Saturday 22 November 2008

This Week's Drawing and Painting Class

Firstly, I'd like to say a big thank you to Cynthia and Leanne for their words of encouragement on my last post. My clay class was on Monday, and those feelings of inadequacy that I described carried over into my drawing class on Tuesday, although I feel better now.

One thing I have noticed every week in the drawing and painting class, is that I am much slower than everyone else. During the still life studies I noticed that in the time it took me to do one still life drawing, other people had drawn several, or had drawn one and painted one. I didn't let it bother me as I noticed that their drawings were very sketchy in style whereas mine was more polished. The past couple of weeks it has bothered me more - we have had a model to draw and the classes have been quite intense - the first week we had to draw two portraits from different angles, and this week we had to draw the model in three different positions. So I've had to draw much quicker than usual and adopt a more sketchy style myself, whereas everyone else has been producing finished pieces! Don't ask me how.

So, I was feeling quite down about this but Anita and her son (who modelled for us) helped to put things into perspective for me. Firstly Anita said it doesn't matter how long it takes, it's the finished result that's important. Also she commented that I had completed the study in exactly the way she asked us to - measuring and paying attention to proportions rather than detail. She pointed out that she didn't need to correct any of mine, whereas she had to help others get their drawings into proportion. Actually, I noticed myself that one lady filled in quite a bit of detail, but he had no legs, and there was no room left on the page for them either! That's when Robin chipped in with probably the most important piece of advice I'll ever need - he said the foundations are the most important part of a building. He's a wise lad for only 16.

So here are my drawings from this week. You'll be pleased to know that he kept his trousers on (I was anyway), but I couldn't bring myself to draw his nipples. It just felt wrong! He's my friend's son and he's only 16! Oh, and these are probably the worst photo's ever - if we get any daylight in this country before spring I'll retake the photo's and replace them!




Just out of interest - if I was to draw a corpse would that still be classed as a life drawing or a still life? :)

I didn't go to the life drawing class this week after all - I stayed home and made something with clay instead! Coming soon!

5 comments:

Leanne Pizio said...

Hey Ms Un D,
I think the hardest and most crippling thing that we all do as humans is compare ourselves to others. As artists it can cause us to be unable to even pick up a brush or pencil for fear of failure. You are not alone. We all do the comparison thing. The greatest thing of all is when you can push through it like you did in your class. You looked around, compared, and then began to stick up for your own work. Finding the differences to the other drawings that were positive. You rock on girl!
I think the drawings are really well done. I wish I could see them better....we have had some dreary days as well....but I think the proportions are really well done.

HMMMM....I think it would be still life! :)

Undaunted said...

Thank you Leanne. Yes, I think I do that quite a lot. Comparing myself to others is what prevented me from entering two exhibitions recently. I must stop that.

I've changed the photo's in the post but I'm not sure if they're much better. My pencil drawings always seem to come out paler in photo's than what they are. I only use my phone camera though because I don't know how to use our other one!

Judi Tavill said...

Your work looks great!
Enjoy the process!
Thanks for the blog comments too!

Anonymous said...

I agree with paintergirl - don't compare yourself to others (though I know it's hard to do sometimes). One thing I tell my students in clay class - especially those who strive for perfection - is there is no one single right way to make art!

You have your own style, stop fighting it or obsessing over how you work. Just do it - and the 16 year old is wise.

Undaunted said...

Thank you Judi! I seem to enjoy the process more when I'm on my own!

Yes he is Cynthia. Thank you for your encouraging words. I'm trying to apply the things you and Leanne have been telling me and I'm feeling better about my abilities now. The test will be at class this week!