New! Écorché Sculpture: artistic anatomy from the skeletal system up

New! Écorché Sculpture: artistic anatomy from the skeletal system up

Adult Course | Registration closed 3/9/2024

200 Grant Street Denver, CO 80203 United States

A01

Beginnier

3/9/2024-5/4/2024

View Schedule

$555.00

$483.00

This class teaches students an intimate knowledge of artistic anatomy from the skeletal system up. The class will spend 4 weeks on sculpting a 24” skeleton, learning specific bone points relative to anatomical importance, while at the same time reinforcing the student’s system of proportion. In the following 4 weeks of the class students will place the artistic muscles of the human form onto the skeleton that they have created. This method of anatomical learning is a time-honored tradition among figurative enthusiasts or anyone wishing to take their artistic figurative skills to the next level.

This class will be a combination of work with a model as well as work without a model.

Instructor Patrick Kent Stephensonpkssculpting@yahoo.com

  • This course will begin on Saturday March 9th and be held each Saturday through May 4, *except there will be NO class held on April 20th.
  • An armature as well as clay will be provided for the class. 

Patrick Stephenson started his figure sculpture journey in 1997 when he enrolled in this first figure sculpture class at the Arts Students League of Denver. This class ignited a passion for the arts, he began to pour through anatomy and sculpture books absorbing as much as possible to improve his craft, including enrolling in a medical dissection course at the University of Colorado in Denver. Early on Patrick sought out the instruction of professional artists such as Blair Buswell, Don Gale, and Bill Starke to learn clay working techniques and soon began creating figure sculptures of his own. Patrick was the youngest exhibitor at the Sculpture in the Park exhibition in Loveland, CO in 1998.

 After graduating high school from the Denver School for the Arts he began to work on his first monumental bronze work “IL Compositore”. This work was inspired by the old masterworks of Michelangelo and Bernini and features a meticulously detailed composer at his piano. This work took four years to complete due to its complexity and size.

Upon completing this piece, Patrick attended the Lyme Academy College in of Fine Arts where he earned his bachelor's degree in figure sculpture. At LACFA he diligently studied, drawing, sculpture, and painting as well as frequented the esteemed museums in New York City where he would draw for hours from the famous works of art. For two summers Patrick lived in NYC working for the Company Spaeth Design in Manhattan learning sculpture techniques in foam carving and production. During his time at LAFCA Patrick also interned for artist Gilbert Boro wo