Drawing Advice From Leonardo da Vinci

Drawing Advice From Leonardo da Vinci | Third Monk image 1

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When we practice a skill, an insulator-like substance called myelin thickens around our neural circuitry, which in turn makes us more talented.

The type of practice one engages in is the determinant of how quickly our myelin sheaths thicken around our neural circuits.

Good practice must test us and stretch our abilities right up to the edge of frustration. Talent without the motivation to ceaselessly improve will never lead to mastery.

Leonardo Da Vinci himself and his students used the following sketching techniques repeatedly. They are meant to challenge you and stretch your drawing capabilities.

1. Be a Student of Movement

Because we cannot depict every detail of the world around us, good drawings, one could argue, are simply the result of a series of decisions made by the artist about what to include, and what to leave out.

“Art is the elimination of the unnecessary,” Picasso famously said.

There is no better way of training yourself to eliminate the unnecessary and notice the most important elements of a particular object, than by drawing it while it’s on the move.

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Do as Leonardo instructs. Go to a bustling place and make quick notes of the people going about their business. Go to a park and draw the birds or the ripples of a lake. Watch a gymnast or a wrestler on YouTube – without pressing pause. Draw moving objects.

2. Copy From The Master

Leonardo was an assistant artist to Andrea Del Verrocchio for roughly 10 years.  It was quite common for assistants to learn their trade by painting small sections of their master’s paintings such as shrubbery or sky and work their way up.

The artist ought first to exercise his hand by copying drawings from the hand of a good master.

And having acquired that practice, under the criticism of his master, he should next practise drawing objects in relief of a good style, following the rules which will presently be given. – Leonardo da Vinci

3. Draw Both The Beautiful And The Ugly

While we now think of Da Vinci’s work as things of divine beauty, a few centuries ago, they were infamous for the exact opposite reason.

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In the Victorian era all around Europe, these ‘grotesque’ heads, as they came to be known, were Leonardo’s most reproduced pieces of art.

Da Vinci provides a hint at his reasons for producing these drawings in his notebooks.

The painter should aim at universality, because there is a great want of self-respect in doing one thing well and another badly, as many do who study only the [rules of] measure and proportion in the nude figure and do not seek after variety; for a man may be well proportioned, or he may be fat and short, or tall and thin, or medium.

And a painter who takes no account of these varieties always makes his figures on one pattern so that they might all be taken for brothers; and this is a defect that demands stern reprehension. – Leonardo da Vinci

Draw obese people; slim people; muscular people; landscapes; strange animals; things you are not accustomed to drawing. It will make you better at drawing the things you wish to excel at.

4. Draw The Same Thing From Multiple Angles

Da Vinci, understood that a good artist doesn’t just copy.

A good artist simplifies, deconstructs, reinterprets, and understands his subject matter.

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All our eyes see is raw jumbled light. Our brain takes this light and sorts it out into objects with form and texture.

Sketching things from multiple angles makes our brains better interpreters of light.

Children draw what they think something looks like; amateur artists copy what they see; master artists draw what they understand.

Sketch a person from multiple angles. Imagine you need to make a record of how they look but you have no camera at hand. Even though you’re using different viewpoints, there should be a basic likeness between them all.

5. Draw A Story

Leonardo wasn’t just an artist who could shade well and draw clean lines. He placed just as much emphasis on the composition and content of his art as he did it’s technical rendering.

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The triangular composition, the eye lines, and the curved centreline which extends into a finger pointing to the heavens, were all carefully chosen by Leonardo to tell a story.

Our minds are natural hallucinators. When we lack external sensory input our brains manufacture their own. This phenomenon can be seen in full effect with the use of sensory deprivation chambers.

For inspiration deprive your mind of interesting stimulation so it comes up with it’s own. Stare at a stained wall, the clouds, into space or close your eyes and let your mind wander. Design a composition with the results of this exercise.

Sketching Techniques Leonardo da Vinci Used To Achieve Artistic Mastery | High Existence

Beauty – Classical Paintings Are Brought To Life With Animation (Video)

Beauty - Classical Paintings Are Brought To Life With Animation (Video) | Third Monk image 1

In this amazing animation by Rino Stefano Tagliafierro, the beauty of classical paintings is brought to life from the immobility of canvas, using the 2.5D effect; creating a sentiment lost to the masterpieces.

Over Beauty, there has always hung the cloud of destiny and all-devouring time.

Beauty has been invoked, re-figured and described since antiquity as a fleeting moment of happiness and the inexhaustible fullness of life, doomed from the start to a redemptive yet tragic end.

Its as though these images which the history of art has consigned to us as frozen movement can today come back to life thanks to the fire of digital invention.

A series of well selected images from the tradition of pictorial beauty are appropriated, (from the renaissance to the symbolism of the late 1800s, through Mannerism, Pastoralism, Romanticism and Neo-classicism) with the intention of retracing the sentiment beneath the veil of appearance.

They are, from the inception of a romantic sunrise in which big black birds fly to the final sunset beyond gothic ruins that complete the piece, a work of fleeting time. – The Enigma of Beauty

Asher Brown Durand – The Catskill Valley‬

Thomas Hill – Emerald Bay, Lake Tahoe

Albert Bierstadt – Among the Sierra Nevada Mountains

Ivan Shishkin – Forest edge

James Sant – Frau und Tochter‬

William Adolphe Bouguereau – L’Innocence

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Song of the Angels

Ivan Shishkin – Bach im Birkenwald

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Le Baiser

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Nature’s Fan- Girl with a Child

William Adolphe Bouguereau – The Motherland

Ivan Shishkin – Morning in a Pine Forest

William Adolphe Bouguereau – The Nut Gatherers

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Two Sisters

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Not too Much to Carry

Thomas Cole – The Course of Empire: Desolation

Martinus Rørbye – Entrance to an Inn in the Praestegarden at Hillested

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Sewing

William Adolphe Bouguereau – The Difficult Lesson

William Adolphe Bouguereau – The Curtsey

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Little Girl with a Bouquet

Claude Lorrain – Pastoral Landscape

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Cupidon

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Admiration

William Adolphe Bouguereau – A Young Girl Defending Herself Against Eros

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Dawn

William Adolphe Bouguereau – L’Amour et Psych

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Spring Breeze

William Adolphe Bouguereau – The Invation

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Nymphs and Satyr

William Adolphe Bouguereau – The Youth of Bacchus

William Adolphe Bouguereau – The Birth of Venus

William Adolphe Bouguereau – The Nymphaeum

Gioacchino Pagliei – Le Naiadi

Luis Ricardo Falero – Faust’s Dream

Luis Ricardo Falero – Reclining Nude

Jules Joseph Lefebvre – La Cigale

John William Godward – Tarot of Delphi

Jan van Huysum – Bouquet of Flowers in an Urn

Adrien Henri Tanoux – Salammbo

Guillaume Seignac – Reclining Nude

Tiziano – Venere di Urbino

Louis Jean François Lagrenée – Amor and Psyche

Correggio – Giove e Io

François Gérard – Psyché et l’Amour

John William Godward – Contemplatio

John William Godward – Far Away Thought

John William Godward – An Auburn Beauty

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Flora And Zephy

Louis Jean François Lagrenée – Mars and Venus, Allegory of Peace

Fritz Zuber-Bühle – A Reclining Beauty

Paul Peel – The Rest

Guillaume Seignac – L’Abandon

Victor Karlovich Shtemberg – Nu à la peau de bete

Pierre Auguste Cot – Portrait Of Young Woman

Ivan Shishkin – Mast Tree Grove

Ivan Shishkin – Rain in an oak forest

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Biblis

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Elegy

Marcus Stone – Loves Daydream End

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Head Of A Young Girl

Hugues Merle – Mary Magdalene in the Cave

Andrea Vaccaro – Sant’Agata

Jacques-Luois David – Accademia (o Patroclo)

Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio – San Giovanni Battista

Roberto Ferri – In Nomine Deus

Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio – Cristo alla colonna

Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio – Incoronazione di spine

Paul Delaroche – L’Exécution de lady Jane Grey en la tour de Londres, l’an 1554

Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio – Decollazione di San Giovanni Battista

Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio – Sacrificio di Isacco

Guido Reni – Davide e Golia

Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio – Giuditta e Oloferne

Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio – Davide e Golia

Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio – Salomè con la testa del Battista

Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio – Davide con la testa di Golia

Jakub Schikaneder – All Soul’s Day

Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio – San Gerolamo scrivente

Guido Reni – San Gerolamo

Pieter Claesz – Vanitas

Gabriel von Max – The Ecstatic Virgin Anna Katharina Emmerich

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Portrait of Miss Elizabeth Gardner

Jan Lievens – A young girl

Johannes Vermeer – Portrait of a Young Girl

Luis Ricardo Falero – Moonlit Beauties

Joseph Rebell – Burrasca al chiaro di luna nel golfo di Napoli

Luis Ricardo Falero – Witches going to their Sabbath

William Adolphe Bouguereau – Dante And Virgil In Hell

Théodore Géricault – Cheval arabe gris-blanc

Peter Paul Rubens – Satiro

Felice Boselli – Skinned Head of a Young Bull

Gabriel Cornelius von Max – Monkeys as Judges of Art

Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio – Medusa

Luca Giordano – San Michele

Théodore Géricault – Study of Feet and Hands

Peter Paul Rubens – Saturn Devouring His Son

Ilya Repin – Ivan il Terribile e suo figlio Ivan

Franz von Stuck – Lucifero Moderno

Gustave Doré – Enigma

Arnold Böcklin – Die Toteninsel (III)

Sophie Gengembre Anderson – Elaine

John Everett Millais – Ophelia

Paul Delaroche – Jeune Martyre

Herbert Draper – The Lament for Icarus

Martin Johnson Heade – Twilight on the St. Johns River

Gabriel Cornelius von Max – Der Anatom

Enrique Simonet – Anatomía del corazón

Thomas Eakins – Portrait of Dr. Samuel D. Gross (The Gross Clinic)

Rembrandt – Lezione di anatomia del dottor Tulp

Peter Paul Rubens – Die Beweinung Christi

Paul Hippolyte Delaroche – Die Frau des Künstlers Louise Vernet auf ihrem Totenbett

Elizabeth Jane Gardner Bouguereau – Too Imprudent

William-Adolphe Bouguereau – The Prayer

Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio – Amorino dormiente

Augustin Théodule Ribot – St. Vincent (of Saragossa)

Caspar David Friedrich – Abtei im eichwald

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