Your art is improving, mine is getting worse, we are not the same
@harrietjameson6 ай бұрын
the good news is that there is always reasons behind this, maybe its that your eyes are getting better at spotting mistakes, maybe you're trying something new, developing bad habits, etc theres always a way out
@StinkzD5 ай бұрын
@@harrietjameson this is what i mainly realise my eyes are getting trained to spot mistakes so my art that i thought looked good like a month ago looks rlly bad now
@zeen81905 ай бұрын
@@harrietjamesonyour eyes being better at spotting mistakes is not valid since you can just always check back on your previous works tho
@Drakengard825 ай бұрын
i had a years long gap then i got back to it, i made mad progress in a few months butva few weeks ago everything i do has started sucking like even worse than when i got back to it it´s so frustrating 😅
@leondris4 ай бұрын
That's called burn out or you're just noticing more mistakes
@spacejunk21866 ай бұрын
Me: "Oh boy do I feel great this morning! I should work on my drawings!" Ten hours later: I drew one line
@jaidenjacob77346 ай бұрын
I love your pfp
@Dop4mineDeficit6 ай бұрын
Time to draw! My paper:
@Suicidalsheep6 ай бұрын
“And I’m severely depressed because of it”
@spaceocelot356 ай бұрын
same
@Amanita._.Verosa._.6 ай бұрын
Slow progress is still progress.
@joshualot23056 ай бұрын
DELIBERATE PRACTICE: 1. Learn the theory 5:18 2. Use references 5:36 3. Get Feedback 6:00
@kool42096 ай бұрын
1 + 3...............everything is reference.
@GingeryGinger6 ай бұрын
I honestly have been making great progress recently and I’ll I’ve changed is my mentality to art. I do it when I feel inspired, not because I force myself to. People say “oh you have to learn to draw without motivation because you won’t always have it” but my solution to this is to just become more motivated. Listening to music and letting myself daydream, and then only drawing when I’ve gotten into the groove has helped me start my works. And once you’ve started, the rest you don’t really need motivation for.
@user-100216 ай бұрын
Thx for saving me 10 minutes
@HeartsForAll094 ай бұрын
Ty
@YamiBaddy6 ай бұрын
Hearing "2-3 hours a day" is seriously saving my mental. Picked up drawing about a month ago and I am pretty tapped out after an hour or two of practicing new stuff. Hearing how others grind out dozens of poses a day had me absolutely stunned. I am happy when I get one out a day lol.
@kurotesuta6 ай бұрын
I have two years, besides some fundamentals topic, what I struggle the most is patience and frustration.
@miqolysa6 ай бұрын
Don't compare your speed to others. Speed comes naturally over time. Focus on the things you want to be able to draw.
@johnhorchler6676 ай бұрын
What I do I just use a pencil ✏️ but the Ai i- pad videos help but I just draw for 15 to 25 minutes and do more later that day if you feel it so you don't burn yourself out I did that a month ago so draw when you want I'm just passed the stick figure stage and I use the todd McFarlane Spiderman spaghetti webbing to warm up. & I watch But don't compare yourself to them Man I can't do that.i did that and it set me back but look up David finch Proko Brad's art school Draw like a sir Kaycem force push Michael mattesi Liron Yanconsky there is one of Jim Lee ykL & I think Jim Lee I don't stick to one So good luck.
@LunaRuna2125 ай бұрын
I am literally unable to draw for longer than 2-3 hours a day, because otherwise my tendonitis would flare up again and cause me physical pain whenever I use my fingers or wrist for anything. 🥲 (Acquired this from writing my bachelor thesis many years ago and it became chronic). Either way, don't get discouraged because some people can draw for many hours a day. I have more than 20 years of drawing experience and I can assure you that drawing for so long at a time isn't worth it learning-wise. Your brain can learn better with shorter drawing sessions a day. And you would make less focus-related mistakes or oversights that way. In German we have the word "Betriebsblindheit," which literally translates to operational blindness. It refers to sitting at a task for many hours, because you're in a workflow. However in this state you will gradually lose focus and it'll be more likely to make mistakes, which you will probably notice the next day, ending up disappointing yourself. Regarding Betriebsblindheit it's recommended to take breaks within worksessions, sometimes longer breaks or finishing the task the next day, because when you come back to it, you'll be able to look at your work from a different angle, allowing yourself to make better decisions for the next steps!
@bonitoflakes-ko5rt6 ай бұрын
WE'RE MAKING IT OUT OF THE PLATEAU WITH THIS ONE🗣🗣🗣🔊🔊🔊
@dvevotedlove6 ай бұрын
At this point, such a comment is obligatory for every video on youtube. Thanks, you're doing god's work!
@greyATK6 ай бұрын
I hope!! been stuck for a couple years now ;;
@darth_hylian6 ай бұрын
Your jokes have plateaued. You must try new ones if you want to improve
@squirrel836 ай бұрын
I read this as “we making out in the plateau” lmao 😭
@bonitoflakes-ko5rt6 ай бұрын
@@darth_hylian well it's fine if you don't like such comments I kinda like them but eventually I too will get bored of them like you
@Art_Wine_And_Anarchy6 ай бұрын
When I started teaching Chinese painting, the most common question I got was, "How long does it take to reach your level?" I started answering that question by bringing my practice papers and showing students my stacks and stacks of paper on which I practiced just one kind of brush stroke hundreds of times. Then I would say, "The time it takes is less important than how you use it."
@kurotesuta6 ай бұрын
When I ask how long it took you to get good, I expect to hear a number, we are running a marathon here, you want to be able to see some measurements in time. Always hated these type of answers.
@wowziee6 ай бұрын
@@kurotesutahaving a time to compare yourself to can be negative for some people though, if you go over their window of time and still aren't at their level a lot of people will be discouraged and probably give up
@coffee-android6 ай бұрын
One thing that I have found to be helpful to also keep in mind is that in most cases, you probably are not going to be able to put your nose to the grindstone for 2-4 hours a day as soon as you make the decision to engage in deliberate practice on a consistent basis. As with pretty much anything you want to make into a habit, you will find a lot more success if you start out small. I have found that the pomodoro technique (for every 25 minutes you focus, take a 5 minute break) gives me a really solid frame of reference and helps me divide my time into measurable units that make me feel like I'm collecting exp points each time I finish one. You can start with just one 25 minute session a day (or as short of a session as you need it to be!) and slowly increase that time as you go.
@YTartschool6 ай бұрын
great point!
@kag25766 ай бұрын
Ah yes, gotta love how I'm watching this acting like I haven't stopped trying to get better for like 2 months. I was pretty consistent for a while there but then I made one drawing that I hated and I've not gone back since. The learning process has just become so dull for me, feels like I've been in limbo regardless if I practice the same things or try to learn something new, nothing really sticks in my mind
@WarFoxThunder6 ай бұрын
SAAAME
@noob_artistrrrr6 ай бұрын
you're not alone in this buddy . we begginer artist just keep getting hit with frustrations and quitting but for some reason we just keep finding ourselves back to drawing, I've been quiting drawing for months then i always find myself going back to it
@329link6 ай бұрын
"How to stop being a perfectionist and giving up every five minutes" is a video I've desperately wanted to see for a while now.
@dundeecake6 ай бұрын
@@329link I also do not really like anti-perfectionist sentiments because that is just a 'well, you could make a disney renaissance movie or a liveaction remake. both is movies, both is a cake someone will eat so so both is good' and that just....yknow.
@jeffjefferson28535 ай бұрын
I tried a drawing after a few months of daily practice. I failed spectacularly, super discouraging. You just gotta keep moving forward. Sometimes you just gotta brute force it, and accept that it'll take time.
@xPXGx6 ай бұрын
Marc is spitting truth here. The secret to improvement isn't doing what you're already comfortable with. It's acknowledging what your weakness is, observing and deconstructing other people's process and then challenging yourself by applying that knowledge. I can speak from personal experience. I can definitely see a noticeable improvement in my work in a pretty short amount of time. I've been pushing myself to do more dynamic poses, implement a better sense of dimension and volume to my subjects and, most of all, forcing myself to COLOR. I hate coloring. I think I'm terrible at it. But I've been forcing myself to color and push my color ranges as much as possible. I'm actually quite proud of myself, which is pretty rare for me.
@kurotesuta6 ай бұрын
Deconstructing other artist process is very hard. For example I struggle to figure out which brush to use to shade like my favorite artist, I even asked artists directly and the answer is nothing I can't work with. Hadn't find a good tutorial for shading (yes, I watched Marc's videos about the topic) and to this day struggle with that topic.
@peterperng6 ай бұрын
recently I start to pick up my wacom again to start become serious about my art career, But I found out I have some issue while learning art. I think my art suck, So I learn, But after I study I will doubting myself that "am I actually learning?" "How is this study gonna help me? " "am I learning the 'right way' ? " and it make me become so frustrated and depress, until somebody point out my issue was keep studying but didnt draw any artwork to see how much I improve/what weakness I have. And from that day somehow the feeling of frustration and depress have disappear and I'm been enjoying drawing ever since. Moral of my story: Dont kept studying just to be better, you need to actually draw a piece of artwork to output the knowledge you had learned and see how much you need to learn.
@harrietjameson6 ай бұрын
yep, i was so perfectionistic that i only studied for a year and made almost no actual art of my own, now im paying a hefty price, i have to re-build everything
@mihaelatrpevski38576 ай бұрын
I am still so grateful how I managed to improve my drawing body anatomy in males and females just by watching your videos. Not only that but now I have the ability to draw fluid, more detailed poses with no reference at all
@AtomicKepler6 ай бұрын
I guess that explains why I made so much progress in 3 weeks, because I was always going out of my comfort zone, doing lots of anatomy studies, and literally *drawing for 6-8 hours a day* I don't know why but every single step that I take has been giving me mad progress.
@CookieSake6 ай бұрын
Nothing like sensei's videos for a boost of inspiration. I'm struggling through a massive art block.
@luckyadrian1006 ай бұрын
I am no one to you but I wish all the best for your art journey
@CookieSake6 ай бұрын
@@luckyadrian100 Thank you so much! That really means a lot to me!
@viser146 ай бұрын
You upload, I like. No questions asked 😂. I always come to this channel for art tutorials because it helps me out a lot with my progress. Looking forward to this video and more 🤟
@InkransArtwork6 ай бұрын
Same
@SilentTrip6 ай бұрын
I agree with your advice, keep in mind to keep things fun and not get too lost in the studies and perfectionism
@togatasenpai78706 ай бұрын
How to have fun when I can't even draw a cube or sphere correctly? 😩
@harrietjameson6 ай бұрын
@@togatasenpai7870if you're worried you arent doing it correctly, theres resources on different techniques you can try, but it still takes practice, people arent born with the power to move their hand in a perfect circle Also, you shouldnt get your fun from drawing something that looks good or perfect, although it does feel good. You should just have fun drawing, let go of the perfectionism, learn that its okay to see flaws and work on them and have fun at the same time. Its hard, but its doable, if not you might be drawing things you dont actually care about (happened to me)
@lemmetalkaboutthis6 ай бұрын
Studying up to understand what you're struggling to draw is so true tho. By now, when I wanna draw new animals, I study up their skeleton first, and it not only makes it easier to draw proportions, but also to pose them quicker and easier. I get multiple references together, study their components and how they interact, and then filter out the most important parts of them that I can then use as ankers to replicate what I found by myself. This is important _especially_ in animation - that's advice given by ghibli animators as well - if you don't understand the figure you're depicting, then movement will look janky and weird, bc some part of our brains still understand that "that's not how that should move"; even if we can't articulate it, it would still feel off somehow. It's a bit of a relief to learn tho that there's a scientifically proven limit on how long it's possible to actually focus up like this, bc I always felt bad and frustrated when I couldn't practice for more than three hours at a time before my brain started going to shit
@SumiroTatsuya6 ай бұрын
My art isn't improving but that's because I haven't practiced in 3 years. This video gets me 1 step closer to maybe starting to think about practicing again. But that's all it takes
@1nfinitysL1mit6 ай бұрын
Glad to know there's a 2 hour max out. I been feeling burned out and wanting to draw for hours and not seeing a huge improvement. There's so much to remember it can be overwhelming at times.
@kurotesuta6 ай бұрын
I practice for 1 hour a day and for me is hard to see results. I think it is how well you understand the topic.
@1nfinitysL1mit6 ай бұрын
@@kurotesuta Yes I'm struggling with anatomy right now. Slowly getting it though.
@Pew23t695 ай бұрын
@@1nfinitysL1mithope you are having fun and be better day after day!
@Whienzarth6 ай бұрын
Ive been really pushing myself in my art. Iv learned im drawing alot more, drawings are taking longer and im paying attention to alot more things. Its actually becoming alot more mentaly taxing. But also im finding more meanimg in my work. I hope that shows visually in my work.
@junky8026 ай бұрын
Next 3 months planing on getting 16 hrs of head drawing practice. Not hard to do in that time span, but job and kids. Definitely coming back too this video now and then in that time.
@cdarklock6 ай бұрын
It really comes down to one thing. Practice what you are bad at. If your practice looks good, you are practicing the wrong things. Stop practicing those, you already know them. That's how learning literally anything works: do what you are bad at until you are not bad at it anymore. Then go find something else you are bad at.
@YTartschool6 ай бұрын
that can also crush your motivation so imo it's best to have a 70/30 balance, 70% of stuff you're good at and stretch with stuff you suck at for the other 30%
@cdarklock6 ай бұрын
@@YTartschool That really depends on whether you call that 70% "practice." I consider it "play." 100% of the practice is on stuff I suck at, but practice isn't 100% of what I do or even 50%. It's like an hour. If I only practiced 18 minutes, I am pretty sure that would adversely affect my learning.
@mistah_mojo6 ай бұрын
I like the focuses on art but I also like that you can really apply this to other things one might be learning/practicing as well!
@gizzy57886 ай бұрын
Really encouraging to watch it and notice that you have been practicing the "right" way. Thanks Marc.
@redrumtheartist62756 ай бұрын
Your videos are always top notch! Love the art! Also, I think that you would have a lot of fun drawing animals, like dinosaurs or mystical creatures of sorts.
@UmbrisArts6 ай бұрын
Somehow those videos come in clutch everytime, thanks a lot!
@mioh146 ай бұрын
the color palette for these characters is amazing! Also yeah, I should practice more consistently...
@mizubiart62306 ай бұрын
Lately I’ve been struggling with burnout and insecurity and I feel this lol
@w1alentin6106 ай бұрын
My 4yo son is so exited from your videos)
@kakoi68756 ай бұрын
Love to hear it
@grumpysourdough6 ай бұрын
young art king 👑
@marselo13166 ай бұрын
next Kim Jung Gi over here
@YTartschool6 ай бұрын
meanwhile my 9 & 11 yo don't give a damn ;(
@tonyvegaart16056 ай бұрын
This is very helpful for me. I am currently in the process of getting back into creating art after years of only doing it once in a while.
@Spika946 ай бұрын
4:36 It is good news if you don't have ADHD. I have no controll over when I am able to focus. Sometimes 15 minutes, sometimes an 1 hour on a really good day, or 1 week where I can't focus at all.
@no_1_knoz6 ай бұрын
'Same Page Club', even with my meds i tend to havr this issue, but mostly due to the scheduling of my day and when im able, depends if i still have a full 'Focus Tank' or not. 🤷♂️
@mundozeo6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video mark! I've definetly seen more improvement when I'm consciously looking for something. Referencing a past video, I'll learn more if I get to the knee, then look up references for the knee, learn it, apply it, then move on. The last point in the video is really important though, and something I think I'll be adjusting in my daily grind, that is, to kick off with sketches to losen up, then some of the learning stuff, and end with something more comfortable.
@mimthyss6 ай бұрын
Yeah thats fair. Literally like an hour ago I was looking at some old drawings side by side with some recent ones and thinking man, my art really hasn't improved much over these past few years. :( But ik its because not only do I not practice a lot but when I do its not the deliberate practice as described in this video, so of course I'm limited to how much better I can get just drawing from memory. Guess I really gotta tryhard if I wanna get back to improving again rahh. Thanks for this perfectly timed and very helpful video :)
@soulofexistence6 ай бұрын
1:14 It seems like you adopted part of May Yoyenma's artstyle, those tips of the hair are looking very Yoyenma-like! So good!
@naut75606 ай бұрын
Marc is one of the few youtubers that actually get me to like when they ask
@JB-jt6oq6 ай бұрын
OK SIR
@tripplejaz6 ай бұрын
I want to add: in two books I've read (Deep Work by Cal Newport and Talent Code by Daniel Coyle) both authors come to the conclusion the brain can only learn about 4 hours of NEW information every day; anything else after that will get discarded or the brain will go on autopilot. So, when you hear stories of artists GRINDING for 27 hours a day, just know most of that stuff was just either rendering or automatic behavior. EDIT: oh shoot you mentioned that XD
@kono12176 ай бұрын
Its funny how im still watching every single new video even tho they're not that helpfull anymore, the questions i ask now sadly only getting answers in books and paid courses, but im always here to get sum motivation and leave a like.
@mirayaki65096 ай бұрын
Ur advice are always a huge help for many artist ! ^^ also i would like to mention your character design from your 2 ocs are incredible !! It tells so much about their personnality !
@warrentan8316 ай бұрын
you posted this just as i was feeling my art progress was stagnant 😭
@luckrequired53826 ай бұрын
Here's to another 7 Years, Happy Anniversary!
@LovelyCoconut-pn6te6 ай бұрын
Finally OG marks art style is back 😭🙏
@artemisherakles63915 ай бұрын
i always spent every drawing around 40 hours and never less that that. But i never satisfied with the results. This is helps me a lot! Thank you! ❤
@SAMEER-ft5yw4 ай бұрын
I feel privileged to have you in my art journey. tysm (^v^)
@noob_artistrrrr6 ай бұрын
as someone who's never known focus my whole life like literally i could not be doing anything and my head is stil bombarded with random thoughts. back then when an artist tell me i need focus to improve always say screw that, it's not possible and i get irritated upon hearing that idea but now I'm trying my best to acknowledge it bit by bit and I'm beginning to agree with them.
@justvr68535 ай бұрын
I can't focus, too much going on in my brain. I try to but i just can't.
@yasinarslan25584 ай бұрын
I startet drawing again yesterday. I really want to improve... so now I set myself a goal to draw like 20-30 min every day. That way I can get rid off perfectionism and if I make mistakes I feel more okay with it, because I just dont put A LOT of time into it. I try to focus on stuff I am struggling with. Proportions, hands, angles etc... Maybe it helps someone else outhere to get started again. Gl
@justguy-46306 ай бұрын
Chill, sensei. I barely just started.
@kylemcbee1706 ай бұрын
I started sketching just pokemon and other cartoon things. It was fun it was therapeutic and eventually I got the courage to try drawing something original instead of just a sketch. And oh boy it was horrible. I felt so defeated. But then I realized I just don't know a lot of things. So I went back to sketching objects and pictures again. Then I tried to be original again. There were still lots of issues, but way less than before, I even noticed how I incorporated stuff I had practiced with. The important thing is you can't draw what you can't visualize. Thanks for helping clear the thoughts in my head on this. Excellent video overall.
@shaun_Z6 ай бұрын
You are My hero you helped me during my burn out
@Kyrandis6 ай бұрын
I'm just happy these videos exist, i went through art school nearly a decade ago and was taught all the wrong things with only a handful of instructors actually being great at teaching, went into art school with decent talent and developed downwards due to stigmas or poor teaching and came out worse than when i went in on top of graduating during an economic depression didnt help
@Sketchchess076 ай бұрын
this video was aimed directly at me thank you professor brunet
@L0rar36 ай бұрын
Never had an idol before but I think you are my first one. Artistically but especially as a human. Thank you SO MUCH for making learning accessable not only through your art school course but these free YT-videos as well Hope it isnt socially inappropriate to say this. I'm just super thankful for this learning opportunity in a world where education is often only for the rich Have a great week and thank you for your work!
@Yazilei6 ай бұрын
Thank you, Marc-sensei
@alisondorantes-garcia57516 ай бұрын
When I start getting paid again (yay new job), I am DEFINITELY paying for the art school program. I have improved exponentially from watching and practicing Marc's suggestions in just under a year and a half. This guy is a phenomenal artist AND teacher.
@unripetheberrby62836 ай бұрын
This discusses some thoughts or mistakes I've had in the past years... Thank you for sharing the advice and motivation :) I really hope we can do it!
@EricRtheModFather6 ай бұрын
I am hoping once I move I can work more on my art. Right now I can't work on anything big so only doing small practice but trying to analyze what I am getting wrong and try to redraw what I got wrong. I have gotten better at seeing when I start getting lazy about where the lines should go and fixing it before the whole drawing is off.
@godhand736 ай бұрын
Whoa perfect timing. I've been feeling down lately because I feel stuck at art. Thank you for this vid!
@bonitoflakes-ko5rt6 ай бұрын
Hey mark great video I've had some issues improving my art from half an year. Context: I'm an intermediate-advanced ish artist who has a decent grip on all fundamentals and wants to focus on improving my rendering Ps: I'm an artist who has practised all fundamentals to a good extent but my art doesn't look impressive from a technical standpoint I can't figure out a good way to practise and improve rendering I'd be eternally grateful to get feedback on this problem
@societalspace56966 ай бұрын
Thanks Marc for another very helpful video this one will definitely help me get out of the spiral I’ve been in.
@boop0046 ай бұрын
I am going to try the art school trial tomorrow and do some deliberate practice for once, lol. I have noticed now it has been a long time since I've drawn something properly out of the scope of what I know.
@456death6544 ай бұрын
This applies to many things
@TheSpellKaster6 ай бұрын
i've recently started to work on bigger more realistic pieces and i'm amazed at how good they've turned out...shame i was limiting myself all this time
@TheAlternativeDuck6 ай бұрын
Thx so much marc, finally getting back into art after I moved houses
@ovidiuh5 ай бұрын
Good I would observe that almost nobody will do only regular practice on the long term without trying to be deliberate , at least sometimes. To sum it up the essence is PRACTICE EVERY SINGLE DAY and you'll eventually get there.
@Lycanthropy_Ultima6 ай бұрын
Oh wow, thanks Marc! I didn't realise but I've actually been doing this(except for the third part that much lol) THANK YOU 😊
@nexusserc6 ай бұрын
That's the reason why I dropped drawing 9 years ago, and stayed with watching others and their results.
@GoldHeartWarrior6 ай бұрын
This might be helpful for me because I'm currently trying to get back to art since I haven't made anything for a while now and needing to catch up with my artistic skill. Thanks for the advice.
@Jadenyoung16 ай бұрын
Hes correct on this. Experienced it myself. If i put not only effort (physical motor skills and muscle memory) into drawing, but also actively thinking about it, while also actively seeing how its supposed to look, i gain a lot of insight and improve a lot quicker. But, hes also on point on that one, cant really do that long. I tap out after around an hour or two. I continue drawing then, usually, but not as actively. The hardest part for me was accepting, that i wont be as good as the artists i have around me. At least, not in the near future. Because, well, it takes years to get to that lvl. But thats okay. As long, as i am improving, i will reach that skill lvl at some point.
@TheJooJq6 ай бұрын
what fucks me up the most is that i want to draw what i'm imagining at the moment, and some of my art ain't that bad but still at beginner level. i know that i have to practice to get good at it but i find the process of learning so boring that it literally stops me from practicing, it's not because i'm lazy, i just don't see the point of spending so many hours or even days practicing, and the level i wanna reach is the same as SinCastermon does his art, he's gotta be one of my biggest inspirations to even learn to draw (and i say that when i've wasted around 2.5k hours in tf2)
@harrietjameson6 ай бұрын
gotta find a way to make learning fun, there is just so much you get out of it, a very valuable life skill or is it practice that gets you? what exactly is demotivating you? Maybe lower your expectations, dont worry about all the hours ypu gotta put in to reach your goal, set some smaller goals in between and find ways to enjoy the process and your drawings, even if they arent perfect
@TheJooJq6 ай бұрын
@@harrietjameson i don't think anything in specific is demotivating me, it's just that I find studying anatomy, perspective and all that crap extremely boring and tedious to do, and like, it's something that you'd need to do lots and lots of times to start getting good at, and I have a tendency to give up on certain things too early if I find it too hard, this is one of them. I think if I had a teacher who could teach me, but that's not the case, I'm just one of that type of artist who are learning to draw by self-teaching.
@harrietjameson6 ай бұрын
@@TheJooJq there are ways to study it in a fun way, find fun references, turn the studies into cool drawings, take breaks and doodle it doesnt have to be boring, also try to find some community, there are lots of art discord servers, could help heres some tips i got from perspective and anatomy: Learning perspective by doing those weird vanishing points and grids is extremely tedious and not that helpful in most cases (depending on the art you do). Try learning intuitive perspective Anatomy is also very tedious, there is just so much to learn but the good thing is that you can start small and it will contribute a lot to your observation and drawing skills. I recommend starting with the skeleton as that will start giving you an idea of all the areas where theres extra thickness due to muscle and fat, like the thighs and calves for example.
@harrietjameson6 ай бұрын
@@TheJooJq there are ways to study it in a fun way, find fun references, turn the studies into cool drawings, take breaks and doodle. Remeber, getting good takes time, but you will still see improvement regardless, be happy about every little step you take it doesnt have to be boring, also try to find some community, there are lots of art discord servers, could help heres some tips i got from perspective and anatomy: Learning perspective by doing those weird vanishing points and grids is extremely tedious and not that helpful in most cases (depending on the art you do). Try learning intuitive perspective Anatomy is also very tedious, there is just so much to learn but the good thing is that you can start small and it will contribute a lot to your observation and drawing skills. I recommend starting with the skeleton as that will start giving you an idea of all the areas where theres extra thickness due to muscle and fat, like the thighs and calves for example.
@han-zo5216 ай бұрын
Bro your newest 2 videos are so relatable to me. I've been drawing since 2016 and my art is still super meh
@-_soy_-8886 ай бұрын
Omg he extended it. Dude I wanted to sign up for the program but money woes + rent. Thank you Marc 🙏🏿
@andreabrown2876 ай бұрын
I can’t call this art block anymore. It’s like a black hole 🫠 I look for reference to be motivated and somehow end up depressed/demotivated and no drawing gets done. Alas! This too shall pass ✨(It must)
@mintytrash6 ай бұрын
Bro uploaded the moment I checked my phone
@L0rar36 ай бұрын
Omg THIS!! Your Art School improved my learning habits SO MUCH because instead of watching some KZbin-Video or Pokemon-Episode whilst drawing, I listen to the class and make specific notes and sketches about that. Once you know what deliberate learning feels like, it'll be like a complete explosion of your skills and learning-opportunities Funny to me that Art taught me how to study but neither school nor university did though :b Edit: I even feel like knowing how to study makes the learning super addictive (or it's just autistic me soaking every piece of information in like a sponge with no other duty but to have F.U.N. with ma starfish friend and learn about the wonders of our world)
@userbunny6 ай бұрын
This video helped a lot for getting a new point of view. Thank you so much.
@SnowieRikka6 ай бұрын
Thank you I needed this
@galaxytaba46402 ай бұрын
The path of least resistance is hard to leave Its also the worst
@agustinpichi26776 ай бұрын
Using my limited free time to Learn to draw ❌ Using it to watch videos on how to learn to draw ✔
@Teriyakiteenkuro6 ай бұрын
One more gem from marc
@katekiler6 ай бұрын
I like to remember that nizmo exhaust video when you talk about you art school
@ManuelSanchez-tt8kd6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video Marc, kinda needing this
@suni25936 ай бұрын
I never clicked so fast on a notification
@Retsiger6 ай бұрын
Same!
@metovir81096 ай бұрын
Thanks, Mark!
@wambo16316 ай бұрын
Gimme the art gainzzzz !!!
@kaitogirldraws6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the informative class, Mr Mark! Have a tip of one comment to show my appreciation!
@DLC_-mw4mc6 ай бұрын
Great video as always. I enjoy the drawing, specially the cute girl with pants. Thank you for sharing!
@WilliamM.F.6 ай бұрын
After watching this i felt like im going to be yoneyama mai
@OyinbobolaFaboyode6 ай бұрын
Another amazing video as always
@Discoveryman296 ай бұрын
As a lazy guy who doesn't spend 10k hours on painting and not improving, I can't relate with this video. Will check back once i got 10k hours. But ill watch it anyway
@etna04yoko826 ай бұрын
Thank you for the video Marc :D
@thatoneperson6896 ай бұрын
Wow this is so amazing to hear. I was trying to cram 8 hours of studying a day
@badneko66666 ай бұрын
is Time to practice more .....💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻 master mark
@Astaa-10k6 ай бұрын
OMG HE’S BACK 🔥🔥
@WaToArt6 ай бұрын
"While half watching a KZbin Art School Class" Got me.
@I_like_spiders6 ай бұрын
Thanks Marc :)
@ravioli_8266 ай бұрын
For me the trial and error method of learning has worked best. I draw something, figure out what’s off about it or what I don’t like, then draw it again to see if I fixed it. Sometimes it’s without a reference or subject. Maybe I alternate between drawing a reference and imagination. A lot of improvements come from just fixing mistakes.
@SUNNYSUZUKISAN6 ай бұрын
WE ARE LEARNING FAST WITH THIS ONE 🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣💥💥💥💥💥💥💥💥💥
@no_1_knoz6 ай бұрын
So glad i watched till the end, don't want to be doing 'illegal' activities (😂). Gr8 video, as per usual and THANX for yet another tid bit of awesome information SENPAI! 🙇
@Silencer7966 ай бұрын
I haven’t even drawn just struggling to study
@asacollings18586 ай бұрын
im a professional artist and i recommend this channel to all my clients who are also interested in picking up art. might have to scoop up the paid class before the month is over 👀
@xx_ibrahim_99gamerxx_ibrah896 ай бұрын
can you teach us how to draw a fight scene? and how to use hatching to an expression that something is moving, like they why use it in manga