Talia Lehavi
London-Mallorca based artist Talia Lehavi works with traditional Japanese ink and water pigments techniques. Exhibiting both in London and internationally, she is known for her cross-disciplinary paintings, prints and ceramic tiles.
Talia’s aesthetic sensibility is an exploration and reclamation of nature's patterns, prompting a dynamic dialogue between the detail and the whole; the fleeting and eternal.
Talia has been teaching Japanese ink painting, calligraphy and watercolour techniques at her studio, as well as lecturing at various museums, art councils and associations in the UK and worldwide.
COURSES
Learn Japanese Ink Painting with ArtBrush courses
Talia is the founder of the new ArtBrush online school for Japanese ink painting. The school offers step-by-step courses that teach students how to master Japanese ink painting. It catered to beginners and those with prior ink painting experience. There are a wide variety of courses available, including single courses that focus on one specific subject.
Foundation Course
Step-by-step how to create beautiful Japanese ink paintings of wild orchids, bamboo, chrysanthemum, and plum blossom
Summer Flowers and Insects
Step-by-step how to create beautiful Japanese ink paintings of water irises, wild roses, hydrangea, grand peonies, dragonflies, bees, ants and butterflies
ArtBrush Lifetime Membership
Providing you lifetime access to all courses, lessons, manuals, and library
NOTEBOOK
Articles on Japanese Ink Painting and Art History
Browse a collection of written articles and insights into the artistic practice and teaching of ink painting.
The Four Treasure of Ink Painting
The Four treasures are the main tools and materials used in the practice of Japanese ink paintings — brush, paper, ink stick and ink stone.
21 Books Every Ink Painting Practitioner Should Read
This is a list of 21 art-related and Japanese ink painting history books. Each has been part of my own journey.
Wabi-Sabi and the Practice of Ink Painting
Finding the profound within the mundane. A short essay on the power of simplicity and rustic beauty within the creative way.