Junior high school drawing (1st grade)
- ecco inoue
- Sep 21
- 1 min read
Most of the first-year students in the junior high school class have been attending since the elementary school class. (The reason we are unable to accommodate new students is that there are only 13 seats available each day of the week, and there are few available seats.) We start with lessons on basic shapes (cubes, cylinders, spheres), followed by still life motifs.
We also do drawing in elementary school classes, but the drawings become more advanced and it is difficult to get approval. Drawing basic shapes is very important, and if you don't understand important points and formulas, still lifes become difficult, so we provide thorough instruction. Regardless of individual differences in time, the most important thing is to "understand." Once you understand, all subsequent drawings will be application.
Paco will distribute original production materials and explain the key points of the assignment. The first graders are confused by the unfamiliar easel lessons, but they are working hard to create the motifs. The first drawing for April will start with a paper cup. We also did paper cup drawings in the elementary school class that we posted about the other day, but in the junior high school class, if the students can draw up to this point, they will be OK.
The instructors are Inoue and Shibata on Mondays, Inoue, Nagaoka and Suzuki on Tuesdays, Inoue and Nagaoka on Wednesdays, and Inoue and Nagaoka on Thursdays. (Some of the works by first-year junior high school students)

















































































