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ARTISTS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME – ALUMNI and other courses

2023-2024

Outline

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The Ar�st Development Programme provides �me and space to think and develop your individual work. It is a place to learn and do work with the knowledge, experience and exper�se of a professional ar�st as well as that of the group. It provides individual tutorials, lectures and discussion on pain�ng ideas and �me away to work.

There are 2 long weekends with studio space to study across the year with a seven-day Field Trip in Dale, Pembrokeshire. Plus a tutorials study day in Binsted and Climping Seascapes. The pain�ng of Landscape has �meless values. Landscape can be the source of our best crea�ve endeavours, and it reveals to ourselves and others an experience of being alive within its forces and spaces.

In the School of Landscape Pain�ng we are immersed in the landscape, we study valuable pain�ng processes and tradi�ons that will allow us to give form and expression to our experiences.

Key aims:

-To grow in individual work.

-Deepen a connec�on to landscape.

-Set down a framework within which a group of pain�ngs, drawings and prints can happen.

-Expand and deepen work through the study of landscape, pain�ng language and materials.

-Bring together ar�sts to inform and support.

Discussion Theme 'Vision and Design' and the Possibili�es of Paint.

Contact: office@schooloflandscapepain�ng.com

Dates:

20th to 22nd October 2023 (Burpham)

19th to 21st January 2024 (Burpham)

23rd to 30th March 2024 (Dale, Pembrokeshire)

20th June 2024 – Individual Tutorial Day (Binsted)

Cost:

Main Course (2 x long weekends & tutorial day) - £900

Main Course + Wales Field Trip (March 2024) - £1300

Discussion Theme - Vision & Design

“ The possibili�es of paint.”

Introduc�on – whilst this course is about individual development we shall also use as a point of reference the theme of vision, this is about your vision and the way you go about discussing this.

“Plasticity has become all important, there is no longer any suggestion of a romantic décor; all is reduced to the poorest terms” - Roger Fry

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