Critique on figure studies please!

Home Forums Critique Critique on figure studies please!

This topic contains 5 replies, has 5 voices, and was last updated by Torrilin 6 years ago.

  • Subscribe Favorite
  • #2975

    Along with other issues you see, if you can help, I have trouble continuing to draw after I get the basic figure down and have to move on to the finer details, I don't know what in particular to work on anymore.

    https://imgur.com/gallery/L5trFwc

    Do I need to draw bigger so I have more room to work with or do you think its something else? Thank you for any comments!

    • Gangrenesucks edited this post on September 22, 2018 3:08am. Reason: link not working
    • Gangrenesucks edited this post on September 22, 2018 3:10am.
    • Sanne edited this post on September 22, 2018 7:23am. Reason: Fixed formatting issue
    Students get 33% off full memberships to Line of Action

    Support us to remove this

    #2980

    I would watch some anatomy videos on specific parts, that way you can get more comfortable adding detail. I think you can add a lot more detail even with the same amount of lines

    (For specifically the bottom one) when the pelvic tilts the spine will bend and bring it closer to the ribs, account for that and the torso won’t be so long ?

    1
    #2985

    Feeling restrained by your canvas is a legitimate thing, but it's not one I'm sure I have tips for.

    As for struggling to move forward and incorporate details, that's probably the result of not having a goal set for yourself. "Draw the thing" is a bit of a broad concept, so it might be good to switch it up and narrow it down.

    Are you happy with the proportions? If not, spend a week or so focusing on proportions.

    Are you happy with the motion and fluidity of your getures? If not, spend a week or so focusing on drawing short 30s gestures in as few lines as possible.

    Do you feel capable of drawing faces? (I don't actually see any face details in your gestures, but one guy's underwear is surprisingly detailed.) If not, spend some time doing face gestures instead.

    Drawing without a goal is not going to improve your skillset, it typically just stalls you and becomes demotivating. There are some things you can work on, but how you work on them depends on your goal. Pick one, and you'll have a much easier time moving forward!

    1
    #3006

    Gangrenesucks, it sure does! :3 ANYWAYS!!! Here are some thoughts I had on your drawings hope it helps! x)

    &feature=youtu.be

    2
    #3040

    When I don’t know what to work on, that means I’m done. Seriously.

    The antidote for this done feeling is to look at art that isn’t mine, take photos, or look over my personal projects until I find a goal so that I can see where to go from the old point of feeling done. For most artists, figure study isn’t the end goal, it’s a discipline so they have the skill needed to do the real thing.

    Maybe you want to get faster so you can crank out panels for a story in comic form. Maybe you want to draw fan art for a favorite TV show where you’re drawing stuff that never happened. Maybe you want to do urban sketching where you’re not skipping out on drawing people. The goal doesn’t have to be high brow or something suitable for an art gallery, it just has to make you happy.

    1

Login or create an account to participate on the forums.