The New Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain Workbook: Guided Practice in the Five Basic Skills of Drawing by Betty Edwards


The New Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain Workbook: Guided Practice in the Five Basic Skills of Drawing
Title : The New Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain Workbook: Guided Practice in the Five Basic Skills of Drawing
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1585421952
ISBN-10 : 9781585421954
Language : English
Format Type : Spiral-bound
Number of Pages : 148
Publication : Published October 28, 2002

Millions of people have learned to draw using the methods of Dr. Betty Edwards. Now, in an essential companion to her bestselling classic, Edwards offers readers the key to mastering this art form: guided practice in their newfound creative abilities.

Here are forty new exercises that cover each of the five basic skills of drawing. Each practice session includes a brief explanation and instructional drawings, suggestions for materials, sample drawings, and blank pages for the reader's own drawings. Also provided in this spiral-bound workbook is a pullout viewfinder, a crucial tool for effective practice. While The New Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain focused primarily on portrait drawing with pencil, this workbook gives readers experience in various subject matter-still life, landscape, imaginative drawing-using alternative mediums such as pen and ink, charcoal, and cont&eacute crayon.

For all those who are taking a drawing class, who have already received instruction through a book or course, or who prefer to learn by doing, this volume of carefully structured "homework" offers the perfect opportunity to reinforce and improve their skills and expand their repertoire.


The New Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain Workbook: Guided Practice in the Five Basic Skills of Drawing Reviews


  • Teri

    This is a workbook that goes with the main text, The New Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain . It has more exercises than the main text (40 exercises, in fact). This workbook has minimal explanation compared with the main text-- the latter delves a great deal into brain hemisphere function and ways to access those parts that are best for drawing, whereas the workbook only focuses on actual drawing. So I think of the main text as the "teacher text," this workbook as the "student text," and the DVD as a crash course for both teacher and student. I recommend all three, especially if you're a homeschooler looking to incorporate art into your curriculum.

    This workbook has a coil binding and is designed to be sketched directly into it (blank pages are provided after each of the exercises). At the back of the book is a plastic PicturePlane Viewfinder to cut out (which is one of the tools used with this drawing method). The author divides drawing into 5 basic skills: the perception of edges, the perception of spaces (negative space), the perception of relationships (sighting perspective & proportions), the perception of lights & shadows, and perception of the whole. This workbook provides multiples exercises for each skill. Each exercise briefly states the exercise's purpose, provides a list of materials needed, provides instructions and post-exercise remarks. Some of the exercises are the same as what you'll find in the main text and DVD, but there are many more that are new. An exercise or two per week would make a nice one-year drawing curriculum for homeschoolers or for anyone wanting an independent drawing program.

    By the way, if you want a hassle-free way to get all the drawing materials, go to the author's
    website. We love the Portfolio Workshop Kit.

    See my related review of the main text
    here.

  • Jason Pym

    Happily there are now endless outstanding books and online courses to teach yourself to draw, and this is one of them.

    Here we have forty exercises across a range of subjects and mediums (pen and ink to crayon). Actually, one of my favourite lessons from the book is not one of these exercises but a piece of advice that comes right at the beginning: How to fight procrastination.

    We all have these great plans to set aside a day a week or an hour a day to practice drawing, but it never happens – something always gets in the way. I have no idea where that inertia comes from, because once I actually start drawing the time flies by in pure enjoyment of the process. But the key is how to get to actually sitting at the desk with a pencil in your hand?

    Edwards says forget about timetabling drawing time. Instead just set a minimum goal which she calls the ‘two minute miracle.’ The idea is that you set yourself tiny, easily-achievable goals whereby you coax yourself, kind of trick yourself, into starting to draw. So you say to yourself, ‘Ok, I’m only going to look at what the next exercise is.’ ‘Ok, I’m just going to lay in the edges of the drawing.’ And before you know it you’ve already started putting pencil to paper, and then it’s easy to forget all those pressing excuses to do anything else but.

    It reminds me of some exercise advice I saw, where a gym instructor said the same kind of thing about setting minimum goals: Just turning up to the gym, even if you sit there and read a paper for 20 minutes, is a good start. Before long once you find you’re actually there it’s so much easier to start exercising.

    The exercises I found most useful were:

    Drawing upside down
    This is straight copying an upside-down drawing (it works better with line drawings), which really forces you to look at the relationship between lines and shapes, to look at negative space, and ignore all those ‘symbols’ floating around in your brain and making inaccurate shortcuts in your drawing. This really helps you to ‘unlearn’ what you think you know and draw what’s really there.

    Drawing negative space
    This concentrates on just drawing the negative space around a chair and a bunch of flowers in a vase, leaving the flowers themselves blank. This reminder to look at negative space is useful because you often forget, even when in the ‘trance-like’ drawing mode, to stop concentrating on discrete objects and look at everything as being equally worthy of consideration. Plus when you concentrate on negative space it does make your drawings more vivid, ‘drawing that emphasize negative spaces are a pleasure to look at, perhaps because the compositions are strong (emphasis on negative space always improves composition) and the spaces and shapes are unified.’

    Drawing the head in profile
    ‘Eye level to chin is the same distance as back of the eye to the back of the ear.’ Drawing profiles is good for practising edges, spaces and relationships. Good to use negative spaces when you run into trouble. And when ‘drawing the hair, squint your eyes to see the larger highlights and the shadows. Avoid drawing symbolic hair – repeated parallel or curly lines. Hair forms a shape, focus on drawing that shape.’

    Edwards herself says that she found one of the most useful to be this one:

    Pure contour drawing
    Sit at a table, with your pencil in hand on the sketchpaper. Now turn in your seat 90 degrees away from the paper (so that you can’t see your drawing) and look at the palm of your other hand. Concentrate on drawing the line on one square inch in the palm of your hand.

    She says that this is the most efficient way for preparing the brain for visual tasks. The verbal, system-based ‘left’ side of the brain switches off at such a boring task, allowing the visual ‘right’ side of the brain to take over.

    I have a different, but related, way of doing the same thing: I begin my drawings with my non-drawing hand (which is my right, as I’m left handed). This takes so much concentration in basic motor control that I kind of phase out anyway, and I’m left with an interesting sketch I can refine with my drawing hand afterward.

    Drawing on the picture plane
    This one is for those who haven’t got the hand of foreshortening yet, and probably of great use to beginning or younger students. You balance a hard, transparent plastic sheet on your non-drawing hand, then use a wipeable marker to draw your hand as you see it directly onto the plastic sheet. Then place the completed drawing on a white background so you can see it properly.

    Foreshortening and the picture plane are concepts that are like a switch, they seem incomprehensible till you grasp the idea and then once you have the epiphany it’s just a matter of refining your skill.

    On the cover it says this books is ‘guided practice in the five basic skills of drawing.’ What are they, according to Betty Edwards?

    1 Edges
    Contours. She defines ‘contours’ in the beginning as ‘a line that represents the shared edges of shapes, or shapes and spaces.’ What a lay person would call ‘outlines.’

    2 Spaces
    Meaning ‘negative spaces,’ instead of looking at the table legs, try and draw the shape of the space between the table legs.

    3 Relationships
    Perspective (portraying three dimensions on a two dimensional surface) and proportion (the size, location, or amount of one element in relation to another).

    4 Light and shadow
    At a basic level, this is ‘shading,’ using light to bring out the three dimensional portrayal of the subject. Can also mean the communication of time, atmosphere and mood. In traditional art instruction there are four aspects of light and shadow: Highlights (the lightest lights), cast shadows (the darkest darks), reflected lights (not as light as the highlights) and crest shadows (the shadow that falls between the highlight and reflected light, not as dark as cast shadow).

    5 ‘Gestalt’
    ‘The “thingness” of the thing.’ This one is perhaps a bit difficult to explain eloquently, but I think is actually the most essential element, especially in heavily stylised drawing. Does this drawing convey the essential qualities of a bicycle, a koi carp or Albert Einstein? This is what I love about illustration, in that true masters can capture their subject with just a few strokes of the pen.

  • Darjeeling

    A rather lengthy but profound quote from the book. This advice alone may be worth the purchase of this book:

    'I would guess that the biggest difficulty you will experience in working through these pages is finding the time to draw. Telling yourself that you will draw for an hour each day, or even an hour each week, rarely works. The commitment of even that much time will probably seem too great. You must remember that your brain's language mode-the left hemisphere, verbal-analytic brain mode-does not want you to draw at all, because it becomes "set aside" while you are drawing. The language
    mode is very good at presenting reasons why you should not draw: you need to pay your bills, you need to call your mother, you need to balance your checkbook (sic), or you need to tend to business.
    Once you actually get into drawing, however, time passes seamlessly and productively. Therefore, I will recommend what has worked for me: a version of the so-called "two-minute miracle," a technique physical therapists use to enable people to exercise even when they do not want to. They are taught to say to themselves, "I don't have time to take a walk right now, but I will walk for just two minutes." Once they are actually walking of course, they forget their objections and continue walking.
    Here is my version of the two-minute miracle. Keep this drawing workbook in a convenient place, along with your pencils and eraser. Sit down for a moment and take the workbook in hand, saying to yourself, "I'm not really going to draw now, but I'll just turn to the page of the next exercise." Then, take the next step: "I'm not really going to draw, but I'll just pick up the pencil and make a few marks to start this drawing." Then, "I'm not really going to draw, but I'll just sketch in some of the main
    edges in this drawing..." and so on. You will soon find yourself with a completed drawing-and unaware that time has passed. I realize (sic) that this may sound, well, stupid, but it does work. I have
    completed entire projects using this technique-a technique of (let's face it) tricking the language mode of the brain into letting one do creative work. You may find this hard to believe, but the single most difficult problem for art students and even for working artists is getting the work done. One is always fighting the delaying tactics of the verbal system, whose mantra is "Not now." At its most extreme, the result is writer's block or artist's block; a milder version is called procrastination.'

  • Samar

    This book was about drawing techniques and the art of art. The book helped you with what way you see things and how to put them into perspective in your drawing.
    I gave this only 3 stars because of the fact that all the exercises were really tough and I didn’t get much of them and also didn’t get much time to do then.
    The best thing that I learned from the book is that when you grow up you will have stopped drawing and you will have the same drawing ability that you had when you were 10/11 or whenever you stopped drawing so don’t ever stop – just carry on.
    I think you should read this book because it would help you regain that confidence in your drawing ability.

  • ♥☆SℓιM☆♥

    I freaking love this book. I definitely enjoyed the drawing 1 class I had to take because of this drawing workbook. Because I got to drawing things I didn’t draw before. To things like self-portraits (kind of hated those lol) but I was glad I got to because I got to get back into drawing faces again and this class and this workbook helped me with that.

  • Annie Shay

    I found it hard to do alone.

  • Irwan

    Drawing is fun. A refreshing change from daily activities, mainly at work, which require logical and verbal side of the brain :-)
    Although not a good drawer (yet) myself, this activity has given me the ability to see the world differently.
    This book provide an interesting method to follow. Another frontier to explore!

  • Bridget

    Have this book

  • Rashid

    hi