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...First, before you even try any part of the cowboy, I think you you should warm up on the four simplified line drawings, a few of the 15 or so of the intermediate upside-down compositions and watch the animation where you'll see the exercise outlined for you in it's entirety. (You'll find the intermediate level upside-down drawings below). Secondly, I've broken the cowboy up into nine separate smaller pictures in the order you see in the following grid. Each square has a fraction of the total picture. Just click on the blue numbers and you'll get the partial picture. When you've done all 9, trim off any extra paper and piece them back together for the completed cowboy. You might be amazed at what you've done. Section 5, 8, and 7 are the three most difficult sections (in descending order of difficulty).
Each number is a part of the bigger picture Draw each section on a quarter page of typing paper. (Fold the paper in half twice, cut it along the bends and you'll have the right size paper.) (The animation is a biggee: 108 kb but you'll see the whole exercise running right before your eyes. I shrank it's 115 frames as far as my computer could before I loaded it here.) And thirdly, you can come back to this or any section as many times as you want, so don't try and do everything in one session. The brain absorbs things best slowly and with lots of repetition. (back to top) Step 1
Step 2 Take a minute to look at the illustration (this is upside down #2). With your eye, pick a line, any line and follow it to where it intersects another line, or disappears. Follow it from it's beginning to it's end. Notice areas that curve. Note how lines - when lines intersect - they do so at an angle. Compare those angles to the edges of the drawing. Ask yourself:
Pick one line at a time and follow it Doesn't it seem that the lines just kinda' all fit together? Keep exploring around the picture for a few more seconds. Look at the curved lines, see how they're in "curved spaces" or objects. The lines form spaces: can you see the forms they make? Step 3 Start at the top of the drawing like you see in the figure. Copy it just like you see it: the picture is upside down and you'll be drawing it upside down, so you'll be starting at the top of the drawing as it sits on your computer screen. (It's marked as such when you get there.)
Step 4 Begin your drawing now. Copy one line at a time. Start at the top. Move to each adjacent line. Go piece by piece, line by line. The picture is complex by design. Don't worry about "getting it right" - just draw what you see. (Go to ) Step 5 Once you you get into the drawing, notice how interesting it's becoming. You may notice an occasional moment of frustration at the beginning - that's the L-mode trying to assert itself at a task it just wasn't made for. As the complexity of the picture becomes apparent, L-mode will give up, R-mode will turn-on and you'll notice, almost in retrospect, you've slipped into a state of deep involvement with the picture. You may notice the music you had on has faded, that your 30 or 60 minutes has flown by, and you've used no words the entire time. (That's been a welcome break!) If you feel the need to think about something other than the drawing at hand, let that pass. If you feel the need to reference something else, like a memory of how this ought to look (even though you barely recognize what you're drawing) remember this: all you have to know is in front of you. It's all laid out. Every line, every angle, every curve, every space is right there in front of you on the page. (Or on the screen.) All you need to do is copy it. It's that simple! Here's you drawing assignments: We've used upside-down drawing #2 for demonstration, but I recommend starting with it. Then do the rest as homework in different sessions - or all at once if you've got time. You learn things best if you don't try to do too much too fast - don't overburden yourself by trying to keep up an impossible pace. Learn at your leisure, review what you've done. Come back when you feel excited about it, (usually in a day, 2 days at the most.) If you
like, watch the animation again: Click
for Animation
Then get
to work. You can do it. You can draw! The beginning drawings: The intermediate drawings: Here's the intermediate drawings - don't print them out (at least not until you've tried drawing them). Draw them directly off the screen as you see them. When you turn them right side up, you're in for a pleasant surprise. (Hint: draw a square on your paper that's roughly similar in size and shape as the border you see around each picture.) Don't be intimidated by any of these - take each one line by line, just like you saw in the animation above. Start at the top and work your way to the bottom. If you feel your self "trying to recognize something", let the feeling go. Just keep heading down the page little line section by little line section, aligning, comparing and contrasting the section of line you just drew to the one just before it. Take note of how the line approaches (or even touches) the vertical or horizontal frame around it. Go for it: The broken up cowboy pictures: Here's the big cowboy picture in 9 separate pieces:
Big Tex And last, but not least, this is the big, the huge, the complex geetar-playin' cowboy picture you've all been waiting for. If you've done the nine smaller pictures, this one will be a breeze and great practice for getting into R-mode: Go here read this when you're finished. Kasbohm & Company's YouCanDraw.com © Copyright, All rights reserved 1997 e-mail: jeffkaz@YouCanDraw |