The Longer Pose
Oil Pastel on Green Paper
Thank you to my mother for once again offering
(involuntarily) to be my model for this exercise. I ended up doing two drawings
instead of the intended one as I wanted to experiment further with a different
medium after finishing the pencil and wash piece and produced the oil pastel
piece above as well. I employed the time tested artists method of holding a
pencil at arm’s length to judge the right measurements and learned a valuable
lesson – always ensure you’re using the same pencil for this.
The Longer Pose
Pencil and Wash
Learning Log
Have you managed to make a complete statement in this time? What
were your main problems?
In the majority of my drawings there is a compete statement
but I have to admit not necessarily a totally accurate one.
I find that the main problem that I am encountering is with
the details of the face and hands. Working with larger mediums like pastels of
thick charcoal this is not so noticeable; there is less room for details so
fewer marks. However I really struggle when using finer utensils such as pencil
or ink pen to record the details of faces and hands smoothly and succinctly. I
know his is all down to a matter of practicing it so practice it I shall do.
How well have you captured the characteristics of the pose?
When I stayed focused and concentrated on each mark that I
made the character of the pose definitely came through much stronger and
produced a more satisfying drawing. However sometimes I would get bogged down
in certain areas and loose some of that individual personality.
Do the proportions look right? If not, how will you try to
improve this?
Surprisingly I think the proportions of my figures are
generally quite good, at times the faces and hands are a bit off as mentioned
before, so I shall practice to hopefully improve in the future. Otherwise I don’t
think they are at all that bad I found that using objects in the background to
relate to really helped to get the scale right.
Preparatory Sketch
Biro and Marker Pen