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I am teaching a life drawing class night class, its a 2 hour class, they are a mixed group of beginners and intermediate. You have any suggestions on fun exercises to do with them.

2007-02-27 02:55:03 · 6 answers · asked by vista 2 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Drawing & Illustration

I was thinking of exercises not just timing of the pose. We always start with quick poses, and because of class time we usually do 2 shorter poses or one long pose, Any ideas on techniques or ways of seeing? I been teaching for 7 years so I am looking for new and exciting ideas, any suggestions

2007-02-27 03:20:20 · update #1

6 answers

Some sketching techniques I've tried, which could be applied to life drawing are things like:

Drawing with your 'other' hand (ie if you're right handed, use your left).
Blacking out the page first with charcoal or something similar, and then using a rubber to erase sections.
Drawing really quick sketches -like 20 seconds rather than 2 mins.
Drawing with your eyes shut.

I hope that helps -Good luck with your class!

2007-02-27 08:45:16 · answer #1 · answered by Elle 3 · 0 0

We started out our Life Drawing classes with about 10 - 2 minute poses just to get warmed up, and to make everyone think more about drawing than the model before us.

2007-02-27 02:58:35 · answer #2 · answered by ઈтєlly 7 · 0 0

Being a master of drawing images is simple with assistance from Realistic Pencil Portrait Mastery guide from here https://tr.im/oRT7p .
With Realistic Pencil Portrait Mastery guide you'll got that named Training Brain Routes and each of this session includes what are named “Process” or “Mind” maps. These are essentially outline summaries of the thing that was protected in each of the lessons.
With Realistic Pencil Portrait Mastery you will also get 100 High Resolution Research Photographs since if you are likely to training your picture pulling, you then are going to need research pictures. That benefit involves 100 good quality dark and bright photographs made up of 70 looks and 30 face features. Very helpful!

2016-05-02 00:38:31 · answer #3 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

get the model to change positions every 10 mins and get the students to draw the first position, and then draw the second position again, on top of the original, perhaps in a different colour or different media.
or use p plastic pallet knife and ask the students to use acrylic paint and paint the model using the knife.
Ask them to fit the model exactly onto the paper they have infront of them, to get them used to drawing in proportion. (the head usually fits into the body 7 times over)
hope this helps

2007-02-27 09:08:39 · answer #4 · answered by hurricane 2 · 0 0

do sketches in varying poses, starting with 10 min, few more 5 min, a ton of 2 min-30 second, then go up to a 30 min. It really exercises your mind. to go from fast to slow.

2007-02-27 03:15:31 · answer #5 · answered by moore850 5 · 0 0

How about doing charactertures of your model?

2007-02-27 03:44:23 · answer #6 · answered by you do not exist 5 · 0 0

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