Let's break down the nebulous concept of gesture—it's about conveying ideas and emotions through abstract lines and shapes in your drawings.
Newest

Fernando Gomez Sancha
12d
Your first lecture is a joy to watch. Impressive work. Congratulations Michael, it is already worthwile having purchased the course.

Eric Bunn
20d
Can't do this exercise too many times. Really excellent way of expressing the proportions of a figure. I tried to construct this step by step as I progressed through the lesson.

Val
24d
Thank you, thank you, thank you! I'm so excited for this class! I didn't spot your head and figure construction courses until they were already over, but I am determined to do this one live. Gesture is an at times frustrating subject to me, but the way you break it down simplifies the complexity and emboldens me to push further.
Noreen Long
26d
II am geriatric & wanted to draw a Geriatric model.
Noreen Long
28d
Pencil on smooth newsprint. Took more than 10 hours to understand these simple patterns of design & complete 3 sketches correctly! I feel very good about completing this project & more confident about shape & structural support. Thanks, Michael.
Lesley Rawlings
28d
I’m loving this course but legs are not right, and not sure what to do to fix them.
Stevie Roder
1mo
Watched the video last night. Really insightful first intro lesson Michael. I actually pretty much learned the basics from it on what to think about gesture drawing and how to approach it. I am looking forward to the upcoming lessons now. I also loved the in-depth of having us think why n how were doing it as well. Very fun things to take notes on.
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1mo
Glad to hear that!

@andy_essayer
1mo
the subtitles between 11:04 - 11:32 is empty, please have a fix.
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17d
Sorry about that! I've sent out a fix request and hope it gets resolved tomorrow.
Aritra Das
1mo
When can we expect the next lesson?
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1mo
The next should go out today!
Paul
1mo
Tried to gesture draw and its really fun to do and a nice change from the basic drawing course that Im following. Still lot of practice needed on my side but Im quit pleased with this attempt. :-)
Michael Giff
1mo
The figures do read nicely.
@carrot
1mo
Michael, I’ve been looking forward to this course and think it’s a brilliant way to help people consider what they actually want to convey or create, instead of just jumping in and starting with pencil to paper. (Which can be frustrating when you spend time on something and it’s just not as expressive as you’d like it to be). Terrific 1st lesson, and looking forward to the next!
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1mo
Thank you! So glad to have you.
Ari a
1mo
When are the videos published?
@struppsi2
1mo
attempts to put some gesture into the cast…

Ali Ali
1mo
Is It 1 lesson a week?
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1mo
It's 1-2 lessons a week depending on how stand-alone/connected the lessons are. We're also giving people a little time to do assignments and the goal is to get the critique videos out the week after the assignment is given.

Malt Hitman
1mo
I guess we'll know on Monday. One lesson each week would make sense if feedback and critique videos are being included in the course. It would give people time to submit things for review.

Malt Hitman
1mo
Here's a sample of what I'm starting from gesture-wise. I learned gesture from Stan's Figure Drawing Fundamentals course a few years back by this point. I've been doing 20 -- 30 second poses and 20 -- 1 minute poses every day for the last three months. Consider these two pictures my 'before' this course.
I hope to learn and improve a lot learning and applying the lessons from this course!

@anthonyjllopez
1mo
Any recommendations where i can find great poses for gesture studies? Also i am having trouble with my gesture on laying poses, especially poses laying in more extreme perspectives, will we cover how to handle these poses?
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1mo
We will cover that!
ahmet yavuz
1mo
https://www.bodiesinmotion.photo/ I recommend this site.

Ron Kempke
1mo
Michael, how do we learn to express our ideas with lines and shapes? Is this a skill artists possess innately or is it something they've had to learn and, if so, how and where have they learned it? I find this aspect of gesture drawing to be an unlearned foreign language, so maybe I'm delusional to believe I could someday communicate ideas and emotions through drawing.
BTW, I've had a long career as a working technical illustrator which has probably influenced my confusion with communicating feelings through drawing because I've associated the act of drawing with reporting tangible facts. How do I unlearn that mindset if that's what's required to express with gesture?
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1mo
Hey Ron, great questions. Don't know if I have the capacity to answer them here. I guess it just depends on how you choose to see drawing. I see line, shape, and value as components of a language. As such, while some may posses an innate familiarity, the rest of us develop proficiency in being visually literate with said formal elements. From there the question is to what end do you use it. You already concede that drawing communicates tangible facts. To me this is an idea about what you see and how you choose to convey it. Gesture in the way I discuss it here conveys tangible facts about the body and it's design through rhythm and asymmetry.
Maybe it's a matter of how we frame it?

@georgiosnt
1mo

Nelson Wiegman
1mo
srt file does not open VLC player.

@georgiosnt
1mo
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About instructor
Educator, painter, writer, and art historian. Author of Figure Drawing: Design and Invention.