Book and Brush Painting with Rachel Woelfel | Ages 5-7 | Saturdays 11:30am-12:45pm | 4/22-5/20 | Spring 2023

Book and Brush Painting with Rachel Woelfel | Ages 5-7 | Saturdays 11:30am-12:45pm | 4/22-5/20 | Spring 2023

Young Artists | This class is completed

107 East Deer Park Road Dix Hills, NY 11746 United States

Studio 2

All Levels

4/22/2023-5/20/2023

11:30 AM-12:45 PM EDT on Sat

160.00 USD

Member Discount Available

This unique and interdisciplinary course for students ages 5-7 incorporates the worlds of storytelling and painting into one fun experience. Instructor Rachel Woelfel will begin each class with a reading of children's literature from children's literature powerhouses such as Eric Carle, Shel Silverstein, and more. Then, students will be guided through the painting process of creating scenes of their favorite moments, themes, or characters in acrylic paint. Students will learn painting fundamentals such as color mixing, shading, brush application, and narrative. Each week a new book will be covered and a new exciting painting will be ready to take home and shown off.

  • Students are required to come prepared to class with as many 16" x 12" canvases or canvas panels as there are weeks in the class. Please dress your students for an artful experience, aprons recommended. 
Woelfel, Rachel

Rachel Woelfel is a ceramicist from Melville, NY and a graduate of Stony Brook University. Beginning as a painter, Rachel quickly adapted to ceramic sculpture, often referring to her work as “painting in 3D.” She has always been intrigued by the human form, its continued representation in art, and how it has evolved over time. As opposed to her training in the medical arts field where absolute naturalism was the goal, her own practice is about liberation and having fun interpreting the human form through color, texture, and narrative. Rachel’s teaching philosophy is based on the principle that the artist’s hand can be guided by tools and techniques to let the individual’s artistic expression shine through their artwork. As the teacher, Rachel believes she is there to spark an idea in the mind of a student with a prompt and then provide them with the technical building blocks they need to create the work that emerges in their own imagination. Even though students may be given the same prompt or assignment, Rachel ensures that each project turns out differently by encouraging students to express their individual style and empowering them to leave their fingerprints behind as signatures or personal trail on their ceramic pieces.