Work
Year
2024-2025

Milena Kiourtsidou
Milena Kiourtsidou – Drawing Ritual: A practice to cultivate attention, presence and experimentation in educational environments

What if drawing would be a pathway of learning from within? Through my graduation research, I explored how drawing, as a meditative and intuitive practice, can cultivate attention, presence, and experimentation within educational environments. How can this practice help to connect to self, others and the world around us? In this regard, drawing is not just a technical skill but a ritual, a practice that goes deeper than technique alone.

Rooted in my own artistic and facilitation practice, I designed and conducted workshops in both formal (ArtEZ, Willem de Kooning Academy) and informal (an art residency in Tuscany) settings.

My research focused on creating conditions where the creative process is prioritized over outcomes, emphasizing slowness, repetition, and creating a non-judgmental space. I worked with three core elements: Attention, Presence, and Experimentation (APE), observing how these interrelate during drawing activities. Across the different pilot studies, I witnessed how drawing supports a shift from result-driven thinking towards a more open, intuitive state of being and creating. Participants reported entering states of flow, discovering new approaches, and allowing unexpected ideas to emerge through simple, focused exercises.

Rather than offering drawing as a tool for relaxation, my intention was to investigate how pedagogical spaces can support experimentation and inner creative discovery. My findings suggest that by guiding students mindfully and allowing space for uncertainty, drawing can activate new pathways for artistic processes, learning and ways of being.

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