Portraiture
Class | Available (Membership Required)
Get to the heart of portraiture with CT/NYC portrait painter, Antony Zito, whose classes are fun and informal but with a powerful emphasis on gaining skills and knowledge. Open to all levels, this weekly course will guide you through the creation of an in-depth portrait using acrylic paint with the option of adding collage.
Our main focus will be to achieve a balanced sense of proportion and a distinct likeness, while exploring expressionistic mark-making techniques and - for the more advanced students - infusing the work with an emotional charge. We will dive into the intense problem-solving aspects of composition, line vs. form and have a lot of fun resolving our pieces through group critiques and one-on-one discussions. This class is insightful, engaging, thought-provoking, and fun!
Materials List:
- Primed canvas board (16” x 20” or so)
- Acrylic paints including: raw umber, yellow ochre, naples yellow, naples yellow light (or other flesh-tone/pale orange), buff titanium (or other off-white), white, a red & orange, other colors of your choice
- Brushes (small medium, large)
- Rag, water cup, and palette (can be anything: paper plate, etc.)
- Full-color high-quality print of a face 8.5” x 11” or larger: face must be well-lit, preferably frontal and preferably without teeth showing. More advanced artists can choose more dramatically posed and lighted images since these types of portraits are much more difficult to render.
Antony Zito
Hailing from the woods of Northern Connecticut, Zito has spent 30 years on New York’s Lower East Side. Zito ran a gallery and portrait studio on Ludlow Street through 2006. To New Yorkers, his portraits of the local characters illustrate a sweeping line through the legendary period after the dust settled from the 80s East Village art scene. The New York Post has called his portrait paintings “sensual” and his renderings of people on recycled materials other than canvas have prompted The Village Voice to refer to him as “a master of the found object”. His work has been exhibited and collected throughout the US, UK, Italy, France, Spain, Belgium and Japan. Zito’s portraits and other artwork appear in Jim Jarmusch’s films, “Coffee and Cigarettes” and “Broken Flowers”. Zito is currently working on a documentary film illuminating his corner of the East Village & LES in the 1990s early aughts.
www.zitogallery.com