Saturday, February 21, 2009

Figure Drawing Powerpoint Greatest Hits

instead of posting a bunch of images, i'm just going to give you the names of most of the artists shown in the powerpoint. it takes an inexplicably large amount of time to upload images on here, so you'll have to do a little research on your own. but i think you can handle it.

Pre Renaissance
Duccio
Cimabue
Giotto

Renaissance
Jan Van Eyck
Donatello
Botticelli
Leonardo Da Vinci
Michelangelo
Pontormo
Bronzino
Vasari
Fiorentino

Late Renaissance/Baroque
Titian
Caravaggio
Rembrandt

Impressionists
Manet
Degas
Renoir
Rodin
John Singer Sargent (not really an impressionist, but in that time period)

20th Century
Lucian Freud
Picasso
Chuck Close

Contemporary
Jenny Saville
Elizabeth Peyton
Zak Smith
Lisa Yuskavage

so, you guys should take some time on your own and check a few of these guys out in depth. it will really help you when handling the figure yourself.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

the last still life!














Above are Wayne Thiebaud's "Rosebud Cakes" and Edouard Manet's "The Lemon"

From Adam Gopnik's "An American Painter" (an article about Wayne Thiebaud):

"Across the room [from Thiebaud's still life of two cakes] a Manet watercolor - not the real thing... but an aquatint copy... pictures another simply shaped food, a green apple. It has the same spareness, the same intensity of observation, the same love of a plain thing seen plain. Yet to look at it is to feel in touch with a classical contemplative tradition. The apple has a dapper dapple, a comfortable shimmer that suggests looking as a completely satisfying way of living. Gazing at transient things in the French tradition, the Manet apple seems to say, is in itself a way of making them last. Looking at transient things in the American tradition, the cakes seem to imply, creates a melancholy little comedy of longing and exclusion. You feel lured in and then you feel left out.

The emotional truth, or anyway the local feeling, hits. The French apple, though it points no moral, is in every sense composed. The two American cakes, though all dressed up as if for their own birthday party, seem by contrast plaintive, longing. The apple is calm; the cakes are sad. Not just sad, but nationally sad, familiarly sad. They radiate a peculiar emotion that we have sensed before in such lovely areas of American paint as those fruit bowls in Hopper's restaurant or the childrens building blocks in Eakins - a note of yearnig, a melancholy undercurrent of aspiration implanted even in things of pleasure that we recognize more easily than understand."

For homework I would like you to consider how artists use objects to create mood. Why does Adam Gopnik find Thiebaud's cakes sad, yet Manet's apple (or lemon) composed and stately? Are these qualities inherent to the objects themselves or are they communicated through the artists' use of materials and stylistic choices?

For next Monday (the 22nd), please compose one still life with the goal of creating a specific mood. You may use any objects you want and any media in your drawing. For this Wednesday (the 18th), I would like you to have considered your mood and to have determined some strategies for conveying this tone. Please write some ideas in your sketchbook, and maybe even sketch out some of them. I will discuss those ideas with you individually on Wednesday.

Below are images of paintings by Giorgio Morandi, one of the great masters of the still life. Think about how he has used color, material, and style to impart the few objects he paints with distinct emotion.

Monday, February 9, 2009

homework!

for monday, the 16th:

make two drawings, the first of a space (interior or exterior), the second of that same space with a person in it. for example, you could draw your living room with your couch, and then your roommate sitting on the couch. find a friend who will sit still for a couple hours (do NOT work from photos), and be sensitive to how the space changes when there is someone in it. how does the weight and mass of a person affect the couch cushions? the light? the sense of depth?

Sunday, February 8, 2009

check this out


hey guys,

since you're working with charcoal i thought i'd send along some links to some super awesome charcoal stuff:

here's a video by the south african artist william kentridge. he makes charcoal drawings, photographs them, alters them, photographs them again and makes videos from the stills.

here's a link to vija celmin's drawings retrospective at ucla a couple years ago. some of these are graphite, some are charcoal. they will knock your socks off.

and this is the drawing center's website. it's a museum and work space in new york that shows mostly works on paper. it's pretty sick.

and, as per request, here's a drawing of mine i did last week.

see you tomorrow!

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

New Blog!



Hey guys,

Welcome to the Basic Drawing class blog! Remember to check in periodically for updates, assignments, links, pictures, and other things I think you should know about.

In the meantime, here's the facial proportion study I told you about. You'll notice the head is broken down into quarters and then also broken down into smaller squares, which are the dimensions of the width of the eye.



And here are a few sketches (which I did not do), that might help you if you decide to do a view other than straight-on.