Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Life Drawing: Pogany's Sketchbook
This post is just the tip of the iceberg... see reason number 8 on our The Top Ten Reasons To Support The A-HAA for links to more great art instruction posts.

Drawing is a language, and it requires building a vocabulary to be eloquent. Students should carry a sketchbook with them wherever they go and draw everything they see- from people's heads in a late night coffee shop to fireplugs on the street. Everything you draw becomes part of your dictionary of imagery in the future.
Cartoons are about things that aren't real- pure imagination. But even here, it's important to have balance... A friend of mine, Louise Zingarelli once told me, "You can't draw crazy things until you can draw perfectly straight. Wonky perspective all over isn't weird or interesting- it's just ugly and dumb. You've got to have both, working right against wrong... just like working warms against cools in colors."
Recently, we featured the book, Willy Pogany's Drawing Lessons. Pogany was a children's book illustrator who specialized in fantasy subjects. At the end of the book, after the lessons, he presents a selection of his work sketches. Pogany was particularly eloquent, with a huge library of shapes and forms in his head. He also had an amazing sense of balance- making the fantastic seem real. This is truly great draftsmanship.

















If you found this post to be useful, see Willy Pogany's Drawing Lessons Part One
For more art instruction posts, see The $100K Animation Drawing Course, Fundamentals of Composition Part One and Part Two, Chad's Design for Television, Willard Mullin on Animals, Incorporating Natural Forms- Haeckel's Artforms in Nature, and Originality vs Imitation: Chaplin's Shadow.
Thanks
Stephen Worth
Director
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive
.
Labels: drawing, education, fantasy art, figure drawing, instruction, lesson, life drawing, willy pogany






























3 Comments:
I bought the book after seeing the previous post. I can't say the instruction in it is all that great, but the drawings are amazing.
I also noticed Pogany's name in the credits of one of the cartoons on the Woody Woodpecker set. (Scrambled Eggs) How much animation work did he actually do?
Wow, those are really good, thanks for posting.
Hey Steve, do you draw?
I studied design at UCLA and got a little drawing as part of that. But I don't draw for a living. I wish I could draw like Pogany though!
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