Line drawing and Mark making
Transcript of Line drawing and Mark making
Drawing
Every drawing has something to offer, and no drawing, or way of drawing will provide a permanent solution to what drawing is or should be.
Drawing is the basis of all artwork. On this course, you’ll be challenged to find your own artistic style and apply it to your art. We are going to experiment with a variety of techniques and explore both traditional and non-traditional styles of drawing. This will hopefully challenge your perception of what drawing is and help you understand how to use a variety of materials.
Line drawings
Pablo Picasso: ‘Fenhofer at Work on his unknown Masterpiece’
What to draw? …You have been given the broad title ‘Environments’ for Unit 1. It is up to you how you interpret this. Initially you are exploring different techniques so can keep your idea fairly broad.
Nature provides the most interesting objects to draw when practicing drawing skills. If possible choose objects that are flexible, to allow the drawing to be freed from inhabiting the need to have it absolutely correct … an old shoe, a pepper cut in two to reveal an inner world of seeds are two good examples.
‘Nature is the Artists Dictionary’: Eugene Delacroix
Our familiarity with picking up and holding pens for writing creates a habitual approach to handling them. Why does a pencil that is used for drawing have to be held like a pen that is used for writing?
This exercise is essentially about making marks with varying amounts of control over your drawing. Your aim is to hold your pencil in four different ways and make at least five different drawings
MaterialsUse a combination of B, 2B, 3B and 4B pencils or graphite sticks on white cartridge paper. You will also need a long stick to attach your Pencil.
SubjectOne, two or three objects eg: an old boot, half a pepper,an animal skull etc
Drawing Project 1: The Extended Arm
Examples …
OutcomeEach of the drawings can be used as a base upon to continue drawing with more control or can be kept as final piece.
Drawing Project 2: Two Pencils
MaterialsUse a combination of B, 2B, 3B and 4B pencils or graphite sticks on white cartridge paper.
SubjectA Single object or a self portrait
By using two pencils bound together, you will produce a range of dense and sometimes unpredictable marks that will provide you with a surface to adjust, restructure, and work, both with and against. This drawing provides you with the opportunity to start by making marks inside the form, and there by breaking the habit of using line to draw the outer contour edge first.
Examples
Jeff Koons‘Concept drawing for Statuary’ 1996
Mike Parr
Francesco Clemente
Cy Twombly
Untitled, 1982
Dale Berning
Alberto Giacometti
-Complete a minimum of a double page of experimental line drawings in your sketchbook-Complete a page on an Artist who creates creative line drawings.-Create a series of large line drawings (at least A3 size) One should use the extended arm technique and one should use the double pencil technique.
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Deadline: 17th September
This week……
Texture and mark-making
The aim of this exercise is to create a direct route of communication between your hands.
Blindfold yourself, and touch and feel an object or your face with one hand, and respond with the pencil touch marks made by the other. What is important here is that the hand that makes the mark with the pencil, moves simultaneously, is in sync with, and responds to, the hand that is exploring your chosen object/face.
MaterialsUse a combination of B, 2B, 3B and 4B pencils or graphite sticks on white cartridge paper
SubjectYou should use a tactile object or you can create a self portrait
Drawing Project 3: A Tactile Object/Portrait
Example
Example
The aim of this exercise is to explore and experiment with creating marks with a range of different tools that you may not usually use for creating Art.
Be creative and learn and explore techniques that you could use to create interesting, original drawings
MaterialsThis is up to you…. pencil, ink, wax, watercolour, biro,pens etc….
SubjectYou should study your surroundings to inspire the patterns and mark-making that you create
Drawing Project 4: Mark-making
Mediums used - Indian ink, white paint, PVA glue, blue dye, candle wax, sticks and card for texture
Lena Ohlen
Joan Mitchell
Jan Schoonhoven
(1914-1994), Drawings
Jasper Johns
‘Target’
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Deadline: 24th September
This week……-Complete a minimum of one page of blind drawings and a double page of experimental mark-making samples-Complete a page on an Artist who using mark-making in their drawings.-Create at least one large blind drawing (at least A3 size)