Process painting workshops are offered by Karen McCormick. I am a
professor in the Graduate Art Therapy Program at Mount Mary College
and have 16 years teaching experience. I have traveled to New York, Chicago
and California to study process painting with Aviva Gold, Stewart Cubly and
I completed the Master Level Training Program with Michele Cassou in 2004,
which I will be repeating in 2007. I am excited to bring their magic to you. I
believe in this work because it offers the painter the opportunity to inhabit the
present moment with conscious awareness and without judgment. It reconnects
the painter with one’s authentic self. I believe in this work because I have
experienced its power; it changed my life.
Come Play in the Rainbow: Moon Circles Studio
Schedule:
Sundays:
April 26th
Full day: 10am to 5pm $75
Half day: 1pm to 4pm $40
Regular Schedule:
Weekdays: 3 hour sessions starting at 10:30 am to 1:30 pm $40
Tuesday: April 7th or April 28th
Thursday: April 16th or April 23rd
I will be happy to set up sessions for small groups of painters.
Register: Karen@mooncircles.net or 262-628-2132
Place: Moon Circles LLC, 2998 Beechwood Ind Ct., Hubertus.
Directions:From the South:
Take Hy 45 north to Mequon /Lannon Rd exit (167east)
turn left and drive 7/10 mi. to stoplight at Hy 175 turn right and
drive 2.5 mi to Chalet Shopping Center (red sign). Piggly Wiggly
will be on your right and the Industrial Park will be on your left.
Turn left onto Beechwood IND ct. Moon Circles is around the
corner from the “Subway.” (blue & white sign) Approximately 25
minutes from Mount Mary College.
From the North:
Take 41/45 south to Holy Hill exit and turn right. At stop sign at
Hywy 175 turn left and drive a couple of miles to a four way stop with
shopping centers and all corners. Just past the intersection look for the
Challet Shopping Center (red sign) on the right across from Piggly Wiggly.
Moon Circles is around the corner from“Subway.”
To register or for more information:
Karen@mooncircles.net
262-628-2132
“Our life is an apprenticeship to the truth
that around every circle another can be drawn;
that there is no end in nature, but every ending
is a beginning, and under every deep a lower deep.”
Emerson