Week 5 and then a break.
Week 5 had us working on our ugly Roman (Plate 1,3). Sam brings us back to the essence of the Bargue, what we are drawing does not explore our creativity as an artist, it's aim is to teach us to observe and copy accurately. Developing this key underlying skill then lets our creativity produce what we wish to achieve. And so we spent a good part of the evening working on our Roman. By the end the large block shapes where beginning to form a face.Big blocks and little blocks
The approach, having established a plumb-line as reference, is to start with the largest dimensions in terms of height and width, so the top of the head, the chin, nose and outer most point at the back. Then mark the next most important reference and keep refining.The big temptation is start with the eyes. The window the soul, eye contact is hugely important in human communication and so its tempting to start there. Well unless its a key reference it may be way down the order in this context.
The other temptation is to start putting in the curves, eh no, not in this case, that'll come. Many artists I've seen will start with quite blocky preparatory sketches, in order to mark the main dimensions and then refine the drawing or keep it as a reference for the main piece. Man, this is like Jedi training, patience young Padawan, agh, but I want to use The Force Master Yoda!
When negative is good

Each week there is usually a brief history of art lesson. This weeks artist of choice was Cezanne (yes, post-impressionists are a recurring theme!) Sam showed a series of paintings and sketches demonstrating balance in composition and the use of negative space. No, negative space is not a Stephen Hawking theory about black holes. Its about shapes created around the image. Here's an example by Cezanne. In this preparatory sketch for 'The Large Bathers' note the diamond shape formed by the bathers and the bow of the tree. This shape is not an accident, there's a clear, if invisible, line that runs from the tip of the branch to the third bather on the right. It gives the drawing a sense of balance, our eyes find that comfortable even if we're not consciously aware of the shapes presence. In the final painting note the triangle in negative space formed by the trees, the out stretched arms of the centre-most bathers and the triangular shapes of both groups. In fact the whole painting is really a series of triangles.Mid-term Homework
We had a break from class for a week, but there was no sitting on laurels we had homework! So on a sunny afternoon I set up my outdoor studio and got to work.
This time I had my camera handy and produced a time lapse of the process, hopefully showing the progression from an outline of blocky images to a fully finished image.
Swatting up
Normal classes resume tomorrow evening but before the week was out I skipped ahead and did one of the sketches that can be found later in the Bargue. Actually this is part of a series of 'classic' poses, anyway it was good practice and didn't take long. The image may be a bit small but note the triangle that's formed between the mans legs and the floor. Its a good reference to check the accuracy of my copy.Talking of copies
Now that I'm over my 'copying is bad' phobia I don't feel so bad showing the following painting.
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| My reproduction |
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| Conan of the Fianna by Jim Fitzpatrick |
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| Side by side |





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