Showing posts with label figure drawing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label figure drawing. Show all posts

Thursday, 11 January 2018

Picking up pigment pens...


It's been October since I last drew regularly. Bar making a little art book in Dec I haven't felt the inclination to draw. Feel I should be drawing but just didn't or couldn't. Guess that block hasn't yet gone.

Had got myself a new Passion Planner which I liked using throughout last year, for art, writing and blogging. Finally got it opened and scribbled in it. A few false starts but now seem to be planning drawing and researching. That Andrew Loomis book I got for my Nov birthday has been opened. Great book. It was first published in 1943 and many of the illustrations seem quite vintage but it breaks down each main part of the body, male and female, giving useful tips on figure drawing


The first drawing in my sketchbook was out of my head, not looking up any visual references. When I do this the features tend to be ill-placed and too large - the eyes in particular. After drawing some exercises from the Loomis book the image has improved a little.



Loomis suggests first drawing a sphere, flattening the sides and then adding lower points for the nose, mouth and chin. Drawing and re-drawing makes the method more second-nature.


The drawing I like most using his technique I drew in pencil. I become aware of the features in relation to each other and the hair 'fits' better. The drawing is unfinished but I like it how it is. This is an imaginary person drawn using the tips in the book. 


I've written about other drawing aids available online, to buy and to download. I'll list the relevant blogs below.

ISBN: 9780857680983 'Figure Drawing for all it's Worth' by Andrew Loomis




Copyright © 2016 by Roisin O'Hagan/bloowabbit
All rights reserved. The artworks/illustrations or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the artist except for specific permission granted with a free downloadable.

Friday, 3 February 2017

Line of action...figure study practice tool...


In the last blogpost Line of action was mentioned by MissKerrieJ as a tool to use for figure drawing. It can be set to suit your preference, female or male figures, or both. Nude or decent. Sessions and times have also selections. 



For my practice I chose female figure, decent and set it to same-length sessions. I began first with 30 second sessions to warm up and all sketches were done in my A5 sketchbook. Poses that appeared on screen were of ballerinas.

30 second poses

After seven quick sketches I moved up to 60 second sessions. At first I simply drew whichever figure came up next on screen but as I worked through the longer times I began to select poses.

60 second poses

I preferred standing figures to sitting or lying poses and flicked past ballerinas in tutus.

2 minute poses

For the 5 minute and 10 minute sessions I chose single figures.

5 minute pose

The 5 minute session took the pressure off me, I could relax. But my quality of drawing didn't increase exponentially. Instead by relaxing I didn't push myself. I used this tool to begin by warming up with the 30 second sessions and then used pencil and eraser to work on the 10 min figure. 

If I were to copy what my sister, who taught me art at school, had set my class as a task I would have worked on the longest session first and ended with 30 seconds. Then by the end of the exercise I might have found I could speed-sketch much more accurately. The 2 minute poses seemed to be my optimum.

10 minute pose





Copyright © 2016 by Roisin O'Hagan/bloowabbit
All rights reserved. The artworks/illustrations or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the artist except for specific permission granted with a free downloadable.


Friday, 22 July 2016

Drawing Anatomy


If you're going to draw realistic figures then it can be useful to know what lies beneath the skin. It can be time consuming learning Anatomy (with Physiology perhaps) indepth. Sometimes just a little understanding goes a long way. Twenty years ago I studied short courses in both Human Anatomy and Physiology to support a course in Aromatherapy - helps to know where the muscles are and what happens to them when you work with them - and some of that knowledge has stuck with me. However I'm am not an expert by any means and am currently striving to improve my figure drawing.


At art classes in school and in the life room at art college I did a lot of figure study but it's a thing that needs constant usage and over time I've gotten slightly out of practice. 


When I create a doodle styled drawing that is freehand, without planning or pencil sketch, the figures are not perfect and the emotion or concept of the art is more important than accurate anatomy. When I create a more planned piece the figure is more accurate. Check out blogpost Updating old work.


from '101 Top Tips for Fantasy Painters' by Kevin Crossley
check out blogpost 'review: Art Book'

You can source tips and tricks of drawing anatomy in books, in blogs or in videos. I like a mixture of sources, looking at simplified breakdowns of the bone and muscle structure, copying from art and watching how other artists draw figures. 



Plus I get out my mobile and snap a picture of my own head/hand/foot if stuck and draw from that. The hands of 'Mother of Butterflies' were drawn from photos of my hands.


A fun tool to use is a wooden movable mannequin although details of fingers, toes and muscle curves aren't indicated - it is a help if you already have a level of anatomical knowledge in your head or want a certain pose and then source anatomical details.


A resource available online to purchase and download is the Anatomy Reference Pack from Jazza's Studios - Jazza also has a few YouTube channels which are worth a watch. I've bought the ref pack and refer to it whenever I need to source a full figure to draw from. The photographs are clear plus each stance is photographed from different angles, some holding swords or pikes.


However the best anatomy resource I've found are the free downloadable charts from Sycra on YouTube with videos to follow. This artist studied Anatomy in order to understand the cause and effect of every movement from bone and muscle, sinew and tendon. He admits it took him a long time and to make things easier for other artists came up with the stylized charts. While they are not entirely accurate anatomically they show where and how to draw curves and planes on the human body plus they help the artist understand the relation of each body part to another. A great resource from a very sharing artist.

I hope the information in this blogpost is of use to you. There are other websites and videos linked below, some are filled with more information than others. I think you've just got to pick up a pencil and draw not worrying about perfection. But the use of anatomy resources with a little practice can only improve your quality of figure drawing.

Links:



Copyright © 2016 by Roisin O'Hagan/bloowabbit
All rights reserved. The artworks/illustrations or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the artist except for specific permission granted with a free downloadable.


Friday, 6 May 2016

History of an artist (me) part 1...



'tank girl, grace, soul & snud' 2015

I've been into art all my life, since I was able to hold a pencil in my tiny hand. For years, a drawing I did when very young was kept in the family dictionary. It was a drawing on a piece of lined paper of an amorphous being. The blob had eyes and some stick-like protuberances which child psychologists might interpret as arms extending from a face, the parts of a loving parent that first imprints upon the child. Anyway, my Dad asked me what I had drawn and after some thought I said 'It's a snud'. 

A few years on 'Tank Girl' joined the Snud in the pages of the dictionary. Tank Girl (not to be confused with Jamie Hewlett's and Alan Martin's late 80's comic strip) was drawn in red ballpoint. A tall figure made up of geometric shapes and lines. I had been sketching a concrete tank opposite the henhouse, got bored and took the ballpoint for a walk across the page. My older sister was at art college and when she went on to study education my drawings in the dictionary illustrated a small part of her obligatory paper on child art.

figure drawing, school art room 1976

My future brother-in-law was my art teacher when I started grammar school and from 11th year onwards my sister taught me. I learned a lot from my big sis. Art was my passion and it was inevitable that I sit art O and A Levels and follow through to a place at Art College. Studio space, heating, lighting and small material grants took the pressure off producing coursework (this was the 70s & 80s when students were financially supported in their choices of further education). Working at college from noon until 10pm each evening, I was in my element.


'Red Curtain' 1978

'Greenscape' 1979

However, it was the late 1970s and Belfast was in the throes of civil war, bombs threatening everyday life in the city as well as across the rest of the country. There were students who focussed on political art but I painted emotive landscapes with turbulent skies in my first year moving into the escapism of fantasy illustration with words in second year. 

My final year show in 1981 reverted to natural form. I had fallen in love with handmade paper, creating huge hangings depicting quirky plants and gourds. Sheets of translucent silk paper adhered to large watercolour pages stained with inks and latex fluid. The pieces were suspended on invisible fishing line allowing them to hang free from the walls so that they gently moved when the air in the room was disturbed by visitors. 


'Tulip Petals' & 'Indian paper' 1981

It's a bit of a culture shock after 16 years within the education system to suddenly find yourself in the real world. What I could have done with was some direction, practical advice on how to continue producing art and earn a living doing so. But at that time there was no after-Uni support. I was twenty, quite naive and somehow had to get a job.

After 6 months of being unemployed, spending my mornings writing short stories (one being published in LIVE! fanzine), I was offered a year's employment working in a community centre as an Arts Assistant. I would have my own art room where I would run arts & crafts classes for after school kids and unemployed teenagers. 

ARTRONIX

That following Summer I worked at a Youth Resource Centre as a Street Theatre Assistant. Running workshops on making simple costumes, hats and props while others worked at creating songs, dance movements and acrobatics. It was a Summer filled with sound and colour. My artwork had taken a backseat at this time. The paid work I continued to do was creative but I'd stopped focussing on myself as an artist. I ran 'Junk to Jewellery' evening classes in a local arts centre. I taught crafts in day centres. I taught machine knitting on a YTP scheme (Youth Training Programme). With two colleagues I ran an electronic jewellery business producing Swarovski set resin cast constellations back lit with LEDs. Occasionally I would take part in a group exhibition but I had lost momentum. Over the decade after leaving art college art was just something I occasionally did on the sidelines whilst earning a living. 

I applied for and got a position in a large day centre working for adults with intellectual impairments. In the ten years I was there making art didn't feature at all. I concentrated on 'my career', got promoted and ended up unhappy, in a lot of stress which culminated in my becoming disabled and losing my job. I found myself unemployed, at home, a single parent with a young child. It's strange how life turns out. This life change became the restart of my path as an artist.

(Part 2 next week)

Links:

Tomorrow's blog: 'Oh Hello drawing challenge'



Copyright © 2016 by Roisin O'Hagan/bloowabbit
All rights reserved. The artworks/illustrations or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the artist except for specific permission granted with a free downloadable.