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Cheap Joe's Artist Tip #0004
Getting Figures Into Shape adapted from The Palette Magazine
 
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#1: Reflected Light
#3: The Order of Attraction
#5: This Old Barn
#7: Stretching Canvas onto a Frame: Fredrix
#9: How to Paint Varied Edges
#11: Color in Shadow
#13: Tips on Value Sketching
arrow #15: Competing in Painting
arrow #17: Paint BIG
arrow #19: Intensity Contrast
arrow #21: The Right Gesture
arrow #23: Edges
#2: Arial Perspective
#4: The Figure Into Shape
#6: Fear and Courage
#8: Landscape Thoughts
#10: Sneaky Darks
#12: Adding Metallic Foil
arrow #14: Design For Dummies
arrow #16: Getting a New Slant
arrow #18: Value Contrast
arrow #20: Round and Flat
arrow #22: Getting Into Shape
 
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THE SHAPE OF YOUR FIGURE
The mere mention of getting our figures into shape makes us all a little nervous; we know we should watch our diet and get more exercise. But getting your figure into shape is exactly what you have to do if youre a figure painter and you want to effectively design your painting. Its not easy. If we have some experience in painting, we dont have difficulty seeing boats or barns or flowers as simple design elements that can be shifted, arranged, and reordered to fit our painting¡¦s composition. To us, boats and barns and flowers are just things, but a figure is a person¡Xsomeone we might know. We have a hard time thinking of people we might know as design elements. It would seem rude to shift, arrange, or reorder them. Our instinct is to leave them where they are and paint them exactly as they appear. But, more often than not, that instinct leads to ineffective paintings. Learning to see our figure subject as a shape is the first step in creating a better design for our figure painting.

The First Step
The first step indesigning your figurepainting is to ignore allinterior detail anddraw your figure (orfigures) as a simplesilhouette. By carefullycapturing the smallchanges in the contour of a form, you can make the shape surprisingly descriptive. With a simple silhouette you are able to assess the effectiveness of your design and arrange elements (see "Moving Things Around) to create an interesting use of space.
Comparing Sides
By drawing a line through the axis of your shape and comparing the two sides, you can see how varied and interesting its contour is. Shapes that are symmetrical are less interesting than asymmetrical shapes. Notice the difference in the contour of the sides of the two shapes shown here
The Simple Silhouette
When we look at a person, the first thing we notice is his eyes,or his nose, or the shape of his mouth. But to effectively design your painting you must forget the interior features and look instead for the simple silhouette of his whole form. The shape,size, and placement of this form is critical to the success of your overall design.




Interior Shapes
When interior shapes (such as the hands in this painting) are reduced to a simple silhouette, you can assess their effect in your design. Note how little modeling is necessary when a shape has an interesting and descriptive silhouette.
Seeing Negative Space
By reducing the figure to a silhouette, you are able to see it as a simple design element that can be changed in size and rearranged to create an interesting composition. Here, I have also described the negative (or surrounding) space as a shape to determine its effectiveness in my design.
TRY THIS...
Take an old figure painting and try drawing the silhouette of the figure. Is it interesting? Would a different viewpoint have improved it? Would a closer viewpoint have produced more interesting negative shape? Here's a chance to redesign your painting and try again.
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