How to Draw Obliques – Anatomy & Motion

274K
Mark as Completed

How to Draw Obliques – Anatomy & Motion

274K
Mark as Completed

Assignment

Use the images provided in the downloads to draw the Robo Bean and Anato Bean. Then add the oblique with the correct stretching, pinching, or twisting. Think about the motion and how the motion deforms the shape of the muscle.

Newest
Kassjan (Kass) Smyczek
I have been drawing a lot but not uploading my assignments. So that‘s what I am doing now. I am in the Us for a couple of months and I don‘t have my scanner here - so I am trying my best to get good photos in natural light.
Benjamin Roseman
Retry of the assignment part 1and some life sketches. Still doesn't seem like this stuff is clicking for me. Any advice
Benjamin Roseman
Here are the skelly drawings. Had a hard time visualizing the muscle. Probably should study the attachment sites more.
Yoyo Yang
7mo
Critiques are welcome~ Thank you!
Rachel Dawn Owens
You captured the obliques really well here!
Dubčido
7mo
Obs, obs.)
Dubčido
7mo
Thank you
Ash
7mo
Very nice!
Waner Hoogleiter
@lazy0
10mo
Could someone give me feedback On these Oblique studies, I don't know if they are correct or not. the pictures are in order.
@nemuiyo
11mo
Alejandro
1yr
Patrick Bosworth
These look nice and solid, great construction, emphasized squash and stretch! Great job!
Vin
1yr
Hello, here are my before and after. I did a lot of mistakes. And I still feel the form and the location of oblique are super hard.
Ezra
1yr
obliques part 1
Manuel Rioja
My assigments for this leson before watch Proko demonstrations.
Karas Rijji
here are my oblique Part 2 & 3 assignments
Karas Rijji
this is my oblique Part 1 assignment
Manuel Rioja
According to the digital model, the origin of the obliques inserts just in the third/half of the lateral plane of the rib cage, approximately towards the middle of the height of the rib cage (at the fifth rib), above the level of the xiphoid process. It seems to me that in some of your drawings your obliques start out too low. But the gesture is very organic!
Steve Lenze
these are nice :)
Samuel Sanjaya
Hi, this is my oblique assignments. I did this first before watching the video, It seems for some reasons i Did not draw the connection to the serrator properly on the later drawing. Any feedbacks or critiques will be greatly appreciated.
Love Byström
My drawing of the model at 2:03. It was just so clear that I needed to capture it. Didn’t pay attention to the gesture at all tho but understood the insertions much better than before so that’s good. Ok back to the video :)
@palyo
2yr
Hi everyone! These are my drawings for this lesson's assignment .Personally i struggled a lot with proportions especially when drawing the abs so maybe i'll practice them until i feel confident while continuing the course. Other than that, i also struggled with insertions but i got them figured out while making the skelly draw-overs. Anyway , i would really appreciate any kind of advice /critique.
Manuel Rioja
I like them! Remember that the fiber bundles of the obliques are 8 in total, and they are inserted in a saw shape from the fifth to the twelfth rib, descending parallel with an inclination of 45 degrees and then widening as they are inserted into the semilunar line of ABS. . Some of the oblique fiber bundles you drew look too straight (they actually curve to the shape of the ribcage), too wide, or the wrong amount.
Peter Tinkler
I did a few extra studies of the obliques over the weekend from some sculptures in my local art gallery in Birmingham (UK). The obliques were not always clear or obvious, but I had a go at putting them in anyway. For the last one on the right (the twisted back angle), have I got the obliques curving too far into the middle of the lower back? Gonna try another one of these for my more detailed, toned torso study.
Peter Tinkler
This is the first part of the obliques exercise, I've still to pick my model references and work from those (which I'm looking forward to). I think I tend to make the upper torso area (ribcage) too long, and sometimes, too wide. All good fun though.
Jesper Axelsson
Nice! I think you get most things right. But there is some ambiguity in your drawings. Try to draw the whole muscle, all the way from where it originates to where it inserts. You're leaving white spots here and there making it feel undefined. It could be an artistic choise, but in anatomy studies when your goal is to understand the muscles, it could be useful to define the entire muscle clearly. When I studied the obliques, I drew all eight muscle bundles, and studied where they started on the ribcage, and where they inserted, tracking their path. Now that I have some more experience, I realize that that might have been an unnecessary amount of knowledge in relationship to my drawing skills, so take the advice with a grain of salt. However, I can't help but feel that it was worth it. I really understand the obliques now. Your drawings seem to lack some understanding of the path of the bundles and their attachments. One thing that helped me when learning the origin points, was to identify the line that would run through them. Highly recommend to give some extra time to studying the oblique in the back. It helped me with drawing the lower back muscles. You might find it useful to study individual ribs. Especially the 12th. When looking at the 3D Model: Male Rib Cage, the 12 ribs seem to attatch to the spine halfway between the sternum and the bottom of the ribcage. Hope this helps :)
Dylan Doster
Oblique assignment
Benjamin Green
nice!
Jesper Axelsson
Hi @Dylan Doster, nice work. These are looking pretty good. - I would study the attachments more. They feel a bit incosistent, as if the muscles were hanging loosely. Decide on exact points and try to hit those same points in every angle. In the 2nd drawing from the left in the bottom row for example, the abs originate too much to the left on the front plane of the ribcage. Before drawing the muscles, find the centerline of the rib cage and make sure the muscles attach correctly in relationship to it. One thing that helped me with the external oblique's origin was to imagine a line running through all the origin points and study were it is. - Try to make a more clean presentation of the work. If you're doing it digitally, save the work as an image and post that. It's good practice for presenting your work as a proffesional, plus makes it easier to critique. Hope this helps :) Keep up the good work!
Course in Parts
View course details
Give a gift
Give a gift card for art students to use on anything in the Proko store.
Or gift this course:
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.
Help!
Browse the FAQs or our more detailed Documentation. If you still need help or to contact us for any reason, drop us a line and we’ll get back to you as soon as possible!