How To Create Four Kinds of Gesture Drawings
1. dot..dot..dot; swipe; refine
2. wire contour "merry-go-round"
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gesture drawing -The act of making a sketch with
relatively loose arm movements (gestures) with the large muscles
of the arm, rather than with the small muscles of the hand and wrist of
the artist. Or a drawing made this way. Gesture drawing is both widely
considered an important exercise in art education, and a common practice
artists use in "warming up" at the start of any new work. A
gesture drawing is typically the first sort of drawing done to begin a
more finished drawing or painting. It is used to block in the layout of
the largest shapes in a composition. There are compelling reasons too
for artists to make gesture drawings simply for the sake of making them.
The act of gesture drawing trains the simultaneous workings of the eyes,
the brain, and the hand, especially in the act of drawing from life
from direct observation of a subject. Intensifying this learning experience
is the practise of gesture drawing at great speeds drawings made
in as long as five minutes, and as short as a few seconds. Gesture drawing
is likely to increase awareness of underlying structures, both in the
subject of the work and in the work itself. The subject of a gesture drawing
can be any at all, although the artists who made each of the following
examples chose to make life drawings of human models. http://www.artlex.com/
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1. Dot Dot Dot -- Using the idea of Gestalt, quickly place dots at the major edges of the figure
2. Major Shape or Alphabet -- Using a dirty chamois, quickly draw the major shapes of the figure (square, triangle, oval) or see the figure as an alphabet letter (Z, L, U, etc.)
3. Refine -- Using your charcoal (vine for a light erasable line, compressed for a darker line), begin to place lines on the chamois shape. These lines might indicate the 3 major body parts (head, rib cage, pelvis) or finding curves and counter/curves in the body.






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Pretend that your hand with the marking tool is wrapping a wire around the figure. This will create a cross contour gesture drawing.



Use the side of a piece of charcoal to indicate the gesture of the figure. Work fromt he inside of the figure out.

Use the end of the charcoal to create a gesture of the figure. Again work from the inside of the figure outward.