Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Anatomy Exercise 1

The last few days have shown me that I need to revisit the subject of anatomy so I'm going to try and build some disciplined study into my daily sketching, it can't be all fun! Not being sure where to start I figured that, as I prefer to do portraits, I should start with the head. Thankfully I still have a lot of the study resources given to me as a student but there are also a lot of books on anatomy available both from an art as well as a science perspective that are designed for this kind of study.


My intention is to retrace steps taken ages ago to refresh my memory and understanding and to strengthen the link between my brain and drawing hand so that it will hopefully improve my figure drawing. I'm sticking with a mechanical pencil to sketch with, partly through laziness (I don't have to keep sharpening it). I 'm getting more and more used to sketching with it, which helps as it's usually the only drawing tool I carry regularly, other than a Biro pen. I'm trying to become disciplined at carrying my sketchbook with me at all times as I used to when I was a student although I'm not sure where I'm going to put it on my motorbike!


I know the overall shape of the skull really well in my mind's eye but as I start sketching it I realise my memory has gaps when it comes to the fine details. Without looking again at the study materials I know I would measure some of the features wrong, such as making the overall skull too wide. Or putting too many teeth in! I have a real problem when it comes to drawing sequences of things and have to count out the teeth very carefully.


This side view in particular can catch me out, the placing of the mandible for example, I would probably have put it a little further forward. Going back over things we think we know can often show us that our memories are unreliable when it comes to the details. 


So now that I've become familiar again with the parts of the skull I try and sketch the skull from different angles, as I previously noted in my second post 'Drawing is harder than sculpting!' that I had gotten completely out of practice when it comes to drawing the head from different viewpoints.


Sketching from slightly behind the skull  I think on this sketch I've drawn the nasal bone showing a little too much.


The skull is turned away more because the other side of the mandible is showing, so you wouldn't be able to see that much of the nasal bone, I think.


I find this angle particularly challenging, so the only solution I know of is to keep sketching it!


When I'm trying to draw the head from this angle - slightly turned away from face-on - I have a tendency to twist the facial features, and it seems I can do it to the skull too, I'm still not happy with this one. Practice, practice, practice!