Quote:I hope this does not sound like I'm arguing. I'm just really confused as to what to do now in terms of studying the human figure because two people are telling me two different things.
I hope that you are arguing because that means that you're taking things in with thought and not just blindingly follow what people tell you to do.
If posing your figures dynamically makes you think you're progressing, that is super great and I wouldn't have chimed in. But woof, the struggle is real! Haha!
Quote:Also, when I look at Loomis's anatomy drawings, I don't know how to interpret it. As in, I see the lines, but I don't follow as to how they represent the 3D form, per se. The drawings feel flat to me or something.
That is true in most cases. 3D looks 3D because of how people interpret the form, instead of drawing it like it's just a symbol or a representation for something. A thing looks 3D because of how you see values or tone in the figure. Line art can pull off a "3D" look with varying line weights, hatching, and other tricks.
Props for trying to give the proportion tip a go! I think it's looking better already. And by looking at your work, I feel I need to brush up with my own knowledge of human anatomy proportion.
@John
Thanks for the reply, John.
Actually, I mainly switched to focusing on proportions because I felt like I wasn't really progressing and I was drawing gesture movements for the sake of drawing gesture movements. I want to start drawing with more of a purpose.
Actually, the proportion thing is starting to become like that right now, so I'm thinking about taking it a step further tomorrow by putting it in perspective (like in the Loomis book).
I'm still figuring stuff out. I'm just hoping that I don't keep wandering in the dark for so long that I wander around in circles.
~Wing
August 1st Drawings (didn't upload on August 1st because of technical issues):
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Today's drawings (Didn't draw yesterday):
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Didn't upload yesterday because I took too much time in trying to do some of the box exercises from Drawabox. I spent some more time on it to try to finish it, but I stopped in the middle of the rotated box exercise because I realized that I wasn't really sure what I was doing and was just kind of placing lines arbitrarily.
I won't have time to sit down and work on the boxes for tomorrow (I want to set a few hours to work on it), but I think I might have time on Thursday and definitely on Friday.
~Wing
Yesterday's drawings:
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Yesterday's and today's box drawings:
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On Wednesday, the Scott Robertson book came in the mail. I spent too much time reading that and not drawing.
Yesterday and today, I spent about an hour each day on Scott Robertson's exercises in the 1st chapter (I altered the 1-point perspective line exercise to be more similar to drawabox's freehand box exercise, though). I think I like the ellipse exercises more than drawabox's ellipse exercises because I feel like I have a more concrete goal with them.
I decided to also check my 1-point perspective boxes in MS Paint with the line drawing tool. I don't know how to really check the ellipses, but I am planning on getting an ellipse template tomorrow if I can find it at Michael's.
Also, should I resize these drawings down even more? They are 60% of the scanned size currently, but I can reduce it even more if people want.
~Wing
Yesterday's drawings:
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Today's drawings:
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Hey lots of hard work here Wing :). Good stuff, keep it going dude.
Also - I am jealous - I want to get Scott Robertson's book but need to scrape together some funds first!
Holy shit dude. You've got some dedication to those lines circles and boxes. Might be time to mix up the exercises though! Or try to use what you've learned in something creative!
@Sublimus - Thanks. I probably should mix things up. There's this problem I kind of have (I mentioned it in a previous post on this thread) that I end up being too focused on "studying" art rather than trying to be creative with it.
I think the problem is that I don't know how to be creative with the artistic skills I have right now. I think in my head, "Oh, I want to draw [blank], but I don't really have the skills to draw it."
For example, say I want to draw people doing...people things. "Oh, I want to draw people doing things, but I don't really have the skills to draw a human."
So, I just end up doing exercises and whatnot.
I don't really know how to fix this, but if anyone has any input on this, any advice is welcome. The only thoughts I have on this is that I'm too scared to be creative or something (which I am kind of baffled as to why).
~Wing
Today's drawings:
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More drawing. I think I'm not doing as well on the XYZ drawings because I have way too much ink, and it's throwing me off. Maybe I should use two pieces of sketchbook paper for it (one to make the grid, one for the actual XYZ drawing).
~Wing
Today's drawings:
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