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| Narcissus - Common Daffodil The Elements of Drawing - Exercise 2 Ink on Paper 23cm x 15cm (9" x 6") |
This is my third go at Exercise 2 from John Ruskin’s The Elements of Drawing (see The Elements of Drawing - Exercise 2 and The Elements of Drawing - Exercise 2 (Take 2)). I repeated the exercise as I worked on exercises 3 (The Elements of Drawing - Exercise 3) and 4. I followed the same steps as in my previous attempts:
Chose an illustration from British Phænogamous Botany; Or, Figures and Description of The Genera of British Flowering Plants.
Narcissus - Common Daffodil
Copied the outline as closely as possible with a soft pencil on to a piece of scrap paper.
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| Narcissus - Common Daffodil The Elements of Drawing - Exercise 2 Pencil on Paper 23cm x 15cm (9" x 6") |
Used Gimp (a free image editing package) to compare my drawing (in red) with the original. This is the most complex example I've tried. The comparison identified the need for more significant alterations than in my previous attempts.Made another comparison and repeated the correct and compare steps until I reached a reasonable level of accuracy (this is my sixth and final version).
I still can’t get on with Ruskin’s suggestion for the last step:
rest your hand on a book about an inch and a half thick, so as to hold the pen long; and go over your pencil outline with ink, raising your pen point as seldom as possible, and never leaning more heavily on one part of the line than on another.I can’t draw with any fluidity while resting my hand on a book. Instead, I don’t rest my hand on anything. I try to hold the pen (a fineliner) so that it barely touches the paper and then draw from my shoulder while maintaining the slow control that Ruskin demands – its tricky.



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Hey! Glad to see you are still active. I saw your posts about the natural way to draw since I have started to follow it too.
ReplyDeleteI feel like I will also do a blog like you did. I wanted to ask that if you recommend the book and a review of it.
Other than that did you follow any other books alongside it? Since how long it takes to finish it? I was thinking if i should follow another book alongside it or not. I feel attracted to old books too for some reason.
Finally, your blog seems really interesting so I will follow it and try to comment when I can. Also your art is beautiful.
Thank you for your comments and interest.
DeleteYes I recommend The Natural way to Draw, but with a few qualifications/caveats. It is a huge undertaking. It took me 2.5 years. If you are looking purely to develop your drawing skills, I think there are better and faster ways. A major gap for me, is it doesn’t give much attention to the skills of accurately measuring proportion and angles by eye. Perhaps the most important point is to stress the focus is on life drawing. I don’t think you can do the book justice without access at least one person who will pose for you and it doesn’t give much coverage to other subject matter - still life, landscape, etc. I’ve seen posts from people who have used photographs and other subject matter, but this wouldn’t have worked for me.
The unquantifiable thing I obtained from sticking with the book is an awakening of an artistic sensibility and a change to my whole outlook to art and learning.
The Training Material Index in the Pages section, lists the other study material I’ve used. Bert Dodson’s Keys to Drawing is a good introduction and Marc Taro Holmes’ The Urban Sketcher gives some good coverage of techniques to improve accuracy.
Blogging is an important learning tool for me. It forces me to take some time to think about a topic and to clarify what I've learnt.
I'm interested in what you decide and if you start a blog.
Hey thank you for your reply!
ReplyDeleteI decided to follow the natural way to draw but maybe I wont do all the exercises or do them in a less amount so I can finish faster.
I was thinking of going through andrew loomis books alongside this, but what do you recommend when you say there are better and faster ways?
I will probably start a blog too, currently I am a little busy but I may post in a week or so, It would be cool if you decide to give it a read and share your opinions.
Thank you for your time
Hi Rahul, I'm glad you decided to follow The Natural Way to Draw. It is worth the effort. You may be able to condense things, but some of the benefits I gained came from the seemingly endless repetition of the exercises. Its a bit like going to the gym and finding some strange enjoyment and benefit from doing the same circuits you've done many times before.
ReplyDeleteI benefited from Bert Dodson’s Keys to Drawing and Marc Taro Holmes’ The Urban Sketcher. I'm glad I had "done" Keys to Drawing before starting The Natural Way to Draw. I've also really enjoyed/benefited from Liz Steel's Sketching Now courses. The material on Proko is excellent, but I've only dipped into their free videos - I've never enrolled on their paid courses.
I started Andrew Loomis' Figure Drawing For All It's Worth. It's a good book. I didn't complete it because I realised my main interest is landscape rather than figure drawing. Its something I may come back to.
Please share the details of your blog when you start it.
thank you for all of your advice! I have went through keys to drawing before all of this and it did help me tremendously. I think I will be following the natural way to draw as it is but just doing 30 mins everyday as a sort of exercise, without feeling like I need to finish this as fast as possible.
ReplyDeleteOther than that I will probably follow some other books alongside this, I was thinking of doing Perspective made easy by Norling.
I will be posting a blog by the end of the week and try to do it weekly or bi weekly at least. I will send you the link. Thank you for all your help and cannot wait to read your future blogs too.