Teaching

On Learning Through Practice

You give people access to your way of seeing — and charge only when they want to go deeper into your world.

On Teaching and Learning

Art is a language, but more precisely, it is a way of seeing.

The role of education is not to instruct, but to refine perception — to guide attention toward what might otherwise be overlooked.

In practice, this begins with imitation. Not as replication, but as a form of entry. To study an artist is to step inside their decisions, to follow their thinking closely enough that it begins to reveal itself.

Through repetition, observation, and return, the work changes — and so does the one making it.

What begins as exercise becomes interpretation. What begins as structure becomes voice.

Education, then, is not the transfer of knowledge. It is the formation of awareness.

And for that reason, it should remain open.

Philosophy

Explore the guiding principles behind Emily's approach to art education — from classroom to canvas.

Lessons

Open studies offered as invitations to attempt, to observe, and to return.

Continue the Practice

This practice is not meant
to be observed alone.

Enter a space where you create, reflect, and evolve your own work.

Enter the Studio