​Curating slow, tactile art experiences for an age defined by speed.
Ikebana

In this workshop, you’ll enjoy Japanese tea and treats while working with seasonal botanicals to create a simple, intentional arrangement with your own flair. The process is slow and thoughtful, centering placement, proportion, and awareness rather than perfection.
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Ikebana is the Japanese art of flower arranging, focusing on balance, restraint, and intention. It invites attention to how small choices shape the whole, emphasizing form, line, and mindful use of space.
Schedule: TBA in Feb for April dates
Length: 90 mins
Sand Art

In this workshop, you’ll enjoy cold drinks and dried fruits while working with colored sand to create intuitive patterns and forms using simple tools. Pieces may be adjusted, layered, or gently undone as part of the process. The focus is on exploration and release, allowing the act of making to be the point.
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Sand Art explores impermanence, play, and process. It centers on making with no attachment to outcome, highlighting the experience of creation rather than preservation. This practice invites curiosity, experimentation, and acceptance of change.
Schedule: TBA
Length: 90 mins
Therapeutic Art

In this workshop, you’ll enjoy vegan-friendly food and zero-proof spirits while being guided through gentle prompts using accessible materials such as paint, drawing tools, or mixed media. There is no expected outcome—only presence, exploration, and allowing the work to emerge naturally.
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Therapeutic Art prioritizes expression over skill, creating space for emotional processing without the need for explanation or interpretation. It uses art to externalize internal states through color, movement, and form.
Schedule: TBA
Length: 120 MINS
Parol Making

In this workshop, you’ll enjoy authentic Filipino food and drinks and create your own parol using provided materials while learning about its cultural background and meaning. The process is hands-on and reflective, blending making, storytelling, and personal intention.
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Parols are traditional Filipino lanterns that symbolize hope, resilience, and shared light. Historically made by hand and displayed in community, they reflect connection, care, and the act of carrying light through darker seasons.
Schedule: TBA
Length: 90 mins
Kintsugi

In this workshop, you’ll enjoy Japanese tea and snacks while repairing a broken ceramic piece using a modern, workshop-safe kintsugi method. The process is slow and intentional, focusing on careful assembly and visible repair rather than perfection.
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Kintsugi is the Japanese practice of repairing broken ceramics by highlighting cracks rather than hiding them. The repair becomes part of the object’s story, emphasizing patience, care, and acceptance over restoration to “new.”
Schedule: TBA
Length: 120 MINS
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