Monthly Archives: January 2012

Why do I enjoy teaching again? Oh yeah, it’s the box.

It’s the same every term. By the end of it,  I am exhausted, running out of time, feeling I am not teaching all I wanted to. And then the first day of the next term starts, and I find my usual students eager to start again, afresh.

Today was no different as four eager, laughing, fresh-faced urchins tumbled down to the basement. No, they didn’t rush for the crayons, sit at the table, ask where the paper was. They did ask: “what are we doing today?” but didn’t wait for the answer, went to greet the bunny, and then the guinea pig. I let them settle as I tried to figure the best way to introduce them to Cezanne‘s notion that “everything in nature can be represented in terms of the cylinder, the sphere  and the cone”… or rather how you can draw fun stuff from your imagination once you know how to represent a cube in space (leaving the “see the real world in an easier way to draw” for another time).

There were squeals of joy as I told them to dig in the box of cardboard, choose a piece and reconstitute the box. Of course, these were 5-8 year old, and sticky tape and cardboard boxes were involved. How could there not be joy? As we waited for all to be finished, I told them that the box that was really well sealed had a cat in it (Not quite Shroedinger’s cat, but his cousin). However, the cat was really sensitive to light, and it would disintegrate if it was exposed the smallest bit of light, which means that we can’t open the box to check if the cat is there. Curiously none of them argued that such a cat couldn’t exist. But when I asked if they believed me, they said “no”. So I gave them the box to check. They stopped and laughed, getting the paradox immediatly (I am using “they” because they really reacted as a group). And then they started looking for solutions. “Maybe we can just take a peak”, or “maybe we can place a camera before the cat goes in, with a mechanism connecting it to the outside so we can take pictures”, “Open the box at night”… as I pointed that in all cases the amount of light required to see or take a picture would be enough to destroy the cat, they fell silent.

And then,

one of them said “We can touch it in total darkness” and the one who’s been most silent all along said “we can ezray it”…I had to ask again. “X-ray“. Oh! I decided there and then that the cat was not sensitive to that range of the spectrum, offered her the box and suggested she passes it to her mom to check (Mom’s a doctor).

After that, everyone settled, and it was box-drawing, constructing from boxes, more box drawing and then drawing 3-D animals from imagination. Pictures next time… get the 3-D glasses ready!

Adult Drawing: Learn to see better in 10 lessons

When you learn to draw, you learn to see the world. It’s like traveling to a new destination without leaving your surroundings. Copying is not a bad word – that’s what artists do all the time; just add personality.

In 10 weeks of 2-hour lessons, we cover:

  • Learn to draw contours as you see them. Learn to “see” without feeling restrained.
  • Mark-making: using different tools or tools differently to make marks on the paper.
  • Exploring different styles.
  • Shading: drawing without contours.
  • Composition: what to leave in and what to include in the picture; Positive and Negative space.
  • Some perspective and how to create space.
  • Appropriate the subject you are drawing from and transform it to make it your own
  • How to stay inspired.

The aim of the class is to send you exploring on your own, without fear.

Here are some links to how I think about art and teaching art:

- Germaine Greer “I’m about to tell you what art is” in the Guardian.

- Austin Kleon “How to Steal Like an Artist“, the book.

- and of course, the classics: “How to Draw on the Right Side of the Brain” by Betty Edward and inspiration from Mona Brooks and her Monart method of drawing.

See some of my drawings:

About the artist/teacher

Timing: Wednesdays 10am – 12pm 
Starting: 18th of January or when a minimum of 4 have signed up!
Maximum class size: 6.
Location: 102 Gardenia Road, Singapore ( 578873)
Fees: $500 for 10 classes.

New Drawing Classes Schedule

I Wish you all a Happy New Year!
The New Drawing Class Schedule has just been unveiled and now provides drawing classes for adults, an Open Studio time on Saturdays, as well as the old regular classes.
 Week-ends are usually reserved for booked events, so feel free to approach me with a request for a workshop.
 The classes run as a series of 10 lessons until the end of March, and will then continue until June.
 Please do save time over the last 2 week-ends of February to come and visit Open House! in Tiong Bahru where I will be exhibiting my work.
Hoping to see you soon, at the studio!

Kids Workshops at the STPI!

Kids Workshops at the STPI in 2012

Kids Workshops at the STPI in 2012

I have worked with the STPI before, so it’s a real pleasure to be invited to run more kids workshops this year!

Check the albums of some of these previous events:

- “Jazz” at the STPI ; album

- “Papiers Collés” workshop

… and make sure you sign up early!

Finding Happiness in the Small Things in your Life

Happy New Year 2012

What better way to start the year than by looking ahead, with expectation and trepidation, at what the year ahead might bring?

Big beads in small bottle work best...

By now, on the second day of the year, if you are like me, you either have already broken one of your resolutions, or you are already beyond making resolutions, knowing that you will be breaking them.
Well, guess what? If you start adding up when you DID follow the resolution rather than when you broke it, you’ll find your glass filling up rather than emptying – et voilà! before you know it, your glass is half-full. Make sure the glass is small too; you can always add a second one when the first one is full!

So now, here is what I am wishing for all this year:

  • Looking at a book from above (Buang's notebook)

    Finding happiness in the small things means looking at what you have with a new eye; looking harder at what is around you; looking differently at what is given to you.

     

  • Thinking outside the box is a great idea, as long as you don’t neglect what’s inside the box and don’t forget the box too. Always remember that as a kid, it was the box you loved the most…for its potential: you’ll never be bored.
  • Keep teaching… you never know what you might learn!

    ... you never know what you might learn (Watercolour class, Summer 2011)

  • Keep your failures… one day they might bloom!

Failures in Bloom (from my 2010 exhibition, "Laboratory of 'Pataphysics")

  • About reading advice and “inspirational” note: remember that the writer is usually giving advice suitable for him/herself. In most cases, it won’t apply to you…

If they're all pointing somewhere but not looking where you're looking, it's probably not a direction worth following. (Pointers at the Louvre, Paris 2011)

Now, if you came to this page wanting to know when the next art class would be, bear with me while I redraw the schedule within the next few days, and the classes will be ready to start again soon. Whatever you do this year, make sure you JUST KEEP DRAWING and you can be sure the juices will keep flowing!

And if you want to know where my ART is going, remember to go and check my artist blog!

P.S. All pictures above are mine and copyrighted and cannot be used without my permission – as with all the pictures on this website!

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