Gallery 6 - Portraits
Left late into this course, I am addressing basic sighting for proportion and perspective over two lessons.
I have used portraits as a model for how to sight and draw proportions and the basics of tones and shading. Full face this week.
The aim of these exercise is not to produce an accurate likeness of the models but to reproduce as closely as possible the basic proportions of a human face so that the face looks enough like a real person.
Tricky to say the least and most of the students complained that they feared this would be the hardest of all tasks set.
They found it challenging but their follow-up work is showing just how well they have consolidated their lesson to produce these images from photographs and life.
It is interesting to see how each student has interpreted the same model and hopefully will help them analyse how their own observation differs from others and will help them critically review their own work.
For that reason I have grouped them according to model. Self portraits come last and are not identified so that the students can try to guess who is who!
Three of them are missing this week for various reasons
Comments from the Students
'I have found this weeks
exercises VERY difficult and I came very close to giving up.!!!
I have not enjoyed or
looked forward to doing them at all. Each one took at least 2 to 3
hours and I kept coming back to them over the course of a day
The drawings look OK
but not a likeness of who they should be.
I know I will not be
drawing portraits in the future that's for sure.
I am sorry this is so
negative but that's how I feel about my drawing this week.
'I had thought I would
not enjoy portraiture - far too difficult - but armed with a lesson
on proportions, and with the help of a bit of shading, it was
fascinating to watch a face come to life under the tip of my pencil.
Heady stuff. I found men's faces the most difficult, but
much more interesting to draw'
'I really loved doing these. They don't quite look like who they are
meant to be but I am amazed at the improvement having been taught about
the proportions of a face by Sylvia. I think I might have changed my
mind about being interested in doing portrait drawings.
Self Portraits of the Artists
For me these drawings are my favourites, they are full of character and energy showing me just how much the artists have seen. Although they would all say that the likeness is really not them there are elements of each one which are true!
It is obvious that they have been done from life and not from photographs...well done all of you - (Sylv)
'I try to avoid looking in mirrors so the
self portrait was a bit of an ordeal for me, but what was more
disconcerting was to see my mother appearing on the paper - that can't
be right surely!'
Marian wrote
ReplyDeleteI really love the way the first Beckam drawing on the blog captures the boyish charm of the original, so following your comments I compared it, mine and the original and can now see that I have somehow managed to reverse his lopsided grin, thereby giving him a totally different character. Not sure if this is appropriate as a comment on the blog, but you are welcome to post it if you want to.
Cheers
Marian