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View Full Version : Atts Anatomy Studies!


AntiThinktankSystem
January 29th, 2006, 03:04 PM
http://www.epimusic.com/test/tos/Ohne-Titel-2.jpg
http://www.epimusic.com/test/tos/Ohne-Titel-3.jpg
http://www.epimusic.com/test/tos/Ohne-Titel-4.jpg
http://www.epimusic.com/test/tos/Ohne-Titel-5.jpg
http://www.epimusic.com/test/tos/Ohne-Titel-6.jpg
http://www.epimusic.com/test/tos/Ohne-Titel-7.jpg
http://www.epimusic.com/test/tos/Ohne-Titel-8.jpg
http://www.epimusic.com/test/tos/Ohne-Titel-9.jpg

im really trying to study anatomy seriously now and as you see im at the very beginning, i feel like i am working too inefficient and too slow to finish this massive complex of human anatomy, i gotta have a finnished portfolio for my next run on art school aplications this summer/autum, so i could use a tip from a pro how to get my workflow on fire...
CC apreciated. :)

Rebeccak
January 29th, 2006, 03:09 PM
Really lovely studies here, keep up the good work and keep pushing yourself!

Cheers, :)

~Rebeccak

dorian
January 29th, 2006, 04:03 PM
strong stuff, MORE!
I like the serious approach, keep it that way!
thanks for sharing!

mentler
January 29th, 2006, 04:42 PM
I will comment here <> I think you are doing a great job <> as to a portfolio that is a different matter <> you need to make sure first that the school is going to teach what you want to learn <> next check to Professors and look at there work that will give you great insight into what they like <> there is a big division btw on the study of anatomy <> some schools embrace even life and die by it <> other schools tend to guide you away from it <> Bammes is the anatomy god of Europe wish I had an English translation of the big momma book.

Once more try to find out all you can about the instructors and the entrance committee <> check the students work and prepare your portfolio in that direction.

I have never had a student that did not get accepted where they wanted to go <> do the research <> do the work <> and you will be successful.

As far as the anatomy studies are concerned we are start out on the same road and make a lot of the same mistakes <> I am not sure there are a great many shortcuts that end up with the knowledge you are seeking <> I think we all over render in the beginning <> we probably waste time trying to memorise names <> the most important aspects are the muscles functions <> the insertion points <> grouping muscles that form the same function into a form unit that you can remember easily and draw at any angle <> oh I almost forgot about 10,000 drawings to get started. Rendering is not learning but you will need to render some for your portfolio <> drawings from life are always the best and short poses show your abilities better than long painfully rendered works.

Remember they want to mold you in there image <> so give them the raw material they want to see.

tskills53
January 29th, 2006, 11:57 PM
Very nice, what book are you using for some of that?

Fl3wk
January 31st, 2006, 05:00 AM
I am also studying Anatomy, from the Burne Hogarth Collection. It takes me like an hour to create one image, more if its complex. So you are saying to do quick studies aswell Mentlar?

E.M.GIST
February 1st, 2006, 12:05 PM
Keep studying, these look great! As for portfolio, quality over quantity, especially when it comes to a student portfolio. You already have 8 nice pieces, just keep a consistent steady pace. If they can't see your potential from these, let alone the pieces you produce in the next half year, I am not sure you want to go there.

Fl3wk
February 2nd, 2006, 08:38 AM
Quantity shows how much one has learned. Not everything is about quality.

OP's work: NOW THATS TALENT, it looks real great.

Also would you be kind to tell me what book you study from?

egerie
February 3rd, 2006, 12:35 PM
Excellent work ! I was wondering where you get your anatomic reference material from ?