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Small-Scale Question Sunday for March 23, 2025

Do you have a dumb question that you're kind of embarrassed to ask in the main thread? Is there something you're just not sure about?

This is your opportunity to ask questions. No question too simple or too silly.

Culture war topics are accepted, and proposals for a better intro post are appreciated.

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I don't know if there's any research into especially fast and effective methods for learning to draw. Art education is in general not very interested in finding out, since there isn't a shortage of people who can draw well enough with the current methods.

A drawing course will include something like the following:

  • A shaded sphere
  • Cubes in one and two point perspective, a hallway in one point perspective, the corner of a rooming two point perspective.
  • Negative space drawings. The space around a tree. The space around a set of easels. This is pretty important, and one of the things someone might not encounter by looking up individual topics. Especially, whenever there is an edge, you have to decide if the figure or the ground is darker/lighter, and provide contrast. Speaking of which
  • Contrast! Always figure out a way to have reasonably high contrast.
  • A draped cloth, preferably in charcoal. Preferably large. My drawing instructor made us draw everything on 18x24 inch paper. That's extremely tedious with pencils, but lovely with charcoals and pastels.
  • Basic anatomical proportions -- proportions of a face, proportions of a body, how many heads high is a person? How many eyes across is their face? DaVinci's human in a circle.
  • Some still life drawings, preferably with some reflective surfaces, perhaps silver, perhaps glass.
  • Preferably a landscape; some classes have students drive to a better location for this.
  • Figure drawings. The model might move every minute for warm ups, and then stay put for 20 minutes for a longer study. Sometimes after a few classes they stay put for over an hour, to allow a more finished drawing.
  • Critiques.

In my head there should exist some form of katas to do and practice to get better - the way they exist for everything else.

Keeping a sketchbook?