Thursday, March 10, 2011

Going Back To the Well


I never took anatomy classes. I never drew from a nude model. I learned my anatomy at the tender age of seven by tracing over comic books. I was lucky, the comic books I had were drawn by artists that knew their anatomy dead-on. John Romita, John Buscema and Neil Adams. I highly recommend tracing as a tool for learning, but that's a subject for a different post. The key here is that I imprinted the lines and forms of the human figure very early, but even so I sometimes find that I run out of talent and forget how the forms work together.

Enter George B. Bridgman and his book 'Constructive Anatomy'.  I found this book after reading that Frank Frazetta would sit down with it and copy everything in one night. Amazing if true, but even if we all aren't that fast, it's worth following in his footsteps. So I picked up this book and copied every page.

Every now and again, when I just can't get the muscle structure right or I feel I need a refresher on some part of anatomy, I reach for this book and sketch from it.

I would recommend that everyone do the same. Further, I would suggest that you don't use pencil. Use a fine point, precise pen that lets you sketch freely. You want a pen that floats over the paper with as little resistance as possible. Pen makes it impossible to erase and will train you to lay a line down and forget it. It will develop a loose sketch style that will serve you well for years to come.



Here are some sketches I did to show you what I mean. A few were done in pen and a few in pencil.
Hope this helps! Happy sketching!

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