Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

Dashboard

Persistence is key to improvement. Persistent practice drives improvement. I keep a pad in my car so that I can practice drawing. Having a pad and pen handy eliminates any friction. While waiting for tennis, I pulled out a notepad and a pen and sketched my dashboard.

A simple drawing of my dashboard helped me work on perspective, circles, and spacing. All because I have a pad and pen in my car.

How can you improve your persistence by eliminating some friction?


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Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

Another Upside-Down Man

Today’s sketch was another where you look at the image upside down. This exercise from the book Drawing on the Right Side of Brain reduces mental conflict. Drawing upside down uses the gap between recognition (knowing you are drawing a man) and drawing upside down, so you focus on lines, angles, and circles. In other words, use the right side of your brain.

This Drawing is from page 53 of Drawing on the Right Side of Brain and is by Pablo Picasso of the Russian Composer Igor Stravinsky.

It was enjoyable, and I focused on the lines and angles, not calling out a head, face, or hands. It works.


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Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

Inked Up

Today’s sketch is my recent fountain pen ink bottle and box. I wanted a subject to work on perspective and depth with both the square and round shapes. Still working on that bottle top shape – still too round.

The good news is that my images are not leaning as much as earlier as I focus on the landmarks and perspective. Making progress.

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Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

Self Portrait

So I have some work to do on my realistic sketching skills.  Interesting how this benchmark sketch, along with my hand and person from memory, indicates where my drawing skills currently are.

This self-portrait is a data point, not a criticism of where my skills are currently.  I am only concerned with improving against myself, not comparing myself to others.

I’m the only one on my journey.

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Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

Woman’s Face

I am starting the lessons and sketches in Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain by Betty Edwards. I have the cooresponding workbook on order.

This book goes well beyond drawing skills.  It shows how building your drawing skills bleeds over into many other areas of your life.

 The three baseline sketches are a person from memory, your hand, and a self-portrait.  Those to come the next two days.

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Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

The Bike

Interesting how difficult it is to describe or draw something from memory.  We have seen thousands of bikes, but sketching a bike from memory is complex.  Remembering all the essential details is hard.  This is true for many things we try and do from memory. 

Today’s sketch is a simple bike – from memory.  I really had a hard time getting the details – how does the down tube look, do I have brakes, how about the derailleurs….  And I raced bikes. 

Another good exercise in slowing down and working through the details, something we can all do; sketching or not.

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