Creativity, Focus

& Wellbeing

Corporate watercolour workshops

In increasingly digital working environments, sustained screen time and analytical intensity can lead to cognitive fatigue, reduced creativity, and disconnection from embodied forms of thinking.

These workshops offer a restorative counterbalance through guided watercolour practice.

Attention changes when the hand becomes involved.

Watercolour requires presence, observation, responsiveness, and manual sensitivity.

Working with water, pigment, timing, and gesture re-engages forms of perception often lost in highly analytical environments.

The result is renewed attention, perceptual clarity, and creative responsiveness.

Focus

A restorative shift away from fragmented digital attention.

Watercolour develops sustained observation, responsiveness, and perceptual clarity through slow material engagement.

Wellbeing

Manual creative practice restores presence through embodied attention.

Working with hand, eye, and material reconnects cognition with sensory awareness and calm concentration.

Creativity

Creative thinking emerges through uncertainty, sensitivity, and gesture.

Participants work without rigid outcomes, encouraging flexible and imaginative thinking.

Why Watercolour?

Watercolor demands attention, adaptability, restraint, and responsiveness. ‍
Unlike digital environments, each mark is immediate and irreversible — encouraging presence, confidence, and sensitivity to process.

Workshop Format

Group Size
6–50 participants

Session Length
90-minute introductions to half-day immersive workshops

Materials
All professional materials provided

Location
On-site or external venues

Experience Level
No prior artistic experience required

Pricing
Typical sessions begin from £25–£60 per participant, according to group size, duration, and location.

Background

Led by artist Prasad Beaven, these workshops draw upon a contemporary watercolor practice rooted in observation, perception, and material engagement.

Influenced by formative years spent in the Himalayan foothills of northern India, Prasad’s work reflects a sustained engagement with landscape and the natural world.

Prasad graduated from the King’s School of Traditional Arts in 2021, was awarded the Ciclitira Prize by King Charles III, and was a semi-finalist on Landscape Artist of the Year.

Testimonials

I really enjoyed the watercolour painting, thank you for such a calm and engaging workshop. The introduction to the techniques was clear and the lead was approachable. I especially liked that creativity and experimentation was encouraged rather than focusing on perfection, which made the session feel very relaxing and enjoyable. The floral painting was a great choice and it was interesting to see how everyone interpreted it differently. Overall, the workshop felt very therapeutic and well-paced, and I’d definitely be interested in attending another session in the future.
— Christina, Medidata Solutions
It was great to connect with colleagues old and new, and the instruction was top notch!
— Jennifer, Medidata Solutions
Thank you for the wonderful painting session. His guidance and way of teaching made the experience enjoyable and easy for me even though i was a complete beginner. I truly appreciate his way of explaining, encouragement and creative style. It was inspiring to create my very first painting under his mentorship. Thank you once again and looking forward for more such sessions.
— Aaliya, Medidata Solutions
It was super fun and if we could have a session like that again, I’d definitely attend.
— Shree, Medidata Solutions