blueBanksia

blueBANKSIA - art workshop directory

Search for Art Workshops

Search for:


Select Category
State

Art Tutor Gallery

Overseas Art Tours

List your workshop with blueBanksia
Ten Tips on Taking a Workshop E-mail

by Nita Leland

(Or, Advice from Someone Who Has Been on Both Sides of the Easel)

  1. First, select a workshop that has something specific you want or need to learn, such as drawing, design, color or experimental techniques. Don't take a workshop just because everybody else you know is going.
  2. Look for an instructor whose techniques or expertise fit in with your artistic goals.

  1. Try to find someone who has taken a workshop from this artist and ask if students received personal attention, whether there were demonstrations and critiques, did they learn what they hoped for, would they take from this person again, would they recommend the workshop to others? Also check on site location, convenience, etc. How can you do this? Subscribe to an artist's news group or mailing list and ask questions.
  2. Request a supply list in time to gather all your materials and take everything listed, within reason. Be sure to take your usual mediums and tools, so you'll have them if you need a break from class activities.
  3. Take a lot of source material to work from, your own photos and drawings, value sketches and abstract design sketches.
  4. Go with a positive attitude. You'll learn something you can use, if you keep an open mind. If the workshop disappoints you, don't spoil it for others by being a griper.
  5. Have reasonable expectations. You don't do your best work under workshop conditions. Hardly anybody does!
  6. Don't try to finish paintings unless the instructor insists. Use the instructor's methods as much as you can - this may be your best chance to try them.
  7. Simplify. Don't try to do too many new techniques at once, but do lots of pieces, trying something different in each one.
  8. Don't be afraid to put something up for critique. You'll learn the good as well as the bad. And be sure to listen to other critiques for even more valuable instruction.
Here are a few more pronouncements from the Voice of Experience:

  • Ask for help when you need it, but don't take more than your share of the instructor's time. Let your instructor know you enjoyed the workshop, stating what helped you the most. If you can work yourself up to mentioning things that didn't work for you, share that, too. That's how workshop teachers improve themselves.
  • Get plenty of rest between classes. It takes a lot of energy to make it through a week- long workshop.
  • Don't be shy. Join a group for lunch. Lots of good talk can happen during the breaks.
  • Help clean up if it seems appropriate. Someone will be very grateful.
  • If the workshop offers a class mailing list, accept it. You may want to keep in touch with other participants.
Travelling to the United States? Then Join Nita in an art workshop - Nita Leland's workshops
 

FREE monthly newsletter

SUBSCRIBE NOW for your free monthly newsletter

DISCOVER new Art Workshops
LEARN new Art Tips and Tricks
gather INSPIRATION from other artists
View sample

Browse art categories

Bookmark and Share

Facebook

Join us on Facebook - we would love to hear from you

Find us on Facebook

Featured Art Books

500 Animals in Clay

500 Animals in Clay

Contemporary Expressions of the Animal Form

No other volume has ever presented such a diverse and captivating collection of contemporary animal-themed ceramics. This magnificent gallery includes pieces from an international group of artists; the beautifully crafted works range from the representational to the abstract, from artful realism to provocative surrealism (including animal-human hybrids). Ann Marais' image of a waterfowl painted onto a porcelain dish has a restrained, Asian quality. Sharkus' painted and smoke-fired stoneware turtle could easily be mistaken for the living creature.

Buy Now on Fishpond

Warm Glass A Complete Guide to Kiln-forming Techniques - Fusing, Slumping, Casting

Warm Glass

A Complete Guide to Kiln-forming Techniques - Fusing, Slumping, Casting

An authoritative, extensively illustrated guide to making glass objects in a kiln. Provides detailed information on the history and traditional techniques of using a kiln in glasswork, along with instructions and examples designed to help you understand all the steps each technique requires.

Buy Now on Fishpond


500 Figures in Clay

500 Figures in Clay

Ceramic Artists Celebrate the Humane Form

Presents some of the best figurative studies created by more than 250 contemporary ceramists from around the world, spanning a multitude of artistic styles, from realistic to abstract, representational to surreal, and starkly minimalist to flamboyantly narrative.

Buy Now on Fishpond

More Featured Books

blueBanksia