Wednesday, February 10, 2010

The idea of this drawing was to draw for roughly 40 minutes and use nothing but continuous line and cross contour.  Our primary focus was to identify the line of the spine, and spend some time establishing this.  Next, we had to put in a few cross contours to give the figure some depth, and after that we focused on the continuous contour.  I began with the line of the spine, and then drew just a few cross contours to identify the back and overall shapes that I saw at the time.  Once I started the contour drawing I focused on establishing the position of the head and the critical landmarks that were present-like the location of the hands, angles of forearms, upper arms, the angle at which the legs were going off into space, etc.  Once I have these primary landmarks it is just details after that.  After I got the shape of the figure down I added some more cross contours to give the image some more depth, and this really helped give a better sense of 3 dimensionality.  




Wednesday, February 3, 2010


file:///Users/student/Pictures/iPhoto%20Library/Originals/2010/Feb%203,%202010/IMG_0672.JPG

For this session we where supposed do a bling contour drawing of the model.  I was focussing on the body as a whole, but it was very difficult to keep my place and maintain the shape.  I should have focussed more on one particular part of the body and really upped the detail.  My process was to keep my starting point in mind and basically go from there, and through this I developed a better awareness of the overall shapes and their relationships to each other.  

My drawing in three words: simple, light, choppy

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

My name is Josh Jakubowski and I'm back in college after being in the real world for a few years.  I got my bachelors in History form UW-Madison back in 2002, and I've always been an artistic person, so I decided to come back for Industrial Design.  So far I love it and all of my classes are very interesting for the most part.  I've always been very good at drawing the human figure, so I've been looking forward to taking this course.  Hopefully I can pick up a few tricks along the way and use them to build my career in ID.