Mentorship for Artists

Events

Weekly drawing sessions in 2025

 

Monday Meditations in OCTOBER

Drawing sessions for artists & designers.

6, 13, 20 & 27 OCTOBER 2025 - Monday evenings 6:00-8pm SAST (via Zoom)

Cost per online session: R230 (Forex payment via PayPal 16 EURO/ $18)
Pay R800 for the FOUR sessions in OCT
(via PayPal 50 EURO/ $56)

IMAGE REFS: ROBERT RAUSCHENBERG, RICHARD LONG, SARAH ILLENBERGER, KIKI SMITH

Monday Meditations are a weekly guided drawing meditation for artists and designers. My intention for these sessions is to continue to hold a safe space to let go, reflect and express the moods and changing colours of your internal world through various drawing and collage exercises.  The format of the sessions encourage an immersion in the process of making as primary and not in creating a resolved result. The prompts and exercises given are aimed at deepening an awareness of our sensory and somatic beingness while creating.

The online sessions will be hosted via the application Zoom, a popular platform for hosting online group video meetings. Once you have confirmed your booking you will receive an invitation to join a Zoom meeting. In the email link you will be prompted to download the Zoom app on your laptop or mobile phone. There is no need to register for an account if you are just attending a session. The sessions are recorded and the recording is available online for a week after the session. Booking for a session allows you access to the live online session and the recording. 

Provision will be made to work creatively with the drawing materials you have at hand. If there is something specific I would like you to source within your home space for the session I will add this to the emailer I send out before each session.

“I think that the imprint is the ‘dialectical image’, … something that as well as indicating touch (the foot which impresses itself into the sand) also indicates the loss (the absence of the foot in its imprint); something which shows us both the touch of the loss as well as the loss of the touch.”
— Georges Didi-Huberman
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