Thursday, 1 May 2014

Anatomy

 Here the artist has drawn detailed anatomy and tried to give the impression of movement in his drawings. On the left is a drawing of a leg that shows the anatomy of the leg reasonably well. The proportion of the leg is well drawn but the foot however is a bit small, this takes away from the image because the foot doesn't look like it belongs on that leg. If the foot was the correct proportion in relation to the leg it would look natural. The musculature of the leg has been defined quite well which adds a sense of 3 dimensions. The pencil strokes that show the shadows of the leg have all been done in the same direction. If the strokes were made in the shape of the leg, curving around the muscles of the upper and lower leg it would have made the leg look more curved.
 The artist has drawn an in-depth drawing of a human arm, the anatomy in this picture is well drawn and clearly shows the pose of the arm and where the muscles are contracted. The shading has added a great sense of 3 dimensions due to the weight of line where the shadows were stronger underneath the muscles and around the crook of the elbow.

In this picture the artist has drawn a model that is sat down, turning around to look behind her. The anatomy on this drawing is very good, the artist has shown the twist of the models body very well by adding the angles of the models shoulders at a downwards angle. The right side of the models back has been accurately drawn, the lines on her back shows that she is physically twisting and reaching behind her to turn around. Furthermore the shading that has been lightly spread across the drawing adds great depth to the image because it is stronger the closer the model is to the artist, as if she is turning away from the light.

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