With the vast majority of my artwork I am working from a selection of photographs but it is still important part of art education to get out there and do some drawings from life. These can be much more difficult to do as it is easy for perspective and lighting to change whilst drawing and in terms of animals they can very easily just get up and move, leaving your sketch permanently in limbo.
When I was studying art in college drawing from life took 2 forms: still lifes and life drawing (of human models). It can be hard to know where to begin with life drawing but tips we were given were to not worry about what we were doing, never to erase the marks we made, and to work FAST. And it was fast, we were given time periods of 60 seconds, 30, and 10. Giving yourself these short time limits is a great way of getting started.
Something else that's useful when drawing live animals is to do focus on drawing when the animal is at rest. This is what I did of my dog and here are the results.
Don't expect to finish your sketches though, it's very easy for a shift in position or something to happen (a sudden noise or someone walking by) that mean that you cannot continue the same drawing. Working from life is more about building up as much as you are able to in order to convey what you are seeing.
Drawings really do feel more 'alive' when sketches from life!
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