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See art in a fresh
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Mini-Tutorial:
Feeling the Form |
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As simple as forms look in art, they
are one of the most difficult things to accomplish.
If the artist is going to convey
reality, getting the forms right are absolutely essential.
The realist artist is also at a disadvantage, in that if they
present real objects, these objects have to have believable
forms.
For example, no spectator is going
to believe that the woman's breasts were concaved, or that the sphere
was flat.
You might have heard it said
that if you can draw an egg, you can draw anything. There is
quite a bit of truth to that statement. So, let's start with an
egg. |
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For this demo, I used a real egg as
the model. I outlined it in a middle-gray tone, not in black.
Many amateur artists outline the edges
of objects with very dark lines and forget about the form that made the edge;
the result is that it flattens the shape, almost irreparably. |

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If artists can hold in their
minds that the edge is the completion of the form, it will help
them a great deal.
To show you what I mean, I have
taken the outlined egg and stuck it inside of a transparent box.
The "X's" mark the points where the
egg meets the sides, top, and bottom of the box. The bold "X" is
the closest to us, and the other 4 "X's" are half-way to the
back of the box.
I marked the closer edges of the box much darker than
the outline of the egg in order to show that the sides of the
egg are further away than the front.
The first thing to grasp about
round forms is that the edges on the side are further away from
us. It is what is in-between
the edges that expands and comes towards us.
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Here is a bird's eye view of the box
and egg. We are looking down as if at a floor plan. |
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A great tool to "see" form is to
imagine reaching out with your hand and figuring what are
spatially the
first, second, and third things you will touch.
In this case it is the center of the
egg that is the closest to the hand, marked with a "X".
Once you can see how forms expand
towards us, you have mastered part of the form problem.
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Now the really hard part begins.
Molding the egg with line or tone is really difficult. Here you
can see that I am using a cross-hatching technique. The lines
(mark making) go around the form, sometimes overlapping
(cross-hatching). There is
no sure-fire way to make these lines successful, but I find the
best way to do this is to imagine that you are massaging the egg,
or whatever form it is, with your thumb. |
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I literally will hold out my thumb and
imagine it gliding gently over the forms. Whatever direction
my thumb takes, I will make my drawing marks go in the same
direction. There is a
point when the pencil feels literally like it is caressing a
form, and not merely scratching the paper.
When I have taught this massaging
technique to classes, of up to 22 students, I have always gotten
amazing results. Aside from understanding how to draw forms, the
students have drawn the forms in their unique "voice." I am
convinced that when they concentrated on massaging the form, the
pencil's touch became personal.
Give this technique a go and I am
sure you will benefit from it.
Michael Newberry
New York, January 14th, 2007 |
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©2005
Newberry,
All rights reserved. |
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