I do a lot of sketching before any job, and I do a lot of sketching beyond the job. I sketch to stay in shape. My weekly calisthenics include drawing from life, in my opinion, the most important sketching to do as often as possible. It is the major and minor scales of our visual language. The tones we see are as sensitive as the tones a musician hears, and as a skilled musician will play scales along with their music on a daily basis, if we want to stay on top of our game we need to continue plugging away at the basics.
Here area few different drawings from various evenings this last semester in the gesture drawing class I teach at LAAFA. I have a brief explanation for the motivation behind the drawings. I put little ashcan books together each Comic-Con with a collection of these along with lessons to learn about quick sketching. It is fun to look back at each drawing, and it is really great to have all the memories surrounding each drawing from that day still fresh in my head when I look through the various pages. The following drawings are 3 – 5 minutes each using charcoal in most of the drawings and design marker in several.
These two pages are very quick sketches working on using line to solve the movement and the weight of the pose. Heavy handedness is encouraged in this exercise, and simplicity is an absolute must. I think these could still be even simpler.
Wonderful drawings!
I like your posts, but I got confused.
What’s the difference between gesture and armature?