in the most influential themes in contemporary art since 1945.
The Ground on Which We Stand (Recent Art History, Diana Padrón)
During this block we think about site-specificity, or not. About where we are, what is happening there, what is happening to the whole planet perhaps.
The ground on which we stand is changing because of what we as a species have done to it.
But also, (politically speaking), where does this land stop and another begin. Who decides that?
Can an artwork be specific to where we are now, and intended to be shown in a specific place, that
tells me a story of ours, whilst also reflecting on what it is like to be living now, and so people from anywhere can appreciate it, whilst still feeling local?
At the end of the block students are asked to complete small test to demonstrate their knowledge on the material exposed. This class is obligatory for all Foundation students, and for Certificate and Diploma students who did not complete them during their first year.
Thinking and Making Workshop: Site-Specific Installation
During every Block students on the Foundation Program have a compulsory workshop which helps students answer conceptual questions materially and material questions conceptually, so as to encourage them not to see a divide between art theory and art practice.
Site-Specific Installation (Anna Irina Russell)
Specific classes,
Certificate / Diploma (Years 2-3)
Critical Theory: Queer Theory
This class introduces students to the theory, philosophers and thinkers that have been, and are still, the most influential on contemporary art, aesthetics and visual culture.
Queer Theory (Helen Torres)
During this class, we will discuss some foundational concepts of queer theory (Judith Butler, P. Preciado, J. E. Muñoz) and put it in dialogue with some art practice and our own artwork.
WRKSHP: The creative side of Lo-Fi media
A practical class that ensures students are challenged and exposed to new methodologies even when they are in the 2nd or 3rd Year of the Studio Arts Program.
The creative side of Lo-Fi media (Agustín Ortiz Herrera)
Not only do we live in the era of mass media consumption, but we have already entered that of mass media self-production. In this context, as artists, we are presented with the possibility of using the means that we have at our disposal in a creative manner, but also in a conscientious way.
In this course we are going to experiment with the production of audiovisual projects that have some connection with your creative process. The idea is to use the most basic means that we have at our disposal: smart-phones with camera, video and sound recorder and a simple editing software. Artworks by some artists such as Maya Deren, Chris Marker or Bruce Conner will serve as inspiration while some basic recording and editing exercises are proposed that include, among others, using online found footage, distorted sounds and superimposition of still photos.
This project oriented course can be focused on any of the particular interests from each student and meanwhile the creation is developed we will work on the awareness of the artistic investigation process driven through the moving image and emphasizing as well processes of conceptualization, experimentation and production. At the end of the course the projects will be presented online.
À-Lab: Career and Presentations
Tools & Techniques
for all students (years 1, 2-3)
Academic Drawing and Painting
Join this workshop focusing on still life and portrait in drawing and acrylic paint where Piotr Perski will group personal objects from his home into still life arrangements, creating the subject matter for blocks of classes.
Piotr will demonstrate his own and other artists’ methods of painting, their ideas on composition, how to approach the subject, lighting and shadows, colour mixing and paint application.
Under his guidance the class will work on their own still life, with the opportunity throughout the workshop for one-to-one discussions and assistance.
Constructing with Wood
This is a useful workshop involving participants in making big structures and furniture on wood. It is all about cutting, carving, sanding, joining, polishing and varnishing. This workshop often ends with fun design of useful elements for the school, such as big tables for coworking, outdoor chaise-longues, stools and benches, shelves for garden plants. The class teaches students to work with solid blocks of wood, using chisels, gouges and sanders, and students become familiar with both hand-tools as well as power-tools. A basic safety course is included in this course.
Introduction to Video Editing
The classes will teach you to import and organize your footage, to trim clips and add them to a timeline, the use of multiple tracks, the use of video effects and transitions, and everything you need to get you started!
We will work with Premiere Pro, After Effects and other similar programs.
We recommend to bring your laptop.
Other Techniques: Drawing
for all students (years 1, 2-3)
Drawing and Performance
During this workshop, students work with the limits of the human body. They will learn how to design the performance with the body movement and body radius in the form of group and personal interventions.
Life Drawing
These classes form “the basics” for understanding model drawing: construction of the body, anatomy, composition, body expression. Over the academic year this class is a weekly ongoing event, and Piotr makes the most of this different dynamics to help students to develop their own expression and language in drawing.
BLOCK 4:
6th of March to the 19th of April 2023
Specific classes,
Foundation Program (Year 1)
Theme: The Trivial and the Meaningful
Every week we expose the student to different currents in Recent Art History. This class is obligatory for students on the Foundation program and open to all students. It is necessary to have passed this class to access the 2nd Year of Metàfora’s Studio Arts Program. This class gives the students a grounding in the most influential themes in contemporary art since 1945.
The Trivial and the Meaningful (Recent Art History, Diana Padrón)
This block examines the explosion of the mass media and its expression in Pop art and those movements that relate to and derive from the consumer’s society emerging in the mid and late 20th c. as well as the Information Age and Postmodernism.
At the end of the block students are asked to complete small test to demonstrate their knowledge on the material exposed. This class is obligatory for all Foundation students, and for Certificate and Diploma students who did not complete them during their first year.
Thinking and Making Workshop: Assemblage
During every Block students on the Foundation Program have a compulsory workshop which helps students answer conceptual questions materially and material questions conceptually, so as to encourage them not to see a divide between art theory and art practice.
Assemblage (Martí Anson)
Specific classes,
Certificate / Diploma (Years 2-3)
Critical Theory: Optopia
This class introduces students to the theory, philosophers and thinkers that have been, and are still, the most influential on contemporary art, aesthetics and visual culture.
Optopia. The Evolutionary Stages of Visuality (Rubén Verdú)
What role will the image play in a future that is increasingly determined to overcome the limitations of the human species? What promotes and motivates the prolific mediation of screens? Why this type of mediation and not another? Any answer to these questions draws, right from the start, a scenario of possible futures that will have a great impact on all those disciplines that give the visual phenomenon a central position in their practices. It is crucial, therefore, to understand the processes that leads us to privilege everything that stimulates the eye and, of course, to understand why it is so configured and not otherwise.
WRKSHP: Interference
A practical class that ensures students are challenged and exposed to new methodologies even when they are in the 2nd or 3rd Year of the Studio Arts Program.
Interference (Martí Anson)
À-Lab: Link Seminar
Link Seminar (Laura Llaneli)
Once a week we have a class which is dedicated to getting to know the local art scene, while at the same time helping students to develop and refine their artistic discourse: talking about art and getting to know local and no-so-local artists.
Open to all students, but obligatory to all 2nd and 3rd year students.
Tools & Techniques
for all students (years 1, 2-3)
Painting Self Portraits
Paint in oil and acrylics layers using various techniques such as transparent and opaque acrylic, over-painting, painting monochromatic studies, using colour backgrounds, stencils and masks, on different supports including paper, canvas, wood, metal, transparent plastic in small size.
Introduction to Metal Work
This class teaches students the exciting melting and joining process of the ARC welding. Be familiar with electrode rods, the power station and its three wires, and with grinding and polishing machines. Students practice of the starting spark, running a weld bead, cleaning and polishing the joint. Naturally, the class includes security systems and personal health protection while welding by making a small metal sculpture.
Introduction to Stop Motion
In this eye-opening workshop students learn how to use Stop Motion to produce artistic projects. We look into early cinema, the uses of stop motion in contemporary art and also, why not, advertisement. With basic equipment, like mobile phones, we discover apps and software available to make our lives easier. At a later point students work with Premiere or iMovie to produce projects more professionally.
Other Techniques: Drawing
for all students (years 1, 2-3)
Drawing Gesture and Movement
A gesture is an action that has significance: the gift of bunch of flowers, or the movement of the pencil on the sheet of paper. Drawing gesture is the action of the hand and drawing tool as they follow the movement of the eye while it scans the figure.
The activity of looking is selective and goal-directed: the eye darts over the field of vision, seeking and selecting pertinent features in the field, and dovetailing these with the mind’s means of making sense of them.
Gestural drawing is one that follows the eye’s search for meaning; it should be quick, seeing and placing the whole figure almost at once.
Life Drawing
These classes form “the basics” for understanding model drawing: construction of the body, anatomy, composition, body expression. Over the academic year this class is a weekly ongoing event, and Piotr makes the most of this different dynamics to help students to develop their own expression and language in drawing.
BLOCK 5:
24th of April to the 7th of June 2023
Specific classes,
Foundation Program (Year 1)
Theme: Body and Limits
Every week we expose the student to different currents in Recent Art History. This class is obligatory for students on the Foundation program and open to all students. It is necessary to have passed this class to access the 2nd Year of Metàfora’s Studio Arts Program. This class gives the students a grounding in the most influential themes in contemporary art since 1945.
Body and Limits (Recent Art History, Diana Padrón)
This block aims to give an introduction to Performance and Body Art practices mostly characterized by their rejection of a clear narrative, the use of chance-based structures, and direct appeal to the audience altogether challenging the conventional values of more traditional art forms.
At the end of the block students are asked to complete small test to demonstrate their knowledge on the material exposed. This class is obligatory for all Foundation students, and for Certificate and Diploma students who did not complete them during their first year.
Thinking and Making Workshop: Performance
During every Block students on the Foundation Program have a compulsory workshop which helps students answer conceptual questions materially and material questions conceptually, so as to encourage them not to see a divide between art theory and art practice.
Performance (Laura Llaneli)
One of the most popular classes, this workshop is taught by artist and in-house tutor Laura Llaneli. In this module students are encouraged to experiment with the body in all its facets: through examples of artist who work with time, space and context, students test their own and others limits.
Specific classes,
Certificate / Diploma (Years 2-3)
Critical Theory: Diffractive Pedagogies & New Imaginaries
This class introduces students to the theory, philosophers and thinkers that have been, and are still, the most influential on contemporary art, aesthetics and visual culture.
Diffractive Pedagogies & New Imaginaries (Helen Torres)
An introduction to the thinking of, (amongst others), Karen Barad, Lynn Randoplh, Donna Haraway and Iris van der Tuin.
WRKSHP: Artist Books
A practical class that ensures students are challenged and exposed to new methodologies even when they are in the 2nd or 3rd Year of the Studio Arts Program.
Artist Books (Anna Pahissa)
À-Lab: Make MACBA Yours
Once a week we have a class which is dedicated to getting to know the local art scene, while at the same time helping students to develop and refine their artistic discourse: talking about art and getting to know local and no-so-local artists.
Open to all students, but obligatory to all 2nd and 3rd year students.
Make MACBA Yours (Marc Larré)
One of the most important missions of an art school like Metàfora is to show its students not only to make art, to talk about art and to reflect on it. It is central that, as promoters of contemporary art, we sometimes pull the students out of the studios and present them with the contemporary context, the art scene.
As part of our studio arts program, we organize periodical visits to the temporary art exhibitions and the permanent collection, but also a more direct activity which we have baptized “Make MACBA Yours”.
Tools & Techniques
for all students (years 1, 2-3)
Abstraction and Scale
How to create an abstract painting with deep personal and aesthetic idea? How can a scale of the painting change its perception and why?
During these workshops Piotr Perski will give a historical background and basic tips and rules related to abstract painting. He will will start each painting day with a discussion of a painting and then a demonstration of how that painting is done along with thoughts, theories and ideas that are behind its execution.
Students are invited to create abstract pictures from the personal aesthetic idea and philosophical or literature interests in big scale format with previous analysis of micro and macroscopic pictures of a nature or cosmic space.
Land Art
Oriol Texidor, in-house tutor and the artist who will be giving this workshop often works in land art, amongst other things.During these sessions he will explain what land art is and guide the students to create their own artwork.
Land art, variously known as Earth art, environmental art, and Earthworks, is an art movement that emerged in the 1960s and 1970s. As a trend, “land art” expanded boundaries of art by the materials used and the siting of the works. The materials used were often the materials of the Earth, including the soil, rocks, vegetation, and water found on-site, and the sites of the works were often distant from population centers.
Screen Printing
In this workshop students learn the whole process for a screen printing edition, from preparing the photolith, coating the screen, exposing it to the light, developing, registering the support and printing. We will print on paper but also on different supports such as canvas, t-shirts, wood, glass or metal. Advanced students will learn the CMYK technique! Usually we end up with a “Printing Market Exchange” among all the participants.
Other Techniques: Drawing
for all students (years 1, 2-3)
Drawing Portraits
During these workshop, Piotr Perski will teach portraiture (basic structure), parts of the face , lines and emotions, natural expression , likeness in a half-length portrait.
He will show students how to create a series of group portraits or family portraits working with unusual materials such as old photos, tracing paper, paper plates and napkins. The portraits can depict not only the physical realistic aspects of the model, but can also integrate personal feelings, senses, and attributes.
Life Drawing
These classes form “the basics” for understanding model drawing: construction of the body, anatomy, composition, body expression. Over the academic year this class is a weekly ongoing event, and Piotr makes the most of this different dynamics to help students to develop their own expression and language in drawing.