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ADVANCED SPECIALISATION
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Professional and Reliable
Comprehensive Personalised Instructions

Dedicated Educators

Our classes are taught by dedicated and experienced educators. Using proven teaching strategies, they make sure that every student finds a path to success.

Affordable Pricing

Our  Courses are reasonably priced and offer value for money with the best of Art Faculty and a structured curriculum 

First-Rate Course Offerings

We embrace a learning environment that will prepare you for the path ahead. Our classes incorporate traditional learning styles as well as hands-on experiences.

Years Of Experience

With a decade of experience in quality education, your success is our priority. To support our inclusive community, we provide a personal approach, tailoring learning methods to each student’s needs.

PAINTING SPECIALISATION

PAINTING COURSES

OIL PAINTING

Explore the art of painting with with the most vesatile  edium of oil. Whether you’re improving your technique or starting from scratch, this course will help you paint with confidence. Students will explore a variety of painting approaches, and develop their technical and conceptual skills, while realizing their own unique vision. The Painting Certificate is designed for adults who are interested in exploring the tools and traditions of painting while experimenting with new methods, materials, and concepts.

Learn how to manipulate your paints to stunning effect, get hints and tips on working and re-working your paintings as they dry, and discover painting techniques that will add a stunning depth, light and character to your work.

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Oil Painting
Acrylic Painting

PAINTING COURSES

ACRYLIC PAINTING

Explore the art of painting with  the dynamic medium of acrylic. Whether you’re improving your technique or starting from scratch, this course will help you paint with confidence. Students will explore a variety of painting approaches, and develop their technical and conceptual skills, while realizing their own unique vision. The Painting Certificate is designed for adults who are interested in exploring the tools and traditions of painting while experimenting with new methods, materials, and concepts.

Learn how to manipulate your paints to stunning effect, get hints and tips on working and re-working your paintings as they dry, and discover painting techniques that will add a stunning depth, light and character to your work.

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PENCIL ART SPECIALISATION

CERTIFICATE COURSES IN ARTS

SKETCHING

Starting from the basics, Learn to sketch and shade structured manner. The course imparts inputs in movement of pencil, drawing measurement and freehand drawing techniques to transform you to a great sketching artist.

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CERTIFICATE COURSES IN ARTS

PORTRAIT DRAWINGS

The Portrait course focuses on students understanding and perfecting the simple techniques of portraiture.

The course gives them the confidence to tackle this interesting and stimulating area of portrait art in 3 different mediums.

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CERTIFICATE COURSES IN ARTS

PERSPECTIVE DRAWINGS

In this course you will learn the basics of Perspective Drawings and the three components essential to the linear perspective system such as orthogonal (parallel lines), the horizon line, and a vanishing point. So as to appear farther from the viewer, objects in the compositions are rendered increasingly smaller as they near the vanishing point.

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FOCUSED SPECIALISATION

Certificate in Charcoal and Soft Pastels
Certificate in Charcoal and Soft Pastels

CERTIFICATE COURSES IN ARTS

CHARCOAL & PASTELS

Charcoal and Pastel course are a very specialised course for those who are keen in this kind of art works.

Whether you would like to develop your skills in drawing with charcoal, or venture into the world of using soft pastels to create your original art works, here is the ideal weekend course for you.

This course is designed for those wishing to learn the skills and explore the exciting medium of charcoal and soft pastels – both as a means of deciphering an unfamiliar subject and as a way of making sketches.

It is also for students interested in developing charcoal and soft pastels portfolios for admission to college-level programs, and for individuals looking to create paintings for personal enrichment and other professional opportunities.

Learn how to manipulate your artworks to stunning effect, get hints and tips on working and re-working your paintings as they dry, and discover charcoal & soft pastels techniques that will add a stunning depth, light and character to your work.

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CERTIFICATE COURSES ART

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FINE ART - WIKIPEDIA

n European academic traditions, fine art is art developed primarily for aesthetics or beauty, distinguishing it from decorative art or applied art, which also has to serve some practical function, such as pottery or most metalwork. In the aesthetic theories developed in the Italian Renaissance, the highest art was that which allowed the full expression and display of the artist’s imagination, unrestricted by any of the practical considerations involved in, say, making and decorating a teapot

It was also considered important that making the artwork did not involve dividing the work between different individuals with specialized skills, as might be necessary with a piece of furniture, for example.[1] Even within the fine arts, there was a hierarchy of genres based on the amount of creative imagination required, with history painting placed higher than still life.

Historically, the five main fine arts were paintingsculpturearchitecturemusic, and poetry, with performing arts including theatre and dance.[2] In practice, outside education the concept is typically only applied to the visual arts. The old master print and drawing were included as related forms to painting, just as prose forms of literature were to poetry. 

Today, the range of what would be considered fine arts (in so far as the term remains in use) commonly includes additional modern forms, such as filmphotographyvideo production/editingdesign, and conceptual art.[original research?][opinion]

One definition of fine art is “a visual art considered to have been created primarily for aesthetic and intellectual purposes and judged for its beauty and meaningfulness, specifically, painting, sculpture, drawing, watercolor, graphics, and architecture.”[3] In that sense, there are conceptual differences between the fine arts and the decorative arts or applied arts (these two terms covering largely the same media). 

As far as the consumer of the art was concerned, the perception of aesthetic qualities required a refined judgment usually referred to as having good taste, which differentiated fine art from popular art and entertainment.[4]

 

Paris Street; Rainy Day; by Gustave Caillebotte; 1877; oil on canvas; 2.12 × 2.76 m; Art Institute of Chicago (US)

The word “fine” does not so much denote the quality of the artwork in question, but the purity of the discipline according to traditional Western European canons.[5] Except in the case of architecture, where a practical utility was accepted, this definition originally excluded the “useful” applied or decorative arts, and the products of what were regarded as crafts

In contemporary practice, these distinctions and restrictions have become essentially meaningless, as the concept or intention of the artist is given primacy, regardless of the means through which this is expressed.[6]

The term is typically only used for Western art from the Renaissance onwards, although similar genre distinctions can apply to the art of other cultures, especially those of East Asia. The set of “fine arts” are sometimes also called the “major arts”, with “minor arts” equating to the decorative arts. This would typically be for medieval and ancient art.

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