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This course will focus on studying how light affects the figure outdoors. Students will work on a series of small paintings, working fast to study the ever-changing color notes. By working on many small starts instead of towards one “finished” painting, students will be encouraged to paint simply and quickly. This style of painting outdoors trains a painter’s eye to capture only the most important aspects of a subject. Training the eye and hand in this way will help painters to develop studio paintings that feel as though they were painted out-of-doors, from life. Comparing color notes in nature and simplifying the figure will bring forth a fresh quality to all aspects of an artist’s work.
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Logan Hagege holds a degree from the Art Academy of Los Angeles Advanced Masters Program. He has also studied with Steve Huston and Joseph Mendez. His inspiration comes from the United States and Europe, including the work of Gustav Klimpt, N.C. Wyeth, T.W. Dewing and Maynard Dixon. He has taught figure painting at The Art Academy and is a Mentor Member of the California Art Club. Mr. Hagege has received numerous awards for his work and has been featured in American Art Collector, Southwest Art Magazine (Artists to Watch) and American Artist Magazine. He is an instructor at the L.A. Academy of Figurative Art.
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