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Mark Kistler 2012 Art Camps!Albuquerque (Rio Rancho area), New MexicoMay 29 - June 1
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Times: (Each hour-long session is different, students are enthusiastically encouraged to register for 2 sessions per day...that's 2 1/2 hours of drawing with Mark each day!)
Session 1: 9:00am - 10:15am 5 to 7 year olds
Session 2: 10:30am - 11:45am 8 to 13+ year olds
Session 3: 12:00pm - 1:15pm 8 to 14+ year olds
Session 4: 1:30pm - 2:45pm 8 to 14+ year olds
Session 5: 6:30pm- 7:45pm ALL ages Family Art Workshop Week!
Why:
Because learning how to drawing 3-D builds important creative thinking skills, powerful problem solving skills, and a solid foundation for future art success (careers in children's book illustration, digital 3-D game design, digital 2-D and 3-D animation). Many of Mark's alumni students are successful digital game designers and animators with resume projects including Shrek, Madagascar, Bugs' Life, Toy Story, Marvel Comics, Leapfrog Toys, etc.

Mark visiting with friends at Dreamworks Studio in California
Cost for Full 4-day Art Camp: $89 first child, $69 additional siblings. DOUBLE YOUR FUN with two sessions per day. 2 sessions per day, $178 first child, $138 additional sibling. That's 2 and 1/2 hours of drawing fun with Mark Kistler every day! All art supplies needed for the class are included!
Registration is closed until next summer!
Register Now:
Click here to advance to our registration page.
Art Camp Sign Up Form.


Home Schoolers, Foster-Adoption Families, and single parents are extended the reduced rate.
Teachers are welcome and free with a paid student registration. All art supplies needed for the class are included.
Parents, grandparents, guardians are free and encouraged to participate! Parents of students ages 5 - 7 years old are required to stay on site for classes. All parents, on the first day, if possible please plan on staying for Mark Kistler's welcome and art camp introduction, thanks! Please no curb drop-offs or pick-ups. Thank you for helping insure the safety of your children.
Scholarships: A limited number of full-scholarships and partial scholarships are available for single parents, foster-adoption parents, and families needing special consideration. Please send an email to info@markkistler.com.
Mission: Over the past 20 years we have donated over 200 episodes of quality children's art education television programming to PBS stations around the country. To help raise the funds needed to create, produce, and distribute (via satellite) the television shows, we offer these Summer workshops and Mark Kistler elementary school assemblies. Thanks for supporting our mission to continue producing imagination enriching children's art education television programming. Children who learn to draw in 3-D, learn to think and live creatively. "Teaching the world how to draw in 3-D, one child at a time."


Questions:
Please email chris@markkistler.com or our toll free number 888-837-2933.
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"My son is SOOOO excited about participating with this week-long Summer Horse Back Riding Camp! If you are looking for a FANTASTIC week of horses, outdoors, fun, friendships, and great memories...click here! AFTER you register for MY ART CAMP of course!" :) |
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The Woodlands Equestrian Club week-long Summer Camps runs June through August. CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION! |
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Click here to purchase Mark's New Book from Barnes & Noble
Here is a wonderful review by Deborah Adams...
Take out your number 2 pencil. You are about to be amazed.
Yes, I'm talking to you people who can't draw a recognizable stick figure. I used to be just like you - I wouldn't even doodle because I was so ashamed of my pathetic renderings. When I received Mark Kistler's You Can Draw in 30 Days for review, I considered it a dare that I would certainly win. I distinctly recall saying, "We'll just see about that."
I was not impressed by the press release that claims Kistler's students have gone on to design the International Space Station and work on animated films such as Shrek and The Incredibles. Those people obviously had natural artistic talent. So what if they took a course from this author? I am drawing-impaired from the word 'go,' and there is no way I'll ever produce more than a lumpy, misshapen circle.
Kistler's friendly writing style lured me in, however. I reluctantly drew the Before pictures - a house, a plane, a bagel -then turned the page to see what Lesson 1 involved. It was so clearly beyond my ability that I almost stopped there, but pure stubbornness drove me to give it a go.
It wasn't easy. I couldn't figure out how to hold the pencil, even though I constantly have some sort of writing implement in my hand and have been capable of using one for writing words for many years now. The paper felt funny. I broke into a sweat. Despite all that, I managed to produce some very nice spheres in only a few minutes.
Kistler's lessons build upon each other, and explain in simple terms how to use size, placement, and overlapping to create realistic-looking objects; how to use foreshortening to create illusion; and how to use a simple horizontal line to give depth to a drawing. You can probably skip all that and just follow the simple step-by-step visual instructions, but honestly - the terms aren't that hard to understand.
Each of the 30 lessons has a bonus challenge, too, and I wound up doing them all with a fair amount of competence. Kistler is surely aware of just how embarrassing art lessons are for the majority of us, because he has wisely included work done by his students with each lesson, including some of their Before attempts, making me feel more comfortable about my own efforts.
By Day 5, I was looking forward to my daily lesson. By Day 7, I'd started sketching coffee cups and bowls, tables and desks, and just about anything else that caught my eye. What's more, I was able to look at those things and identify what I was seeing: foreshortened view, two point perspective, and textures.
Am I serious competition for Van Gogh? Nope, not yet. Can I draw one heck of a waving banner or delicate lily? You're darned right I can. And I'm convinced that You Can Draw in 30 Days, too.
© Deborah Adams, 2011, Curled Up with a Good Book


