Watercolor Foundations: Loosen up! 1W25
This class will be registerable on October 15th.
Join this workshop for a guide/refresher course to watercolor techniques - especially wet on wet to help loosen up your practice. We'll do color mixing on the paper, in water; we'll work on lifting; and we'll go over how to work with different surfaces.
Students will get a greater understanding of the fundamental elements of watercolor (from paint to paper to brushes) along with a better understanding of how watercolor paint works and some techniques that work best with watercolors.
Lisa Goren
Lisa Goren was born in California and raised in NYC. And yet she has dreamed of Polar landscapes since she was in her teens. Her first trip took her to Antarctica where she was inspired and captivated by the landscape. Later travels to Iceland, Alaska, increased her love for the Polar Regions. Her watercolors show an unfamiliar landscape in a new light. By using vibrant colors and taking risks with different surfaces, she makes the viewer reevaluate their understanding of both these landscapes and their beliefs in the potential of the medium. Her works create questions about the nature of abstraction and our planet as many of her pieces are representations of unfamiliar, threatened terrains.
Lisa’s work can be found in personal collections all over the world, from Australia to Iceland, and the United States. She was awarded a place on the 2013 voyage of The Arctic Circle, an artist residency sailing near the North Pole. This “trip of a lifetime” was chronicled in an article she wrote for the New York Times (http://nyti.ms/1PAO5mr) and led her to her next phase of her Polar work. She had two pieces in “Gaia - Les femmes et l'ecologie” in Paris to coincide with the COP21 Climate talks.
Lisa has been working out of Boston, Massachusetts for the past 25 years and is a board member of the National Association of Women Artists (Mass. Chapter). She was named Artist-in-Residence for the South Shore Art Association, 2016-2018.
If you already have watercolor paints/paper, then you should bring those and we can make them work. If you have any questions about materials, let us know and we will put you in contact with the instructor.
- Watercolor paint. Suggested colors:
- Indigo Blue
- Ultramarine Blue
- Cadmium Yellow
- Lemon Yellow
- Cadmium Red
- Alizarin Crimson or Permanent Rose
- Watercolor paper
- It’s helpful (not required) if you have both inexpensive watercolor paper and some good paper (140lb). This way you can do a lot of small exercises without wasting the good stuff. I bring 300lb paper with me so that if you’re interested you can buy a piece (it’s expensive so I buy in bulk – I charge $20/sheet, it’s 22” x 30”). This paper is NOT required, only if you’d like to try it.
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Paint palette to hold the paints – even a plastic plate is fine.
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Generally, any brushes you already have work. You don’t need to buy the most expensive sable brush. I do bring extra brushes just in case.
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A good synthetic or mixed natural/synthetic does a great job.
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At least one round brush with a good tip.
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At least one larger and one smaller brush. Even if you tend to paint very small, you’ll need something at least as large as a size 12.
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If you have any questions about materials, let us know and we will put you in contact with the instructor.