Online Registration

MICRO MOSAICS PENDANT WORKSHOP

Save $20.00 with a Spruill Center for the Arts Membership - New and Renewal


Course Number: 202CEMO220

Dates: Saturday, August 22, 2020
Check for other dates or times

Meets: 12 N to 4:00 PM

Fee: $135.00

Notes: All staff, instructors, and students will be required to wear face masks while in the building and during their class. Each individual will be responsible for providing their own covering; however, additional masks will be on hand in case of breakage or if a mask becomes dirty. Class sizes may be reduced for Social Distancing, and hand washing is encouraged before, during and after class.

This course ended on August 22, 2020

Spend a few hours and have fun making a gorgeous micro mosaic pendant! Instructor will provide smalti, filati stained glass, polished minerals, colored mirror, seed beads, select charms and crystal chatons to add to your piece.
Supply fee of $25/pendant PAYABLE TO INSTRUCTOR for additional pendants made.
This class requires good eyesight. Please bring readers, glasses, or magnifiers that you might need for close-up work. Students will be working with tweezers as needed.

Notes:

All staff, instructors, and students will be required to wear face masks while in the building and during their class. Each individual will be responsible for providing their own covering; however, additional masks will be on hand in case of breakage or if a mask becomes dirty. Class sizes may be reduced for Social Distancing, and hand washing is encouraged before, during and after class.
Fee: $135.00

Save $20.00 with a Spruill Center for the Arts Membership - New and Renewal

Fee Breakdown

CategoryDescriptionAmount
Course Fee (Basic)Non-member$ 120.00
Optional FeeDonation$ 1.00
Mandatory FeeMaterials Fee$ 15.00

Julie Mazzoni

Photo of Julie Mazzoni Photo of work by Julie Mazzoni

mazztroop@yahoo.com
Julie's Classes

Julie Mazzoni teaches Mosaics. She takes an integrated approach to teaching that blends her personality and interests with my student's needs. She tries to be a facilitator that will help her students achieve their goals, with a few demos and lectures to guide them. More of Julie's work can be found at:

www.facebook.com/Mazzoni-Mosaics

www.instagram.com/mazzonimosaics/

mazzonimosaics.com

Julie's YouTube Channel

Julie has a Bachelor of Architecture from Kansas State University and has always enjoyed artwork. Julie created children's murals for six years before moving to watercolors and acrylics. In 2009, Julie discovered the joy of mosaic art and completed her first piece. She realized that making mosaics is very time consuming and she would need help to mosaic the world. Julie decided to teach so others could help her! She is also self-taught.

Julie has exhibited my work locally, nationally and internationally. Most notably at Mosaic Arts International exhibitions, at The Museum of Biblical Art in Dallas, TX, The Women's Museum of California in San Diego, CA, The Parthenon Museum in Nashville, TN, and Orsoni Gallery in Venice, Italy.

Julie cites Sonia King, Guilio Menossi, and Dino Maccini as her favorite artists. She says The Society of American Mosaic Artists has had the biggest influence on her, opening her eyes to the possibilities within mosaics.

Artist's Statement

For me, the tactile pleasure of working with the materials is in competition with the visual delight of the eye candy aspect of the tessarae. Similarly, each piece competes against the entire mosaic. I must carefully consider the design elements of each piece’s placement, shape, color, and texture and of the whole composition. The juxtaposition keeps pulling at me until I find a satisfactory balance. Each piece laid offers a whole host of parallel ideas for future projects.

Mosaic is a clear reflection of life. Made of many components, there are infinite possibilities. The struggle is to decide which materials and compositions merit the time needed to create. Once the goal has been determined, then it is a joy to labor towards that end. And when one mosaic is completed, the process starts anew. Working on mosaics wipes out all sense of time, destroying all memory of a beginning and all fear of an end.

Share

Email Information to Friend Print