Online Class: Atmospheric Watercolor Landscapes with Clouds & Skies
Registration required. Space is limited. Please email contact@gokm.org or call 505-946-1000 for assistance with registration.
Inspired by Georgia O’Keeffe’s use of color and blended tonal gradation, learn how to create atmospheric landscapes in watercolor that show the vastness of space, depth, and dimension.
Students will be introduced to hands-on techniques for creating watercolor gradients as well as resist, blotting, and lifting techniques to capture cloud formations. Through step-by-step demonstrations on graduated layering, teaching artist Sudeshna Sengupta will also help students explore the expressive possibilities of atmospheric landscapes through a variety of techniques with watercolor washes, blended gradients, and soft textures for watercolor skies.
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This class is suitable for youth ages 12 and up. Children are welcome to participate alongside their adults.
This program will take place via the video conferencing app – ZOOM. Details for accessing the Zoom meeting will be with your receipt upon registering and again sent via email the day prior. Please register in advance in order to access the program.
Note that all program times are in Mountain Time.
Supplies Needed for this Class:
- Watercolor paints. Individual tubes are recommended but a box of half-pans may work as a starter set.
- Recommended paints in watercolor tubes (similar colors may be substituted): 1. Hansa Yellow, 2. Indian Yellow or Quinacridone Gold, 3. Pyrrole Orange or Vermillion, 4. Carmine, 5. Opera, Quinacridone Rose, Permanent Rose, Opera Pink, or Opera Rose, 6. Quinacridone Purple/Violet, 7. Dioxazine Purple/Violet, 8. Ultramarine Blue, 9. Pthalo Blue or Thalo Blue, 10. Viridian, 11. Sap Green, 12. Leaf Green, 13. Burnt Sienna or Quinacridone Burnt Orange.
- Recommended brands of watercolor paint tubes:
- Student/Learner grade: Van Gogh, Grumbacher Academy, or W & N Cotman;
- Professional grade: Holbein, M. Graham, Daniel Smith, or Winsor & Newton
- A 12-well circular palette with a larger center to mix paints is ideal. Jones Travel Palette is recommended.
- Watercolor block (preferred) or pad (tape-bound, not spiral-bound) of Fluid, Strathmore 400 series (not 300 series), Canson, or any other brand with acid-free 140 lbs (300 gsm) sheets in Cold-Press finish that is between 9” x 12” and 12” x 16” in size.
- A regular 2 pencil (a.k.a. HB) or 2B pencil
- A white eraser.
- Round and Flat Watercolor brushes (synthetic ‘Taklon’ brushes are fine): 4 to 5 Round brushes in the range of Size 6, 8, 10, 12, 14. Optional: a 1 Flat brush that’s 1⁄2” to 1.5” wide. Royal Soft-Grip Watercolor Round brushes work well.
- An ordinary ¾” – 1” mop brush to be used as a clean-up brush after erasing pencil lines.
- Q-tips and paper towel or pieces of cotton rag. Cut-up pieces from a clean, used t-shirt work well.
- Masking tape if a watercolor pad is used instead of a watercolor block.
- 2 to 3 empty glass jars or containers for holding water. Used yogurt containers or wide-mouth smaller glass jars work well.
- Toothpicks and or a blunt plastic tool such as a disposable plastic knife for sgraffito technique.
- Optional: Hair dryer if available, a white wax crayon or a small piece of candle for optional resist techniques, watercolor pencils for additional details, a 9” x 12” or larger newsprint pad or ordinary sketch pad for preliminary warm-up drawing practice before painting.
The items above should be available locally or online as individual items in the U.S and in Europe. They can also be purchased online as individual items or as a set from Sudeshna Sengupta’s class-list.
About the Instructor:

Sudeshna Sengupta’s career as a teaching artist spans multiple decades, continents, and cultures that inform her pedagogy for decolonizing studio art. She earned her Master of Fine Arts degree in 1985 from Visva-Bharati University, founded by the first non-European Nobel Laureate (1913) and humanist poet Rabindranath Tagore.
After teaching art and design at the college level in New Delhi, Seattle, and California, she taught at New Mexico State University-Alamogordo, where she established its first intaglio printmaking studio in 1995. Besides the O’Keeffe Museum, Sengupta teaches credit courses with the School of Art & Design of the Santa Fe Community College.
Her etchings and lithographs from the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Modern Art in New Delhi have been featured in a landmark exhibition on Women Printmakers of India at the NGMA-New Delhi in India. Her work is in the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi; Association Musée d’Art Contemporain, France; Kala Institute, Berkeley, and more.
Sengupta also conducts workshops, short courses, lectures, and community-based art events focusing on multicultural and intercultural experiences that emphasize human, cultural, and environmental connectedness through creativity.
To learn more, please visit notes-and-doodles.com and visit her Instagram @santafe_online_art_studio
Registration
This class is being offered on a sliding scale. Your class fee helps to sustain the variable costs associated with hosting this program. We appreciate your support.
$15 minimal fee.
$25 covers the cost of the class.
$40 covers the cost of the class, plus a contribution to support educational programs.
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