Can anyone tell me how to be more creative at drawing and painting..??
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U can observe scenes around you..
maybe your neighborhood or village nera ur house or a market...
U can also observe scenes at a railway station or a Bus stand...
these r the ways u can search ideas for drawing...
hope it helps u..
if yes, Mark brainliest...
have a great day ahead..
@TeraBhalaHo
maybe your neighborhood or village nera ur house or a market...
U can also observe scenes at a railway station or a Bus stand...
these r the ways u can search ideas for drawing...
hope it helps u..
if yes, Mark brainliest...
have a great day ahead..
@TeraBhalaHo
Anonymous:
means u want imaginary ideas?
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This is a really interesting question, simple though it may be at first glance.
At risk of offering contradictory points of view, let me posit two answers- yes, it can certainly assist in the creative process, and no, while it's part and parcel of said process, it's not necessarily needed to be "creative."
Let me say at the outset that, like learning the nuances and grammatical conventions of a language necessary to communicate effectively as a writer, a visual artist (of any stripe) must master basic drawing skills in order to become an effective artist.
If you want to be a competent visual artist, you must learn to draw. It's the fundamental tool of visual communications. Period.
That being said, you shouldn't (and generally can't ) expect to draw like a Picasso or Rembrandt. However, you should be able to, at minimum, express yourself clearly with a drawing. It's actually a very low bar to jump, but one that, sadly, many artists nowadays eschew.
To the original question… if the primary focus in your art is more realistic representation (or some offshoot thereof), drawing is a skill and pastime that can effectively increase your range of expressive possibilities, and hence, your creative potential. A close friend is a exceptionally skilled portraitist, who's pen I envy. He's branched out into finely detailed landscapes- and finds the skills he honed as a (working) portraitist greatly to his advantage. Indeed, he started creating landscapes as his creativity was piqued by the endless portraits he completed. Or, in his words "I got tired of doing kids and dogs, kids and dogs, all day, and well, decided to draw the landscape around me."
Here is a case where an intensive focus on the mechanical and creative aspects of drawing opened new creative (and monetary!) vistas for an artist.
And yet, in some cases, no. Drawing on a regular basis does not materially effect ones creativity. I know this for a fact, as while I draw on occasion (mostly to pass time or alleviate boredom), I do not actively draw to increase my creative juices. Why? My personal creative expressions do not (generally) demand it. As weird as it may seem, especially in light of what I have written above, it just doesn't "do" much for me. At times, it can help me rediscover some formal relationships that I am overlooking, but in general…meh.
Of course, that does not mean I do not know how to draw, or that I did not spend many years learning how to effectively draw (I was trained in both architectural draftsmanship and freehand composition). Drawing, like any skill, can get rusty at times, and mine are probably heavily oxidized. Fortunately, a few weeks in front of a sketchpad can re-hone said skills.
Finally, the last word about drawing- like any human expression, some come by it through hard work (me!) and some have a natural talent. If your natural proclivities lead you to draw on a regular basis, it would be silly to suggest that you, like my friend mentioned above, won't find greater creative expression possible. Good luck!
At risk of offering contradictory points of view, let me posit two answers- yes, it can certainly assist in the creative process, and no, while it's part and parcel of said process, it's not necessarily needed to be "creative."
Let me say at the outset that, like learning the nuances and grammatical conventions of a language necessary to communicate effectively as a writer, a visual artist (of any stripe) must master basic drawing skills in order to become an effective artist.
If you want to be a competent visual artist, you must learn to draw. It's the fundamental tool of visual communications. Period.
That being said, you shouldn't (and generally can't ) expect to draw like a Picasso or Rembrandt. However, you should be able to, at minimum, express yourself clearly with a drawing. It's actually a very low bar to jump, but one that, sadly, many artists nowadays eschew.
To the original question… if the primary focus in your art is more realistic representation (or some offshoot thereof), drawing is a skill and pastime that can effectively increase your range of expressive possibilities, and hence, your creative potential. A close friend is a exceptionally skilled portraitist, who's pen I envy. He's branched out into finely detailed landscapes- and finds the skills he honed as a (working) portraitist greatly to his advantage. Indeed, he started creating landscapes as his creativity was piqued by the endless portraits he completed. Or, in his words "I got tired of doing kids and dogs, kids and dogs, all day, and well, decided to draw the landscape around me."
Here is a case where an intensive focus on the mechanical and creative aspects of drawing opened new creative (and monetary!) vistas for an artist.
And yet, in some cases, no. Drawing on a regular basis does not materially effect ones creativity. I know this for a fact, as while I draw on occasion (mostly to pass time or alleviate boredom), I do not actively draw to increase my creative juices. Why? My personal creative expressions do not (generally) demand it. As weird as it may seem, especially in light of what I have written above, it just doesn't "do" much for me. At times, it can help me rediscover some formal relationships that I am overlooking, but in general…meh.
Of course, that does not mean I do not know how to draw, or that I did not spend many years learning how to effectively draw (I was trained in both architectural draftsmanship and freehand composition). Drawing, like any skill, can get rusty at times, and mine are probably heavily oxidized. Fortunately, a few weeks in front of a sketchpad can re-hone said skills.
Finally, the last word about drawing- like any human expression, some come by it through hard work (me!) and some have a natural talent. If your natural proclivities lead you to draw on a regular basis, it would be silly to suggest that you, like my friend mentioned above, won't find greater creative expression possible. Good luck!
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