The Quick Pose: A Compilation of Gestures and Thoughts on Figure Drawing
By Erin Meads
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About this ebook
Author Erin Meads defines the quick pose as figure drawings than can be executed in less than 20 minutes. The majority of images in this book took less than five minutes to draw; their brevity encourages more dynamic poses from the model and challenges the artist to make quick decisions about what to include — and even more significantly, what not to include. Topics include symmetry, foreshortening, light and shadow, drapery, and other essential elements of figure drawing. Artists, art students, art teachers, and anyone who draws will appreciate these well-illustrated insights.
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The Quick Pose - Erin Meads
the
QUICK POSE
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Special thanks to Mary Sauer, Kristal Lindheimer, Michelle Erickson, and Amy Christensen for helping me get my thoughts into words. Thank you to the fantastic models from the Department of Visual Arts at Brigham Young University. Without them, this publication would not exist. Thank you to my students and for their patience with me. Often times I feel as though I am the student. Thank you to my teachers and to those who have taught me throughout my life. I appreciate your willingness to share. Thank you to my family and friends who always show great love and support. And lastly, thanks to my husband, Matt, for his constant love and encouragement.
Copyright
Copyright © 2015 by Erin Meads
All rights reserved.
Artwork, text, and book design by the author.
Drawings are on 18 x 24
newsprint with conté or charcoal.
Bibliographical Note
This Dover edition, first published in 2020, is an unabridged republication of the work originally published by Erin Meads in 2015.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Meads, Erin, author.
Title: The quick pose: a compilation of gestures and thoughts on figure drawing / Erin Meads.
Description: Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 2020. | This Dover edition, first published in 2020, is an unabridged republication of the work originally published by Erin Meads in 2015.
Identifiers: LCCN 2019039451 | ISBN 0486841367 | ISBN 9780486841366
Subjects: LCSH: Human figure in art. | Figure drawing—Technique.
Classification: LCC NC765 .M395 2020 | DDC 743.4—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019039451
Manufactured in the United States by LSC Communications
84136701
www.doverpublications.com
2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1
2020
CONTENTS
FOREWORD
INTRODUCTION
GESTURE
WEIGHT & BALANCE
SYMMETRY
FORESHORTENING
LIGHT & SHADOW
HEADS
DRAPERY
FINAL THOUGHTS
FOREWORD
by Mary Sauer
I met Erin in 2007 when she and I were both undergraduate art students. We later were apprentices together in the same studio when we were still developing as artists, in an environment rich with talented instructors and mentors. We have been in a number of workshops together over the years in locations as varied as Jackson Hole and Manhattan. As I have looked back over my art education, I see how rare great instruction to art students really is, and how difficult it can be to get a holistic understanding of traditional drawing as skill-based art diminishes in importance throughout the country. Many art teachers would rather spend time discussing the philosophical meaning of a gesture rather than the basic principles of how a drawing achieves convincibility. Frustratingly, distortion and obscurity are encouraged and emotion is valued more highly than expression with accuracy. It was my experience in art departments at universities for both my Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees that the only departments that valued traditional drawing skills were the illustration and animation programs. I find it amazing that many in the art world, including some art teachers, dismiss the need for strong figure drawing skills in these and all other disciplines as commercialism instead of embracing those skills as invaluable to an artist’s development.
I believe that the concepts learned through drawing the figure apply to all aspects of art-making and can be interpreted by every artist differently as they develop their abilities. The figure has always been my favorite subject in art, both in