Mastering Figure Drawing from the Imagination???
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I'm way at the beginning but, I would have to say, draw 9 million figures and get critiques and draw overs until you are able to visualize on your own. Also, as someone else said, I would think life drawing would be a great addition. Maybe you can hang out at a beach or pool and sneak in some gestures I am working on the figure drawing class video but haven't done it for awhile. Such a challenge to draw good figures!
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@Trevor-timms I don't think it's naieve at all! It's a good plan. As you get better at figure drawing you will still be getting better at drawing other things, just because you're drawing a lot.
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I would say along with figure drawing skills, train your visualization. I mean before you draw the figure. Visualize it in your head - to details. Of course, knowing gesture, anatomy, proportions, etc is necessary, but having a clear vision of what poses do you wanna draw is as important as other things + I think for comic book artist it is big plus as it saves you a lot of time instead of taking references as you said.
and if you are talking about mastering. Don't stress yourself up with it. Mastering is lifetime pursuit. If you train long enough it will come
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@Trevor-timms from what I know comic book artists use a lot of references for their work. Most of the times they even trace figures. Jason Brubaker a prolific artist outwardly shares that he traces. You donāt need to draw from imagination to prove your worth in comics. Itās all about the speed. If you yourself know that you can draw, you donāt need to prove that over and over by drawing from imagination. Plus, your audience will never know which piece is drawn from imagination from one which was done with a reference or traced. Theyāre going to gloss over that page faster than a few seconds and how itās drawn really wonāt matter. Again, itās about the speed. The faster you can churn out beautiful images, the better. Your audience will appreciate that and your body will definitely like that too given the volume of images you have to illustrate.
If you really want to get better at figure drawing (which is amazing and I still highly recommend), I can only suggest 2 things:
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Practice drawing various poses until it becomes second nature
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Donāt be afraid to use reference. Thereās nothing bad with using reference. Amateur artists try to āwing itā but GREAT artists use reference.
I hope this was helpful.
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So just to reiterate for everyone Iām not against using reference photos. But just like you said you canāt always find a perfect reference photo for what you are trying to draw.
I think there must be some legitimacy to what I mean when I say drawing from imagination or imagining poses that you canāt find good reference for. Otherwise you wouldnāt have guys like Kim jung gi. Now I understand that he is truly a master and Iām not trying to say I need to be as good as he is at it but just on a lesser level I would like to be able to comfortably do with out reference every now and then just for efficiency sake.
I also want to clarify that I am capable of drawing from imagination without reference I would just like to be better at it. Mainly I like reading what others have to say about their struggles with this issue cause Iām curious how other people deal with it. And thank you I am grateful for all the input!
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@Trevor-timms Oh I understood what you meant, I'm just saying the best way to become better at drawing from imagination IS to practice drawing with reference. I know it sounds counter-intuitive, but practicing drawing from imagination won't really make you better at drawing from imagination. Drawing from imagination is basically recycling things that you have already mastered, but not learning any more new things. To become better at it, you need to master more stuff so you have a bigger pool of knowledge to recycle when you draw from imagination.
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@NessIllustration Hm. I'm not sure I agree with you entirely... Accruing a bigger pool of knowledge doesn't necessarily happen from drawing from reference... I see it in my costume design students all the time--they learn how to reproduce the reference exactly, but not how to extrapolate from the visual information they're looking at and apply it to a different situational context or drawing. I even struggle with that myself.
Fabric, for example, holds a special challenge when trying to draw from reference. Different fabrics behave differently, and finding the right reference of the correct fabric in the correct pose with the correct lighting in the correct time period is impossible. One has to work from imagination, and hypothetically invent what one surmises is the correct way to communicate a specific fabric's appearance and behavior in the context of the costume rendering.
I would think comic illustration is in some ways quite similar--finding reference for some of those poses is impossible. One has to build from one's own deep understanding of the figure at some point and invent.
@Trevor-timms I wonder if part of the challenge is learning how to use reference. If one doesn't use it to replicate or copy or reproduce but instead to inform and inspire one's choices, reference images become something very different indeed. We are often taught in our artist education that replication is what's necessary--but that just trains the eye to see and discern. Anatomy study is also required to train the brain to understand what one is seeing, so one can use both to create the marks on a page. Have you thought about turning your attention away from replication of references and toward anatomical studies for artists? That might help... I am learning, personally, that anatomy is something I really really need to do my own work...
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@Coreyartus in a way you are correct. When you donāt have reference, you need to dig into oneās understnading of the human figure. And how do you build this understanding? By studying and practing drawing the human figure over and over again using refrences/models until it becomes second nature. So basically, to get better at figure drawing, you need to practice and use references.
Also even if you canāt find the exact pose youāre looking for, I bet you can find a lot of references that are similar though still not quite right. What do you do from there? Well, you use your reference as basis and you reach into your knowledge of the human figure which you have built up through practice and various observation from references.
I understand what you mean about your students. What I can say is that they can improve this through practice and soaking in alot of references. I know the FZD School of Design uses this technique where they give students the front and side view of an onject (letās say a truck) and the students have to draw the truck in a three-quarters view from an extreme angle. What happened here is that they used reference and their understanding of the form and design of a truck which again was build through observing a lot of references.
On a more personal example, just a few days ago, I wanted to draw a cat pouncing straight foraward. However all the images I saw online were taken at a three-quarters view. So what did I do? I saved those images and went looking for more similar ones. I googled lions/tigers/leopards/etc lurching forwards front view and used that as reference. By using those, I developed an understanding of how a felineās body would look like if it were to jump on its prey. I combined that with the cat images I have and I got my desired image.
So, to sum it up, in order to be good at figure drawing, you need to practice and use references. Also, if canāt find what youāre looking for, find creative ways. Combine the figures that youāre familiar with and which are similar to what you want in order to achieve thatat pose you have in your mind.
I know Iām repeating myself but thereās really not much to it but practing and using references.
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I also think looking at skeletons and muscle systems helps. I do a lot of animal drawings and often have difficulty deciphering what is going on in an animal's body in a picture unless I understand its anatomy. (Joints get hidden by fur etc.) Once I understand the skeleton, it's easier to create a different pose it in my imagination, I don't draw people as much but I know that Jake Parker posted some drawings to Instagram saying that he is trying to level up his drawing by understanding muscle groups. He was even color coding muscles groups in his sketches and it looked really helpful.
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Trevor, I understand what you're saying. You want to build your knowledge of figure drawing in a way that makes what you draw look natural, whether you have the right reference or not. You want the overall expressive needs of illustration to determine the pose, not your reference!
I like what @nyrrylcadiz says here. There's kind of a cycle. You practice drawing from life generally, but maybe you can't always find a model to use as direct reference. You find online references, but they may not be exactly what you want either. You draw from imagination, and then work on making your figures more accurate. All three of these methods reach out and fill gaps that the others don't cover, but they are all important.
When I started doing illustration, I was generally good at figure drawing, but I was rather dismayed at how realistic reference was limiting my illustration and how little confidence I really had without a model. So I am working a lot on drawing from memory and then filling in the gaps by looking in the mirror or with photos I take on my phone, translated into a more childish form. Sometimes I spend a lot of time imagining the pose in 3D, because that's also important. I use the Magic Poser app sometimes as well, but I get frustrated with it because it seems unnatural at times and it's also hard for me to use on my phone. Another hint is to draw something and then looking at it the next day, or get critiques to realize where the problems are. But I don't think there's one method, and which you emphasize may depend on where you feel your weaknesses are.
It's like any other aspect of illustration in that it feels like doing sit ups. You feel weak at first but eventually you start to see progress!
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Im getting a lot of interesting opinions and advice and Iām thankful for all of it. This is the reason why I posted this in general discussion because as I might have my own opinions on this, Iām glad to hear others say what they think as well.
I do want to say from my experience that I almost only draw from imagination when doing my art thatās not studies and what not, and Iād like to think Iām pretty decent at it. So I absolutely know itās possible. It just takes a lot of tooling around and I know when I look back at these drawings thereās always something just a little off, whether itās proportions, or slight anatomy inaccuracies. But I do this and even so feel great about the drawings I just know that down the road I could be better at this.
And yes I have always believed strongly in drawing from life and studies to slowly but surely internalize the human form and feel it in three dimensions and all that. Iām sorry if anyone thought Iām just trying to never use reference to study or draw because that is absolutely not the case.
Iām of the opinion right now that itās just going to take some deep devoted work and hundreds of hours to really get that stuff in your bones and muscle memory. So thatās my plan for now.
Also I donāt literally expect to be a master at this, I just like the term mastery as an aspirational thing. I like to think of people who fully devote themselves to their craft like that. But Iām more concerned with loving the process cause thatās all there is and thereās no real end to learning.
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@Coreyartus I get what you're saying, but like @nyrrylcadiz said, when there's a gap you can find creative ways around it. It is probably impossible to find the right reference of the correct fabric in the correct pose with the correct lighting in the correct time period, but you CAN find references of the specific fabric to learn how it behaves, and other references of the time period, and other references of similar poses, and from there form the image you need. My point is that you should get the knowledge of how the thing you want to draw looks like (whether it's from reference photos, real life objects, video, encyclopedias, etc) instead of just filling in the gaps in your knowledge with "imagination". Once you've learned something and can recreate it, you no longer need a reference for it. As time goes, the gaps in your knowledge become smaller and the number of references needed reduces.
Today I drew a large illustration of a forest getting hacked away by a tractor machine and becoming agricultural fields, and was able to draw it all from my head except for the piece of heavy machinery, which is a gap in my knowledge. If I had decided to make something up instead of getting a reference, it wouldn't have been nearly as successful (whereas for trees and fields I had the required knowledge and needed no reference). I also don't think if I'd just tried drawing the tractor over and over and over again without reference, that I would have gotten any better at it no matter how long I practiced it. If I don't know what it looks like, I don't know. That's why I said no amount of just drawing from pure imagination is really going to make someone better at drawing from imagination - what they really need is fill the gaps in their knowledge, and then they're free to fly
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I find that the most important way to draw from imagination is a keen eye for observation. I am constantly studying people, their faces, features, shadow and light, the ways their clothes fold, etc. The reason being, I don't want to be a copy artist. I can copy the heck out of a photo reference, but I want my portraits to breathe, to capture that living essence. As a comic book artist wannabe I have drawn so many figures I have internalized what the muscles are doing. There are exceptions of course when it comes to lighting and such where photos help, but you will get there with practice and lots of observation.
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@chrisaakins Very true! I remember going through a phase after high school where I didn't draw for a good 6 months, yet when I picked up my pencil again I had improved. It baffled me for a while until I understood that even though I'd stopped drawing, I hadn't let go of the habit of observing people, objects and landscapes around me, and I had learned and internalized some of that during my hiatus.