Draw Any Pose From Any Angle - Rhythms

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Draw Any Pose From Any Angle - Rhythms

10K
Mark as Completed
Course In Progress
Stan Prokopenko
Introducing Rhythms! A system to help you capture any dynamic pose from any angle. With rhythms we find visual alignments that capture a flow between the forms, making the pose feel more connected and convincing. We've kind of been doing similar things to this in other lessons in this course. But now I specifically want to apply these concepts to figure drawing. Most of us will want to include some kind of people or humanoid-like characters in our art. I think it's really important to start applying a lot of these fundamental concepts to draw people. It might feel harder for some of you, but thats only because you're very good at seeing mistakes in drawings of people. I mention some anatomy in the video, but very little anatomy knowledge is needed to use rhythms as a concept. Initially it's about learning to see visual connections. I'll go over head, torso, and limbs, one at a time to give you a template of sorts.. to make this as approachable as possible for you.
Newest
Art Stark
2mo
I've been waiting for this Gesture Shorthand my whole life! Thank You!
Miguel manfredi
Had a bit of a hard time with rhythms, but I'm getting the hand of it right now, I should loosen my line weight next time with confidence.
Josh Fiddler
Hey Proko-sians! I just finished watching this and well, something dropped in for me as I was making notes on the PDF he speaks to at the end. Most of us are newish to drawing. Many others are not. If you are familiar with figure drawing at all, you've probably heard of Loomis and Reilly and other's I'm sure. They all present systems. I'm a student at drawingFORCE as well and Mike as the Forceful Method. What I'm trying to say is, there are so many ways artists think of "gesture" and "flow" and "connection" and they all present their way of thinking. If you are just starting out, this way of thinking might feel a bit magical, and seeing the natural rhythms of things feels elusive. Remember, Stan has built up years of knowhow, intuition through practice and teaching. It isn't always easy to convey this deep knowing, so the rationalizations for why he "indicates" things the way he does are the important parts to focus on here. Study (reproduce) the examples and indications he provides in the video/PDF and speak aloud the rationalizations. Internalize. At the end of the day, it's easy to say but hard to do: Slow down. Look. Think. Understand. Practice the mark. Make the mark. Accept the mark. Move on. That's quick-sketch. And of course, try to have fun! It will make it that much easier. I heard it takes about 200 repetitions of a thing to master it. But make it fun and it will only take 30 or so. Good luck out there!
@ber
4mo
I dont see that pdf or i dont get something in this... Theres a screenshot what am i missing?
@cpclermont
> Slow down. Look. Think. Understand. Practice the mark. Make the mark. Accept the mark. Move on. That's quick-sketch. Love this. Thanks for the post!
@optix
7mo
That was really fun to go through. I'm been having trouble to gestures, so I'm hoping this helps me figure things out more.
Jake Miller
Came here from being in the middle of all my other studies, honestly, the two videos and the talk around rhythms made it so much easier to understand than the gesture course, these would have been fantastic to have right at the beginning. So many aha moments.
Phil
7mo
In How to Draw the Marvel Way and the Loomis books, often a figure is started with a gestural stick figure, 3 ovals representing the head, torso, and pelvis and the limbs are just gestural lines. I understand that there are many ways to approach the topic of gesture but what do our instructors think of this method?
@jarmiger
9mo
Great lesson. I have a question. In the next to last arm rhythm, I tried it out before watching Stan do it and created this. I tried to convey the locked out arm with a slight curve opposite of how the arm should bend. I know there's no specific correct way to do this but is mine a good gestural representation? As it is somewhat different from Stan's.
@thrabchak
9mo
I understand the gesture, maybe it's just that the proportions are a little off
@leeroy
11mo
I had tons of fun doing this challenge and some poses were difficult but I muscled through it and tried my best to fix my errors and refer back to your video ‼️‼️
Joan Lacasse
Thank you for that presentation. So helpful.
Zach Pipher
could i think of visual alignments, the term Stan uses when talking about Rhythms, as the arms in the Michelangelo: The creation of Adam. as Gods hand flows into Adams hands with the fingers touching. The Rhythms, the visual alignments is the flow between his arm and adams arm? I'm trying to wrap my head around it if possible. Thank you in advance.
Cedric Lafond
I've drawn using observation skills (replicating what I saw) then studied some of the poses with the image beside it, finding the relevant rythms. Most of them used quite a lot of time to do, about 15 to 30 minutes each. Have a good day!
DreamMist
1yr
I haven't done these studies in awhile. I started learning gesture way back from your courses (along anatomy pretty much everything you guys do) and these lession are a real fun refreshers for the principals of gesture. Also just to note: I am using lazy nazumi at 25 smoothing, my lines are much worse on papier but I do try to practice regulary on my sketchbook to better my lines. I don't know where to post these really. **NSFW warning for the reference pictures !!**
@arash18
9mo
Great work by the way
@arash18
9mo
Where do you get your reference photos from?
@drawingdodo
Great line weight!
Peter Tinkler
I've just finished the last of these, which were a lot of fun. It was good to try a larger body type too, which posed (no pun intended) a different kind of challenge.
Patrick Bosworth
Really clean, confident lines! Great job!
Dvir Maltzman
Thanks for the lesson Stan -- I've been a long time viewer/fan of Proko! I'm really impressed with all of the work below, hope you guys like these :)
Peter Tinkler
Nice and loose and gestural. Good work!
Jake Jackson
Thanks to the Enchanted Wizard of Rhythm for showing us the rhythms of the Universe
@nick_laze
1yr
Hi people, I'm a newbie and I noticed that a lot of you are really good. That's great, I hope to get good too. Can you give me some feedback on a couple of quick sketches done by following this lesson? I've been doing a lot of gestures since I started and it feels good to change my routine a little bit with these rhythms (Which I find really similar to my usual gestures, just with a different approach). Have a nice day :)
@drawingdodo
Great work! If I could have a critique, I think you might be complicating some shapes and adding them potentially too soon. Try to get a looser gesture first, and then try to add some more details and smaller shapes to complement the bigger things
@sanghxa
1yr
It was super fun following along this video. Thanks for the greag tips. Here’s what I did while watching.
@mogumogu
1yr
5-minute sketches, except the last which was 30 seconds. I made a lot of beginner mistakes, especially with proportions, I went off the page, made the legs of the figure too long/upper portion too short I think...
@somegui
7mo
I agree with your assessment, though I think they all show the potential for growth. In addition to what you said, I would say for the 5 minute sketches, you show slightly too much focus on the surface forms and contour. They are fairly gestural, and sometimes when one had 5 minutes, it can be tempting to add those to the figure. However, if you are trying to practice gesture and rhythm drawing, it likely will not help very much. However, your 30-second drawing looks to me to be an excellent example of what this exercise is looking for, and certainly looks well-designed.
Peter Tinkler
I've done a few more. Really enjoying these studies, the poses are so dynamic....so I must keep remembering to get as much gesture in there as possible (within reason). Thanks for this video, Stan. A great freebie.
Peter Tinkler
I got a start on these today, still a few more to go. Always great to practice gesture and rhythm, and enjoyable too. Sometimes it feels like I'm being loose, and then when I see the drawings on a different format (laptop screen), it seems like I could have taken it further. Definitely going to do more of these......
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About instructor
Founder of Proko, artist and teacher of drawing, painting, and anatomy. I try to make my lessons fun and ultra packed with information.
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