Watercolor Foundations

Watercolor Foundations

In-Person: Adult | This program is completed

20 Academy Street Arlington, MA 02476 United States
Loft 3
All
9/25/2013-11/13/2013
7:00 PM-9:30 PM on Wed
235.00 USD
Member Discount Available

Watercolor Foundations

In-Person: Adult | This program is completed

8 Wednesdays, 7-9:30pm

Work with still life, landscape, and some abstraction to learn concepts and strategies that allow you to paint with clarity and spontaneity. Beginning with demonstrations and guided exercises in washes, layering, wet into wet, and color mixing, learn to demystify the watercolor process. Utilize various techniques to resolve issues of light and shadow, volume, space and depth, texture, and transparency. References to contemporary and traditional watercolor included.

Glick, Marjorie
Marjorie Glick

Marjorie Glick (she/her/hers) is known for her large scale vivid realism watercolors that are inspired by New England’s places of antiquity and by the beauty found in nature. She has exhibited at several regional museums and galleries including the DeCordova Museum, Berkshire Art Museum, Brockton Art Museum, Beth Urdang Gallery, Boston, and the Forum Gallery in New York. Her work is in over 40 corporate and private collections including The Federal Reserve Bank, Fidelity Investments, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Tufts-New England Medical Center, all in Boston; Friends Hospital, in Philadelphia. She is the recipient of grants from the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation (Artist’s Resource Trust Grant) and the Massachusetts Cultural Council. She is represented by The Turtle Gallery in Deer Isle, Maine. She has served as Adjunct Faculty for The Art Institute of Boston at Lesley University and was a member of the faculty of the DeCordova Museum School, in Lincoln, MA from 1986-2012. She leads plein air workshops in Maine, France, and Tuscany. She holds a BFA from Massachusetts College of Art and has studied independently with Wolf Kahn and George Nick.

To learn more about Marjorie, visit her website You can also read a feature on her work in American Watercolor Weekly at: https://americanwatercolor.net/creating-depth-in-large-scale-watercolor-paintings/