Sunday, September 26, 2010

Second Week Reflection

This second week we have continued to gain experience with drawing live models. I feel that I’m gaining confidence in capturing forms, and given the amount of drawings I’ve carved out of my newsprint pad I would hope that I’m improving. We are continuing to practice series of short, thirty second poses so that we can begin to get a feel for how to flesh out the body in a given space, and develop some solid knowledge so that by the time we move on to more lengthy poses we might learn more out of them. I’m still getting used to drawing from live nudes, but so far it has been a new and rewarding experience. Usually I approach drawing figures with a rough idea of what the person looks like under the clothes, and then spend a lot of time trying to figure out what the clothes would look like on top of my nebulous human sketch. Getting to intimately know the human form and all of it’s common curves and landmarks is no doubt going to improve my ability to create believable figures, clothed or unclothed.


Aside from drawing, we have also been introduced to our skeletal models, which we will begin applying layers of clay muscle to over the next few weeks. I’m excited to learn more about the muscles and how they interact with the rest of the body, both for artistic and anatomical, scientific understanding. With human figures being one of the easiest things to relate with in a drawing or design, it is very important for me to digest this material. Specifically in terms of game design, if a game doesn’t have realistic, clearly humanoid forms to engage with, it won’t attract and engage with a general audience. We’re starting off with just the spinal erectors, because a believable back line is the keystone to a figure drawing, but will be moving on to other muscle groups shortly.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

First Week Reflection


Already I've dove headfirst back into the world of drawing.  This time, however, I get to focus on life, mostly my shell and our model we had last Thursday.  It's a very different feel from my other classes, where I had developed skills in drawing in a very painterly way, pushing out large shapes with the fat end of my charcoal, and then pulling it in using the eraser as a drawing tool.  Instead here I find myself not even thinking about an eraser, instead I get to make lines exclusively with the charcoal sharpened to a fine point.  I can use some elements from my hatched figure drawings I enjoy doing in my sketchbook, but here I have to focus more on the lines and their diversity.  Learning just when to make a line quickly, or calculated, thin or fat, pale or bold--this is part of what I've been digesting in the first week drawing blind or continuous contour drawings of my shell.

Drawing with the model when differently than I had expected.  In my mind, I had thought that I would be rushing to create something rough, but representational.  I had anticipated creating a series of drawings that depicted half investigated necks, shoulders, backs, hips, etc.  Instead I had to accept that every drawing, whether 30 minutes or 30 seconds in duration, had to capture the entire form from head to toe.  It was then a matter of finding lines that seemed important, and scrawling them across the page until I had a gestural stick figure that may or may not have accurately captured the contour of the model's hip or shoulder or whatever seemed dominant.  Honestly, my hardest task was to draw the model in front of me, and not simply construct a figure out of what I already know.  Often times I would find that my drawings looked a little too masculine.  This was because I was tending to pull lines out of my head, preconceptions based more on my own body than the model's.  Like with the blind contour drawings we did with the shells earlier, I had to try to really look at the model, and hope that my hand could mimic the curves accurately.

Monday, September 13, 2010

About Me!

Hello!  I am Andy Bensen, a junior at UW Stout.  Being a Game Design & Development major with an art concentration, I'm very interested in the areas of digital art, concept art, and mastery of the human face and form.  I've been trying to get better at drawing for as long as I can remember.  Growing up I remember digging through what I could find of game manuals and comic books and trying my best to replicate the fantastic scenes I found inside.  At that point, it was all about trying to fit different muscle groups together like a jigsaw puzzle to form a human-like shape.  Fast forward to today and I'm doing pretty much the same thing...

 Above is my first experimentation with design markers.  While these markers can be used well for blending and shading, I was hoping that the rapid, stark streaks would create a more intriguing gestural approach.  Still, I feel that my actual sense of faces is too rooted in addressing certain objects and not in representing a three-dimensional form.  Below is an exercise in drawing female forms.  I've never been comfortable drawing the female form, as not living in one doesn't allow me the same intuitive sense I can use when drawing a male form.  These are both areas I'm looking forward to addressing in life drawing.


Below is another ink drawing, this time specifically trying to incorporate certain childhood influences of comic books and video games.  I have more fun trying to draw figures interacting in strange ways and unexpected positions, than simply drawing a standing or lying figure.  When engaging my sketchbook I'll always be excited to find a new way to draw figures, flipped upside down or contorted in some way, to create a composition that feels dynamic.  What I still have trouble addressing is rooting the figures in convincing dimensions, something that my presentation techniques class has helped me with greatly (one of my favorite classes so far). 



All in all, drawing human forms and faces is what I find the most rewarding, and this is reflected in the pages of my sketchbooks.  In the future I would like to pursue a career in the game industry, a place I can hopefully continue to draw things my inner child would be proud of, as well as engage in 3-dimensional digital art where a keen understanding of the human form is perhaps even more important. For these reasons, I am hoping to grow as much as possible in this upcoming life drawing class.