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Anatomy and Perspective: The Fundamentals of Figure Drawing
Anatomy and Perspective: The Fundamentals of Figure Drawing
Anatomy and Perspective: The Fundamentals of Figure Drawing
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Anatomy and Perspective: The Fundamentals of Figure Drawing

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Artists of classical Greece and the Renaissance were highly aware of the complexity and great beauty of the human figure, and strove in their artwork to depict the ideal form. This book by an experienced twentieth-century art teacher covers two fundamentals of figure drawing that were equally important to masters of earlier eras — anatomy and perspective, subjects that seldom receive a thorough treatment within the same book. Carefully addressing both topics, the text suggests ways to convey the structure and functions of the human figure, covers elementary principles of drawing, and considers the use of light and shadow. Also discussed are aspects of measurement and the application of such simple forms as the cube, cylinder, and sphere in representing parts of the human body.
In describing the relationship between anatomical features and surface form, the chapters on anatomy include drawings of the bones and muscles of the trunk, upper and lower limbs, and the head and its prominent aspects. A final section focuses on accessories, such as eyeglasses and clothing — items which, when worn, virtually become part of the figure's anatomy.
Clearly and concisely written, Anatomy and Perspective will be an important addition to the personal library of anyone interested in drawing the human figure.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 25, 2012
ISBN9780486146409
Anatomy and Perspective: The Fundamentals of Figure Drawing

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Anatomy and Perspective - Charles Oliver

Art.

Introduction

This book cannot teach you to draw the nude figure. Only constant practice can do that. Drawing and painting the figure is not merely an exercise in copying photographically, it is rather a re-creation of the form seen; a selection, made by the artist, of some features of the original. Thus when Ingres (fig. 70) draws in line only, the drawing is not unfinished because it lacks the light and shade of Seurat (fig. 33)—it is merely a different interpretation.

The human figure is a complex machine, a super machine, and like most machines is a thing of great beauty. The ancient Greek artists and their Renaissance successors realized this. Believing that man was the noblest of creatures they strove to seek the formula for the perfect form.

With the formation of the Academies in Europe, figure drawing became the most important part of the course, and it is only during the present century, with its completely new values in art, that figure drawing in the old academic sense has waned; anatomy and perspective are touched on only very lightly. Drawing from the nude figure is still a stimulating exercise calling for keenness of observation and depth of perception. For those who wish, for various reasons, to draw the figure, it must be said again that only constant practice can yield results. Given this, the student will, I hope, find that the notes and drawings which follow provide a useful background and lead to further study. W. R. Sickert once said that whenever he saw a book on drawing he always bought it as there was bound to be some suggestion in it somewhere which was new to him. I hope that this book will contain something somewhere for each individual reader.

Every draughtsman develops his own ideas about drawing partly from his early training and partly from his subsequent practice. I make no claim to being able to draw in many different manners and cannot impart tips for drawing in different ways. My own concept of drawing has been, and is, that of the appreciation of form in its three-dimensional aspect. It is this conception of figure drawing which I have offered to my students and it is largely for teaching purposes over many years that I have tried to crystallize these ideas into a coherent form.

In this book there will constantly be found an insistence on knowledge of the human figure—the sort of knowledge which I believe to be of use to the figure draughtsman. Many of the suggestions relate to general principles of drawing and although these are found in most good books on drawing I have restated them in my own way and with my own diagrams. Much of the space is allotted to the anatomy of the figure, but I am not a professional anatomist and this is not a treatise on anatomy. For those who wish to pursue anatomy further there are many excellent books, mainly old (see Bibliography, page 95). Not all good draughtsmen have had Michelangelo’s profound appreciation of anatomy.

Some space is also devoted to various ideas of perspective and geometry, although for the deeper study of these subjects there are specialist books available.

My main aim is understanding: understanding of the form of the body—the ability to recognize that form as revealed by light and line, and how to express it graphically—the ability to create not merely the rhythm of lines, lovely as this can be in the hands of a master, but to be able to establish a rhythmical relationship of form to form.

General drawing

Preparation for drawing

Drawing is, at its simplest, the making of marks on a surface. Therefore any tool which will mark and any surface which will receive marks, is suitable for use. The various media available are consequently too numerous to list in detail, but there are some which, because of their availability, lend themselves more readily than others. If my first premise is true then drawing and painting become inseparable. There is little doubt that in referring to drawing, or in producing a book on drawing, we are thinking of some limitation of medium and usually a restriction of colour range. Most of the drawings and diagrams in this book will have been made on paper with instruments traditionally used for such work—pencil, chalk, pen and ink, etc. The paper may be white or coloured, the chalks and inks black or coloured.

The medium will probably be important to the individual artist. One may use black or red crayon while another may prefer pen and ink. Whatever your choice of medium you may well be fastidious in your choice of materials. It would be wise always to have a choice of media to hand, but I think it would be a wrong attitude to decide beforehand which medium to use. On a particular occasion the figure may seem to call for interpretation in a linear way and therefore a pencil or pen line may seem to offer the best means of expression. On the other hand, if the figure and its surroundings create an exciting pattern of dark and light areas, then perhaps charcoal or brush and washes may seem more suitable. Such a decision is better made when you have seen the model’s setting. On pages 38–9 you will find a collection of sketches in different media (figs. 36–40).

Transcending the question of media is the problem of expressing something of the interest of the various forms of the body, its rhythms and integrations. The draughtsman’s method of approach is also very important. A brief note with a stubby pencil on the back of an envelope may, if taken at the right moment, have more vitality than the most elaborately wrought drawing done with

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