

Masks: Imaginary Faces & Hidden Selves / A Creative Workshop for Kids (Ages 5-11)
Saturday August 2nd / 11am-1pm
Under Workshop Tent @Ravenwood Barn
Limited to 10 Participants
Ages 5-11
For thousands of years, people have made and worn masks to become something new—an animal, a character, a spirit, or even a version of themselves no one has ever seen before!
In this fun and hands-on workshop, kids will create their own unique masks using a mix of colorful, textured, and surprising materials. We’ll talk about how masks can tell stories, express feelings, or hide and reveal different parts of who we are. Each child will dream up a character or alter ego, then bring it to life through cutting, building, painting, and decorating.
This workshop is all about imagination, creativity, and self-expression. Whether your child loves to draw, act, craft, or invent stories, they’ll find something to enjoy—and they’ll leave with a one-of-a-kind mask that’s as unique as they are.
No experience needed—just curiosity and the joy of making!
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Cancellation Policy: No refunds or reschedules please. If you can’t make it, you're very welcome to transfer the spot to a friend.
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DO GOOD SOCIETY is a platform for awakening how we see—and shaping how we show up in the world. Through immersive workshops, we explore and question the world around us, recognizing that everything we interact with was once imagined, designed, and made. When we understand that, we begin to see our own power to create, contribute, and do good.
In this workshop, participants are introduced to key figures and references in Design, Art, and Architecture, engaging with their work through hands-on exercises that help us grasp their ideas in practice. These three disciplines are approached holistically and without boundaries, allowing them to inform and enrich one another naturally and intuitively.
In our workshops, we’ve explored the concept of identity through construction, design, color, materials, and drawing—with all their endless possibilities. The combination of thoughtful exploration and the simple joy of making has led to brilliant exercises, fresh ideas, and unforgettable conversations.
Our goal is to create a space where people can learn to see—by doing—while cultivating a slower, more intentional future. One that understands, values, and ultimately improves the world we share.
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INSTRUCTORS:
Ester Peiró Verdú is a Madrid-based entrepreneur, creative director, and lifelong lover of art and books. For over 25 years, she has led projects at the intersection of education, design, and cultural innovation—often supported by the Spanish Government and the European Commission. She spent a decade as Executive Director of Davidelfin, the pioneering Spanish fashion and design label. Under her direction, the brand gained international acclaim, presenting work at the Corcoran Gallery (Washington D.C.), New York Fashion Week, Guggenheim Bilbao, Madrid Fashion Week, and more. Davidelfin also collaborated with major brands including SONY, Samsung, Honda, Repsol, Christian Louboutin, Converse, and Dr. Martens. Today, Ester focuses on educational and creative initiatives for those who believe a better world begins with a new way of seeing. She is co-founder of DO GOOD SOCIETY, an interdisciplinary program for all ages that blends learning, making, and imagining into tools for personal and social transformation.
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Tito Pérez Mora is an artist, architect, and educator based in Madrid. He began his career in architecture, specializing in retail design, ephemeral spaces, scenography, and residential projects. During this time, he collaborated with renowned brands such as Marc Jacobs, MUJI, davidelfin, Maje, Converse, and others. After 15 years, his practice shifted toward a more personal and introspective path. As an artist, his work now centers on themes of intimacy, home, family, and the quiet poetry of domestic life. His pieces have been exhibited internationally through solo and group shows, as well as art fairs in cities including Madrid, Barcelona, Copenhagen, London, Calgary, and Lima. He has published two art books—one of which was acquired by The New York Public Library. Tito’s work has been featured in numerous publications, including AD Architectural Digest, El País, Elle Decor, IN Design Australia, Vanity Fair, and Diseño Interior, among others. A passionate advocate for art and design education, he has taught for over 15 years at leading institutions such as Elisava Barcelona and Istituto Europeo di Design. Tito is also the co-founder of DO GOOD SOCIETY, an interdisciplinary education and creativity platform for all ages, which he runs in parallel with his artistic practice.
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Willa Jaymes is a visual arts graduate of Interlochen Arts Academy and a scholar at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Class of 2029. She is from Accord and Rhinebeck in the Hudson Valley. Her work has been published in The Interlochen Review and recognized by the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards. Jaymes's work lives where the tangible meets the intangible. She works with natural materials—wood, fiber, paper, and ceramics—each carrying its own texture and imperfection, reflecting the delicate balance between the physical world and the emotions we often struggle to articulate. In each installation, she explores how these raw elements can be woven together to evoke the clarity of a well-lit moment, alongside the shadow that hints at something ineffable. Influenced by Taoist philosophy, which suggests that some truths exist beyond words, she embraces the tension of trying to define deeply personal experiences. Her practice is an ongoing effort to capture the fleeting intersections of memory, emotion, and material—a quiet reminder that not everything can, or should, be fully defined.
