my mom, an artist, only gave me one thing to teach me art. she said, "art is just learning how to see properly". I've used this to teach myself art, then I went to an Atelier later to refine it all. The info in this video will absolutely help you, this guy is 100% right.
@Enrommie Жыл бұрын
Fr I just tell myself to get good and process the image better
@leslievincent8565 Жыл бұрын
I agree, 100%!
@kathleenstoin671 Жыл бұрын
She was right.
@ciaralee9760 Жыл бұрын
I'm really excited to see this video
@visualsweets Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately, my mother was not an artist. Took me 30 years to realize that I needed to learn how to see to be able to draw well. I had that ability at 12 years old but at some point I lost it. I try every to get that ability back.
@neon-kq6wz Жыл бұрын
"draw what you see, not what you think you see" I learned this concept of symbols a few years ago and it improved / developed my drawing skills tremendously. I think this is the best drawing advice to give beginners who want to improve their technical drawing skills :> 👍
@goblishsensei Жыл бұрын
yeah it's a concept that really deserves more light
@halzion Жыл бұрын
I've heard that phrase a thousand times but only NOW i genuinely understand what it means and why. i feel like im slowly opening my third eye the more i realise how my brain actually works. this video helped so much with simply understanding WHY. why draw upside down? why do i keep sucking at foreshortening? now it all makes sense :O
@HarleyF69420 Жыл бұрын
I do try to draw what I see but my hand does not see what I'm drawing
@GBArche Жыл бұрын
what does that even mean
@HarleyF69420 Жыл бұрын
@@GBArche I can't draw
@Suryeon555 ай бұрын
“Draw what you see, not what you THINK you see” the only advice that stuck with me since a kid - from Neil Buchanan - Art Attack
@kirklangdon15914 ай бұрын
Art Attack was THE BEST! Haha totally forgot about that show!
@ameedahmawalin32273 ай бұрын
Omfg! You have upped my drawing skills and brain health game. I am becoming trilingual as well. Ty so much! I am fast approaching 70 & needed this boost!
@Bymaverickstud2 ай бұрын
that was my philosophy as a Kid, cheers to the 8years old version of e
@Alwayssjuicy2 ай бұрын
My teacher always says this!!
@bigchonc1Ай бұрын
I think to a point yes, but if all every artist did was draw exactly how they saw the world, there would be no variation in art, just realism. There would be no Basquiats, no O’keefes, and no Pollocks
@m.santiago859210 ай бұрын
Its probably not that great to draw in the dark, but I used to sketch in bed with only the dim light of looking at my reference photo on my cell phone. Since I can only see the shape of my page and not much of what is going on paper it allowed me to relax and draw freely. In 2 weeks my art had drastically changed. And now its easier to draw all the time now.
@m.santiago859210 ай бұрын
this was a very good video and I will be trying these practices thanks for sharing
@heartache.architect4 ай бұрын
i feel this so much
@ForHonorUSMC25 күн бұрын
For some reason, I always grew up thinking it was 'cheating' to look at anything when you draw (e.g. using a reference). This video just madee realize why I feel like I've never really progressed. Always thought it was 'pure' to draw from my mind, but they always suck! Thank you.
@Rays_K21 күн бұрын
Thinking that reference is for cheater is one of the most dangerous mindset for an artist to have, I was one of many artist that fall for it. 3 years wasted with miniscule progress to my art skill, right until I finally decide to use reference then guess what, I finally started to see progress. You can always do both, draw from reference (To understand what you are drawing) and draw from imagination (To reinforce the things you learn without relying on reference) , mixed it. Its far more better that way.
@Gruff_rift12 күн бұрын
Liberally why I've been stunted as an artist but I've been getting out of it
@nr1877 Жыл бұрын
as a psychology student and an artist, i love how deep the connection of art and psychology is, far deeper than what we thought in class (at least at my uni and other schools i knew). i swear that most people in the psychology department of my uni doesn't have any idea about this. thank you for bringing this topic and maybe i'll take this not only to improve my art but as a research idea 💗
@peppermintgal4302 Жыл бұрын
Be careful because the right brain / left brain specialization stuff has been recently refuted, or shown to be _broadly_ untrue. (I _think_ there is some specialization, like obviously its true both lobes govern one half of the body, and ironically, its the opposite side, and I _think_ syntax is handled by one of the halves of the frontal lobe, and vocabulary the other --- though that in and of itself shows that no, the right side is not broadly uninvolved in language.) Psychology is a constantly evolving field, like any other, and it has its persistant myths and outdated models that bounce around pop media like any other. If most people in the university haven't heard these ideas, they are either very novel, (DEFINITELY not the case, the right brain left brain stuff have been around since I was a kid,) or they're... not well substantiated despite being given time to prove their merits. (Tbf, again, the right brain left brain stuff only recently was definitively shown wrong.)
@josemosqueramoncaleano1711 Жыл бұрын
It would be nice to make a thesis work based on the relation between art production (from the artist's perspective) and psychology
@TheMatrixofMeaning Жыл бұрын
Art was originally a mental and spiritual development and communication medium not just making pretty pictures. It was always connected to how the mind works
@toddbowlin5844 Жыл бұрын
Betty Edwards - Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain.
@flouncymom Жыл бұрын
My passions were always Art and Psychology. So I became an Art Psychotherapist. It is so fascinating what information comes out in someone’s Art. We’re trained to interpret it and then use that in the process of therapy. There’s also the branch of art therapy that emphasizes how just making art is therapeutic. Regardless, if it’s something you’re interested in doing as a career? It’s A LOT of schooling (Master’s minimum) and training to get the required registration and board certification designations. I don’t know the process outside US). But, if it’s something you’re interested in just reading about I’m happy to recommend some authors. Wishing you the best!
@art_krisis Жыл бұрын
YES!! After graduating from art school, I can’t stress how many art profs I’ve had saying “just focus on the shapes! The contour!” Etc etc. Once u see it, u can apply it to EVERYTHING. Another tip that has helped me a lot is looking at the negative space to help me position things properly, those are shapes too! Love this sm, and the psychological experiments u explained were fascinating to hear
@ivannnyy Жыл бұрын
This is quite late. But I know that I have to stress on the shape, and 8 have been doing that but i have a hard time with like what comes first. So like if ur drawing the shoulder from a 3/4 perspective, then like what comes first? Like do you see the chest and some of the shoulder? Or do you just draw the arm/shoulder. I've been trying to train myself to draw from memory but this has been insanely hard for me to understand what comes before the other
@art_krisis Жыл бұрын
@@ivannnyy Hi! No worries, so sorry for my late reply, I just saw this now!! I think whichever shape u see first is the first one u draw, and then whatever u see next, u draw next. So on and so forth till you’re satisfied with the level of detail! I don’t think there’s any wrong or right order, tho I do think generally going from bigger shapes to smaller shapes can be helpful (tho not always necessary). When doing studies, I jump around a lot. What I draw first depends on what about the subject catches my eye first, cuz most likely, that is what’ll catch others ppls eyes as well! Or if not, I then get to bring ppls attention to what I notice and think is important. When doing an original piece, I try to rough out what I consider are more major important shapes then fill in the details later, u get to decide what’s more important and what’s minor! And don’t feel locked down, u can always jump back and forth between major and minor (theres always erasers, white paint, and techniques to replace sections of paper lolol) When it comes to drawing from memory, at least for me, it’s not rly a matter of what order I take, but more like TONS of practice, observation, and repetition until it becomes muscle memory. U naturally build an image library in ur head over time. Soon it’ll sorta become like handwriting, how u just /know/ to write the letters in ur own way cuz you’ve done it so much, if that makes sense! Best of luck
@ivannnyy Жыл бұрын
@@art_krisis lmao, no worries but thank you so much! I've kinda been putting off doing so much studies so I'd be able to draw from memory because I like to keep art something I'm really passionate about and I would hate for it to feel like a chore. You are right though, the things that catch my eye first are usually the biggest shapes or the most important so I'll definitely try to portrait that more into my studies. Thank youu :))
@art_krisis Жыл бұрын
@@ivannnyy if it helps, ik lots of ppl who also dislike studies and will add in other things like decorations, fantasy elements, whatever they like to make it more fun! but overall i think observation solves lots of problems when learning to draw and studies is just one way of learning to observe. but it can be done just going about ur day, noticing the lines, curves, colors, and nuances of around u! np
@indonesiashounen8168 Жыл бұрын
@@art_krisishy idk what you mean by negative space,iam begginer and non native english,may you explain more?
@llamalemone4398 Жыл бұрын
As someone who started "drawing" around a month ago (about an hour a day), I realized I have been doing this unintentionally. When I first tried drawing people I could NEVER get the proportions right/ faces to look good, but for fun, I decided to trace a couple photos of myself and my friends, and doing that gave me a way better (if still very imperfect) understanding of how people are supposed to be proportioned. The mental image I had of people was NOT people shaped lmao. Great video!
@twotruckslyrics Жыл бұрын
😂😭same same. what i THOUGHT was a body was actually realllly short lmao
@Jiji-yn6ky Жыл бұрын
Good point
@roymakescomics Жыл бұрын
Look up the Loomis method for figure drawing..it will change your world
@Susan.Burns63 Жыл бұрын
Well, you convinced this old Nanna to give it a go 👍🇦🇺
@Alabanzas159 Жыл бұрын
I love drawing figure sicks. And circles. U confuse me more. I want to learn but I can't
@wdvest833311 ай бұрын
I'm 75 yrs old and I have been waiting for this video,. Thank you so much!
@Horzinicla11 ай бұрын
75?? I hope I have your enthusiasm and curiosty when I get to your age. I wish you the best dude
@shefali.v507 ай бұрын
Soo inspiring!!
@Earlybeggar5 ай бұрын
Drop ur ipad lil timmy
@nikofromtheamazinggameoneshot5 ай бұрын
@@Earlybeggar no need to be so disrespectful also he has a playlist full of tons of songs definitely over 15 years old
@pjthestargirile3 ай бұрын
@@Horzinicla same
@donde2k8 ай бұрын
“I can talk about it all I want, but the best thing is for you to just try it out” is the best advice in the video.
@Tagging_Swag13 күн бұрын
Oqñp So 😮 Si 👏🏽 Yo Lo Si O Si PPP Si
@Tagging_Swag13 күн бұрын
Si 👍 Mmap pi p O P
@MElaughs Жыл бұрын
My guitar teacher told me "you'll never be able to play what you can think." I convert this lesson to everything, including drawing. What you create will never, ever be the level you want it to be, but it will always be better than it was. Look at your drawings from 3 years ago and you'll see what I mean.
@atticusezis10398 ай бұрын
Your teacher is wrong. Anyone who can mimic what they hear is capable of this.
@MElaughs8 ай бұрын
@@atticusezis1039 the point he was making is that the hands will never ever CREATE the level of artistry that the brain could imagine, mimicry is not creation. Every artist wishes they could be better and can pinpoint the flaws in every piece they create whereas the beholder may see it as perfection.
@shartbossmaster6 ай бұрын
screenshotting this cuz I need to remember this thank you😋
@coffeeawakening Жыл бұрын
My advice for artists is to deeply use reference photos especially if it's unknown to you. Then to incorporate your left side, try to use things you do know about the image. If it's clothing, play with the style, make it more loose, add wrinkles to the shirt, make stains, patches, even if the reference photo doesn't have it. Just use it for inspiration and stylize it, improvise, make it your own and always add a bit of you to it what you know.
@sum67-u8j10 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@brxn0177 ай бұрын
I have a question. When it comes to drawing something without reference, would we have to know what we’re drawing with your tip of using reference photos so that we can be able to draw something without reference?
@definitelyrealfortnite7 ай бұрын
That would work if i was capable of doing any of that to begin with.
@danielleford95316 ай бұрын
@@definitelyrealfortniteYou can do it just give it a try👍
@NearOTP10 ай бұрын
someone remind me to come back to this video in a year please
@JoannelopezAmen6 ай бұрын
Come back
@NearOTP6 ай бұрын
@yetundelopez7839 I said in a year man..
@Kivaylo5 ай бұрын
@@NearOTP LMAO
@frootypatooty61813 ай бұрын
Come back dawg
@NearOTP3 ай бұрын
@frootypatooty6181 IN A YEAR. IT'S BEEN 6 MONTHS.
@ArianaAtanazio20 күн бұрын
I'm a illustrator since I know myself as a person and now I'm 28 and this is one of the best videos I ever seen in years about the subject. Congratulations, so young with this knowledge will led you far :) thank your for making it!
@donswords66717 ай бұрын
Betty's "Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain." is worth every penny. IMHO. Thanks.
@كريمة-بوقمر5 ай бұрын
❤ i like this book i reread it more than i remember
@celery8059 Жыл бұрын
I find that, when drawing from reference if you time yourself for 20 seconds to lay down the base outline as fast as possible it helps to keep everything in proportion! You’re not getting enough time to analyze the image as familiar items, but abstract sections of light and shadow.
@mothmaru Жыл бұрын
Speed sketching with a pen too is really good for practice :3 in places where you’re almost constantly moving- and sketching with a pen to improve line confidence!
@ridgebonnickart7 ай бұрын
Thank you for this ❤
@alexfitchcreates Жыл бұрын
for people with ADHD: flip your reference image upside down so your brain doesn't try to draw the 'symbols' it associates with certain things (legs/arms/faces/etc) and helps you focus more on the lines and details, shapes, etc.
@spacecatdet4206 ай бұрын
I'll be trying this 💜 thank you
@RDHEYY_006 ай бұрын
thankyou for this
@alexfitchcreates6 ай бұрын
@@RDHEYY_00 got you fam'
@balar23056 ай бұрын
Tyssmmm
@alexfitchcreates6 ай бұрын
@@balar2305 :)
@kakaiyu Жыл бұрын
My elementary school art teacher was incredible. She started our lessons with this. In ELEMENTARY SCHOOL.
@goblishsensei Жыл бұрын
nah doing this in elementary school is wild lmao, your teacher's a legend
@hiilikeyourbeard Жыл бұрын
a good art teacher will change your entire life
@defendersart3051 Жыл бұрын
@@hiilikeyourbeard agreed !!!
@pe-ka184411 ай бұрын
same. I didn't understand what the exercise was all about at the time but finally my eyes have been opened. he was good
@ichangemychannelname11 ай бұрын
yess same mine made us practice contour drawing and thanks to this video I finally fully get why
@TheToucanWithers11 ай бұрын
Whenever I'm trying to draw something that I'm entirely unfamiliar with or not used to drawing it always felt like I could physically feel like something was blocking me from drawing the way I want it to look. I could tell that I was trying to draw it the same way I've done past drawings and I could never find a way to break out of it. It genuinely felt like one half of my brain was yelling at the other to just show me how to do something correctly and the other just wasn't responding, but now seeing that there is a real reason as to why I was getting that constrictive feeling is so helpful, especially when there is exercises to fix the issue. Great video man I've yet to check out your other content but I'm subscribing cause I can't wait to see.
@rutbrea87964 ай бұрын
You're a genius! I'm goingwatch this video again , and again , and again. I'm an artist ! And have been since I was 13. Today, I am 76. Your words make so much sense! Thank you, sweetheart 😘
@CarpeCakem2007 Жыл бұрын
I’m so grateful for your video! I’m a newly retired nurse (left-handed) with right sided stroke injury. My mother and grandmother were artists as well as my dad. And all three of my children. I could never draw. Until the stroke. Your video describes perfectly what happened in my brain to make this possible.
@janinafisher1017 ай бұрын
Neuroplasticity. Isn't the brain amazing. If you haven't yet, you may like to read Jill Bolte Taylor's book "My Stroke of Insight." She was a neuroanatomist who studied how the brain worked, and she had a stroke. So while she was in this situation she was also able to observe, from her knowledge and perspective of her brain research, her own brain and behaviour post-stroke. As a nurse you may have already read it, but it's also good info for people in general. How this all works is just amazing.
@DazzlingAction Жыл бұрын
Here's a neat drawing exercise. Draw random shapes with your right eye. Draw random shapes with your left eye. Draw random shapes but blind contour. Then draw some with both. And then do one up side down based on a reference.
@goblishsensei Жыл бұрын
nice, thanks for the list
@AllinAllisAllweAllare Жыл бұрын
My art teacher in high school explained this to me, she explained it very well, and something in my brain clicked. After that I went from not being able to draw to drawing very good realistic drawings. This was 25 years ago, so I can not remember just how she put it, but basically, you draw the lines you see, not the symbol your brain wants you to draw.
@stellamariss333511 ай бұрын
That one blind person 🧍. Oh
@Tahtea3339 ай бұрын
Okay but what about when you draw from your brain?????????
@roseaphile9 ай бұрын
the way people draw from their brains is like having a library. when you want to reference a particular fact, you find the book you have closet to the topic. drawing is just like this, the hours of real life practice can be thought of as book-collecting. more hours = more books to obtain and go back to. so when you free hand draw, you go to the books in your mind and cross-reference between to the get the best answer (the best way to draw what want you want).@@Tahtea333
@anblueboot53649 ай бұрын
@@Tahtea333 from what I learned/figured out from my Art mentor, as I‘m still an Art Baby, you never actualy draw from your brain/imagination. You always draw from reference but as somepoint your inner image library gets so huge that you need less references while having fun drawing. So you still draw from references but those are deeply remembered and even them who went professional which only means they get paid: they still use reference for their paid comissions etc. Depending on the scenes/character etc they‘re supposed to draw.
@Hallden_11 ай бұрын
Damn! This was such a good video man!! I’ve heard of the upside down drawing idea before but the way you prefaced that exercise with such a compelling argument and explanation for why it works! 100% going to practice this stuff
@jennajohnson403814 күн бұрын
I’ve been struggling a lot with my art this past year, mostly due to mental health issues, but this way of thinking makes me want to try again. I’ve done these exercises before but have never thought of them in quite this way. Hopefully this change in mindset will help me out!
@leslievincent8565 Жыл бұрын
I just found you tonight...I have heard some of these concepts from art class in high school back in 1981-1982. My art teacher used exercises from that book you referenced. I am 57 yo as of yesterday, and I absolutely LOVE your approach! It makes me want to go get my supplies out right this minute. Thank you, the world needs this, especially us striving artists.
@aishidove Жыл бұрын
happy belated birthday!
@peppermintgal4302 Жыл бұрын
I do want to caution, the concept of the right brain being creative and the left brain being logical has been broadly rebutted recently. There's _some_ specializing, (like, yes, the right brain does control a lot of the left side of the body, snd the left brain does control a lot of the right side, and as the split brain patient shows, vocabulary is done mostly by one side of the brain --- though ironically, _syntax_ is handled by the other, iirc, showing that no, language is not handled by just one side of the brain,) but its not nearly that deep or straightforward. Happy birthday, by the way! Edit: it is true enough that there isn't always a singular strategy the brain might have for a given task, and drawing demonstrates that. The functions responsible for stickfigures are a different set of functions than we engage when drawing less idealized, more accurate art. So the myth is just accurate enough that us artists have gotten something from it, even if its technically wrong.
@nolantalisman4993 Жыл бұрын
Happy belated Birthday! I hope you find happiness in your art!
@alyssagoentzel83067 ай бұрын
@@peppermintgal4302Im super curious about what you mentioned here and would love to know the references you read?
@brandonhanserd7832 Жыл бұрын
Great video man. I think the one thing that helped me the most was breaking down complex shapes into smaller simple shapes. As humans we’re attracted to shapes. The shape of your favorite car, clothing, furniture, an attractive face, body type, etc. Study things you like to draw and then, with a lot of practice, you’ll start developing your own shape language. This is part of what determines your art style.
@bissycream Жыл бұрын
that’s very insightful and helpful thank you
@seliacordero3674 Жыл бұрын
Shape language. I love that concept!
@johnnynephrite6147 Жыл бұрын
"a few years ago you're a kid"....Thats so cute! Im 60.
@VoxsPillow-ql5fh7 ай бұрын
You’re a legend 😂
@lowkeyfish_fr7 ай бұрын
Dannnnngggg you an og
@johnnynephrite61477 ай бұрын
@@lowkeyfish_fr Old Grandpa 🤪
@cruellamyers2 ай бұрын
Still cute🤌🏻❤️
@johnnynephrite61472 ай бұрын
@@cruellamyers Yes, I am😋
@gracelittle3979Ай бұрын
thank you so much for this video.i turned off all distractions, focused really hard, i tried the drawing upside down excessive a few times, critiqued what looked wrong or right, tried a few different poses, and i’m honestly getting better! i will recommend this video to anyone who wants help with art to be honest, this changed everything for me. thank you!
@user-dn9vd9xg9p5 ай бұрын
Wow. This is very similar to the way I learned to type so fast. Decades ago, my teacher said, "Do not look at the words,look at the letters. Type the letters - not the word". When I learned this style , I could type 120p.m. without ever looking at the typewriter for the keys. Unbelievable! I teach others this as well. It really works! Of course, in my old age I have become slower.
@Mystery-l2z2 ай бұрын
Break it down into individual parts
@e.9874 Жыл бұрын
this is so genuinely helpful! i think its even better than a lot of tutorials that basically just say "if you wanna draw it, draw it this way!" because so many people struggle doing it "that way" regardless, and this can help with that struggle so much! also "lets get there together bro" is a great sentiment
@flouncymom Жыл бұрын
All great advice. I have a degree in Art Education and one of the things I told my students was: draw what you see, not what you know. After explaining the concepts here. And warming up with contour drawing, etc before a drawing session as well as daily (if only 10 minutes) is really helpful in working that right brain “muscle”. Excellent video! Subbed.
@qwertyshblong Жыл бұрын
i’ve focused on lines and shapes more than the subject of a reference since i was a kid and ig that’s why arts always come more easily to me, however this helps me understand why people struggle and i think that’s equally as valuable as improving my own art for anyone that may need a different perspective on this line of thinking, try intensely focusing on a small area. whether that be simply just focusing in, splitting your reference into sections, or zooming in a lot, it may help you disconnect the subject from the forms
@skapaloka222 Жыл бұрын
i went to a figure drawing class and was able to practice this really well, but i also noticed that if I only focused on one part of a drawing at a time, and didn’t take a look at the whole form of the model and of my art often enough, and/or if I worked on one part of a body for 5 minutes and then another part of the body for 5 minutes instead of just following where my hand went as I drew, the figure would come out with the wrong proportions and an off pose, so i learned that it’s very important to be able to look over the whole figure fairly often, and it’s important to follow the steps of drawing: sketch figure, block figure with simple lines and shapes, THEN details, THEN shading, and not skip any on any part of the drawing, in addition to also looking at the shapes and contours of every part of your reference
@ghostsheet7779 ай бұрын
Im actually only good at art bc of my detail 😂😂 just look like odd shapes otherwise
@flyhunnies89222 ай бұрын
I use to turn things upside down and draw them whenever I felt something looked off. Did this on and off since i was a kid and it helped tremendously! Didn't realize it was an actual assisted method for improvement. And the contour drawing practice is actually brilliant to practice contours as opposed to symbols. Much respect..👍🏾 Edit: For reference, I've done portrait and mural commissions on and off since high school and won regional and statewide awards. Art and learning how to master it is SUCH a brilliant practice. Hated school but I love learning! This is a beautiful reminder of why balance is important.
@Dgen24711 ай бұрын
not even finished the video yet and I have to say I like how you speak ,good at explaining ,seem to understand what you are talking about very well , knowledgable ,your approach seems humble and genuine and I like how you don't seem to force information but rather push us to try it for ourselves. keep up the good work my brother. Got me keen to check out your other content.
@felischaos Жыл бұрын
"it'll make you *feel* like you've become 10x the artist" very key difference! feel vs skill skill is doing something over time to where you naturally get better at it this is the foundational principle for that! your art has great potential. technical skills should be studied if you're aiming to become *good* at art, but if you want to have *fun* with art, unless you make the time learning it fun somehow, those will always be seperate i think the way art can be percieved or mean different things is the psychology of art! but i liked hearing what you had to say about it. i think people can have different opinions and be cool with it. subbing for more! i love how you edit videos.
@goblishsensei Жыл бұрын
100% agree that technical skills need to be worked on in order to improve overall. the whole concept in this video is not to replace technical practice, but to supplement it and make it more effective, that's kinda my angle with this whole thing. thanks for your comment, i really like what you had to say.
@beccagee5905 Жыл бұрын
Good point on technical skills, I remember pushing myself, staying up late into the night painting, and at the very beginning getting headaches, from being in the art zone for hours. Many years later it takes an entire day to feel a little like that. I learned to work on technical left brain functions of art at the very start of the project, because when I get in what I call the "zone," I forget to take it into consideration. Like borders, thinking about the focus of the painting, where the horizon line will be, or perspectives. Things I might want to leave out, or move around in the painting. How many eyes wide the face is, how many noses long the face is, and how many heads tall the body is.
@trenchfry7492 Жыл бұрын
I’ve only read the first couple chapters of the book referenced, and only tried like three of the exercises including the upside down reference and there’s already been so much improvement! I’ve had a good understanding of anatomy and proportions, but it was hard to apply to art until I intentionally started to use my right brain.
@abe_is_here Жыл бұрын
i wish i could like this video twice! i’m a self taught artist and have been drawing on-and-off for about 6 years now and only recently have i picked it up again. ive felt stuck on my improvement for a very long time but this has blown my mind and i actually feel like this is what i needed to continue my artistic journey. thank you!
@CollegeEntrepreneur23452 ай бұрын
Drawing upside down… I’ve never even heard of that but it makes sense. It detaches you from caring so much about what you draw. Love it!
@samiier33246 ай бұрын
Man ive been doing all of that without realising. That's why I can quit drawing for 1 year and after coming back I regain my skills AND EVEN IMPROVE. I never tried to draw the thing , I tried to draw the lines which have an angle and which are positioned in a certain way and I always analysed the spaces between shapes/ lines/ forms. And I swear Im the biggest procrastinator when it comes to art but when I come back I improve instead of loosing my skills .
@samiier33246 ай бұрын
Because Ive learned to see long time ago when I was a child.
@pingukii Жыл бұрын
I accidentally developed these skills in class! I always used to get bored and start drawing without seeing the paper, and since the benches I used to sit at were at a weird angle, I used to draw upside down a lot! It really helped me become a better artist and better at looking at details in general! Now I'm trying to live my art since university has been a nightmare. I just wish I had started sooner!
@-TheExposition- Жыл бұрын
I'm a 45 year old man and a very good artist and this is fundamentally brilliant because it's so effective. I'm subscribing. Looking forward to seeing what other techniques you can come up w/.
@kuu666710 ай бұрын
Do you have socials? Id love to see ur art :)
@av3ngers176 ай бұрын
very humble too
@sevenirises Жыл бұрын
Excellent book recommendation. Betty Edwards was my art teacher at LATTC years ago. It was the most frustrating exercise I ever attempted but I still use it to this day.
@hollisshaner547211 ай бұрын
I started using this technique after watching your video . I'm 12 days in and have created 18 sketches. My drawing skills have improved immensely. I now map out my drawings with my left hand because I'm able to get the perspective correct more easily. Now when I draw with my right hand I find myself focusing on the details in ways that I didn't before. I have been drawing for many years and in that time I had difficulty picking up features of youth and when I use this technique I'm able to do it without issue. Thanks for posting your video; it was short and sweet and perfect for helping this season artist improve. I'm on a journey of using this technique every day.
@Quickgetmemy8 ай бұрын
I’ve never felt art was something that could be taught so effectively but this is life changing thank you
@GaryTongue-zn5diАй бұрын
ANYTHING that a single human can do can be taught to others, dumbass. Literally ANYTHING. If one human can do it, then so can others.
@Mr.Travelr Жыл бұрын
Dude I can't honestly thank you enough this is probably just what I needed so I can move forward with my art instead of staggering
@goblishsensei Жыл бұрын
keep going bro
@skabbmask Жыл бұрын
Omg so good! Putting words to what I remember doing as a kid - I was so frustrated with not being able to draw hands (before the times of social media, so I also didn't really know it was something most people struggle with) that I just went "Ok, screw it, I'll focus on drawing each individual line I can see then - I should be able to copy-paste from my eyes!" Ofc I couldn't really and it looked absolutely shit for a while, but just staring at my posed hand and analysing the lines in reference to each other really helped - like not thinking "here's a finger, and it connects to the hand here" but "that slightly curved line runs parallell to that straighter line and they meet up there by the U-shape". I think it came a lot from my work with big cross-stitch patterns. Now, hands are one of my favourite things to draw, and I'm playing around with adding fingers where there shouldn't be any and bending them in unnatural ways. Thanks for one of the few actually helpful drawing tips video! :D
@remydechef10 ай бұрын
Actually a really chill and productive channel to watch. I’m gonna drop a sub bro you need more than 20k for this
@wooyoungsdoormat385315 күн бұрын
the fact that theres content like this out here for free.... thank you man. this is lowkey lifechanging and incredible
@Sofiawhite-h5k10 ай бұрын
YES!! After graduating from art school, I can’t stress how many art profs I’ve had saying “just focus on the shapes! The contour!” Etc etc. Once u see it, u can apply it to EVERYTHING. Another tip that has helped me a lot is looking at the negative space to help me position things properly, those are shapes too! Love this sm, and the psychological experiments u explained were fascinating to hear
@YunaKatz8 ай бұрын
As a perfectionist, my inner critic is always telling me what my drawings should look like. Of course, I have no chance of living up to his idea of a perfect and “beautiful” drawing. It gets even worse when he starts comparing my drawings with those of other, much more experienced and skilled artists. Thanks a million for your brilliant video! ✨ I'm going to draw my coffee cup upside down.
@Raster_Rasper Жыл бұрын
A chill well edited video thats informative, funny and genuinely helpful? Instant sub, i love your vibes!
@broberts2847 ай бұрын
I taught exactly this, as a high school art teacher!!!! People thought it was a bit crazy! Glad it's being reinforced on social media.
@EnglishwithAlan8 ай бұрын
brilliant summary of Dr. Edwards. I've been using her book for probably as long as you've been alive, and I don't think I could add anything more. very well done. thanks. I'm going to save this and use it to introduce others to the ideas.
@autrediscours6 ай бұрын
MAAAAAAAN. it's so true and I like your speech style thanks for keeping it alive
@autrediscours6 ай бұрын
I also wanted to share some Lacanian psychoanalytic idea on Symbolic and Imaginary, combined with my travelling experience that helped me in photography. When I've been to Germany I didn't know a word in German and I took great photos because I did not attach a symbolic meaning of buildings and material stuff to their look. When I got back to Moscow, I experienced difficulties with photography and understood that the city that is too familiar to you does this thing - its symbolic meaning prevails over its imaginary meaning. So I imagined that I was in France and got great photos that really remind of France rather than Moscow
@bleedingrosepetalz Жыл бұрын
I tend to find how to draw videos not too useful but this one is a real game changer!
@Thedmljd Жыл бұрын
I have the opposite problem I've learned to draw what I see when I was very young. My ability to draw from or create something without an exact reference is hard. Ive also ruined many drawings by trying to draw too much detail and have a lot of trouble trying to simplify shapes. I've figured out that in terms of detail you can only add as much detail as the point of your pencil. If your drawing a tiny face you can't draw details like freckles because the the freckles would be as big as iris. It's took me a while to figure out the reason I was ruining all my drawings was because my drawings weren't big enough for the detail I was adding. I understand now to do a realistic drawing that shows things like skin pores has to be on a much larger scale almost 1:1 if not larger.
@Virgorising2 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant thank you. I was at art school many years ago and we did a lot of the drawing without looking at the page. I never knew the workings behind that and the concept of the left side of the brain being dominant. Also the drawing upside down technique is a revelation, will definitely start giving that a go🙏
@beccagee5905 Жыл бұрын
You can also draw the regular way up, but turn your reference photo upside down.
@Virgorising2 Жыл бұрын
Ah yeah, I’ll try that way too. Depending on if its an image or real life😉@@beccagee5905
@waterquiche90369 ай бұрын
when i first started figure drawing i always nailed in the head to “draw what you see not what you know” along with never looking at my work during the process! all helped lots
@Ravenous_s Жыл бұрын
In my opinion, what's truly the best about art is precisely the perspective it offers. The ability to see and illustrate things from entirely different angles. Changing and playing with perspective is the most enjoyable aspect I know.
@artelorde Жыл бұрын
I always enjoy and learn from the content of creators who employ psychological approach, it just feels more practical and authentic.
@geeb3n6 ай бұрын
Yo, you changed my brain. I find out I used to draw better without reference, but kind of suck with reference. But now the upsidedown method works. Thanks man.
@VanessaNeiditch10 ай бұрын
This encapsulates what ALL of my college drawing classes taught me - practice contour drawing and gesture drawing, those are two strategies that can help our brain look closely. We need to learn how to see, not how to draw. One comes before the other ❤ awesome information
@Palepious4 ай бұрын
I cannot describe how much you have helped me. Just two of your videos got me out of a year long drawing depression where I hated absolutely everything I put to paper/ programm. Now I'm actually motivated to practice and make things again. tysm
@arya15293 ай бұрын
Best KZbin video I've ever seen. Very simple and yet detailed. Inspiring and eye-opening. Practical advice. Just greate :)))
@ohdangitsjosh15433 ай бұрын
I noticed there’s a lot of comments from people saying they’re 40+ years old. That’s awesome you guys found your way to this video and are trying a new skill or looking to improve still! Proud of all of you! This popped up as a recommended video because I’ve been watching videos on learning to animate I assume. Now I’m excited to go practice these exercises tomorrow (as it’s 3 am and i should be sleeping now 😂) and see if they help improve my drawing skills and help make learning a new skill a bit easier. 😅 Keep up the practice everyone! Edit: i also forgot to add this was an excellent video. Very informative and you did a very good job at explaining things! Would make for a fine teacher. 👍🏼
@kuriokurio Жыл бұрын
great vid, congrats ! flipping the canvas upside down or horizontally is a REALLY great tool to digital artists, like you explained, it forces to "refresh" your brain and "blocks" the left side from recognizing the symbols on the reference. when struggling with a drawing I recommend doing that canvas flip and trying to figure out with the intuitive part of the brain what feels wrong, instead of focusing on the symbols.. it helps a lot. another useful concept I learned through the years, when facing a pose that has foreshortening or it's just a complicated one is: ✨ negative space ! ✨ that means focusing on representing the "void" around the figure instead on the internal forms, this way the drawing will be more similar to the reference because focusing on the space around what you want to represent makes it easier to get right the volumes and directions of the general outline. this topic is so interesting, thanks for covering it and you earned a new sub ! 🥳
@beccagee5905 Жыл бұрын
Another thing you can do, is hold it in front of a mirror, which flips the image, but helps you to see where you have it right, and where you need to make corrections.
@imclara Жыл бұрын
I can’t understand how you only have 600 subs dude what??? This was great and your editing’s top notch. Looking forward to more videos :)
@mermaidtingzzz28 күн бұрын
Wow, old memory unlocked! I learned this years ago in art classes. I haven’t truly drawn in a long time but i still have some principles locked in but this was definitely one that needed tightening. Thank you!
@cidopal43216 ай бұрын
This was a great video. I read this book a few decades ago but this was a good refresher. And I like how you broke it down and went into the psychology of it.
@flowerjamy8 ай бұрын
"school kills artists" sounds quite literal now
@pianiscidera11 ай бұрын
For something requires a lot of repetiition, I need the strong reason to do that. And thankyou so much for explain everything, now I can start with a bold confidence.
@nkobal6264 Жыл бұрын
Since ive been basically honing left brain drawing by no reference sketching for hours every day this will be an interesting thing to try hopefully this is what helps me break through to enlightenment
@ArpitaBhawal29 күн бұрын
Brilliant video. It's 100% true what he says - the power of observation is not accurate during drawing. Free drawing - upside down - without overthinking the subject and the knowledge of shape, size, etc., you can learn how to observe better and so you draw better! ❤
@walker58555 ай бұрын
Your form of explaining stuff is amazing; i extremely feel i have learned something new and valuable. Thanks for the video, sigue así!
@langolingo6 ай бұрын
One fundamental thing to always do when you draw. Start off lightly. From the shading to the shaping. Start off lightly.
@therealzahyra Жыл бұрын
Whoa whoa whoa wait wait wait. Are you telling me that what I put myself down on periodically that I call my "copycat" skill, is actually the right thing to do??? What the actual fuck. I used to feel inferior because I always compared myself to people who could draw from nothing, and I used to have to copy reference images 24/7 and when I learned how to draw, I learned to draw by copying drawings from existing manga.... I went from drawing badly to pretty decent manga from my "copycat" skill and then I was able to draw it without reference. THIS is why??? I used to think I cheated because I didn't go through the traditional learning style
@zuzzzied Жыл бұрын
I relate to this, but with life photos T_T whenever I feel like that, I remember some of my favorite artists draw almost only from reference, and some of the most iconic paintings, are from reference. I think of realism and the amazing artists who have a hard time visualizing without photos. It helps remind me that photos are a tool like anything else.
@TheEpicPancake Жыл бұрын
Those interested in learning more about this would benefit from reading "Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain". This whole video is essentially taken from the earliest sections of that book. This gets mentioned at the end of the video, but this might save some a bit of time or missing the plug entirely. It's very good and worth the time to read.
@hforhungryy4 ай бұрын
wow… that was a hell of a video!!!!!! omg everything about this video is just so good!!!! the thing is that i’m trying to get back to art after years of losing passion and almost a year and half of stopping completely and i came across that video and all i can say is that info is so useful!!!! even the way you talk was so soothing and not boring at all!!!! thank you so much for that amazing video and i’ll make sure to do all of that and check more of your videos! btw u earned a new subscription:))) 💜
@ThePatchyShow5 ай бұрын
As someone with dyslexia I would naturally be more right brained I have always had a passion for art and drawing which makes sense i came across this video as I desperately need to improve my anatomy I found this video really interesting let’s all improve our art together, thank you for sharing your wisdom!
@magnetdesignandadver Жыл бұрын
Very helpful. The upside down technique is so effective. It's all about observation vs memory. 'Draw what you see not what you know' is what we were taught at art school.
@nonbeautynonbeing Жыл бұрын
I believe most of what you saying. You explain it in simple understandable terms. Reminds me of my art teacher yelling at me "draw what you see not what you know!!" on the other hand, there is no "dominant" side of the brain. This whole idea of "left" vs "right" has been disproven. Just look up functions of the brain and you will see there isn't even a direct "right" or "left" side (amygdala & thalamus) for example. The amygdala is actually associated with emotion while this could also be the function of the "left" brain emotion is not strictly associated with the "left". (ofc this is just what I remember from my high school psych class so honestly you could be right)
@goblishsensei Жыл бұрын
the idea of being having a left or right brained personality has indeed been disproven, but the concept of brain lateralization is factual, unless im tripping. this is clear in people who suffer brain damage, bc depending on the side of the brain that's damage, they tend to struggle with the functions that were performed by that hemisphere. of course, there isn't a task that's 100% done by the left or right side, they communicate through the corpus callosum and work together in that sense, but there's functions that are typically performed more by one side of the brain over the other. take a look at videos on split brain patients. ofc i tried to simplify the whole thing in this video and tie it back to art to try and make it understandable
@AmeeliaK6 ай бұрын
Do you really think that they gave Dr Roger Sperry the Nobel Price for a theory that had no proofs and was debunked some years later? Of course reality is more complex, as always, but the basic principle is still valid.
@jenniferb.awesome5 ай бұрын
It makes sense now why my art professor always had our reference be a an assortment of random objects, like unique looking bottles, weirdly shaped foam pieces and an assortment of other random objects, all stacked, hanging and clumped together. It's like following exercise 1, there's no preconcieved idea in your brain that it can try to draw from memory because they're all mishapen, random objects. Those were the hardest drawings I've ever had to draw, It definitely trains you to draw what you're actually seeing and not subconsciously drawing from memory,
@shrug_shrugsly Жыл бұрын
Well. I hate click bait. I hate it so much that I unsubscribe to folks. So when your video started, and you made such grandiose claims, I fought real hard deciding whether to hear you out. I’m glad that I did! Still some big claims, but I think you followed through. And your excitement plus enthusiasm equaled quality I’m in for subscribing. Thanks for the video and great work! ❤
@AgingLearner5 ай бұрын
This was such a good summarization of The Right Side of the Brain that I was able to tell it was your inspiration before halfway into the video. Amazing!
@TheRoadDawg11 ай бұрын
My dad studied Art his entire life, including a Masters Degree, then was an Art Teacher and Professional Artist. I found a journal of his after he passed away, and this was the passage from 1985, shortly after I moved from my mom/stepdads to my birth dads my Senior Year in High School… “Today was a humbling, yet proud day… I discovered that my teenage son, with only 1 semester of Art (under me) was by far a better artist than I’ll ever be, despite 40 years of practice, study, and productivity.” Not anyone can draw anything. It’s not just mental block, some people aren’t structured in a way to draw, just like not everyone is born to sing, play the guitar, etc.
@ritatownsend740811 ай бұрын
What a beautiful gift he left for you.
@TheRoadDawg11 ай бұрын
@@ritatownsend7408 It really was an amazing moment. He was a great artist, so it was humbling to know what he thought of my abilities. He was complimentary when he was alive, but I always thought it was just parental pride and wasn’t really sure he thought I was that good.
@oxnardmontalvo774910 ай бұрын
I'm not crying.. you're crying! 😭
@tinaknutsen10 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing. Beautiful passage.
@RyokoVT Жыл бұрын
Love the video! I don't think I ever would have come across this were it not for your video on it, and I greatly appreciate that! I've been a long-time on-and-off artist, and it's very demoralizing to feel like I've been doing it all my life and I have no progress. I hope to see some improvements with this!
@lenlooni Жыл бұрын
how does this not have more likes
@goblishsensei Жыл бұрын
idk lmao. may the algo bless this vid 😔 🙏🏽
@myname1083 Жыл бұрын
the goveremmt doesnt want us to be art godddssss
@sckanner10 ай бұрын
Cause you can not like it twice 😅
@TheRealPE4-n8g3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video! I was given that book as a gift for my birthday.. I never really got to reading it. I am going to start reading it now, I honestly never really understood how good it could be! Thank you so much for educating me!! :D
@fictionfactory24489 ай бұрын
bro im halfway through this rn and compelled to comment about how interesting this video is so far. A unique approach and a commendable perspective
@honey7ea Жыл бұрын
You are very nice to listen to and I enjoy the passion behind it! (Plus I LOVE psychology on like ANYTHING!) My brain is absolutely changed 😂❤ I’ve been having an art block for a long time and now I am excited to reignite my passion! Thanks for this!
@2am179 ай бұрын
is that an AI profile picture? that'e the worst way to fix art block or do anything as an artist
@linkspanties9808 Жыл бұрын
def trying out these techniques. What ive been doing is similar to what youre explaining. I try to look at my references or things in real life im disecting as geometric forms. Squares triangles and rectangles. It helps a lot with proportion. I also try not to look at references as a "whole". Kinda like squinting ur eyes while observing the reference but not actually squinting you know? that also helps me get a general idea of what I gottta draw.
@Mellor120 Жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot bro for this vid, this helped a lot very well researched, great content and great editing aswell. Thorughly enjoyed the vid
@goblishsensei Жыл бұрын
i'm happy to see you liked it bro, thanks
@cy.bersphinx6 ай бұрын
I have only recently become interested in drawing and your video has not just given me advice on that but I also feel that the entire brain topic is something fascinating, for anyone to learn. Thank you for the great content
@TalkingWeirdStuff2411 ай бұрын
Good video! Overall a well-made video. I'm not trying to make myself sound super cool and ahead of the curve, but it was a little eerie how much of this I already did with my drawing, my writing, and even other things in my life, without even knowing this concept, and without using these words. It's a kinda strange feeling to watch a video and hear a person you've never even met describe your thought process, but with different words, and it happens to me more often than I ever expected. I think this is kinda like what he's talking about in the video, but I remember a phrase I came up with and taught myself is "draw how it feels, not how it looks". Years ago I was trying to draw horses for the first time pretty much ever. I pulled up my references and was drawing from them and it looked pretty crummy. Then I thought to myself "draw how it feels, not how it looks": I turned my sketchbook to a new page and drew the same horses again, but I focused on capturing the feeling of the horses, the energy. And while the second set of drawings still wasn't wonderful, I could see an immediate, palpable improvement from the page I had drawn from the same images just minutes earlier.
@group15f Жыл бұрын
Brother, this video is well done, and nicely put together, I deeply appreciate it. I'm an artist and I have been feeling down recently and not creative enough, this made me feel a weird feeling in my brain lol. Thanks again.
@Airfriedfroglegg11 ай бұрын
0:52 yes a few years ago I was a kid *laughs in 43*
@akemqiy3 ай бұрын
so nostalgic oh the memories
@chipm0nk Жыл бұрын
Awesome video man, I feel like I've been naturally doing this subconsciously for the last year and my art has improved like 100x. Recently, I was trying to teach my mom to draw, and I realized the difference between her drawing and my own is that she draws with 'icons', and she even incorrectly assumes my art is better because my 'icons' are just more developed. I'll definitely be showing her this video, and maybe by next year my mom will be an artist! Also, genuinely underrated channel, keep going and you'll find big success 👍
@goblishsensei Жыл бұрын
yeah this whole thing is so easy to notice if you're trying to teach someone how to draw, hopefully this video will help your mom out lmao
@chipm0nk Жыл бұрын
@@goblishsenseihaha thanks! Remind me to let you know how it's going next year
@MiketheNerdRanger28 күн бұрын
About halfway through the video, I completely knew where this was going. I've been told a million times, but it's never been explained psychologically, which, to me, is what really gets the point across.