The Royal Drawing School to present a live online session on Wednesday 4th December at 1PM- 3PM GMT, offering a unique opportunity for participants worldwide to draw from the exhibition Drawing the Italian Renaissance, on now at The King’s Gallery, Buckingham Palace.
The class will be led by acclaimed artist Mark Cazalet. It will feature practical life drawing exercises with a live model and will take direct inspiration from the Italian Renaissance works on display.
Drawing the Italian Renaissance is on show at The King’s Gallery from 1st November 2024 until 9th March 2025 and brings together the widest range of drawings from this revolutionary artistic period ever to be shown in the UK. Exploring the diversity and accomplishment of drawing across Italy between 1450 and 1600, the exhibition features around 160 works by over 80 artists such as Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael and Titian alongside lesser-known artists, all drawn from the Royal Collection, which holds one of the world’s greatest collections of Italian Renaissance drawings.
BOOK: HERE Tickets: £20.50
About the Royal Drawing School
The Royal Drawing School exists to celebrate, share and advance the practice of drawing from life.
The artist-led, not for profit organisation, is the leading independent school to learn observational drawing and to discover leading and emerging artists. It ensures that artists and creatives everywhere can access world-leading skills-based drawing tuition regardless of background, age or circumstances; to bring new audiences to drawing; to champion the practice for this generation and the next.
The School teaches everyone, from beginners to practicing artists. Its programmes include the world-renowned full-scholarship postgraduate-level Drawing Year, the series of ambitious and affordable public courses and the weekend programme for young artists. Courses take place on site in the School’s Shoreditch studios, outdoors, in galleries and online.
Founded in 2000 by HM King Charles III and artist Catherine Goodman LVO CBE as The Prince’s Drawing School, it became the Royal Drawing School in 2014. royaldrawingschool.org