Tag Archive for: figure drawing

Sunday Drawing 8 May 2011

The group of artists seemed more chatty and distracted than usual. It was the second to last session before the drawing group breaks for summer so maybe everyone wanted to get in some social time. We were comparing graphite drawing tools and Sally asked if I had ever used powdered graphite with rolled up felt; I hadn’t so she handed me some. It allows you to cover large areas quickly and it is easy to make smooth tonal gradations. It felt best to dip into just a little graphite and start very lightly, gradually building up value. I used a thick woodless pencil to add some lines and worked a lot with my eraser.

Sunday Drawing March 27 2011

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This week I continued to pay attention to the unity of values and how they bring the form together as a single, coherent element. This is most evident in the first image (the five minute pose). I then became involved in a different focus. I suddenly realized that when I came to understand what I was seeing, I didn’t have to focus much attention on what I was doing. Instead of paying close attention to the lines and marks that I was making, I looked and thought about what I was seeing – the model and her proportions, the gradations of value and the planes. I also attempted to remember that the model was a person, and as Nicolaides suggested, I imagined what it would feel like to hold the pose she was in. With that awareness, the very fast and spontaneous marks that I made, seemed to really describe the model!

Sunday Drawing, March 20, 2011

Sunday Drawing, March 13, 2011

I can accidentally come back to a drawing approach that I had forgotten about and rediscover its virtues in a deeper way. It can seem cyclical. On Sunday I started the drawing session using the side of a broken piece of graphite about an inch long. I worked the short, one minute poses placing touches rather than making lines.  Here are two of the short poses.

I touched all around the body very quickly and was surprised to find that I had the feeling of capturing something of the essence of the head, torso and limbs in just a few marks. This was enough to inspire me to use the same technique for longer poses in which case I was able to keep adding layers of marks to build up the forms. There is something about placing marks rather that drawing lines that makes me see in a different way. perspective becomes more intuitive and the sense of form becomes heightened. I continued to work quickly circling through the figure again and again. Here are two ten minute poses.

The teachings of my Japanese painting teacher came back to me. I was creating images that were very unified as a single element. This was a concept the Kaji Aso worked very hard to get across to his students. It is difficult to explain but actually pretty simple. The darks and lights of the whole form work together and define each other. They do not need lines contain them. The whole figure is like a single drop of water that is held together and made one by some invisible force. Below on the right is the drawing from my session that best exemplifies this unity. On the left is an ink painting by Kaji Aso.