Art Class: The Essential Guide to Drawing: How to Create Your Own Artwork
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About this ebook
An essential guide to drawing by internationally bestselling practical art author Barrington Barber.
Whether you want to learn to draw from scratch or to brush up your skills, this comprehensive drawing manual contains all you need. With introductory chapters on techniques, basic drawing exercises and composition, the book goes on to explore the major subject areas available to you as an artist: still life, landscape, and figure drawing.
Barrington Barber's combination of clear step-by-step exercises and inspirational examples has enabled people all over the world to learn to draw, and to enjoy this incredibly rewarding pastime.
ABOUT THE SERIES: Arcturus' Art Class books are a curated series of instructional art and craft titles designed to inspire artists of all levels, from beginner to professional. Stunningly presented in full color and in a highly usable landscape format, these comprehensive books are packed with all the ideas, inspirations, step-by-step projects, and techniques you'll need to master the subject covered.
Barrington Barber
Born 1934, Barrington was educated at Hampton Grammar School and later Twickenham Art Schoo for which he received a National Diploma of Design. He then practised as an illustrator (Saxon Artist) and Graphic Designer, was Art Director at Ogilvie & Mather and S.H. Bensons, and was a lecturer in Graphic Design at Ealing Art School. Other credits include freelance work, designer, illustrator, animator and painter at Augustine Studios. He was awarded a one man exhibition in 2000 at St. Oswald Studios, and also exhibited in Putney in 2003 and Cork Street in 2004. He was Head of Art at St James's Independent Schools. He now paints, draws, writes about art, and enjoys sports, walking, philosophy and meditation.
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Art Class - Barrington Barber
Introduction
Learning to draw is not difficult – everybody learns to walk, talk, read and write at an early age, and discovering how to draw is easier than any of those processes! Drawing is merely making marks on paper which represent some visual experience. All it takes to draw effectively is the desire to do it, a little persistence, the ability to observe and a willingness to take time to correct any mistakes. This last point is very important as mistakes are not in themselves bad – they are opportunities for improvement, as long as you always put them right so that you will know what to do the next time.
Many of the exercises in this book incorporate the time-honoured methods practised by art students and professional artists. If these are followed diligently, they should bring about marked progress in your drawing skills. With consistent practice and regular repetition of the exercises, you should be able to draw competently and from there you will see your skills burgeon. Don’t be put off by difficulties along the way, because they can be overcome with determination and a lot of practice and this means you are actively learning, even if it may seem a bit of a struggle at times. The main thing is to practise regularly and keep correcting your mistakes as you see them. Try not to become impatient with yourself, as the time you spend altering your drawings to improve them is time well spent.
Work with other students as often as you can, because this also helps your progress. Drawing may seem like a private exercise, but in fact it’s a public one, because your drawings are for others to see and appreciate. Show your work to other people and listen to what they say; don’t just accept or reject their praise or criticism, but check up on your work to see if they have seen something you haven’t. If other people’s views aren’t very complimentary, don’t take offence. Neither praise nor criticism matters except in so far as it helps you to see your work more objectively. Although at first a more experienced artist’s views are of great value, eventually you have to become your own toughest critic, assessing exactly how a drawing has succeeded and how it has not worked.
Talk to professional artists about their work if you get the chance. Go to art shows and galleries to see what the ‘competition’ is like, be it from the old masters or your contemporaries. All this experience will help you to move your work in the right direction. Although working through this book will help you along your path to drawing well, it is up to you to notice your weaknesses and strengths, trying to correct the former and building on the latter.
Steady, hard work can accomplish more than talent by itself, so don’t give up when you are feeling discouraged; drawing is a marvellously satisfying activity, even if you never get your work into a gallery. Enjoy yourself!
Chapter One
MARKS AND MATERIALS
When you first begin to draw, it can be hard to know just what you should do to set off on the right track, so in this chapter we shall look at what drawing is about at the most basic level. Put simply, it’s making marks on paper, and initially any marks will do.
We shall look first at how to handle your equipment and adopt a good drawing position. Then I’ll show you the materials that you can draw with, giving you some choices so that you’ll have fun and explore different possibilities. The most obvious tool to use when you are starting out is pencil, as you will have used these since you were a child and will feel very comfortable with them. But I encourage you to try a variety of mediums to see the different marks they make, enjoying the way you can expand your range of techniques.
Don’t worry if at first you make rather a mess of the exercises; no one ever became any good at art without making lots of mistakes to start with. Experimentation is the way that art evolves; it is not just the preserve of scientists.
Holding the Tools
Holding your pencil, pen, brush or chalk doesn’t always have to be the same as you would hold a fountain pen. Sometimes you get better, freer results by holding them as you would hold a stick or a house-painting brush. The only one that you will have to hold the same way as a fountain pen is the dip pen with ink because it is very difficult to manipulate any other way. We show here the variety of ways of holding these implements. You may need to practise these different ways to become good at them.
Pastel held loosely.
Large sable brush held like a wand.
Fineline pen held conventionally but with your little finger supporting it.
Pencil can be held either like a wand or more conventionally.
Push or dip pen held normally.
Small brush held like a pen.
Artist's Note
A pen line doesn’t have to be firm and precise any more than a pencil line or a pastel stroke has to be: a rather wobbly and meandering pen line often looks more convincing than a smooth, hard-edged line. The main thing in holding an implement for drawing is not to grip it too tightly. Your grip should be as light as is possible without losing control of the tool.
Drawing Positions
In order to draw well, make sure that you are comfortably positioned – try different positions to find the one most suited to you. It is nearly always best to have your drawing supported on a sloping board. This is particularly useful when using watercolours because it allows the water to run down the paper and makes it easier to control the intensity of your colour.
For most drawing, except with pen and ink, I prefer to stand up using an easel, but sometimes it is not convenient nor does it always give the best results. When working with pen and ink, you should keep your paper surface less upright, otherwise the ink does not flow properly to the nib, and the same is true to a certain extent with brushwork in watercolour. But having the paper absolutely flat is not a good idea because you tend to view it too much from one angle, which can give rise to distortion.
Standing at an easel.
Sitting down with the board supported by the back of another chair.
Drawing with pastels on a board propped up on a table.
Probably the best position for drawing in pen and ink.
Standing up with a sketchpad
Pencil
The most common medium for drawing is pencil. Use B-grade pencils as they make a darker mark with less pressure required than the harder H pencils. Ideally you should have B, 2B, 4B, 6B and 8B as a range.
B-grade pencils are soft and wear down quite fast, so have several sharp pencils to hand. It will interrupt the flow of your work if you have to keep stopping to sharpen your pencil.
1. When you’re ready, start drawing a wavy line in any direction just to get the feel of the pencil on the paper. This is more important than it may seem, because experiencing through your hand the way the pencil meets the paper gives your drawing greater sensitivity.
2. Scribble lines in all directions to make a patch of dark tone.
3. Then try a series of quickly made lines, all in the same direction and as close together as you can, to make a patch of tone.
4. Next, draw a number of lines in all directions, but shorter and spaced around to build up like a layer of twigs.
5. Draw a tonal patch with all the lines going in one direction in vertical strokes.
6. Next, draw horizontal strokes in the same manner.
7. Now combine horizontal and vertical lines with diagonals to produce a very dark patch of tone.
8. Draw a circle as accurately as you can. Although it’s easy enough to imagine a perfect circle, drawing one takes careful work and yours will probably look like the one shown.
9. Now add a bit of tone to one side of your circle to give the impression of a three-dimensional sphere. Put a patch of tone underneath the sphere, to look like a shadow.
10. Now try a drawing of a group of leaves, keeping it simple and just aiming to express the feel of the plant’s growth.
11. Similarly, draw a flower shape – don’t try to be too exact at this stage.
Now we are taking a further step towards picture-making, because you are going to attempt a shape that resembles something that you might want to draw.
12. First draw a diamond shape that is flatter horizontally than vertically.
13. Then draw three vertical lines down from the left corner, the lower centre corner and the right corner. All the lines should be parallel to each other and about the same length, so that the central one ends a little lower.
14. Now draw lines from the lower ends of the verticals, similar to the lower sides of the original diamond shape. This now looks like a cube shape.
15. To increase the illusion of three dimensions, make a light tone across the background space to about halfway down the cube, then put tone over the two lower surfaces of the cube. Make the tone on one of the lower sides even darker. To finish off the illusion, draw a tone from the bottom of the darkest side of the cube across the surface that the cube is standing on. The final result looks like a box standing on a surface.
Pen and Ink
To draw with pen and ink, the most obvious tool to go for is a graphic pen. These are available in several sizes, and you will need a 0.1, a 0.3 and a 0.8 to give you a fine line and two rather thicker lines. You can buy them in any stationery or art supplies shop. There’s no variation in the line from these pens, so if this is what you want, use instead a push pen with a fine nib and a bottle of black Indian ink. If the pen nib is flexible enough you can vary the thickness of the line at will, by exerting or releasing a little more pressure on the pen. These pens are available from a good art shop or a specialist pen shop.
1. To start with, try out your pen by drawing a wavering line that winds around and back over itself.
2. Now, as with the pencil, make a fairly rough scribbled area as shown – don’t worry about the direction or length of the lines drawn.
3. This time make your lines more deliberate, all in the same direction and as close together as you can without them touching.
4. Now have a go at short marks that go in