A how-to handbook that makes drawing easy. Offers simplified techniques and scores of brand-new hints and helps. Step by step procedures. Hundreds of illustrations. This description may be from another edition of this product.
This one has info that you would otherwise have to buy multiple books on; heads, hands, feet, draping the figure. Hamm's approach is realistic, so if you want exaggerated Frazetta or Boris style, this isn't it. I would compare it more to Hogarth's "Dynamic" titles, but more compact and with pointers that are often left out in other anatomical texts.
I often recommend it as the "starter book" to art students, but I still refer to it, even today.
It would've been okay, but.......
Published by Kristy , 1 year ago
There are ten pages torn out! The book would be fine if it wasn't missing pages.
Complete & detailed for beginners- incredible Head & Figure
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
Is it really possible for beginners to get a quick start to this difficult subject? The answer here simply is- YES! Jack Hamm has done here what *very* few books can: he introduces beginners to clear, detailed instructions that will continue to help them grow in their skills- even all the way to being established working professionals. Even professionals can use a few pointers every now & then, and this book is incredibly jam-packed in this regard. For such a slim book, it's truly a phenomenal achievement. Great price too! Maybe the one knock on this book is its general appearance- it's an illustrative style popular in 1963. Style is really irrelevant though(!): it's the simple tips, tricks, and clear instructions here that continue to make this book so incredibly popular, even today. All aspects of the head are considered in the 1st part: step-by-step head & feature construction; proportions & measurements; varying types & comparisons; male & female differences; skeletal structure & details; drawing features using the fewest lines possible; styles & types of hair; foreshortening & rotation; profiles for men & women; planes & shading; semi-cartoons, kids & elderly. EVERYTHING is included here. It's the full-figures section that gets *phenomenally* detailed- 2/3 of this book. Proportions are 1st- using 8-head & 7-1/2 head standards. Differences between males & females are described & depicted. How the skeleton affects the surface of the figure is constantly emphasized. Simple lines & shapes for full-figure construction & individual parts structure here are near genius. EVERYTHING a parts analysis could include is detailed here. Torso, neck, arms, hands, legs, feet, and even *clothes* are considered. Illustrators & Comicbook artists will especially treasure this work. Fine artists may be put off by the style- for them I recommend George Bridgman for a more general approach to memory drawing & drawing from life. His classical beauty is very different than the illustrations here by Hamm, yet I can definitely recommend both. It all depends on what you prefer! Other great books (not necessarily for beginners): anything by George Bridgman, Andrew Loomis, Burne Hogarth & even Ernest Watson. Highly recommended! And for photo-reference of different heads, angles & ethnicities, check out Facial Expressions: A Visual Reference for Artists...
Clear and Concise
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
This is, without a doubt, the best book on figure drawing that I have ever seen. Most books get muddled trying to teach you anatomy, and muscle groups. They are also all written by teachers who know the one way that works for them. Jack Hamm, on the other hand, has no problem showing you multiple ways to draw a head, body, hair, etc. The drawings are clear, with only enough detail to get the point across. No extra shading, or different drawing techniques to confuse the issue. To those people that say the book is dated (it was originally published in the 60's I think), people haven't really changed. How can a book on drawing the human body get 'dated'?
The complete one-book reference on drawing head and figure.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
This book is a clearly written, easy to follow, detailed and concise handbook to drawing the head and figure by using several different approaches and understanding the anatomy of the human body from the outside without going deeper into its musculature or skeletal structure. This fully illustrated reference contains over 900 diagrams and illustrations and is structured into fourteen carefully organized sections that pack into one book, without leaving anything out, all the information that usually takes other authors 2 or 3 volumes. The author covers general topics like figure and head construction, basic lines of the figure, head patterns, angles and comparisons, movements, proportions and simplified figures. He also goes into specific topics like facial features, hair, torso, neck and shoulders, arms, hands, legs, and feet. As an added bonus he includes not so common topics such as youth and age, and clothing, but as a warning, note that most fashion elements like clothing, hairstyles and makeup are from the 1960's since this volume is a reprint of a book originally published in 1963. By studying this book as if it were a textbook on a course, doing all the exercises and reviewing each section afterwards, I have noticeably improved my drawings in a very short time. If you are a beginner, this is the first book you should buy to understand the fundamentals of head and figure drawing before going into deeper, more complicated and not so thorough figure drawing books. If you are a seasoned or professional artist, get this book to discover new principles and techniques with which to experiment. This book is a must for any artist's bookshelf. --Reviewed by Maritza Volmar
If you want to draw the figure, this book is indispensable
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
I own many artistic-anatomy and figure-drawing books and this is one of my favorites. I can't say that this is the only book you should buy if you want to learn to draw the figure, but it should absolutely be one of the books you buy. Maybe even your first.This book gives you so much information that other books lack. There are hints for drawing every part of the body, including the shoulders, necks, noses, mouths, eyes, arms, elbows, hands, and legs. These hints are practical and directly applicable to your drawings. The book isn't full of highly finished figure drawings that are beautiful to look at but don't help you actually learn to draw; instead, the drawings are more like "illustrations" but the principles contained here are what's important. You can produce your own finished figure drawings in your own style after you've learned what this book has to offer.There is no perfect book and you can never have enough figure drawing books. Each one has something to teach you that isn't discussed in the others. Other recommendations include every book by Robert Beverly Hale and Terrance Coyle (Anatomy Lessons from the Great Masters, Master Class in Figure Drawing, Albinus on Anatomy, etc.), Atlas of Human Anatomy for the Artist by Stephen Rogers Peck, An Atlas of Anatomy for Artists by Fritz Schider, and books by Barcsay, Hale & Richer, and so many others. Buy them all. Enjoy them all.In short, I can't praise this book enough. Buy it. Use it. You won't be disappointed.
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