Getting a likeness with no features
This is a demo I did during my week long workshop at the Scottsdale Artists' School, April, 2014.
As you can see I didn't get very far, but believe it or not I accomplished my goal. The main principle I wanted to impart was that features are not really what makes a portrait look like a specific person--it's the big shapes. During the week, this study was seen by many people and everyone who saw it knew instantly who the model was.
Students: So think about that the next time you're painting a face. Try to paint it with no features then step back and ask yourself if it looks like the person you're painting.
"...If you work on a head for a week
without indicating the features you will have learnt
something about the modeling of the head." --J.S. Sargent
without indicating the features you will have learnt
something about the modeling of the head." --J.S. Sargent
My second goal was to work with temperature to turn the form because there was a very tight value range in the face. Meaning, other than the darks in the eyes and hair and the highlights on the skin there were only two values. So that gave me a lot of room to play with color variations that were in the same value range. Sorry the photo really doesn't show those little variations- it's a bit blurry.
The other major principle I discussed during this demo were edges and how powerful they can be in drawing the viewer's eye to the center of interest.
2 comments:
This sounds like a tremendously useful exercise! Even in my drawings I can imagine how this might improve my sense of face proportion and control over how I lay things out.
Thanks so much for the inspiring idea!
-Jason Cobill
Hi Jason, thank you, I appreciate you comments. I think it's definitely something we all need to keep in mind, at times I still find myself putting in the features too soon and I think it's even more problematic when working from photos.
Thanks again, Bryce
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