What's included
1 live meeting
55 mins in-class hours per weekClass Experience
Are you ready to enter the world of drawing using pen and ink? Have you always wanted to be able create an architectural drawing with only an ink pen and a piece of paper? More importantly, have you always wanted to pursue a life as an artist and would like to be shown the tools and techniques that are necessary to visualize the artwork that you dream of creating in your head? Look no further! The classes offered here are for the dedicated and devoted artist, young or old who wishes to build upon the foundational knowledge of the great artists of the past while creating art for the future! Art Teacher Meghan Lacey brings both a positive and cheery disposition to her classes and loves to share her love of art with all of you! This class is ongoing, offered weekly, meeting for 55 minutes each week. Each class will feature a lesson given by Meghan Lacey, a detailed instructional lesson on animal drawing which will be featured. The teaching method is step by step feedback on how to create the scene. Students have the opportunity to submit questions and ask for feedback on assignments as well. In this class, we will learn the foundational concepts in pen and ink drawing learning how to draw animals. For each class, Meghan will teach the students through demonstration and lessons outlining the concepts of each of the components of a strong pen and ink drawings. Using a pencil and a ruler, first students will draw with Meghan step by step before adding pen and ink to the illustration. Students will practice their skills starting from the very beginning of compositional line drawing to creating a pen and ink drawing. Real life observation for practice outside of class will be encouraged but is optional. Meghan is so excited to meet you and hopefully encourage you in your own artistic journey! June 25-July 1: Arctic Fox Drawing July 2-8: Baby Elephant Drawing July 9-15: Blue Whale Drawing July 16-22: Cat Drawing July 23-29: Horse Drawing July 30-August 5: Corgi Drawing August 6-12: Parakeet Drawing August 13-19: Ducks Drawing August 20-26: Koi Fish Drawing August 27-September 2: Sea Turtle Drawing September 3-9: Butterfly Drawing September 10-16: Bluebird Drawing September 17-23: Panda Drawing September 24-30: Koala Drawing October 1-7: Raccoon Drawing October 8-14: Bumblebee Drawing October 15-21: Hedgehog Drawing October 22-28: Polar Bear Drawing October 29-November 4: Penguin Drawing November 5-11: Reindeer drawing November 12-18: Baby Elephant drawing Holiday Week: Sunday, November 19-Saturday, November 25. Classes will resume on Sunday, November 26. November 26-December 2: Gazelle drawing December 3-9: Giant tortoise drawing December 10-16: Dolphin drawing December 17-23: Clownfish drawing December 24-30: Dalmatian dog drawing Holidays: Monday, December 25 and Monday, January 1 ——————————————————- Winter/Spring 2024: December 31 - January 6: Gazelle drawing January 7-13: Macaw drawing January 14-20: Golden Retriever drawing January 21-27: Flamingo drawing January 28 - February 3: Horse drawing February 4-10: Dolphin drawing February 11-17: Butterfly drawing February 18-24: Parakeet drawing February 25-March 2: Hedgehog drawing March 3-9: Octopus drawing March 10-16: Barn Owl drawing March 17-23: Blue Whale drawing March 24-30: Bee drawing March 31 - April 6: Pig drawing April 7-13: Tree Frog drawing April 14-20: Monkey drawing April 21-27: Cardinal bird drawing April 28 - May 4: Sea Turtle drawing
Learning Goals
Students will learn to draw animals using pencils and pen and ink on paper.
Other Details
Supply List
Welcome! I'm so excited that you joined this class! Would you please introduce yourself to me and the other learners? And please share any background or questions you have in this topic area. If you already have graphite drawing pencils, erasers, and drawing paper you like to use please feel free to use those instead of what I have suggested in the supply list. I really like using any pencils with an "H" in the name on the label, they tend to be lighter graphite pencils for better light sketching. Any "B" pencils tend to be darker and have more smudgy graphite in them. The supply list is a guide for you to follow in case you want to know what kind of materials I like to use. I am so excited to have you all in class and I look forward to seeing you soon! :) Thanks! - Miss Meghan Recommended Supplies: 1. Drawing Paper: A sketchbook is perfect for this: https://www.amazon.com/Canson-Heavyweight-Texture-Sizing-Sheets/dp/B0039UMRMW?ref_=ast_sto_dp&th=1&psc=1 2. Graphite Drawing Pencils: https://www.amazon.com/STAEDTLER-break-resistant-super-bonded-100-G12/dp/B0014E2S0Q?ref_=ast_sto_dp&th=1 2. Drawing Pencils: https://www.amazon.com/STAEDTLER-break-resistant-super-bonded-100-G12/dp/B0014E2S0Q?ref_=ast_sto_dp&th=1 3. 3 Eraser Pack: https://www.amazon.com/Prismacolor-Premier-Kneaded-Plastic-Erasers/dp/B003UDR9Y4/ref=sr_1_2?crid=31MWRY8F1VBEF&keywords=prismacolor+eraser&qid=1675375774&s=office-products&sprefix=prismacolor+eraser%2Coffice-products%2C106&sr=1-2 4. Ruler - Inches, centimeters and millimeters: https://www.dickblick.com/products/blick-aluminum-non-slip-rulers/?clickTracking=true&wmcp=pla&wmcid=items&wmckw=56014-1018&gclid=Cj0KCQiA2-2eBhClARIsAGLQ2RlESwKHKzuCtZDKqkO1LjiJafMMY18ERMOp7D_HvKvmHbstM-DYKm8aAhKHEALw_wcB One kind of black ink pen will be great - here are some options - I usually use the Micron pens in class. 5. Micron Pens: https://www.dickblick.com/items/sakura-pigma-micron-pens-100th-anniversary-black-set-of-10/ 6. BIC Pens: https://www.staples.com/BIC-Round-Stic-Ballpoint-Pens-Black-Ink-Medium-Point-60-Box/product_442901 7. Pilot Precise Black V7 Pens: https://www.staples.com/Pilot-Precise-V7-Premium-Rolling-Ball-Stick-Pens-Fine-Point-Black-12-Pack-35346/product_205138
External Resources
Learners will not need to use any apps or websites beyond the standard Outschool tools.
Teacher expertise and credentials
Bachelor's Degree in Music or Theatre or Arts from LaGrange College
Meghan Lacey was raised in sunny and warm climate of Florida and has spent the last 12 years living in the beautiful foothills of Georgia. She credits her mother, Lyn Lacey, as her first inspiration for her artistic endeavors. While she was still very small, Meghan could be seen carrying her sketch book and pencils wherever she went and still keeps a sketchbook of her own today. She considers herself an oil painter in the classical realist method. She chooses to paint representationally rather than non-representationally (abstractly). Her mediums she enjoys most currently are oil painting, graphite drawing, colored pencil drawing, pastel drawing, charcoal drawing, watercolor painting, gouache painting, and pen and ink drawing. Her extended family is full of creative writers, artists and musicians so there is no end to the ideas and inspiration that she is able to experience. She encourages her students to be careful observers of the world around them, especially the natural world in all its complexity and beauty.
For the last 12 years, she has taught students in art camp settings, private and small group classes and in studio art electives. Within the art studio, Meghan seeks to find the treasure hidden inside each individual to help them blossom into the person that they will become. She gains her inspiration from time spent outside in natural settings and her childhood memories are strongly linked to hours she spent as a child in the Florida sunshine. Cherished memories consist of eating warm oranges from her grandparents’ orange grove, climbing magnolia trees, building forts with palm fronds and running barefoot through the grass, and playing hide-and-seek with her brother and cousins in azalea bushes in the backyard. Meghan builds her artistic pursuits upon her own desire to stop, look and listen at the world and reflect upon each day with gratitude.
While still in high school, Meghan received classical drawing and oil painting instruction from Chris DiDomizio in Atlanta, Georgia from 2006-2012 and watercolor painting instruction from Dylan Scott Pierce from 2009-2012. Meghan has taken private lessons from portrait artist Leah Burchfield Mantini as well as workshops from artists Amaya Gurpide, Jordan Sokol, Mia Bergeron, Anne Blair Brown, Alan Shuptrine, Brett Weaver, and Suzy Schultz. During the fall semester of 2016, she studied abroad at Oxford University through the Scholars' Semester at Oxford, where she studied History of Art as a registered visiting student. Meghan graduated with her B.A. in Art and Design, with a Concentration in Painting and a Minor in Art History at LaGrange College in May of 2017. Currently, she is pursuing her MFA in Painting through Academy of Art University, San Francisco, CA.
For her educational philosophy, Meghan finds the etymology behind the words of “teacher” and “art” themselves to be inspirational. In Latin, the word, “do, dare, dedi, datus” means to “give” and this is the basic root for the Latin word, “doceo, docere, docui, doctus” meaning “to teach”. This essentially means that the etymology of the word for “teaching” means “giving”. So as a teacher, Meghan sees herself essentially as a “giver” and seeks to share the knowledge she has with others in a giving spirit.
However, most people today consider that creating art requires both innate “talent” or some kind of genius that a person is either born with or simply isn’t. How many times it has been said, “How talented they are!” but not “How skilled they are!” Why it is that people dismiss the hard work which is accomplished by an artist and only give them the praise of how talented they are? Even a natural inclination or desire towards a subject requires great dedication and hours of practice and study – but practicing the skill or artmaking in a vacuum without knowledge of the prior discoveries and advancements in their area of study is unwise. Most advanced art classes, give an assignment or set up a still life/model and then ask students to interpret the visual material on their own, without any step by step guidance on structure, color theory, or methodical process. While this personal impulse based art produces personally inspired, as it has been called “original” work, it does not allow artists to convey a greater sense of realism or more substantial impact on the viewer. In contrast, Meghan teaches her students with this philosophy of “giving” as a teacher (as has been given to her by her teachers) but also realizing that the root word of art in Latin is “ars, artis” which actually means “skill” or “method”. This implies that anyone can create realistic art, if they are given sufficient instruction in the skill-based art curriculum of fundamentals of art. This is a description of what is known as representational art as opposed to non-representational art. “Non-representational” art means that the art created is not supposed to “look like” the subject necessarily but instead may be a reflection of the person’s own emotional response without showing the actual visual detail of the subject.
An abstract or non-realistic piece of art may benefit from the understanding of realism techniques to choose to use or not use in a work of art, editing and enhancing the message of a piece during the artistic process. As an artist, a choice can be made to work in a realistic or non-realistic way, but without the skills to make something “look like” the subject there becomes only one choice, creating something that is inaccurately drawn or painted, simply because the artist lacks proper instruction. With academic representational art studies, an artist will be handed the tools to make a choice when to abstract the image and when to try to capture what they see realistically by their own judgement and decision and not a lack of options.
For the last few hundred years, prior to the beginning of the 20th century, accepted and required art curriculum included Giotto’s Value Scale, the French Academy approach to drawing and painting, and the Charles Bargue drawing program, which allowed each student to progress through “Atelier” style assignments in a small group setting. Today, many art academies and atelier experiences are available all over the world, however, they usually are aimed primarily at teaching only adults and require full-time enrollment at an intensive level of commitment.
Most students will likely be ready to begin classical drawing instruction and painting by age 11 or 12 as it requires personal dedication and interest in detailed projects and developing skills. Meghan does not usually recommend these classes in most cases to younger students, unless the student and parent are aware of the rigor of the assignments and feel that the student is sufficiently advanced enough for the challenge. This should be a joyous process of growth for the student, not one of frustration or discouragement at the inherent difficulty which exists in even the primary drawing exercises. Currently, classes are at a small size capacity, which allows all the students to individually receive help and encouragement from Miss Meghan as they create their art projects.
If a student wants to continue to study in an atelier beyond the classes that Meghan is teaching, these courses will provide a necessary foundation to continue further education in an atelier, a traditional arts college or another artistic career such as an animator, graphic designer, architect, etc. The portfolio of work can be assembled to apply for art programs such as these, art scholarships or art grants for atelier programs as well. Many practicing artists in these fields will find it beneficial to sharpen their drawing skills and add more color theory understanding to their projects, adding more professionalism to their overall quality of work.
One very important foundational belief that Meghan holds is that it is the desire of the artist to grow, improve and pursue art which makes them a success. The determination to keep on going and not give up is what sets artists apart, not even the amount of “talent” or skill they may possess. So remember, yes, anyone can be an artist, but only the ones who believe will truly see what they dream.
Meghan enjoys spending time with her family, playing the piano, going on adventures with her two dogs, Jem and Scout, watching BBC or Masterpiece TV miniseries and cooking new yummy recipes.
She looks forward to seeing you in art class!
Meghan Lacey Fine Art
Reviews
Live Group Class
$21
weekly1x per week
55 min
Completed by 4 learners
Live video meetings
Ages: 14-18
1-5 learners per class