• Artists over centuries have painted the nude figure for quite specific reasons and it
• Focusing on the formal elements of colour and composition etc is a logical and
Romantic
Many artists choose to draw and paint the figure because of its beauty. This has been the
case for many centuries and there has been nothing happened that has changed this basic
perception of the human form. Some painters have idealised and others have
romanticised the figure. There are many examples.
Leonardo Da Vinci – high Renaissance accurately observed but ultimately idealised
beauty often depicting themes from mythology.
still based on traditional subject matter like landscape, still life and the figure.
Consequently we have many examples of the nude interpreted though these different
modern art movements. This is a great source of information on the very diverse
approaches to interpreting the human figure and understanding the original thinking behind them.
Impressionism
Impressionism represents the break with academic painting marked by the use of colour
theory, painting in the open air and a search for a new way of expressing reality. The
geometric structures. They believed that the reality of an object is not accurately
expressed by only one view and the artist is responsible for selecting and representing a
new arrangement of shapes that better describe the subject.
Picasso, Braque
Surrealism
An attempt to record images of the subconscious and characterized by fantastic imagery
and incongruous juxtaposition of subject matter. The actual movement was influenced by
the psychoanalyst Sigmund Feud and consequently often sexual in its interpretation of the
figure. The term surreal can now be used to loosely describe images generated by the subconscious. Dali, Magritte
Abstraction
When we observe the figure there are other visual possibilities to apart from the challenge
of realistically representing the human form. We actually see a complex collection of
shapes and forms and there are a number of starting points that can logically lead to semi
abstract images and possibly total abstraction.
We might decide that we want to be selective or even rearrange the shapes to produce
something totally new.
Picasso, Braque, Giacometti, Francis Bacon
The figure could be moving and we would have the challenge of trying to represent this.
Marcel Duchamp – Figure descending stairs.
Conceptual
For more than forty years now we have moved on from the ‘isms’ of modernism into the
post modernist period. Artists have gone freestyle and always on a search for the
individual approach characterized very much by the Brit-artists like Damien Hirst and
Tracy Emin. It can be a wonderful thing to throw away the rule book and look for new
ground. Jenny Saville and Ron Mueck are perhaps the artists that are most closely related
to the figure.
THE FORMAL ELEMENTS
It is no coincidence that the experimental art movements of the 20th century first of all
investigated the basic elements of colour, composition and techniques:
see in the figure. It was over a hundred years ago in the work of the Impressionists that
we see whole new palette of possibilities and the complete liberation that took place with
Composition
In a life class with the usual time restrictions the drawing often takes place in the centre
of the paper with little thought to the relationship of the shapes of the figure with the
sides of the paper. The figure itself is made up of shapes and angles with endless
combinations. Considering how they fit into the rectangle is the starting point of
composition. Moving in and selecting only a part of the body can be interesting and
forces you to make decisions about the composition. In a studio there are often a many
interesting lines and shapes, colours and tones which can be used to compliment the
shape of the figure. You can be selective and move these lines around so that they work
well with the figure. Freud makes good use of the simple lines and proportions found in
his studio.
Classic life drawing
Life drawing has become an academic activity with its own traditions and disciplines.
The degree of observation is usually intense so the results tend towards realism rather
than idealism or romanticism. It is the process of recording with the hand what is seen by
the eye. As a result elements of this process can become central to the artist’s intentions;
the actual act of drawing or mark making or maybe the interpretation of form
Euan Uglow – a 20th century, English academic painter who focuses on the precision and
accuracy of measuring during the drawing process. The result has the beauty and
simplicity of mathematics rather than a depiction of a photographic or expressive reality.
TECHNIQUE
The techniques from oil painting to charcoal to etching to sculpture can be central to the
reason for producing the work for some artists. Different techniques can certainly help
determine the character of a piece. As a logical step forward from life drawing, varying
your media can have very positive results and alone help you find a new direction.
Pastels - Degas
Pencil, pastel plus watercolour wash – Rodin, Egon Schiele
Wax resist and watercolour – Henry Moore
Collage – Picasso, Muñoz, Valdēs
Photography – Cindy Sherman
Video – Bruce Nauman
...or try anything from your shed.