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The definitive resource for rendering realistic figures that seem to leap off the page, from the acclaimed cartoonist hailed as the “Michelangelo of the comic strip” Dynamic figure drawing is the most essential of all skills for the artist to learn, and one of its most challenging aspects is foreshortening. One must visualize the body forms from every conceivable point of view as they plunge into deep space, often rendering them in radical foreshortening. In Dynamic Figure Drawing, Burne Hogarth offers a revolutionary system that will enable you to draw an incredible variety of poses, actions, and gestures without a model and with the correct relationship between forms. Dynamic Figure Drawing covers: • body forms • figures in deep 3D space • interconnection and overlapping of forms • foreshortening • bodies in motion • and more! Burne Hogarth’s unique teaching methods in Dynamic Figure Drawing , part of his comprehensive Dynamic Drawing Series, are indispensable for every professional artist, art student, teacher, painter, sculptor, illustrator, cartoonist, animator, and serious amateur. Burne Hogarth’s masterful Dynamic Drawing Series is an invaluable resource for any artist: DRAWING DYNAMIC HANDS • DRAWING THE HUMAN HEAD • DYNAMIC ANATOMY • DYNAMIC FIGURE DRAWING • DYNAMIC LIGHT AND SHADE • DYNAMIC WRINKLES AND DRAPERY Review: Very Effective - This book and the series by Hogarth in general, are a class apart in teaching the figure. In no other book I have seen the body masses so clearly and simply presented that with just one look you 'understand' the form and add it to your repertoire. Just like that. One striking difference we notice is the three dimensional presentation of the drawings using probably charcoal or a very soft pencil, how else will we understand that form if its not rendered in three dimensions?! Yet so many books exist, even the ones from great such as Loomis, where you would see a more finished figure, where the contours take over, making the student wonder 'why is a line in front of the other?' etc. Hogarth aims as dispensing such doubts and to get rid of the guesswork from the minds of the artist. He talks about 'inventing' the figure, and about a notation of representig the figure in deep space, meaning three dimesnions. As the masters such as Vilppu would say, drawing is all about learning how to represent the form in two dimensional paper, and about knowing the form one wants to draw. We do get both in this book by Hogarth. more actually on the forms of the figure. more than half the book presents the figure, the varous parts, the torso, the limbs and the head in great detail using simple three dimensional forms. and the remainder of the book deals with how one would approach or rather go about drawing the figure. An interesting approach here is to begin with the torso, and not with the head. torso, legs, arms and then comes the head, and surprise surprise, this is such an effective way of setting up the figure in the desired gesture. Vilppu would talk about a Ball and a box in a sock to study the torso. Bridgman would also talk in detail about these two forms, Hogarth lays down explicitly the order, and importance. This approach must be tried before understanding its effectiveness. This is overall a great book for the figurative art student. I found it most effective, because every single picture in this book teaches me something that I can apply directly. The rendering of the forms make it so easy to understand them and cast to memory not only the form but its relations to the other forms in context as well as what happens when they twist and turn and go about doing whatever a figure would do. This book stays right at the top along with Kimon Nicholaides and Glenn Vilppu and Bridgman. Review: A Great Reference Tool - A figure drawing book that exaggerates some structures in order to teach, featuring superb illustrations of how movement affects the body; there is no pull or relaxing of muscle that goes unannotated in this book. Hogarth's Dynamic Figure Drawing is less about drawing from step-by-step shapes and lines, and more about anatomy- how the form interacts as a whole. A bit more appropriate for those who already have some background in drawing than those just beginning, but undoubtedly a useful tool for the beginner as well; you can never go wrong with such well noted and illustrated reference material. Hogarth also covers the changes of the structures according to perspective, though notes on the face and hands are less in number than those on the body as a whole. However, there are books from the same artist, on dynamic hands, and drawing the head as well, so if you find yourself needing more guidelines for those structures, there are resources for it.
| Best Sellers Rank | #99,212 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #79 in Arts & Photography Study & Teaching #93 in Drawing Specific Objects #119 in Figure Drawing Guides |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 616 Reviews |
G**M
Very Effective
This book and the series by Hogarth in general, are a class apart in teaching the figure. In no other book I have seen the body masses so clearly and simply presented that with just one look you 'understand' the form and add it to your repertoire. Just like that. One striking difference we notice is the three dimensional presentation of the drawings using probably charcoal or a very soft pencil, how else will we understand that form if its not rendered in three dimensions?! Yet so many books exist, even the ones from great such as Loomis, where you would see a more finished figure, where the contours take over, making the student wonder 'why is a line in front of the other?' etc. Hogarth aims as dispensing such doubts and to get rid of the guesswork from the minds of the artist. He talks about 'inventing' the figure, and about a notation of representig the figure in deep space, meaning three dimesnions. As the masters such as Vilppu would say, drawing is all about learning how to represent the form in two dimensional paper, and about knowing the form one wants to draw. We do get both in this book by Hogarth. more actually on the forms of the figure. more than half the book presents the figure, the varous parts, the torso, the limbs and the head in great detail using simple three dimensional forms. and the remainder of the book deals with how one would approach or rather go about drawing the figure. An interesting approach here is to begin with the torso, and not with the head. torso, legs, arms and then comes the head, and surprise surprise, this is such an effective way of setting up the figure in the desired gesture. Vilppu would talk about a Ball and a box in a sock to study the torso. Bridgman would also talk in detail about these two forms, Hogarth lays down explicitly the order, and importance. This approach must be tried before understanding its effectiveness. This is overall a great book for the figurative art student. I found it most effective, because every single picture in this book teaches me something that I can apply directly. The rendering of the forms make it so easy to understand them and cast to memory not only the form but its relations to the other forms in context as well as what happens when they twist and turn and go about doing whatever a figure would do. This book stays right at the top along with Kimon Nicholaides and Glenn Vilppu and Bridgman.
M**D
A Great Reference Tool
A figure drawing book that exaggerates some structures in order to teach, featuring superb illustrations of how movement affects the body; there is no pull or relaxing of muscle that goes unannotated in this book. Hogarth's Dynamic Figure Drawing is less about drawing from step-by-step shapes and lines, and more about anatomy- how the form interacts as a whole. A bit more appropriate for those who already have some background in drawing than those just beginning, but undoubtedly a useful tool for the beginner as well; you can never go wrong with such well noted and illustrated reference material. Hogarth also covers the changes of the structures according to perspective, though notes on the face and hands are less in number than those on the body as a whole. However, there are books from the same artist, on dynamic hands, and drawing the head as well, so if you find yourself needing more guidelines for those structures, there are resources for it.
M**6
Excited to learn from this book!
This book is great! First one I received had some sticky substance on the cover and side but it was promptly replaced. TY!
H**E
A note of Caution
Rather than add to the dozens of wonderful and true things that have already been said about this book, I would just like to add one bit of caution. Though I believe this is probably the best book you will find on drawing difficult foreshortened positions (as this was/is my biggest challenge and this book has been a tremendous help) the artist in this book somehow misses something very basic in drawing the body. There is a way the body naturally tilts when more weight is put on one leg than the other. Unless I am deeply mistaken, the artist in this book fails to account for the tilt that occurs between the hips and shoulders in response to this weight shift. IE if all your weight is on your right leg, that side of the hip will almost always be higher and the shoulder is normally lower on that same side as the gap between the bottom of the rib cage and the top of the hip closes. As far as I know -- unless I am completely blind --, not a single picture in this book accounts for this. And when it does it is because the body is in an action that requires it. Not to take ANYTHING from this book or this artist, but this seems so bizzare to me that I feel like I must be mistaken here. Every other art book I have accounts for and mentions this, and if you look at any of the 'old masters' drawings you will notice that this sort of position was used quite often in depicting the standing figure. Infact just google the statue of david and you will see what im talking about. Whatever you think of that, this book is still the best book on the issue.
S**N
Another former student weighs in...
I was fortunate to be one the many students of Hogarth when he taught figure drawing in Los Angeles. He was a remarkable teacher, and his drawing style, and teaching style, is certainly "dynamic". All his books are great, but "Dynamic Figure Drawing" is a particular favorite. While you may find Hogarth's comic book roots not to your taste (and you don't want to have your art look too "Hogarth") - don't deprive yourself of his books. He has much to offer, and many details about the figure that are very valuable. My drawing has been forever impacted and improved because of what he taught me - in class and from his books. Just because you absorb much from his books (and you will) it doesn't follow that you will adopt his "comic book" style as well. Learn from him, and many other artists' works, and consider yourself well-rounded!
L**E
Reference Book
This is a great reference book for any artist interested in improving their study of anatomy. I have wanted it for years and I find it to be a great addition to my art library.
A**I
The Holy Grail of Dynamic Figure Drawing
Hogarth was one of the first (if not the first) to draw the human form in what we now know as the exaggerated pose of comic book art. One of the most difficult tasks in achieving this, is being able to think up the pose (a pose that may not be easy to find in real life) and then successfully draw it. In conjunction with his other book "Dynamic Anatomy", Hogarth makes sure you understand not only the anatomy, but every defining subtle detail of the human figure that is normally taken for granted and not consciously identified. Moreover, he draws and describes each part in three dimensional shapes and uses metaphorical descriptions that can't be forgotten. Also, I find his instruction for the order in which to draw each of each body parts to be key. This makes the formerly daunting task of creating a pose in your head so much easier, you'll be amazed. The only thing I wish there was more of in many of his books is reference of the female figure, but there's still enough there to get the job done, and enough references in other publications that can help. Just be sure to learn the fundamentals in "Dynamic Anatomy". Some of it is touched on in this book, but it helps to get full details from the other.
S**N
Heroic, Stunning!
Dynamic Figure Drawing by Burne Hogarth is an explosion of human motion. The text, like the drawings, is crisp and forthright. There are no unnecessary lines in Hogarth's sketches or his dialogue on how to create them. This is the book to give anyone, of any age, with, or without talent. The beauty of the illustrations almost eclipses their value as examples. The figures curl, cringe and almost seem to launch from their empty backgrounds. There are no distractions of composition, just the human body in motion, caught on paper. The static, frozen, two dimensional renderings of anatomy previously available to artists don't give a clue as to how the bones, muscles and tendons will flex with movement. Hogarth's work clearly and beautifully shows how to capture the human body in motion. If you love art, of any form, you will find endless enjoyment in this book. If you are an artist you will find it an invaluable anatomical reference. This is the book to give anyone interested in art, but in the hands of the very young, that person just forming their talent, it would be invaluable.
C**N
livraison rapide
Bien
E**O
Perfekte Raumillusion Figur Zeichnen
Eine moderne - zeitgemäße Version dreidimensionaler Figur Zeichnung die sich an der Technik der großen Meister der Renaissance orientiert. Das Buch vermittelt klar verständlich Schritt für Schritt wie diese räumliche Illusion entsteht. Großartiges Lehrbuch.
S**N
Great Art Book!!!
This book is a great art book. I have purchased most of this author's books and they are well done. The only thing negative is it would be nice to have drawings of more non-perfect people figures to provide more variety.
S**R
Recommended resource for artists, animators, sculptors and computer artists.
More than any book on the subject of figure drawing. It took my figure drawing to another level. Brilliant poses to refer to for not a very large book. Although chapters are not titled plainly, it provides guidance in foreshortening, rendering, proportions, figures in perspective and motion. It makes me want to draw.
J**Y
Immancabile
Nella libreria di un illustratore non può mancare qualche volume di Hogart. Sempre utilissimo per lo studio e il disegno della figura umana.
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