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Hey guys, what's going on. Stan Prokopenko here with Proko. Sorry for the long wait for
new videos. I’ve been working hard to get the anatomy lessons out to you guys as soon
as possible. There’s a lot to do to make this the best anatomy course ever, so I appreciate
you guys being patient.
Today I have a critique for the Shading lesson and generally summing up all the figure lessons.
Amit Shirole submitted two drawings. He did such a great job with this exercise, I think
he's a good example for everyone else and maybe an inspiration to do the same thing.
So, Amit emailed me and said:
Hello sir, I’m following your videos and this video was extraordinary! Here I’m sending
you my work sir… Please guide me with your valuable suggestion. Thank u sir!!!
Ok, I will do my best.
First of all, you did a fantastic job with the study of my drawing and then doing one
of your own in the same style. I applaud you for such a great effort. It looks to me like
you understood most of the points from the shading lesson. And the best thing is that
you actually did it. You did exactly what you're supposed to do. Watch the lessons,
study from the lessons, and practice what you learned from the lessons. It's easy to
just binge watch all the videos. But it's those people that actually go and practice
that will make the biggest improvements. So, good job man!
Now, if you don't mind, and since you asked, I'll give you few suggestions on how I think
you can improve.
First Drawing
On the first drawing you missed the gesture. Draw a plumb line from the right side of his
head down to his foot. You’ll see that in the photo and in my drawing the line aligns
with the left side of his right foot. On your drawing it's farther to the right. This causes
him to look like he’s balancing on his right leg. But, he’s actually leaning on his left
knee. The weight is distributed evenly between the left and right side. Maybe you could review
my video on Balance.
You seem to be using too many sharp edges to separate the muscles masses. It can be
good to exaggerate that in some areas, but you’re doing it too much. You have the whole
scapula region outlined. The trapezius is outlined. And the same thing on the other
side. Notice how in my drawing I have areas where I show a sharp edge with a line, but
then I fade the line and the edge becomes more vague. It's softer and it provides a
variation throughout the edges, that's just a more appealing design. When you've indicated
the beginning of the edge and the end, the viewers will connect the dots on their own.
You don't have to outline the whole thing. See how here you have outline, outline, outline.
On mine, those areas are open.
The background is too messy. It distracts from the focal point. Overall I feel like
the drawing is spotty. Lots of light and dark spots that don’t work together as a whole.
You’re making every area in the composition the lead actor. Try to decide in the beginning
of the drawing, what is the focal point? What is the secondary focal point? See how in the
bottom of the right leg, the highlights are just as bright as the highlights at the top.
The lights on the stick are glowing. See how I have the same highlights, but they are much
darker. They fade as they get farther from the light source. And the background is clean
and doesn't fight for attention. I intentionally made the the upper back as the main focal
point and the left foot as a secondary focal point. Hopefully it comes across that way.
Squint at your drawing and see if anything sticks out too much that shouldn't be. Ok?
So, be more deliberate with the composition, the way you lead the viewer's’ eye through
the drawing.
Proportions - Not too bad. Mainly I think that torso is too short and head is too large.
Everything else looks pretty close.
Second Drawing
Ok, let’s take a look at your second drawing. Actually, much better composition. The background
is cleaner than the previous. You kept the lights on the bottom foot a bit darker. You
faded the value of the thigh a bit as it goes toward the knee. When I squint I can see you've
created a focal point at the center of the torso.
But! of course, there’s a but.. I think you still have room to improve the composition.
The background could be more deliberate. I’m seeing spots that don’t seem to have a purpose.
I think that they just happened as you were shading, instead of you deciding that you
want them to be there. As you’re shading, think about how the values in the background
can help tell a story, guide the eye, and create a sense of atmosphere. Any texture
or gradation has an effect. So, take that into consideration and don't let too many
things be accidental. Approach the composition with intent.
You could have made the values of the shadow on the right leg here darker. Some of them
are really close to being halftones rather than shadows.
I would have pushed the darker gradation toward the knees even more. On both sides. The tanned
skin helps to push the eyes back up to the focal point.
As for the gesture, you straightened the body. You made it more vertical. That makes the
pose feel stiff. I like the diagonal in the photo better because it’s more dynamic,
a little more interesting to me.
A few things about the proportions..
First, his left leg. You did what most of us do when there's foreshortening.. You un-foreshortened
it. You made it longer. An easy way to check that is with a few plumb lines. If you draw
a vertical plumb line from the inside of the knee, you'll see it align with the inside
of the pelvis here. Continue it up and it goes through about the middle of the head.
When we do the same on yours, it aligns with the outside of the pelvis. So what you did
was you swung the leg outward to show the length. Continue the plumb line up and it
misses the head by a lot. Now that's a combination of incorrect foreshortening and also the torso
being more vertical than in the reference as I said earlier about the gesture.
But, down here the relationship between the pelvis and the knee. That's completely a foreshortening
problem. It's a very common mistake. Our brain just wants to elongate foreshortened objects.
We remember the body parts the way they look in their extended position, so we draw them
that way. Using some plumb lines and approaching the shapes abstractly in the beginning will
help overcome that tendency.
Another proportional mistake is the foot. It looks too big. Taking the length and stacking
another on top of it reaches the bottom of this upper leg mass. On yours it reaches up
to the patella. So, it's too long. And the shape of the foot is too thick. I would cut
into the side here, and here.
And the last thing I'm going to say about it is that you didn't capture the angle of
the head. Your guy is looking straight ahead, but in the reference he's looking down. Make
sure you're wrapping the lines around the head like on a tilted cylinder. Notice how
the placement of the ear in relationship with the eyes and nose is higher up. And the curve
of the brow ridge shows that curve too. On yours, both of those indicate a straight on
angle.
Positives
Soo.. What do I like about your drawings? Well I guess everything else, really.. The
first thing that struck me when I saw it was how successfully you captured the style in
which I did my drawing. When I compare yours to mine I can see that you analyzed it almost
line for line. Every stroke in the shading is considered. And it’s that kind of attention
to detail that will make you good.
The shading is done very well. All the forms feel 3d. You’ve got all the elements, highlight
halftones, core shadow, reflected lights.. And generally they're all designed very well.
I have a feeling you were paying attention during the shading lesson..
Your anatomy seems to be pretty close. Could be polished and designed a little better in
areas, but they're minor things.
And the main thing I really liked is your discipline. As I said earlier, you didn’t
just watch the video and move on. You studied from it and you applied it. So, everybody
watching, hopefully this inspired you to want to do a longer figure drawing of your own!try
not to be intimidated about it. Just approach it in a fun way. Just go out, do it, see what
happens. And then post it online, tag me in it. So I can see it.
Thank you for watching, everybody! Make sure to check out my premium lessons at proko.com/store.
I just finished the Figure course, but you can sign up for it at anytime and work through
the videos at your own pace. Alright, thank you for your support everybody!
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