ENROLLMENT CLOSED: Intro to Sensory Art: A Playful Exploration
Meghan Tsitsuashvili
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ENROLLMENT CLOSED: Intro to Sensory Art: A Playful Exploration
Meghan Tsitsuashvili
Rediscover your creative curiosity through playful exploration of the five senses. This welcoming, all-levels course is designed for adults who want to try art making in a relaxed, experimental environment where there’s no such thing as “getting it wrong.”
We'll dive into each sense - sound, touch, visual, smell, and taste, through hands-on play and low stakes experimentation. You’ll work with found objects, unconventional materials, and simple techniques that prioritize joy and discovery over perfection. As you explore, you’ll develop a personal theme and see how it translates across different sensory experiences.
By the end of the workshop, you’ll create your own mini multi-sensory installation to share in a casual group setting. You’ll leave with new creative confidence and the permission to keep playing.
No art experience required- just curiosity and willingness to play. All materials provided.
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Meghan Tsitsuashvili
Meghan Tsitsuashvili is a visual artist and creative workshop facilitator based in New York City. Working across painting, drawing, watercolor, and participatory design, she approaches creativity as an intuitive, interdisciplinary practice.
Her visual work explores abstraction as a form of mindfulness—process-led mark-making guided by intuition rather than predetermined outcomes, navigating the balance between structure and spontaneity.
Alongside her studio practice, Meghan designs workshops that invite participants to engage with creativity through the body, imagination, and collective play. Born from her own need for a daily framework tending to mind, body, and soul, these experiences combine movement, writing, textiles, food, and collaborative art-making. They create environments that are playful yet reflective, structured yet open—emphasizing presence, curiosity, and process over technical skill or finished products.
Meghan is interested in how meaning moves between individuals, materials, and groups. Through creativity, she has found a deeper connection to spirituality—understood not as doctrine but as attention, embodiment, and play. Her work invites others to experience the creative process as something lived, felt, and shared. Visit her website here Meghan Tsitsuashvili