I'm definitely going to watch this again over some days with some spaced repetition. It looks like you hit EVERY relevant point in one video, especially that mental stuff toward the end. There really is a point where Confidence has to become a DECISION and not a feeling you wait for.
Imma need to watch this again cuz I felt like I wasn't even listening and was just lost in my own mind it felt like hearing a teacher talking but you're so tired that you just want to sleep but the moment they stop talking you're not tired I'm bad at paying attention..
Why are you so perfect at explaining this topic? 😭 I felt so overwhelmed when I tried gesture drawing because I lacked the necessary information on how to approach this process. I knew I was doing it wrong and couldn't systematise what I tried to apply (since I already knew about CSI, the relations, etc., I KNOW what makes a good gesture drawing). Like, the pressure to consider all the nuances and quickly end up with something coherent on paper felt like an unsolvable task to me. This video ALONE helped me so much, I'll be teaching myself using your explanations from now on.
OMG! Once again, everything in this video just hits me loud and sound because I've made same mistakes as described and I also need to push myself as an artist like you described....I look forward to our gesture class coming in early Feb. to explore. So delightful to always be able to go forward with your teachings.
this was incredibly helpful; thanks! one of my drawing classes jumped into gesture drawing day one with no examples and i felt very unprepared. my teacher just kept telling us to move fast and make big, long lines, but i like this slower, deliberate, form-focused approach a lot better.
Thank you so much. I've been struggling with gesture drawings for the past few days and I feel like I made a breakthrough after watching this video. I've still got a long way to go but I feel like I can actually start making progress now.
Thank you. You are such an articulate and easy to understand and listen to instructor. I made so many notes and sketches as you explained. I appreciate you sharing your knowledge with us and being so pleasantly encouraging. A fan in Venice, California.
I loved hearing your mark strategy! Sometimes I think just hearting an artist’s *personal* thought process can be sooooo helpful - thank you so much!!!
Your video has helped me SOO much. Your tips and perspective are absolutely fantastic and unique. I’ve looked at many videos and the things you focus on truly provide clarity to the practice. Thank you
This whole video is great, but man, that last tip is so huge and such a big deal to internalize. Love the way you talk about drawing, keep up your fantastic work teaching figure drawing! ❤️
This is great. There isn't any new knowledge to be found here as one that has been watching these videos for a year now, but having sound knowledge concisely reinforced every now and then can be just as helpful as stumbling into something new at times. I have a long and interesting relationship with gesture drawing. When I was first encouraged to do gesture drawings years ago, it pretty much discouraged me from continuing to practice for a long time. The idea of doing 30 second drawings that never looked like there were getting better was disheartening, especially when I didn't understand WHY I should be doing them in the first place. It's only been in the past year, thanks to channels like this one and sites like Line of Action, where I started to understand that WHY: gaining the ability to see key areas - or landmarks - for drawing a pose and doing so with increasing ease. It seemed insultingly simple, but it actually helped transform my entire artistic mindset. Since then, gesture studies have become something of my go-to way to practice, but I still struggle with issues that plagued my sessions years ago. I too often get lost when it comes to my mark-making for key areas of the figure, and I still feel like my practice can be a bit mindless at times. That's not to say I haven't improved, but I don't always feel like the time I've put into my gesture drawings are translating into my skill set, even when I occasionally stumble into a gesture drawing I really like. But I do enjoy it now and am more committed to the marathon-like mentality needed to get better. Long(er) story short, this video has helped me to remember that I don't need to rush things. A gesture drawing doesn't HAVE to be a 30 sec to 2 min speedrun; I could probably improve by taking more time to focus on my lines and building confidence in the marks I'm making. As always, I appreciate the work you're doing! P.S.: I'm looking forward to the Fresh Eyes Challenge in January. I actually took part of the initial challenge when it debuted on the site, but never got around to finishing. I think the recent refinements to the posing model should serve to make the practice more enjoyable, and the added live aspect sounds exciting!
your art is so beautiful! Every line is so precisely captures the gesture but is also loose and flowing, theres so much to learn in this video and very inspiring! Thank you so much
My favorite art teacher from college would have us do all our out-of-class practice with pen on cheap printer paper. He said it built fearlessness because you can't take back a stroke.
sei fantastico! grazie per la tua generosità e l'estrema chiarezza di ogni spiegazione. il problema è che da giorni continuo a guardare i tuoi video e sto tralasciando il lavoro 😅...una specie di dipendenza, perché poi i risultati pratici nel disegno si vedono subito. grazie
This video gives me a great insight about gesture drawing, and just in time too! I've always been intimidated at the practice since it was so unfamiliar in my realm. I am a little self-critical to what I am able to do, and just play it safe, but that only limits my skill as an artist. Thank you so much for this video!
I found your channel recently and I really appreciate your videos, They're helping me a lot to learn more even when I feel stuck and don't know what to focus on to improve.
Thank you this video really helped me a lot! This video was really clear and easy to understand! This video really helped me under What I need to work on and helped my understand that ever piece doesnt have to be perfect. Thank you so much!
video için çok teşekkürler. şu anda bir tür bunalım halindeydim ve kendimi kapana kısılmış hissediyordum ama videon beni tekrar düşünmeye itti ve kafamda bazı şeyler yerli yerine oturdu. teşekkürler❤
Hey, I just want to say that these tips are extremely helpful for beginners, thank you so much. A general follow-up (unsure if anyone will read this, given the video's been published year ago): When you talk about intuitive proportion, are there any exercises or advice you have for reliably getting proportions correct? One thing I suffer from is exactly what you'd mentioned-- head too big, legs either too short/too long, arms too long, etc. Just wondering how I might be able to reliably intuit proportions or train myself to better understand that. Any tips appreciated.
Do you have a source for photographs of models posing? I have been unable to find a good source of photographs to practice from. The video BTW is very helpful and well done.
Hi! I'm a digital artist but do you think doing gesture is on paper is more efficent in building the gesture drawing skill or does it not make a difference? :)
Love the videos! This might be asked already, but what pencil are you using? I know it's charcoal pencil, but what brand or grade is it? And the paper is newsprint, correct? :) Thanks for any info in advance!
I have an essential question for all of us here. If drawing requires miscle memory does it mean i also have to be bodysmart like an athlete to unleash my talent in creativity? Also will playing physical-skill-based games show me my muscle memory to know if i could draw well or good or terribly?
Good question. I would say no you don’t need to be like an athlete to draw well. The muscle memory is one part but mostly it’s about what you care about visually. Even if you’re not an athlete you could learn to write or ride a bike etc which is enough ability to gain muscle memory, at least that’s what I thino
Did some reps with the scott Breton sketchfab model, right? After that, try the proko pelvis videos (anatomy vid and then process). You can't go wrong going in this order. But don't forget Kenzo's Harry & Sally video. You have to look closely at Sally's process to maximize on your time.
@@XD-rd8zd Same thing for you, the order is intentional. ScottBreton Pelvis keeping it simple construction and observation. And then clarify it same day with the two proko videos 👍 Your pelvises should look pretty good after.
It really needs a strong intuition to learn figure and it's not easy at all.. It's like when you think you have master some gesture move, then the other you'll go like you never learn it at all.. Like you suddenly forget how to draw.. Also when we want to draw gesture, why is it so hard to visualize in mind, like our mind is very blank..
As much as I like gesture drawing, much of the world's greatest masterpieces don't display it, or at least it is heavily subdued. Vermeer, Rembrandt, even Norman Rockwell doesn't use it much. It seems that art teachers, and comic book illustrators are where you see gesture the most. Am I wrong? I have seen it displayed on advertising from time to time, such as a sign poster or playbill.
@@SpeedAnarchy Yes I saw the advantage of gesture drawing in composition. You have an idea or feeling you want to express. You set the scene but you want your characters to express the theme and not just stand around like the furniture in the background. Not only gesture drawing for balance and action, I also refer to my body language books so you instinctively know what a character is feeling as well. (PS - Sometimes I do cringe a bit in these books when they get the anatomy incorrect but the knowledge of body language in their poses is priceless.)
You use a white pencil like to block the black marks you don't like Can you please tell me what it is and where to find it thanks you are very helpful and excellent quality of sharing thanks again
I'm definitely going to watch this again over some days with some spaced repetition. It looks like you hit EVERY relevant point in one video, especially that mental stuff toward the end. There really is a point where Confidence has to become a DECISION and not a feeling you wait for.
Yeah it’s a 15 min video but a couple of years worth of practice!
Interestingly, I'm doing that too. I only noticed this comment after watching this video a few times.
You're right bcs i watch this for the 5th time or more.. Very useful to refresh my mind, thank you..
😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
Imma need to watch this again cuz I felt like I wasn't even listening and was just lost in my own mind it felt like hearing a teacher talking but you're so tired that you just want to sleep but the moment they stop talking you're not tired
I'm bad at paying attention..
The concept of "wrong in the right direction" was particularly helpful for my perfectionistic brain. Thank you very much.
Why are you so perfect at explaining this topic? 😭
I felt so overwhelmed when I tried gesture drawing because I lacked the necessary information on how to approach this process. I knew I was doing it wrong and couldn't systematise what I tried to apply (since I already knew about CSI, the relations, etc., I KNOW what makes a good gesture drawing). Like, the pressure to consider all the nuances and quickly end up with something coherent on paper felt like an unsolvable task to me. This video ALONE helped me so much, I'll be teaching myself using your explanations from now on.
I'm so glad it helped!
Kenzo is the most unique combination of all the things you could want in a teacher, absolutely world class.
Thank you! For someone whose learning this at an older age, this is helpful! I appreciate that you didn't speed up the drawing portion of the video.
4:25 I swear i never felt so called out ever. It sounded like you literally have read my mind and directly answered my thoughts with this little joke.
OMG! Once again, everything in this video just hits me loud and sound because I've made same mistakes as described and I also need to push myself as an artist like you described....I look forward to our gesture class coming in early Feb. to explore. So delightful to always be able to go forward with your teachings.
thanks Jennifer!
Perfect timing because this month of drawing practice is specifically about gesture!
this was incredibly helpful; thanks! one of my drawing classes jumped into gesture drawing day one with no examples and i felt very unprepared. my teacher just kept telling us to move fast and make big, long lines, but i like this slower, deliberate, form-focused approach a lot better.
Thank you so much. I've been struggling with gesture drawings for the past few days and I feel like I made a breakthrough after watching this video. I've still got a long way to go but I feel like I can actually start making progress now.
You're a wonderful communicator and you know how to get to the essence extremely well. Thanks.
Thank you. You are such an articulate and easy to understand and listen to instructor. I made so many notes and sketches as you explained. I appreciate you sharing your knowledge with us and being so pleasantly encouraging. A fan in Venice, California.
I loved hearing your mark strategy! Sometimes I think just hearting an artist’s *personal* thought process can be sooooo helpful - thank you so much!!!
Your video has helped me SOO much. Your tips and perspective are absolutely fantastic and unique. I’ve looked at many videos and the things you focus on truly provide clarity to the practice.
Thank you
This is definitely one of the best drawing videos I've ever seen
This whole video is great, but man, that last tip is so huge and such a big deal to internalize. Love the way you talk about drawing, keep up your fantastic work teaching figure drawing! ❤️
Your gesture drawings are really beautiful
So helpful for overcoming my chronic overthinking! Thamks
Thanks Love Life Drawing. Keep bringing your good intuition and dynamics to drawing.🧑🎨♾️✍️
The limiting of types and quantity of marks was just a light bulb moment for me! Brilliant advice, thanks!
This is great. There isn't any new knowledge to be found here as one that has been watching these videos for a year now, but having sound knowledge concisely reinforced every now and then can be just as helpful as stumbling into something new at times.
I have a long and interesting relationship with gesture drawing. When I was first encouraged to do gesture drawings years ago, it pretty much discouraged me from continuing to practice for a long time. The idea of doing 30 second drawings that never looked like there were getting better was disheartening, especially when I didn't understand WHY I should be doing them in the first place. It's only been in the past year, thanks to channels like this one and sites like Line of Action, where I started to understand that WHY: gaining the ability to see key areas - or landmarks - for drawing a pose and doing so with increasing ease. It seemed insultingly simple, but it actually helped transform my entire artistic mindset.
Since then, gesture studies have become something of my go-to way to practice, but I still struggle with issues that plagued my sessions years ago. I too often get lost when it comes to my mark-making for key areas of the figure, and I still feel like my practice can be a bit mindless at times. That's not to say I haven't improved, but I don't always feel like the time I've put into my gesture drawings are translating into my skill set, even when I occasionally stumble into a gesture drawing I really like. But I do enjoy it now and am more committed to the marathon-like mentality needed to get better.
Long(er) story short, this video has helped me to remember that I don't need to rush things. A gesture drawing doesn't HAVE to be a 30 sec to 2 min speedrun; I could probably improve by taking more time to focus on my lines and building confidence in the marks I'm making. As always, I appreciate the work you're doing!
P.S.: I'm looking forward to the Fresh Eyes Challenge in January. I actually took part of the initial challenge when it debuted on the site, but never got around to finishing. I think the recent refinements to the posing model should serve to make the practice more enjoyable, and the added live aspect sounds exciting!
I can definitely relate to all that. See you in Jan for the challenge!
Great advice! Plus your drawings are so dynamic i love it
your art is so beautiful! Every line is so precisely captures the gesture but is also loose and flowing, theres so much to learn in this video and very inspiring! Thank you so much
Thank you so much!!
Thanks x Your advise they are VERY helpful I'm practicing VERY hardi I can see My inprooving it's alot work I'm veryhappy with My progres Gracias
Fantastic!
My favorite art teacher from college would have us do all our out-of-class practice with pen on cheap printer paper. He said it built fearlessness because you can't take back a stroke.
This is the best tutorial on gesture drawing I have ever watched !! Thank you so much < 3
sei fantastico! grazie per la tua generosità e l'estrema chiarezza di ogni spiegazione. il problema è che da giorni continuo a guardare i tuoi video e sto tralasciando il lavoro 😅...una specie di dipendenza, perché poi i risultati pratici nel disegno si vedono subito. grazie
This video gives me a great insight about gesture drawing, and just in time too! I've always been intimidated at the practice since it was so unfamiliar in my realm. I am a little self-critical to what I am able to do, and just play it safe, but that only limits my skill as an artist. Thank you so much for this video!
I found your channel recently and I really appreciate your videos, They're helping me a lot to learn more even when I feel stuck and don't know what to focus on to improve.
Thanks! My drawings are stiff so this will help
Thank you this video really helped me a lot! This video was really clear and easy to understand! This video really helped me under What I need to work on and helped my understand that ever piece doesnt have to be perfect. Thank you so much!
This is a lot of great advice! I've been doing a lot of gesture drawings lately.
thank you for this video, you explain this so well and your information has already helped me so much
I need to watch this once a month for 6 months and see if it sticks! Helpful!
video için çok teşekkürler. şu anda bir tür bunalım halindeydim ve kendimi kapana kısılmış hissediyordum ama videon beni tekrar düşünmeye itti ve kafamda bazı şeyler yerli yerine oturdu. teşekkürler❤
So far I’ve watched this twice in a day
It's like an artist Guru.
Thank you so much.
THANKS FOR REFERENCES BUD!
Awesome video! And your gesture drawings are beautiful
Thank you so much 😀
minute in and i already love your teaching style
SUBBED
Great video thanks
always a wonderful lesson per video.
It is very good for me to learn illustration art..
Greetings Nugroho from Indonesia
Wonderful! Thank you very much!
Woaa let me tell you you saved me🙏🏻tahnks🌸
One of the best channels about anatomy and fd!! Awesome
You’re such a great teacher☺️
Hey, I just want to say that these tips are extremely helpful for beginners, thank you so much. A general follow-up (unsure if anyone will read this, given the video's been published year ago): When you talk about intuitive proportion, are there any exercises or advice you have for reliably getting proportions correct? One thing I suffer from is exactly what you'd mentioned-- head too big, legs either too short/too long, arms too long, etc.
Just wondering how I might be able to reliably intuit proportions or train myself to better understand that. Any tips appreciated.
Great video
So very helpful
Great video, great gestures. Definitely saving to come back to again. Thanks, Kenzo 😁
Love you!!
I need to hear the part where artists say “ IT TAKES TIME “ because I tend to get very frustrated. But I am getting somewhere 😊
yeah quite often it's just a matter of doing another thousand quick sketches
Thanks, very helpful
Thank you
Quite a scene you've drawn of those two at 13:07 lol - if I had just started the video here.
This was great. Thanks so much! Great tips!
Love this. Just found you...😊😊😊😊
I totally agree with what you said
Thank you so much I'll try these tips tomorrow for sure. 🥰
Thanks this is very very helpful
Brilliant
1) I love your shirt! Could you comment where you purchased it, the brand and model? A link?
2) What is the gadget on your shirt collar?
Squash and stretch? I heard that before from the Force drawing channel. Mostly from Mike Mattesi and Swendly Benilla.
Do you have a source for photographs of models posing? I have been unable to find a good source of photographs to practice from. The video BTW is very helpful and well done.
Look on his website please
His website has a bunch of good quality references from different angles and different body types. It's free as well, just sign up.
Line of action
you're the best. thank you
Great tips. thanks! I like the poses you draw from. Where do you get those reference images of the models from, please?
hey those are our references - link in description :)
you are ammmmazing
really neat vid, thanks
Hi! I'm a digital artist but do you think doing gesture is on paper is more efficent in building the gesture drawing skill or does it not make a difference? :)
That’s a great question. I think you can do fantastic drawings on digital! It’s easier if you can draw w good range of motion in your arm
Love the videos! This might be asked already, but what pencil are you using? I know it's charcoal pencil, but what brand or grade is it? And the paper is newsprint, correct? :) Thanks for any info in advance!
i usually use pitt pastel :)
@@lovelifedrawing Just went and bought 3 pencils of Faber Castell Pitt Pastel. Thanks!
I have an essential question for all of us here. If drawing requires miscle memory does it mean i also have to be bodysmart like an athlete to unleash my talent in creativity?
Also will playing physical-skill-based games show me my muscle memory to know if i could draw well or good or terribly?
Good question. I would say no you don’t need to be like an athlete to draw well. The muscle memory is one part but mostly it’s about what you care about visually. Even if you’re not an athlete you could learn to write or ride a bike etc which is enough ability to gain muscle memory, at least that’s what I thino
I’ve youre delivery !
Meant love ure delivery !
I need pelvis! I need pelvis!
(Pelvis deconstruction, like you did with ribcage)
Did some reps with the scott Breton sketchfab model, right? After that, try the proko pelvis videos (anatomy vid and then process). You can't go wrong going in this order. But don't forget Kenzo's Harry & Sally video. You have to look closely at Sally's process to maximize on your time.
@@alexmccaleb2152 I shall definitely check those out. I'm following proko of course, but I don't remember watching the rest, thanks!
I'm waiting for that as well!
@@XD-rd8zd Same thing for you, the order is intentional. ScottBreton Pelvis keeping it simple construction and observation. And then clarify it same day with the two proko videos 👍
Your pelvises should look pretty good after.
I hear you! Working on it for Jan :)
Excelente gratoo
Sir ! From where do i get those reference Photos ?
I can see a lot of Steve Huston in your drawings.
What pencil do you use? because it looks thicker this the pencils I use
Pitt pastel
Man 1st view... 🤩🤩🤩
Brabo!
Is it worth copying another artist's gesture to try to understand the process?
Yeah for sure
It really needs a strong intuition to learn figure and it's not easy at all..
It's like when you think you have master some gesture move, then the other you'll go like you never learn it at all.. Like you suddenly forget how to draw..
Also when we want to draw gesture, why is it so hard to visualize in mind, like our mind is very blank..
As much as I like gesture drawing, much of the world's greatest masterpieces don't display it, or at least it is heavily subdued. Vermeer, Rembrandt, even Norman Rockwell doesn't use it much. It seems that art teachers, and comic book illustrators are where you see gesture the most. Am I wrong?
I have seen it displayed on advertising from time to time, such as a sign poster or playbill.
It's mainly just ment to be a construction method instead of contour drawing every bit
@@SpeedAnarchy Yes I saw the advantage of gesture drawing in composition. You have an idea or feeling you want to express. You set the scene but you want your characters to express the theme and not just stand around like the furniture in the background. Not only gesture drawing for balance and action, I also refer to my body language books so you instinctively know what a character is feeling as well. (PS - Sometimes I do cringe a bit in these books when they get the anatomy incorrect but the knowledge of body language in their poses is priceless.)
You forgot the line of action
Now, The real hard part is taking ALL , remember all of them and then put it into practive.
Then fail into even do the most simple thing correctly.
This stuff is crazy expensive. Lot of dough to add some pencil shavings to filament.
👋
like the video
I am so sorry, but I just can't get pass that swallowing. I mean thank you for this video I will be learning from it. I just had to say it.
WHAT
"wrong in the right direction" Bruh so when I can now where I am wrong in the wrong direction 💀?
how to get the body proportions: step 1: Dont do it super long or short. CONGRATULATIONS, you learned
This is not gesture drawing. The true gesture drawing is done within 60s
You are talking too much at all your videos
You use a white pencil like to block the black marks you don't like Can you please tell me what it is and where to find it thanks you are very helpful and excellent quality of sharing thanks again
love this video! as always as other videos
우와 감사합니다. 잘 따라 연습하겠습니다.
Hello