Mensajes en el foro por Anime Beginner Acct

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  • #28153
    I'm learning gesture myself so I'm not the best source. But I will repeat what Proko and other artists have said about gesture drawing that I think will help you


    Gesture isn't an art style or a technique for drawing completed sketches quickly. It's a way to learn how to evoke a pose or movement with the fewest possible lines. That's why amazing gesture drawings you see really are just a few lines of CSI curves done in 30 seconds. The artist has spent a lot of time practicing capturing the gesture, not the outline, for a long time


    With this in mind, we can make a few obvious critiques that I think will be helpful from one person learning gesture to another


    1. Stop trying to draw the outline
    2. Stop trying to draw forms
    3. Stop adding lines as soon as the gesture has been evoked
    4. Stop trying to "copy" the gesture and learn to "evoke" the gesture

    That last one is meant so that you exaggerate the gesture both to capture more of the silhouette and so that the gesture is easier to capture

    The biggest advice (And one I'm still personally trying to beat into my own head) is that these are not meant to be "pretty". They're a way to learn to capture gesture quickly and move on. It's a training method wherein we keep adding the skills we've learned with each new session


    Proko's video teaching the basics of gesture
    &list=PLBnwmlTQLxzEey1-lsLKjN8BoGtDhb9vS&index=3

    Aside from that, I would suggest learning to incorporate CSI curves into your practice. As well, the line of action doesn't seem to be serving a real purpose for your drawings. From what Proko has said, the line of action is the line that runs through the body along it's longest extension. So a pose where the model has their hand stretched above their head and their foot extended forward the line of action would run from the hand to the foot with whatever curve it is extended into. You can then use this line to judge both where you should put the head and other parts of the body as well as have a reference angle to decide how those body parts should be oriented in order to "evoke" the pose
    #28070
    This came out really well. You can tell what everything is at a glance
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