Blog Layout

Teaching beginners to paint icons online – New classes start in February 2023

Faye Drobnic • Dec 10, 2022

Teaching beginners to paint icons online – New classes start in February 2023


How do you teach someone with little or no painting experience how to paint an icon in an online class? 


That was a question I faced almost three years ago when COVID-19 closed the country, and Vladislav Andreyev asked me to teach a beginning-level online class for the Prosopon School. 


Online teaching requires a different approach from live teaching. Unlike classes with students physically present in my studio, in online classes I cannot mix the initial paint for the beginners, nor can I correct their mistakes or physically show them what they might be doing incorrectly.


The first step in online teaching of beginners is to teach them how to mix their own paint — to instruct them about the nature of painting in egg tempera with dry pigments, the relationship between pigment and egg and water, and the various methods of applying the paint. This is the material that we cover in our 3-day PAINT MIXING CLASS (Feb. 2-4, 2023), which is a prerequisite for all the other classes that I teach. 


Students receive all art materials necessary to complete the work, because it is essential that we all work with the same brushes and tools. Students also receive detailed written instructions and reference materials prior to the class. Classes are conducted live on Zoom and they are recorded. Students have access to the recordings for at least 3 months after the final date of the class, and they can watch the videos as many times as they wish. 


During the class, I walk them through every step of the process, and we do the work together, aided by close-up views of my work via a web camera, as well as screen-share photos and one recorded video demonstration of making the egg mixture. There are ample opportunities to ask questions. 


The Paint Mixing Class consists of six 2-hour sessions (2 each day, with a 1-hour lunch break): an introductory session, three painting sessions, and two pigment-study sessions. These sessions give students a foundational understanding of Prosopon-style egg tempera painting that prepares them for successful work in all the other online classes.

Christ the Bridegroom

Christ the Bridegroom


Most students follow up the Paint Mixing Class with a nine-week BEGINNING SERIES project class that starts two weeks later. (These classes are two 2-hour sessions each Saturday for nine Saturdays.) Over the course, we paint a small icon of the head and shoulders of either Christ, Our Lady, Archangel Michael, or Archangel Gabriel. (The projects rotate over two years’ time.) We work through each step of the process, learning the skills necessary to complete each step successfully.


Our icons are small (6’x8”) and the images are simple, and we take plenty of time to focus on the fundamentals of the work and how to handle the brush and the paints. Students get to observe me doing every step of the work via the web camera, and we do much of the painting together in class, with the students completing any unfinished work during the week. Many students paint more than one icon of the class project as they develop their skills.

Christ the Bridegroom

St. Michael the Archangel


For individual assistance with their work, my students in project classes are all enrolled automatically in my Tuesday Zoom critique sessions. They email me a photograph of their work, and on Tuesdays at 3 pm and again at 7 pm Central Time, I open each email and critique each photo. We celebrate the things they have done well, and I give them my suggestions about how to improve areas that need work or correction. Some students do not send photos but rather critique their own work considering my comments about the photos of other students. Everyone enjoys these constructive critique sessions, and we cover a variety of topics about icon painting.


This February our beginning project class will be an image of THE BRIDEGROOM — Christ at his Passion, with a crown of thorns. We will focus on the fine points of painting the face of Our Lord, which is a little different from other faces. This is a perfect image for our prayers as we move through Lent and Holy Week this spring. Classes begin Feb. 18, 2023, and end in April, with a few breaks included in the series. All classes are recorded in case students miss a particular class; they make up the work from the recording. 


Beginning after the 4th of July this year, a second series of beginning classes will be taught with the subject of the project class being the Archangel Michael, Warrior. Please see our CLASSES page for more information about all our classes and the registration process. If you feel called to begin painting icons, come and join us. We’d love to have you!

St. Francis of Assisi
By Faye Drobnic 07 Feb, 2024
A standing figure of St. Francis of Assisi, with the walls and buildings of Assisi in the background, will be our 12-Week Intermediate Class Project beginning in February 2024. This class will focus on the development of the standing figure, including the techniques of painting a smaller, more graphic face.
Paint mixing and beginning series 2024
By Faye Drobnic 08 Nov, 2023
The teaching program for beginners at St. Elizabeth Icon Studio consists of an Introduction to Paint Mixing and Pigments Class (3 consecutive days) followed by a Beginning Project Class (weekly on Saturdays for 10 weeks).
St. Mary Magdalene, Apostle to the Apostles icon
By Faye Drobnic 06 Jun, 2023
Christian iconography is essentially the faithful transmission of the truths of the faith. The canons of the eastern Church tell us that new icons should be based on older icons when possible. In developing an icon of a saint, we first study existing iconography.
The Archangel Michael
By Faye Drobnic 06 Jun, 2023
The Christian tradition teaches that angels are bodiless spiritual beings created by God who often serve as messengers between God and humankind. As such, they are portrayed in Byzantine iconography in the robes of the Byzantine court.
The search for the perfect icon paintbrush
By Faye Drobnic 07 Jan, 2023
The most important tools in an iconographer’s supply box are our brushes. Many of us have spent years on a quest for “the magic brush,” hoping that once it was found all our brush strokes will be perfect and our brush control will be sublime.
St. John the Baptist icon
By Faye Drobnic 11 Dec, 2022
St. John the Baptist — also known as St. John the Forerunner — is one of my favorite saints to paint! I love his wild hair, his long straggly beard, and his green camel’s hair garment that looks like water.
New Packet: Icon of St. Thomas Aquinas
By Faye Drobnic 03 Aug, 2022
Not long before we closed our local icon studio in Lafayette because of the start of the covidpandemic, one of our students requested that we paint an icon of St. Thomas Aquinas.
Protection of the Most Holy Mother of God icon and other fall classes
By Faye Drobnic 25 Jul, 2022
Surrounded by the heat of one of the warmest summers I can remember, I have spent the last week working on the drawing of the icon for our upcoming Fall Intermediate Class: The Protection of the Most Holy Mother of God.
New Packet: Icon of The Kazan Mother of God
By Faye Drobnic 19 May, 2022
The icon of the Kazan Mother of God is one of the most loved of all the images of Our Lady. It is the newest tutorial packet from St. Elizabeth Icon Studio. According to Russian tradition, this icon appeared in the city of Kazan in 1579.
OVERVIEW OF CLASSES 2022
By Faye Drobnic 31 Dec, 2021
Three sessions of classes are planned for 2022: Winter-Spring (February-April), Summer (June-August) and Fall (September-November). We will kick off the year with a Paint Mixing & Pigments Class in mid January. All classes are taught via Zoom and are recorded.
More Posts
Share by: