Never too late: How I learned to draw from imagination at age 48 (part one)

Last weekend, I had a birthday. I turned fif–. Excuse me. I turned fift-.

Still working on that. Suffice it to say, it was a big one.

When I started this blog, I was just a tender, nubile lass of 48. My goals — apart from the bathtub full of money — were to motivate myself to keep up with an art and writing practice, and to have a record of my progress. I’d imagined I could be a resource for people wanting to learn to paint: I could pass on what I learned in my studies, and any readers I had could learn side-by-side with me.

I’ve since learned that people prefer to learn from folks who know what they’re doing. Go figure.

So in this (two-part) post, I’m going to turn it over to the experts. All of the resources that have brought me “aha” moments. But first, a bit of history.

I was not a kid who drew. That was Richie Lamb (SO cute). I was the kid who loved to read, and who wrote short stories, and who wanted to be a veterinarian. In college, I was an art history major, but only because I liked pretty things and had no idea what I wanted to do with my life (I’d discovered that being a vet was the world’s saddest job). I took a drawing class there, as well as a few other drawing and painting classes throughout my adulthood, and then started weekly painting classes at The Art Academy at the culmination of this blog.

You’ve probably taken similar drawing classes. The teacher puts apples on the tables, and everyone does their best to make their apple look better than the person’s sitting next to them. Every few moments someone sticks their pencil out in front of them to measure the exact angle of their stem. The next week it’s bottles. Bottles are harder, and people studiously try to capture the itty bitty reflections and the lettering on the label. You think yours looks pretty good, compared to the person sitting next to you.

At The Art Academy, it was the same. “There’s no reason to know how to draw in order to paint,” our teacher would say. “Just use your brush as an angle machine.” And so we drew with grids, breaking our canvas into squares and measuring every angle with our brush handles until it was a decent — if robotic — outline of the picture propped up next to us.

Doing this weekly, I got better at it. I no longer relied on my “angle machine” for every line — I could judge the direction and steepness of most of them closely enough. If someone had asked me at that point if I could draw, I would’ve said “Sure, if I’m looking at something.”

But if I tried to draw WITHOUT looking at something, it would look like this:

(That’s a person, by the way.)

WTF? What was I missing? How were some people able to create entire scenes of things that never happened? As much as my teachers tried to convince me that “anyone can learn to draw,” I really believed that only the Richie Lambs of the world (sigh!) would ever do it well. There was something I simply wasn’t born with.

When people who can “see” as an artist try to teach someone who can’t, it either comes off as overly tangible (a cat is simply two circles with five rectangles sticking out of them) or as so much mumbo jumbo (drawing is “seeing,” “believing,” “a lie”). And while I now know that much of that mumbo jumbo is actually true, it does little to help people understand what missing ingredient separates those who can from those who can’t.

I want to back up for a second, because I don’t want to come off as pretending to be some great artist. Clearly I am NOT. But the difference between where I started at 48:

… and where I am at fif– ahem — where I am now:

…is the difference of starting to SEE — of being able to put lines on paper and feel my way around a shape in 3d space, knowing as I do so which way I need to move, and more accurately discerning when I’ve judged incorrectly.

Clearly I’ve become fluent in mumbo-jumbo-ese. So I’ll just give you the regimen (part one).

Drawabox.com. To use a cliche, this is the equivalent of playing scales. It’s the most basic of basics — retraining your muscle memory to draw with your arm rather than your wrist, creating hundreds of boxes and checking how close you got to meeting at their vanishing points. Then cylinders. Then, if you want to go further, organic shapes like leaves. For some people, this would be unimaginable drudgery, but I’ve always thrived on this sort of busywork, especially when I feel like I’m laying a foundation. Every time I needed a break from work, or I was bored and waiting for something, out came the sketchbook. It took a couple of months of drawing boxes, but I was eventually able to visualize them in different positions, and fairly accurately draw them to their vanishing points. (I wasn’t quite sure yet WHY this was helpful, but I went with it.) And it became second nature to use my arm rather than my wrist for longer strokes, making my line quality much more confident and sure. (Bonus: Their content is FREE!)

Proko.com. After I’d gone as far as I wanted with Drawabox, I needed a new daily regimen. A friend of mine suggested Proko for figure drawing, and I jumped right in with the paid version (they have loads of free stuff as well; I can’t vouch for that). After months of drawing nothing but boxes and cylinders, it was a relief to draw humans, but… I’ll be honest: I sucked. I’d hoped to be further after my months of drudgery. It was true — definitely, unquestionably true — that my line quality was better. But comparing my ability to capture gesture from the model poses with that of the uber-talented instructor was humbling and disheartening. Much of the time, my “bean” (a form made from two oblongs that we used to synthesize the shape of a pose) was facing the wrong direction; on no occasion was I within the realm of accurate. Had I learned nothing? Furthermore, in his video critiques, the instructor kept criticizing students for “drawing the contours,” which seemed to me the art-equivalent of the thoroughly unhelpful “don’t be afraid of the ball.” If not the contours, what was I supposed to be drawing?

One of the issues I was finding was that Proko models are bumpy. Covering their arms, legs, and torsos were muscles I didn’t know existed (sorry, dear husband!) and that seemed to be in different places in every pose. While we could ignore these while drawing “the bean,” eventually the instructor was adding many of them to his drawing as “landmarks.” I couldn’t understand this. The church on the corner is a landmark, because it’s ALWAYS ON THE CORNER. It doesn’t sometimes appear two blocks up and shaped like a bank.

I realized that I didn’t know enough about the human body to be able to draw it intuitively. I was drawing the bumps, but I didn’t know what the bumps were, so I was once again simply relying on my “angle machine.” I’d always heard that you shouldn’t study anatomy until you’re comfortable with gesture, or your figures will be stiff, and that might be good advice. But I didn’t think I’d be capable of drawing gesture without better understanding anatomy. So I doubled down and invested in the 3-part Proko anatomy class. (Full disclosure: I attempted to memorize the dictionary in high school because I thought it would help me with my SATs. That’s just how I roll. This process may be more than many people need.)

This is where I started to understand what I’d gained by starting with Drawabox. When faced with an entire, contorted, bumpy body, I’d been overwhelmed and stymied. But when faced with drawing, say, the form of a ribcage, and then eventually visualizing where that ribcage would be placed, and how it would be rotated in certain poses, it was much more manageable to understand how it lived in 3-d space. My drawings — compared with the instructor’s drawing of the same — began to be more accurate. What’s more, I learned and began to understand the bones and muscles, so I was able to see the “landmarks” — tiny depressions or curves that were sometimes mere shadows on the surface but that helped to define form and proportion, and place other features.

Have you ever read Roald Dahl’s “The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar”? (You MUST!) In this book within a book, Henry Sugar has just read the account of a man who can see without his eyes, Imhrat Kahn. Figuring he could use this skill to cheat at gambling, Henry undertakes a years-long meditation practice to attempt to harness the ability. Finally:

Sometime within the tenth month, Henry became aware, just as Imhrat Kahn had done before him, of a slight ability to see an object with his eyes closed. When he closed his eyes and stared at something hard, with fierce concentration, he could actually see the object he was looking at.

“It’s coming to me!” he cried. “I’m doing it! It’s fantastic!”

I had my Henry Sugar moment several months into my drawing regime. Until that moment, I’d only drawn what my regimen had told me to draw: boxes or cylinders, ribcages or pelvises, or –badly — the swoop of the human form. I’d never attempted to draw something from imagination, because, well, that just wasn’t something I did. But now I attempted it. I drew a giraffe.

I’m not going to claim it was a great giraffe — I’m not familiar enough with a giraffe’s body to visualize it well enough for accuracy. But as I moved my pencil on the page, I wasn’t just drawing the outline of a giraffe. My pencil was understanding how the giraffe’s body lived in 3-d space, with foreshortening and form. I suddenly understood what had been meant all along by “don’t draw the contours,” and “drawing is seeing.” I was starting to see. And it was fantastic!

Obviously, there’s more to drawing (and digital painting, which I like, and do) than this, and in part two of this post I’ll explore some of the other resources that I’ve found invaluable while learning about light, color, composition, facial expression, and digital painting.

Stay tuned!

The Midnight Disease

It’s been a year since my last post, and what a year it’s been! Peace in the Middle East, President Obama back in the driver’s seat, that crazy giant fan they erected that seems like it might put an end to global warming — who would’ve thought that would work?

Erm… no. But we won’t dwell.

Looking back at my last post, I can see how it was a bit of a cliffhanger: Woman torches website of prominent organization… and then… nothing. Was she fired? Now living on the streets? Bumped off? Nah — as far as drama goes, it was a complete nonstarter. Got the site finished. Client happy. Got paid. Yawn. Plenty of other humiliations small and large since then.

But this blog is really only about my humiliations in one realm: “art.” And here, as with the world at large right now, there’s been both big changes and a feeling of constant stasis.

Over a year ago, I wrote about my classes at The Art Academy, and how after months of painting only in greyscale, we still had not yet been introduced to color. Well, that was a year ago! Now, after another year of weekly classes (up to, of course, a couple of months ago) we’re finally there! Color!

Well, one color. Brown.

One of the frustrating things I’ve found about classes at the Art Academy is the lack of a transparent agenda. Clearly they have a method. I’m now one table up from the kids’ table and I can see that nothing is winged: There are the same compositions of Dopey and the Oven Mitt, the same story about Jim’s sister and her school dance dress. But we, the students. are completely in the dark about where we’re headed. Thus it was that after endless weeks of painting and repainting the same ghastly grey head, my friend Becky finally reached the precipice — she was given a list of colors to buy and told to come in the next week with 16 toned canvasses. Oh, the excitement! We were all grey with envy. But alas, those 16 toned canvasses were fated not for great masterworks of color, but for the next stage of the mysterious process: underpaintings. An endless slog of single-color copies of NC and Andrew Wyeths, designed to break us down until only the strong are left standing. (Or maybe it’s to teach us about value. But I don’t know, do I?)

And now we’re in a pandemic, and I’m stalled out painting in one single, dark color. Pretty frickin symbolic, no?

I needed something else.

Have you ever heard of the Midnight Disease? It may or may not have been coined in Michael Chabon’s great novel about the creative life, “Wonder Boys” — at least that’s where I heard it. To quote Chabon:

“The midnight disease is a kind of emotional insomnia; at every conscious moment its victim—even if he or she writes at dawn, or in the middle of the afternoon—feels like a person lying in a sweltering bedroom, with the window thrown open, looking up at a sky filled with stars and airplanes, listening to the narrative of a rattling blind, an ambulance, a fly trapped in a Coke bottle, while all around him the neighbours soundly sleep.”

Not sure if you’ve experienced the midnight disease? You haven’t experienced the midnight disease.

Before these last few weeks, it had been awhile for me. 2016. I know that, because I recently dug up the picture book manuscripts I’d written back then, and once again those dang manuscripts started rattling around in my head like “a fly trapped in a Coke bottle,” waking me up in the middle of the night, and sending me to my computer early, early, early — this time not to fiddle with the story, but to attempt to illustrate them. Myself. (You did see Dopey and the Oven Mitt, didn’t you?)

Now, I’m not someone who really loves kids. I mean, they’re fine. Whatevs. But the picture book form is so… elegant. It’s poetry, really (even if it’s not!) — every word has to be carefully chosen, every image has to advance the story, every character needs to express his emotion clearly enough for a nonreader. What an incredibly fulfilling challenge for someone who loves both art and writing!

But I do realize that I’m not the only one who feels that way. Thousands of actual artists and writers want to publish a picture book. I’ve seen the work of some incredibly talented people who somehow have never managed to get published.

It makes my stomach hurt a little.

And I also know from experience, because I sent out several of these same stories to agents years ago, and heard… nothing. And looking back at them again, I still like many of them. I’m not going to be convinced that they’re not good stories. Sending them out into the void and getting no feedback whatsoever was enough of a crotch-kick that I stopped writing them completely.

So I know. You don’t have to look at me that way.

I’ve created the first of 5 or so illustrations I’ll do for this first story, about a dandelion with big aspirations, and her naysayer neighbors (that would be YOU). I’ll continue to post as I go along, along with resources and things that I learn along this new path.

Back soon!