Lucky Drawing 103. My third online class session in the Lucky School of Art. April 14 - May 11, 2015. All drwaing skill levels beginner to advanced. Now taking registration for up to 30 students. When you've paid, your place is guaranteed. Thanks!
Susan Shie
Turtle Moon Studios 2612 Armstrong Drive, Wooster, Ohio, 44691-1806.
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| Visit Jimmy's Leather StudioAbove: This is me on March 2, this year, drawing a piece about my friend Early Weygandt delivering some bedroom furniture to my new Granny Pad in Lakewood, OH on Oct 1, 2004. I was getting ready to be my granddaughter Eva's nanny then, and Early was also getting her usual haircut by her friend Christine, over on the other side of Lakewood that day. In the online class, we draw in this size hardbound sketchbook, and we draw a lot from life, but also can throw in working from memory or imagination, when we like. I was using mostly children's markers and Pentel Color Pens on this playful narrative piece, to honor my friend who had just passed away, and that happy time in our lives.
Registration is open now for Lucky Drawing 103, April 14 to May 11, 2015, which will run as a 4-week session, that you can continue to take, as when people start taking piano lessons or a yoga class that continues over a long time. But you can also take it for just one or two 4-week sessions, or pop in and out over the years. There will always be a 2-week break between sessions, and you won't miss anything if you are in and out over time. You are very welcome to come to this class as a new drawing student. You don't need to have taken a drawing class from me or anywhere else before. I will always have some brand new students in all my 4-week sessions, and the classes will always have students with all levels of drawing skills, from no skill to very advanced. Some will consider themselves to be beginners in drawing, while others may be as advanced as professors who've been teaching art for 30 years. ( I have both ends of this stick in my current class, and everything in between, and we're all getting along just fine!) Each artist's personal best is what we're focused on.
This class will be from Tuesday April 14 to Tuesday May 11, 2015, online in a secret private Facebook group, which I'll leave up for a year from its starting date, so you can go back and reference it, or find friends you made there. This FB group can only be seen by the people who are in the class, so all that we post and say is totally private among us.
This will be my third time to teach an online drawing class, as Lucky Drawing 101 ran from Jan 20 to Feb 17, 2015, and LD 102 is March 3 - 31, 2015. The session numbers (101, 102, 103, etc) do not mean you need to take one class in order to take the next or another class later. They are not sequential, but are just numbers to let me know which session we're in. Each student in the class is going at their own pace, at their own level, during any given session.
To take the class, you and I must be Facebook friends, so I can invite you to be a member of the secret, private class group, which no one but us will ever be able to access on Facebook. If we aren't already FB friends, please send me a friend request, so that I'll be able to invite you into the group, which I'll open a few days before the class actually starts.
How to pay for this class: If you live in the US, the class fee is $160, if you pay with PayPal, and $155 if you mail me a personal check instead. If you live in another country, please use PayPal and send me $165, which will cover the currency exchange fee PP charges me.
However you’re paying, please email me at susanshie@gmail.com, to let me know that you are sending payment, so I can put your name on my class list. I will also need your phone number and street address.
For PayPal payment, send your fee to my email address, susanshie@gmail.com. The name on the account is my husband, James Acord. When I receive your payment notice from PayPal, I will email you and let you know that you’re enrolled in the class. If you've never used PayPal before and want to, email me, and I'll send you instructions on how to use PayPal.
For personal check payment, email me and then send $155 to Susan Shie, 2612 Armstrong DRIVE, Wooster, Ohio 44691. When I receive your check in the mail, I will email you and let you know that you’re enrolled in the class.
Along with the class description here, I've put in some of my own recent drawings, as well as a supply list near the bottom of the page and a little bio about me. So be sure to scroll all the way to the bottom of the page.
A woman interested in taking this class wrote to me: “If you want some early feedback: I don’t want to sit around drawing still life stuff. I am scared of drawing anyway. I want to do fun stuff that resembles the real but doesn’t have to look like a replica. I need a kick in the pants or incentive to overcome the fear of drawing. I love funky stuff and funky colors!" I wanted you to read that quote, because that's exactly the kind of students I'm looking for!
Above: "St Judy's Comet." ©Susan Shie 2014. drawing in large sketchbook, with pen, colored pencil, and watercolor. This piece was made for the drawing assignment "Draw a Song," and uses Paul Simon's "St Judy's Comet" as the song, and began with a photo of a friend putting his son to sleep, which is what Paul Simon was singing about in this song. My friend Carson's son was about 2 and a half months old at the time of the photo. I added the tumbling comet above them, to show the song's line "Won't you run, come see St Judy's Comet roll across the sky and leave a spray of diamonds in its wake." I decided that the comet here is Carson's wife and his son's mother, Jo.
Class Title: Lucky Drawing 103.
Class cost: in the US: $160 for four weeks, if paid with PayPal. OR $155 for four weeks, if paid by personal check. In other countries: $165 for four weeks, paid with PayPal.
A little background: I began teaching focused drawing classes when I was a graduate student at Kent State School of Art, teaching two undergrad drawing classes per semester in the early 1980s. I’ve taught drawing, painting, writing, and sewing in my art quilt workshops since 1989, around the world and in my Turtle Art Camp weeklong, live-in students sessions at my home since 1994. (Check my 2015 Turtle Art Camp schedule, which is alive and well with lots of dates to pick from!) But I never taught an online class until this January. I found out I love doing it!
This online class is about drawing, and will NOT be about working on cloth at all. I may offer that online later, but for now, I’m focusing on what most artists I know need to improve on: their drawing skills, so basic to being able to have true freedom in artmaking! We'll be drawing in large hardbound sketchbooks and uploading pix of our drawings to the classroom's albums. My classes include very interactive discussions about everyone's drawings, so I'm sure you'll be motivated to keep up with the rest of the students, because it feels like we're really in a classroom, talking together, supporting each other's ideas and artworks.
We are only doing actual drawing with real art supplies on real paper (in the 11 x 14" hardbound sketchbooks), and we are NOT doing any iPad or other digital drawing. There are probably classes for that, but this one isn't. So thanks for understanding that and drawing freehand on paper in this class.
I have always considered myself a painter, much more than a quilter, as all my formal art studies were in drawing and painting. I came to quilting out of a feminist choice in college, to embrace the sewing my mother had taught me, and which had been such a big part of my life as a woman. I wanted to make Women's Art. This made me consciously decide to add sewing to my drawing and painting, and later that kind of work became known as art quilting. But we aren't studying that here.
Class description: This class will be all about drawing A LOT in a large hardbound sketchbook (using pens, markers, colored pencils, watercolors - whatever works well for you and is visually strong on paper.) We'll be doing optional and simple daily exercises and working on the weekly assignments. We’ll be drawing from life mostly, but we’ll also be able to play with the drawings and make them more passionate and poetic than just realistic renderings, in order to show our feelings in and for the work.
I’ll be making posts daily to the Facebook group, and will do this in a combination of ways: some little home videos (about once a week), photos of my own drawings, and posts about other things that interest me. I will give feedback to you about your work that you post to the group, and the whole class group will participate in our discussions of our drawings and whatever else we want to talk about. My students tell me that I partipate much more than the usual online teacher does. I wouldn't know, since I haven't taken an online class, just invented my own.
Besides giving you weekly assignments, I’ll give some ideas for keeping you psyched for drawing each day, even if just a little bit. Everyone can upload their assignments and other drawings, and can give positive feedback to each other. We’ll all share, and get to know each other, so everyone can feel comfortable together, in our own little art tribe.
A really nice thing about taking an online class is that you can "attend class" whenever it suits your own personal schedule. There is no exact time when you must be present. I hope this will help you fit the class into your own busy schedule. And if you get behind in the assignments, because Life gets in the way, you'll be able to access the group for a long, long time after the class is done. All the deadlines for assignments are what I call "porous." You can be late or early, or never do any givebn assignnent, and you're still ok.
Learning to draw takes dedication and a hunger to improve, just like learning to play piano or other instruments does. This class is for those who ache to be able to draw well and are willing to work at it a lot, starting wherever their skill level is right now and being unafraid to let others know that they can’t draw perfectly now, but want to become able to draw as realistically as they would like. It can take years to get to “perfect” realism, not just a few weeks, but every improvement in skill toward that goal is amazing! And along the way, you can savor the leaps in your drawing ability, as you enjoy being able to really express yourself with what you create on paper. Continuing with more 4 week sessions of Lucky Drawing is what I hope you'll consider doing, so that you can continue to stay motivated to draw and improve your skills. I am certainly always striving to improve my drawing skills, as are the other more advanced artists in the group. We all need some structure, in order for us to make the time to draw, too!
I believe that some of us are born with more ability than others in artmaking, but that everyone can improve their skills, as long as they’re enthused and hardworking … and hardplaying! The amount of your drawing improvement will hinge on your thirst to make it happen. I promise that practice and passion make perfect ... eventually. And we'll have a lot of fun along the way! I hope you'll lie in bed, thinking about the drawing you're working on, and get up in the morning, with excitement about drawing on your mind. Well, at least sometimes!
I don’t judge my students’ work, but rather encourage them to keep learning how to really look at things and how to see the stunning variety of nuance in the world around us. Each time you look at something, it will look different, and you will learn to really see the shapes before you, and not draw what you think they look like, but rather, what they really do look like, in that place, from that angle, at that time. The world is so fascinating in its infinitely changing forms!
Above: "Happy Moon Supply Box." ©Susan Shie 2014. ink and colored pencil on paper. 8.5"h x 11"w. Inspired by looking a few times, before drawing, at a tiny tin box that had a very similar illustration painted on it, and had the same name. I saw it in a friend's house, in a box of goodies in the bathroom and was intrigued by its playfulness and magic. I added the big buddha girl, the duck and suns and pie and various other things ... I call the assignment "Drawing inspired by a Tin or Box."
Remember: visual art is about communicating visually to others. Think about what you want people to notice, to feel, and to understand in what you’ve created and are sharing with them. Also please take to heart that there is no right and wrong in art. Creativity has no rules, thank goodness!
So I ask you to come to this class, if you’re ready to really fall in love deeply with expressing yourself through studying drawing, which is the visual-form equivalent to studying piano, with the same requirement of discipline and dedication. Drawing with its art basics is to making art what basic piano with its music basics is to making music. It's all about practice and learning to see!
You can continue taking my 4-week classes, since they will not be repeats of earlier sessions. You can work with me as long as you want to, to keep your enthusiasm and inspiration up for doing your drawing on a regular basis. I'll keep thinking up new class assignments and making more videos, so you'll never feel like the class is getting old. I promise to keep you challenged!
If you are hungry to improve your art skills, to the point where you are able to feel unlimited in what you choose to make art about, or you need a group structure to make yourself find drawing time, or you want to be part of a very active, feisty group of artists making drawings together from all over the country and even farther away, then sign up.
How to pay for this class: If you live in the US, the class fee is $160, if you pay with PayPal, and $155 if you mail me a personal check instead. If you live in another country, please use PayPal and send me $165, which will cover the currency exchange fee PP charges me.
However you’re paying, please email me at susanshie@gmail.com, to let me know that you are sending payment, so I can put your name on my class list. I will also need your phone number and address.
For PayPal payment, send your fee to my email address, susanshie@gmail.com. The name on the account is my husband, James Acord. When I receive your payment notice from PayPal, I will email you and let you know that you’re enrolled in the class. If you've never used PayPal before and want to, email me, and I'll send you instructions on how to use PayPal.
For personal check payment, email me and then send $155 to Susan Shie, 2612 Armstrong Drive, Wooster, Ohio 44691. When I receive your check in the mail, I will email you and let you know that you’re enrolled in the class.
Lucky Drawing 103 is the next session of 4 weeks, starting April 14 adn ending May 11, 2015. Students from earlier sessions can sign up to continue, and new students can jump in, as the lessons will always work fine for both beginners and ongoing students at all levels. I'll be thinking up new weekly assignments all the time, without repeating them. You can sign up for this next class any time now. Email me at: usanshie@gmail.com, to sign up. Just tell me that you want to sign up, and tell me how you're paying. I'll write you back, and also let you know when I've got your fee. I'll open the new Lucky Drawing 103 classroom on Facebook a few days before the class starts, and invite you to join that secret private classroom. Thanks a lot. Call me at 330-317-2167, if you have questions.
Supplies for this class, Lucky Drawing 102:
You can start this class with just the big hardbound sketchbook and a few ballpoint pens, if that's all you have around. You can use anything you like for drawing supplies, except you'll see I hate it when you use regular, too light, pencils. Who can see those weak marks in a photo online?? If you are not in the USA, buy your supplies in your own country, but just try to find the biggest size hardbound sketchbook.
The 11 x 14" hardbound Sketchbook: This is the one supply you must buy for this class. You can buy other brands, but make sure the paper is of good quality. I suggest the 14”h x 11”w hardbound sketchbook by Pro-Art. 220 pages, 110 sheets, acid free. Buy anywhere you find it, but Dick Blick has it. retail $16.99. Blick price $11.81, plus shipping. Amazon has it for $12.62, with free Amazon Prime shipping, if you have Prime. If you don't buy this brand, your sketchbook still has to be hardbound, so it doesn’t have holes where the pages meet, but rather a nice bound-book center line between the open book’s facing pages. No glued-only binding books, as pages fall out. Hardbound books last! And we’ll be drawing across a double page spread most of the time. It has to be this biggest size, too, so you can work big enough to really evolve your drawings.
Suggestions for other supplies you might want to try:
I suggest finding the supplies at places you want to. Shop local or google. Amazon has everything, but you can also try Dick Blick, Jerry's Artarama, and other places. Some of us have local stores we can support for at least some of this stuff!
Bic ballpoint pens, medium tip. I love cheap blue and black pens for drawing! They're great for drawing on the run when you don't have any "art supplies" on you! Use any paper you can find, when you're out and about and need to draw. Ballpoint pens are great for shading your drawing, and I use them intentionally in my work, a lot! You can use other colors of ballpoint pens, too.
Rub-a-Dub laundry markers by Sharpie. No kidding. I use them all the time! They look great on paper, but are a fairly thick line. Same line as a regular Sharpie, but these don’t do the dreaded haloing of rust colored crud onto the drawing surface, a while after you made the art. Not sold in too many places, but look around online! Rub-a-Dubs are at Staples, Amazon, and most office supply stores, especially online.
Rub-a-Dubs will bleed through to the other side of your paper a little, but not as much as regular Sharpies and other permanent markers will. I am used to a little bleeding in my sketchbooks, and I don’t mind it. But if you DO mind it, then don’t use any permanent markers. Stick to water based markers, like the Pentel Color markers or even markers designed for children. In the sketchbook, you don’t have to worry about light fading your work, because the book will be closed most of the time. (This will protect your watercolor drawings, too, which will also flatten out, after you let them dry well and then close the book, especially when you put heavy weights on the closed book.)
Uni-ball Signo Impact 207 1.0mm point black gel pens. Best roller gel pen I've found for paper, at a lower price than the Pentel rollers for fabric, lised below, which I also love. These Uni-ball pens don't say they're waterproof, but that they're water-resistant. They have refills, which is amazing to find with a pen anymore! Very buttery gliding tip, very rich ink like the richness of the ink in the Pentels below here. The link above is for a set of 3 pens with 8 refills, because gel pens go down fast. But you can find them sold separately or in other package deals, too.
Pentel Black Roller black gel pens for Fabric. These are not meant for use on paper, but they really ARE great for on paper, because they have permanent, waterproof, acid free pigment ink, and they glide easily and have a very rich black line, about 1.0mm thick. Their line resembles the lines I get with my airpen and fabric paint, for writing on my fabric pieces. Many regular gel pens' lines bleed when you get them wet, but these Pentel gel rollers don't do that. And they don't bleed through the paper to show on the next page. And this item is just a suggestion, like everything here but the sketchbook, which you need in that size and hard bound. These gel pens, and the ones above them don't bleed through your paper and are useable with watercolors, unlike most other gel pens. They do use way too much ink though. Go down super fast.
Pitt Artist’s Pens by Faber-Castell. India ink, super rich, but keep cap on tight when not in use, or they dry out and are ruined. Their lines are thinner than the gel pen lines, but some people like thin lines, and sometimes you really need them. They make 2 or 3 sizes of tips, blus brush tip pens, too.
Above: "Art and Peace." ©Susan Shie 2014. Drawing on the back of a big envelope, using a black, medium point Bic pen,
Colored pencils: best are Prismacolor Premier colored pencils, because they’re soft and rich in color, the very best colored pencils with the very most wonderful colors! Make sure you're getting the Premiers, because Prismacolor also makes cheaper, but harder (therefore lighter and less rich) colored pencils. You can buy Prismacolor Premier Colored Pencils many sizes of sets, and even individually, to replace your favorite ones. They also make Prismacolor Art Stix, which are sticks of just the "leads" of the colored pencils. These are very waxy, so they don't smear or give off dust, like oil pastels and regular pastels do. They cost more than regular colored pencils, but they last a lot longer. Do not sharpen them, but rather, hold them at an angle, while you use them, so that the tips naturally have a point, if you want one. You can maintain a flatter edge on one end and a pointer edge on the other end. Clever!
Pentel Color Markers. fine line, really nice colors. I suggest Dick Blick, because they have the best price on these for now, but buy anywhere. If you buy them on Amazon, be careful, because they have a bunch of different prices that vary a LOT. If you see that the markers are indeed Pentels, and the price is nearly as good as Dick Blick's, but you have Amazon Prime, then you decide! But don't buy these markers at crazy high prices!
Prang or other watercolor sets, with the cakes of color, not the dreaded, always stuck-lid tubes! I recommend the Prang 16-color set, the ones marked Professional, as there's also a lower quality set by Prang for kids, too. Prang is my favorite watercolor, and many artists agree that, even though we used them as kids in school, they make the best watercolors, with highly saturated, smooth colors. Also, with Prang, you can find replacement color cakes online. I go through yellow really fast!
Some nice watercolor brushes. Blick, Jerry’s Artarama, etc, lots of places sell them, but you might want to feel the bristles yourself, in person, and buy locally. The brushes that come with watercolors are usually not very good brushes, so buy some good ones and take good care of them. I love to use flat brushes, not round ones, but I'm on the lookout for the wonderful round Chinese horse hair brushes with bamboo handles. They used to have Chinese writing on the handles, but now they're less interestingly marked in English. They're for painting with Sumi ink, but I used to use them a LOT for watercolor. They're rounded brushes, but have a tiny tip, so they make great thick or thin lines and hold a lot of paint. If they're bent or misshapen when you see them, don't buy them. Buy ones with well-shaped tips. Be very careful with all your brushes, to make sure you form them back into their original brush shape, using your fingers, after you gently wash them. And never leave them sitting in water. Store them brush-end up or lying flat.
Water soluble colored pencils and color sticks that you can draw with and then use water and brush over are very nice, too. Derwent, Caran d'Arche, Koh-i-Noor, and other brands make these.
Good metal, hand-held pencil sharpener, and replacement blades.
Kneaded eraser, though I really hate erasers.
I discourage students from using regular pencils and erasers, because these imply and beg revision. I prefer letting it rip and just drawing, so the pens, markers, watercolors, colored pencils, etc, make me happy, as you get used to always moving forward, not fussing with “mistakes.” Children don’t erase, until they get into school and hear about doing it right or wrong … And back to my bad attitude about regular pencils: lightly drawn pencil sketches are very hard to SEE. Let’s stick with things that make good, strong marks, so we can all see what each other has created!
You don't need to buy a lot of stuff right away, and you may only wish to use a few tools for your drawing, anyhow. So just have a few things you think you'll love using ... and that fancy sketchbook I wrote about, at the start. That's the one thing I really, really want us all to be using the same. If you can't get that particular one, find another brand of 14 x 11" hardbound sketchboook.
I hope to hear from you soon! Thanks so much, Lucky (Susan Shie) Please contact me for more information or to sign up for Lucky Drawing 102 or a later class.
Above: This is the drawing I made in my 11 x 14" sketchbook, of the scene below. I drew from life, not from the photo, but the photo shows you what I started with ... before the light changed over the next two work hours and the pets shifted and moved a lot. This drawing was made with black marker and colored pencil. For the assignment, students can choose what media to use in response to my assignments.
Above: This is a photo I took of my unmade bed, in prep for making a two hour study of this setting. I knew the dog and cat would move in that time, so I wanted to have the photo as a fail-safe, but I ended up drawing from life for the whole session. It was an assignment I made called "Unmade Bed Drawing."
Above: Susan Shie with one of her large soft paintings (art quilts), made about Monica Bongue's sustainable organic farm, near Wooster. "Muddy Fork Farm." ©Susan Shie 2013. 72"h x 72"w. Airbrush, airpen, whole cloth painting, mostly machine sewn.
Susan Shie personal background: I'm a lifetime artist, born in Wooster, Ohio, on September 28, 1950. I'm a Libra. I’ve lived in Wooster most of my life, with my leather-artist husband James (Jimmy) Acord since 1976. Our daughter Gretchen, her husband Mike, and our granddaughter Eva live in Lakewood, Ohio. We have a dog, Libby, and two cats: Otis and Ome, and their sister Cricket lives with GEM, our kids in Lakewood.
I have two college degrees: The College of Wooster, BA in Studio Art (painting) 1981, summa cum laude, honors, Phi Beta Kappa. Kent State University School of Art, MFA (Master of Fine Arts in Painting 1986, summa cum laude. I taught Drawing I and Drawing II at Kent State School of Art, to undergrads during my master’s program.
My awards include two NEA Individual Artist grants, a Major Artist Grant from the combined NEA and OAC (Ohio Arts Council), and several Individual Artist grants from the OAC, as well as the 2008 Teacher of the Year Award from Professional Quilter. My artist's residencies include six months at PS#1 in New York City and a month in Xi'an, China, both thanks to the Ohio Arts Council.
This year's Quilt National '15 will be my 13 time to have work in this seminal biennial exhibiton that tours for two and a half years. I have exhibited, been published, and have taught art in adult workshops around the US and abroad since 1987, when I went from being a student to a professional artist. I've offered monthly weeklong Turtle Art Camps for adult students at my home studio from 1994 to present. I also offer private drawing and painting lessons in my home on a weekly basis, to children, teens, and adults. I'm very glad that I added teaching drawing online to my teaching formats in January, 2015.
See more detailed biographical information, including resume, bibliography, teaching history, and artist’s statement, in my resume index page.
For more information, please visit my website Turtle Moon Studios, or email me at susanshie@gmail.com.
Above: "The Busy Bee Egg Beater Company, Chicago, IL." ©Susan Shie 2014. ink, markers, and colored pencil on paper in 14" x 11" sketchbook, 2-26-14. This started out as an exercise with students, drawing from real egg beaters. Then we used mirrors and added ourselves in the negative spaces formed between the egg beater studies. The assignment is called "Kitchen Tools Drawing."
Susan Shie Turtle Moon Studios, Wooster, Ohio
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