Still life and lighting carefully arranged by instructor Terry Furchgott |
During the 25 weeks that I studied colored pencil and graphite drawing with Suzanne Brooker, I learned a wealth of information about rendering
landscape forms, but only from photos. While it was invaluable to be able to spend
many hours studying and drawing landscape scenes without worrying about the weather
or the changing light, I always felt like I was missing something by not
working from life. The portraiture workshop I took from Gary Faigin confirmed that artists who already have drawing
skills may be able to work from photos successfully, but photos cannot
substitute for life when learning to
draw. Studying living, breathing models in 3D was enormously helpful in
understanding the structure of the head so that I could render it more
accurately. I wanted more of that kind of classical study but with subject
matter other than the human face. Last weekend I got it, this time from Gage
instructor Terry Furchgott, with a
focus on still lives.
A weekend intensive, Accurate Drawing Basics began with blind
contours, sketching negative spaces, copying an image upside-down (all
exercises that were familiar to me from the classic Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain
and other books) and mark-making with various tools. Then we moved on to
learning measuring techniques to make drawings more accurate, such as using a
straightedge or pencil to measure an angle and gauge proportions and using
negative space to relate objects. Practiced while drawing simple still lives,
most of these basic tools and techniques were not new to me, but I appreciated
being reminded of their usefulness.
We also studied how four basic, three-dimensional, geometric shapes
– cube, sphere, cylinder and cone –
describe almost all visible forms that we encounter in nature and the built
environment. Understanding how light and shading can be used to describe their
imaginary volumes helps us to see how actual objects can be described the same
way. This concept, too, was familiar to me, but as I soon realized, reading
about it in a book is not the same as applying it to a drawing.
The meat of the workshop began toward the end of Day 1 with
the still life that we would work on for the rest of the workshop. Using
three
forms of charcoal (vine, compressed, pencil), white Conte and white pastel on
toned paper, we learned to render the volume of forms by closely observing how
they are illuminated.
Six-value scale of lights and darks applied. |
Furchgott’s teaching method is highly systematic, working
through each stage step by step to achieve a six-value scale of lights and
darks. It was probably the most structured, methodical art class I have ever
experienced. In addition to employing all the measuring tools we learned at the
beginning of the workshop to make the composition as accurate as possible, I
also spent quite a bit
of time trying to see the relative values accurately. As
is often the case when I’m sketching on my own, I found the local colors confusing
(Is the red cup lighter or darker than the green vase or the navy background? Is
the dark side of the pear darker than the dark side of the cup?), but it helped
to view both my own work and the still life through a textured sheet of Plexiglas
to see the values without the details. (The same effect can be achieved by
squinting to blur out the details.)
Values corrected; transitions refined. |
It’s surprising – I’ve seen the lighted cones and spheres repeatedly
in drawing books, and I’ve even practiced shading those shapes. Intellectually,
I thought I understood the principles, but until I was shown how to apply them
to a still life I was drawing, I didn’t fully grasp how they get put together
in the form of real objects. Sometimes a mysterious shadow or a reflected light
didn’t make sense, but when I imagined the conceptual cones and spheres that
the object was made of, the shadow or light suddenly did make sense. It’s not a mystery after all; in fact, it’s referred
to as “light logic” (the term Suzanne Brooker uses) because it’s nothing more than the physical effect of light hitting
a dimensional object – and how our brains have learned to interpret that
information.
Once again, the value of drawing from life was confirmed in
this workshop. Seeing actual objects in front of me – being able to walk around
and look at them from different angles to see how the shadows bend or closely
observing a tiny reflected light in the narrow fluted lip of a vase – is so
much more informative than trying to draw those same objects from a flat photograph.
Toward the end of the weekend, I started wishing that I had
taken this workshop a few years ago – maybe it would have accelerated my
learning along the way if I had more fully understood these concepts earlier.
But on the other hand, if I try something too soon without a certain base of
experience, the attempted learning is meaningless. I have found that I can study
the same concepts over and over, but if I’m not ready to learn them, the
concepts won’t “stick.” I don’t know if it’s this way for everyone, but for
myself, I seem to have critical times that are optimal for learning. (The unfortunate
paradox is that I have no way to know when that critical time is until I have learned
from it!)
The creative and learning processes are endlessly
fascinating to me – almost as fascinating as drawing itself.
5/12/19 completed still life |
Sounds like a good workshop, presented logically and with a way to put the concepts into practice for yourself!
ReplyDeleteYes, her methodical structure was very helpful in a way that I had not experienced before.
DeleteThe results look wonderful! I've found a number of times that trying something at least a little before hand makes the lessons in the class really come to life.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Dave! It's interesting how often I've read about these concepts, and yet they didn't really "stick" until I used them at the workshop.
Delete