Portraits From Photos- Oil & Acrylic

Portraits From Photos- Oil & Acrylic

Adult Classes | This program is completed

585 Park Street Naples, FL 34102 United States

Studio 206/207

Intermediate-Advanced

1/10/2022-1/31/2022

9:00 AM-12:00 PM on Mon

$200.00

$150.00

Initially, I guide new students through a series of studies designed to improve their ability to accurately see and represent the details of the human face. As students advance, they will begin working from their own photographs.

  • Masks are required to be worn by all students, regardless of vaccination status.
  • Oil and Acrylic Painters:
  • Book Painting the Portrait from Photography by Richard Kirk
  • 9x12 Fredrix Canvas Pad (ten sheets of cotton canvas)
  • Palette Pad (coated paper used to mix paints)
  • Turpenoid (Do not bring Turpentine!)
  • Liquin (Do not bring Grumbacher Mediums!)
  • Palette Knife Che Sun #827
  • Paint brush- Filbert #6
  • Paint brush- Flat #4
  • White sable- Round #6 or #8
  • Paint – Burnt Sienna, Ultramarine, and Titanium White
  • Two Large Jars
  • Paper Towels
  • Recommended Colors:
  • Unbleached Titanium White (oil)
  • Cadmium Red Light
  • Burnt Umber
  • Yellow Ochre
  • Indian Red
  • Cadmium Yellow (light or pale)
  • Raw Sienna
  • French Ultramarine Blue
  • Terra Verte
  • Burnt Sienna
  • Raw Umber
Kirk, Richard

Richard Kirk is an oil painter living and teaching in Naples and Bonita Springs, Florida. His current paintings are figurative and photorealistic, but he has worked extensively as an illustrator, portrait painter and still life painter. Currently, his paintings are on display at www.richardvkirk.com He teaches classes in Advanced Oil/Acrylic Painting, Figure Drawing and Portrait Painting at both Naples Art and the Center for the Arts of Bonita Springs. Richard studied illustration at Palomar College in San Marcos, California and established his illustration business from Boston, Massachusetts. His illustration clients included Hoods Milk, Dexter Shoes, Fidelity Investment, RGA Publishing and Harvard Magazine, to name a few. In addition, Richard has written and self-published four books designed to help his students learn the basics of drawing, painting, portrait painting and color theory. His fundamental belief about painting shapes his work and his teaching: “Creating a painting does not make one an artist. Artists create something extraordinary from their experience, knowledge and ability. Until a painter has discovered and is able to pull instantly from these three primary conditions, he or she is a student. Still, taking pride in being a student moves you closer to creating art.”