A new approach to the history of art was developed by Rudolf Steiner in the early 1900s to enable an experience of the “inner history” of humanity. Along with many others in our time who have been involved in uncovering the vast panorama of human history, Steiner contributed a practice of looking at art as a way to enter into the inner world of our ancestors. For those working in Waldorf education and with Anthroposophical art, studies in the “evolution of human consciousness” provide a cornerstone for understanding ourselves and the struggles of contemporary society. |
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Kenneth Smith has been the Director of BACWTT since 2014. He is a Waldorf educator, program leader and artist. Ken attended the Foundation Year and the Visual Arts and Sculpture Course at Emerson College, England and after teaching in Waldorf schools in England, he returned to Emerson College as Course Leader of the Visual Arts and Sculpture Program. He works internationally to support and develop Waldorf education for contemporary society, and has built an eco house where he lived off the grid with his spouse and children for 7 years in New Zealand. |
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Cost: $10 per class (Free for students who are currently enrolled in the 3-year Healing Through Art or BACWTT Waldorf Teacher Training programs.) These classes will be presented via the Zoom platform and will be recorded. |
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