Pen & Ink & Watercolor - online via zoom

Pen & Ink & Watercolor - online via zoom

Adult Class | This program is completed

Any

9/14/2020-10/19/2020

10:00 AM-12:30 PM on Mon

$120.00

Member Discount Available

To assist you in preparing for this class, we have provided a link to the setup / test pages from the conference provider. If you have never used this conference service before please click on the link below so that your PC or device will be ready to participate in this class.

In this class, we will use pen and ink and watercolor in various ways and see how these two media can enhance each other.

As an added idea, but not necessary, this is also a good time, if you would like, to pursue working on any special painting that you want—e.g. using a special photograph or picture that you can translate into watercolor and ink.

For the first class you can bring any pens, paper, pencil, eraser and watercolors that you have and we will spend some time going over materials.

  • Beginners and experienced students are welcome.
  • Please email Jennifer Kane for supply list: jenn_kane@hotmail.com
Kane, Jennifer

Jennifer Kane is a contemporary artist working in Central Pennsylvania and Southern California. She studied art, science, and theater at the University of Illinois, graduating with a BFA and MFA before moving to the State College area, where she has a dual career as a costume designer and conservation artist. Recent work is informed by her study of climate change, featuring new ways of using materials to physically interpret her subject and observations. The resulting mixed media works on paper were accepted into the main division of the Central Pennsylvania Festival of the Arts in 2018. This was Jennifer’s 15th year as a participating artist at the festival, where she has been an award winning invited artist. Jennifer’s other current abstract works include ‘Into the Future’, a digital landscape series about construction and destruction from her own on-site photos of concrete, and ‘Access Series’, colorful portraits of utility access portals with a corresponding essay about American access to power and sanitation.