Online | Fiction | Reading Group

4 Weeks of Reading Novels about Art as Writers

In this eight-week, four-session class, participants will read and discuss a selection of novels that focus on art and artists.

Books will include:

1. To the Lighthouse  by Virginia Woolf (1927)

2. Cat's Eye by Margaret Atwood (1988)

3. Seiobo There Below by László Krasznahorkai (2008)

4. Sudden Death by Álvaro Enrigue (2013)

This selection of novels will allow us to explore a diverse range of depictions of art in a range of literary styles, from the more classical to the more contemporary and experimental. We will discuss the way each of these writers effectively describes visual mediums in their prose as well as how they use these stories of artists to represent their own struggles as writers. We will pay particular attention to craft techniques, including description, sensory detail, point of view, and style.

Virginia Woolf's To the Lighthouse is a classic of literary modernism that explores the nature of artistic representation, while Margaret Atwood's Cat's Eye centers on the life of a painter in the middle of the twentieth century and depicts the struggle to forge an artistic identity. László Krasznahorkai's experimental novel Seiobo There Below, meanwhile, examines different artists across a range of historical eras and seeks to understand the relationship between beauty and the sacred. Finally, Álvaro Enrigue's Sudden Death uses the inventive structure of a tennis match at the beginning of the Renaissance to explore the connections between art, history, and empire. Together, these novels show us the range of possibilities when it comes to writing about art and illuminate how writers have successfully used the medium of text to understand visual mediums of expression such as painting.

We will spend each class period discussing one book, and afterwards we will do a short craft exercise that students will be invited to revise on their own, building towards a longer written project that participants can then share with the instructor for feedback during an optional extra one-on-one conference after the final class. Participants are expected to have read To the Lighthouse before the first session.

Note: Any ‘Reading...as Writers’ student can opt in to a 45-minute consultation with the instructor for an additional fee of $105, in which you receive one-on-one feedback on any writing that emerged from the course, including ideas for revision and specific line edits. Please email classes@catapult.co after your final group meeting to arrange a consultation.

Our class platform works best on laptop or desktop computers. Class meetings will be held over video chat, using Zoom accessed from your private class page. While you can use Zoom from your browser, we recommend downloading the desktop client so you have access to all platform features. The Zoom calls will have automated transcription enabled. Please let us know (classes@catapult.co) if you have any questions or concerns about accessibility. 

Check out this page for details about payment plans and discount opportunities.  

COURSE TAKEAWAYS:

- Greater familiarity with novels about art and artists

- Examinations of four different authors’ writing techniques and what they can teach us about our own writing

- Illuminating discussions of the relationship between craft choices and representations of visual art in fiction

- A supportive environment for exploring new literary possibilities, particularly with regard to writing about other artistic mediums and representing artistic struggles

- Optional: Personal feedback from the instructor on your writing project during an add-on one-on-one consultation

- 10% discount on all future Catapult classes

COURSE EXPECTATIONS:

- Participants must have access to the four assigned books, either as physical copies or e-books

- Participants are expected to have read  To the Lighthouse before the first session begins

- Each session will focus on one book; participants are expected to have read the book before the session begins

- Students are expected to attempt the writing exercises offered at the end of each session

COURSE SKELETON:

Week One: To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf (1927)

Week Two: Cat's Eye by Margaret Atwood (1988)

Week Three: Seiobo There Below by László Krasznahorkai (2008)

Week Four: Sudden Death by Álvaro Enrigue (2013)

Aatif Rashid

Aatif Rashid is the author of the novel Portrait of Sebastian Khan (2019, 7.13 Books). His short stories have appeared in The Massachusetts Review, Metaphorosis, Arcturus, Barrelhouse, Triangle House Review, X-R-A-Y, New Moons: Contemporary Writing by North American Muslims (2021, Red Hen Press), and Made in L.A. Volume 4 (forthcoming 2022). He’s also published nonfiction in The Los Angeles Review of Books and Lit Hub and wrote regularly for The Kenyon Review blog from 2018 to 2021.

Testimonials

“In Aatif Rashid’s witty and dissolute Portrait of Sebastian Khan, a Muslim American college student is conflicted by his love for free-spirited pleasure and the more conventional realities of accomplishment, commitment, and financial success… Sebastian is a flawed but compelling character, and his romances are detailed with rushes of color and sensation. This sensuality alternates with undertones of humor and even subtle splendor.”

Foreword Reviews

"Rashid gives us the chance to look at millennials in a different light."

Atticus Review

"...[a] startling coming of age story."

Necessary Fiction