Figure Painting Progression: Starting with the basics
Adult Class | Registration opens 5/5/2026 9:00 AM MDT
Figure Painting Progression explores how to paint the human form by starting with strong fundamentals and building toward confident, full-color work. This class is structured to help students ease into figure painting through a step-by-step approach, beginning with a monochromatic palette and gradually expanding into color.
In addition to simplifying color, students will learn how to translate the figure onto the canvas using foundational approaches that emphasize composition, proportion, and basic anatomical structure.
This class is ideal for beginners who are just starting their journey in figure painting, as well as for artists looking to strengthen their skills and deepen their understanding of the human form.
- This class will work in oil so some basic understanding of the medium will be required.
- Oil paint set up and preferred painting surface.
Andrea Kemp
Painting had its way of creeping into my life. I do not know how or why, but I am so fortunate it did. Though it is a large part of who I am, its meaning is ever changing. My journey as a painter takes me to new places that end up either, presenting unique ideas and challenges, or paralleling other events in my life. Painting in itself is a teacher that if we pay attention to, we learn from and grow from , not only as an artist but to be a better person. Its possibilities are boundless and the adventure of painting presents numerous challenges. It's not always easy to meet those challenges. A famous female writer, who I cannot recall her name, describes the experience of having a great idea and the desperate need to capture it by comparing it to train and how you can hear it approaching, which sends you into a fury preparing yourself for when it passes by so that you might capture its power and greatness, for when it is gone, it may be gone forever. Though writing and painting may be two different mediums of communication, I still could very much relate to this metaphor. https://www.andreakempart.com/portfolio