The Painter’s Palette: A Dialogue With Color (Limited Offering) – New!

Adult Multi-Week | Registration opens 11/5/2025 9:00 AM EST

1812 West Main Street Richmond, VA 23220 United States
Drawing West
All Levels
1/26/2026-3/2/2026
1:00 PM-4:00 PM EST on Mon
$245.00
$220.50
$10.00

The Painter’s Palette: A Dialogue With Color (Limited Offering) – New!

Adult Multi-Week | Registration opens 11/5/2025 9:00 AM EST

This class explores the painter’s palette—not just as a tool, but as a space for decision-making, experimentation, and meaning. You will develop an understanding of how color theory, emotion, brushwork, and historical influence come together on the palette. Each class provides opportunities to mix, apply, and react to color in ways that build confidence and deepen awareness of visual relationships. Through exercises based on Fauvism, symbolism, and historical palettes, you will discover your own chromatic preferences and develop a more intentional use of color. By the end of the class, you will have created a personalized palette and a final painting project rooted in the concepts explored throughout.






  • Accessibility notes: Many artmaking processes require the ability to sit or stand for extended periods of time, fine motor skills/finger dexterity, repetitive motions, vision, and some amount of physical strength. VisArts values making classes accessible to everyone, and is always happy to work with students to make accommodations when possible. Please reach out to info@visarts.org with specific questions related to accessibility or accommodations.
    This class is moderately physical. Students should be comfortable standing for extended periods and using arm and hand motion for painting and mixing. The act of mixing paint, handling brushes, and setting up compositions can involve repeated shoulder and wrist motion. Accommodations can be made for seated workspaces if needed.
    Paid studio access is available through our Studio Access Program. Please visit visarts.org for more information.
    Classes are confirmed one week prior to the start date. In order to help us confirm classes, please register as early as possible.
  • Students are expected to bring materials to class, please download the materials list HERE: Download materials list
Okaily, William
William Okaily

William Okaily is a multidisciplinary artist, educator, and writer whose practice bridges visual and performing arts, scenography, and critical research. His work explores perception and the intersections of materiality and myth, often incorporating deconstructive methodologies and oral histories. Influenced by East Asian philosophies of Nothingness, he investigates what he calls "the grandeur in the granular"—how subtle details evoke visceral responses and reveal hidden complexities.
William earned an MFA in Multidisciplinary Art from the Maryland Institute College of Art, where he also pursued a Minor in Curatorial Practice and a Certificate in the College Teaching of Art. He holds a BA in Studio Art with a Minor in Media and Communication from the American University of Beirut and completed his French Baccalaureate in Philosophy and Literature.
His work has been exhibited in Lebanon and the United States, and he participated in the Antioch Recovery Project Research Lab at Johns Hopkins University. Currently, he contributes accessible art criticism to RVA Magazine and teaches Painting and Drawing at the Visual Art Center of Richmond and the Cultural Art Center at Glen Allen. William fosters critical perspectives and innovative pedagogies, integrating radicalism, critical thought, and risk-taking into dynamic learning environments.