April 23, 2012

perspective quote

The following words, by Leonardo da Vinci, can pertain to the drawings of my past and present students:
There are three aspects to perspective. The first has to do with how the size of objects seems to diminish according to distance: the second, the manner in which colors change the farther away they are from the eye; the third defines how objects ought to be finished less carefully the farther away they are. 


Student from SIS l '11


Marie Obegi


Hobin Lee

April 16, 2012

life drawing

This student loosens her grip with a painterly sweep, which caresses the paper. Skillfully, the hair is left for the eye to finish. A strong diagonal lends our focus to the foot, and over to the hand, both of which, in their detail, maintain a relationship with the ground. 

Is this drawing perfect? No. That is the beauty of life. 



April 06, 2012

drawing sp'12 | Why do we draw the figure?

The human body holds the essence of LIFE. Its spirit can be deciphered with a soft touch, or a powerful mark, and its flesh, by a twist of the wrist. Without the exacting symmetry, so often found in man made objects, figure drawing allows for a basic human desire - freedom of expression.

Is it any wonder that artists have been attracted to its form for centuries? Whether in capturing the serenity in a child's face, the agony in a brush with death, or the frailty in a aged hand, one thing is clear: artists explore similar methods - gesture, contour, values, and composition - yet, with their own eye.

Students enter class with varying levels of experience - and a response all their own. With the stage set (jazz playing through the speakers, and two spotlights illuminating the model) my voice carries. "Let you hand dance on the page, be messy, angry, joyful, and gentle! Press down, lighten up, go from the tip to the side, back to the tip again." Invariably, students let go, take risks, and get in touch with their own very human perceptions. Individual likes, dislikes, tentativeness, boldness, empathy, and pragmatism are evident, whether they use charcoal, graphite or marker. A wall of pinned-up drawings proves that there is no one way to draw the human figure. It is by far nature’s most imperfect, dynamic, tactile, and widely interpreted subject. Students are fascinated, sometimes frustrated, but never bored.



First drawing (no instruction) by Kristen Bogart



Justin Elkaim




First drawing (no instruction) by Sarah Levy




First drawing (no instruction) by P. Andrew McCausland




First drawing (no instruction) by Joseph Whang




First drawing (no instruction) by Hobin Lee




First drawing by Marie Obegi



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