Gesture drawing is . . .
. . . a method of training hands to quickly sketch what the brain has already seen. Staying "focused" means sustained concentration. Once you start drawing, don't stop--there's only 1-2 minutes to finish! This is Gesture practice.
Focus . . .
. . . constantly! The eye, a wonderful camera estimates proportions, contours, movement, and contrasts quickly. Determine contours first, then interior shapes and shadows.
Draw lightly . . .
. . . for the 1st "layer" as a rough draft; darker for the 2nd drawing corrections right over the 1st layer adding contrast; then, the darkest 3rd layer with deep shadows and final contours.
Draw quickly . . .
. . . the entire image is viewed in a blink. Make the pencil follow content flashed to the brain. Keep the pencil/pen in constant circular and linear motion. Catch the form, not the details.
Constant movement . . .
. . . is a necessity. Quick, light drawing makes for easy clarifications in succeeding layers. Move eyes with quick returns without moving the head. Accuracy takes patience, perseverance and lots of practice.
No erasing . . .
. . . as the gesture drawing's purpose is to develop visual skills which will effect expertise. Erasing breaks focus and wastes time!
Here’s a quick example . . .
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRTqpJMs98E
Your Turn!!!
Get several sheets of paper ready. Try using a high B pencil(9B – 6B), hold the pencil high and keep your movements loose.
You will have 2 minutes to draw the object and/or figure on the next slide. Work fast, trust your eye.
Now time for some still-life . . .
Grab a random object and put it in front of you on the table, for example, a pair of scissors, erasor, ipod, book, etc.
Make sure the object has some dimension and is interesting to draw – you will have 5 minutes this time to complete a gestural drawing of the object
Go!
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