
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
Anyone who desires to learn to draw well can do so with a little persistence - this is the starting point for The Complete Guide to Drawing, a practical and comprehensive course for students of all abilities.Whether you want to draw a still life, landscapes, figures, or portraits, Barrington Barber brings his invaluable expertise as a working artist and teacher to the task of showing you how.• Includes advice on materials, equipment, and techniques
• Explains the fundamentals of drawing objects, people, animals, and nature
• Teaches the core skills of perspective, composition, and shading
• Contains step-by-step drawings and exercises to practise
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Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access The Complete Guide to Drawing by Barrington Barber in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Art & Art Techniques. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Figure Drawing and Portraiture
The human figure is the hardest and yet most satisfying subject to draw and no artist ever really exhausts its possibilities. Attendance of a life drawing class is the best way to learn how to do this. However, if you are trying to teach yourself, discipline and an eye for detail will take you a long way. The best way to start is by observing people carefully: the way they move, sit and stand and how they look in different lights and from different angles. The great figurative artists studied the human form for their entire lives without reaching a limit with it, so there’s plenty of scope!
Starting to draw figures
Before you begin, refer back to the diagrams of proportions in human beings to re-acquaint yourself with the basic lessons you learnt there (see pages 28–29). Now find pictures of people in various natural poses and try this exercise. Carefully trace the outlines of your chosen figures.

This way of drawing shows you how to tackle figure drawing using very basic lines to describe the position of the figure and gradually build a more solid structure around these lines until you have got a complete figure.

Now trace over your tracings, breaking down the figures to their simplest shapes.

Now trace over your second tracings, putting in only the absolutely essential lines in order to show the movement of the figures. Take a central line through each figure, draw the main line of the shoulders, the main shape of the head and then make very simple lines to describe the arms and legs.
Don’t include any other details. In my examples you can see that for each figure the head is given simply as a rounded shape, and a line running through the torso and legs serves to give the feel of the pose. Pare down your drawings to absolute essentials, as I have done.
When you have reduced your figures to these simple shapes, build them up again until you have worked back to the shapes of your original tracings. The method is exactly the same as that shown here. You simply reverse the process. Begin by tracing over your last drawing.
Drawing from life
Once you have practised the previous exercise a number of times and gained in confidence, you should be ready to tackle drawing a real person. Get a couple of different people to pose for you for about twenty minutes. Approach your subjects exactly as you were shown in the previous exercise.

Draw the essential shape, movement or pose first and then try to fill it out a bit, but don’t worry about the detail.

As you take the figure through the stages – from simple shape to more detailed figure – you’ll begin to see how the drawing can be made to work. This does become easier with practice. Your aim at this point is to produce fairly good figures that resemble the models in a general way. Keep your drawings very, very simple, as I have done here.
Try to do this sort of drawing at least once a week.
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Table of contents
- Title Page
- Contents
- Introduction
- First Steps
- Object Drawing and Still-life Composition
- More About Perspective
- The Natural World
- Figure Drawing and Portraiture
- Composition
- Techniques
- Copyright