how to draw, drawing, draw
The Elements of Drawing by John Ruskin

On First Practice
Sketching from Nature
On Color and Composition



EXERCISE X: Plates to Study

Now I have led you to this conclusion by observation of tree form only, because in that the thing to be proved is clearest. But no natural object exists which does not involve in some part or parts of it this inimitableness, this mystery of quantity, which needs peculiarity of handling and trick of touch to express it completely. If leaves are intricate, so is moss, so is foam, so is rock cleavage, so are fur and hair, and texture of drapery, and of clouds. And although methods and dexterities of handling are wholly useless if you have not gained first the thorough knowledge of the form of the thing; so that if you cannot draw a branch perfectly, then much less a tree; and if not a wreath of mist perfectly, much less a flock of clouds; and if not a single grass blade perfectly, much less a grass bank; yet having once got this power over decisive form, you may safely — and must, in order to perfection of work — carry out your knowledge by every aid of method and dexterity of hand.


But, in order to find out what method can do, you must now look at Art as well as at Nature, and see what means painters and engravers have actually employed for the expression of these subtleties. Whereupon arises the question, what opportunity you have to obtain engravings? You ought, if it is at all in your power, to possess yourself of a certain number of good examples of Turner's engraved works: if this be not in your power, you must just make the best use you can of the shop windows, or of any plates of which you can obtain a loan. Very possibly, the difficulty of getting sight of them may stimulate you to put them to better use. But, supposing your means admit of your doing so, possess yourself, first, of the illustrated edition either of Rogers's Italy or Rogers's Poems, and then of about a dozen of the plates named in the annexed lists. The prefixed letters indicate the particular points deserving your study in each engraving.* Be sure, therefore, that your selection includes, at all events, one plate marked with each letter. Do not get more than twelve of these plates, * The plates marked with a star are peculiarly desirable. See note at the end of Appendix I. [p. 217].2 The letters mean as follows: — a       stands for architecture, including distant grouping of towns, cottages, etc. c       clouds, including mist and aerial effects. f       foliage. g       ground, including low hills, when not rocky. l       effects of light. m       mountains, or bold rocky ground. p       power of general arrangement and effect. q       quiet water. r       running or rough water; or rivers, even if calm, when their line of flow is beautifully marked.


From the "England Series"
a c f r. Arundel.
a f l. Ashby de la Zouche.
a I q r. Barnard Castle.*
f m r. Bolton Abbey.
f g r. Buckfastleigh.*
a 1p. Caernarvon.
c 1 q. Castle Upnor.
a f 1. Colchester.
l q. Cowes.
c f p. Dartmouth Cove.*
c l q. Flint Castle.*
a f g l. Knaresborough.*
a f p. Lancaster.
c l m r. Lancaster Sands.*
a g f Launceston.*
c f 1 r. Leicester Abbey.
f r. Ludlow.
a f l. Margate.
a l q. Orford.
c p. Plymouth.
f Powis Castle.
l m q. Prudhoe Castle.
f l m r. Chain Bridge over Tees.*
m r. High Force of Tees.*
a f q. Trematon.
m q. Ulleswater.
f m. Valle Crucis.
   























From the "Keepsake"
m p q. Arona.   p. St. Germain en Laye.
l m. Drachenfels.*   l p q. Florence.
f l. Marly.*   l m. Ballyburgh Ness.*



nor even all the twelve at first; for the more engravings you have, the less attention you will pay to them. It is a general truth, that the enjoyment derivable from art cannot be increased in quantity, beyond a certain point, by quantity of possession; it is only spread, as it were, over a larger surface, and very often dulled by finding ideas repeated in different works.1 Now, for a beginner, it is always better that his attention should be concentrated on one or two good things, and all his enjoyment founded on them, than that he should look at many, with divided thoughts. He has much to discover; and his best way of discovering it is to think long over few things, and watch them earnestly. It is one of the worst errors of this age to try to know and to see too much: the men who seem to know everything, never in reality know anything rightly. Beware of handbook knowledge.


These engravings are, in general, more for you to look at than to copy; and they will be of more use to you From the "Bible Series"
f m. Mount Lebanon.   c l p g. Solomon's Pools.
m. Rock of Moses at Sinai.   a 1. Santa Saba.
a l m. Jericho.   a l. Pool of Bethesda.
a c g. Joppa.      



From "Scott's Works"
p r. Melrose.*   c m. Glencoe.
f r. Dryburgh.*   c m. Loch Coriskin.*
a l. Cacrlaverock.      



From the "Rivers of France"
a q. Château of Amboise, with large bridge on right.   a p. Rouen Cathedral.
f p. Pont de l'Arche.   l p r. Rouen, looking down the river, poplars on right.*
f I p. View on the Seine, with avenue.   a l p. Rouen, with cathedral and rainbow, avenue on left.
a c p. Bridge of Meulan      
c g p r. Caudebec.*      



when we come to talk of composition, than they are at present; still, it will do you a great deal of good, sometimes to try how far you can get their delicate texture, or gradations of tone: as your pen-and-ink drawing will be apt to incline too much to a scratchy and broken kind of shade. For instance, the texture of the white convent wall, and the drawing of its tiled roof, in the vignette at p. 227 of Rogers's Poems, is as exquisite as work can possibly be; and it will be a great and profitable achievement if you can at all approach it. In like manner, * [The drawings for all these vignettes are in the National Gallery. They are, in the order named, 246 ("Columbus at La Rabida"); 226 ("Twilight"); 230 (" Tornaro "); 231 ("Gipsies "); 243 ("The Falls at Vallombre "); 205 (" St. Maurice"); 203 ("Aosta"); and 223 ("Padua: moonlight").] if you can at all imitate the dark distant country at p. 7, or the sky at p. 80, of the same volume, or the foliage at pp. 12 and 144, it will be good gain; and if you can once draw the rolling clouds and running river at p. 9 of the Italy, or the city in the vignette of Aosta at p. 25, or the moonlight at p. 223, you will find that even Nature herself cannot afterwards very terribly puzzle you with her torrents, or towers, or moonlight.*


You need not copy touch for touch, but try to get the same effect. And if you feel discouraged by the delicacy required, and begin to think that engraving is not drawing, and that copying it cannot help you to draw, remember that it differs from common drawing only by the difficulties it has to encounter. You perhaps have got into a careless habit of thinking that engraving is a mere business, easy enough when one has got into the knack of it. On the contrary, it is a form of drawing more difficult than common drawing; by exactly so much as it is more difficult to cut steel than to move the pencil over paper. It is true that there are certain mechanical aids and methods which reduce it at certain stages either to pure machine work, or to more or less a habit of hand and arm; but this is not so in the foliage you are trying to copy, of which the best and prettiest parts are always etched — that is, drawn with a fine steel point and free hand: only the line made is white instead of black, which renders it much more difficult to judge of what you are about. And the trying to copy these plates will be good for you, because it will awaken you to the real labour and skill of the engraver, and make you understand a little how people must work, in this world, who have really to do anything in it.



Exercise X: What to Notice in the Plates



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The Elements of Drawing by John Ruskin
On First Practice
Exercise One: Shading
Exercise Two: Outlines
Exercise Three: Gradation
Exercise Four: Pencil Drawing
Exercise Five: Drawing Letters
Exercise Six: Drawing Trees
Exercise Seven: Watercolor Practice
Exercise Eight: Drawing Stones
Exercise Nine: More Watercolor Practice
Exercise Ten:

Sketching from Nature
Sketching Trees
Sketching Trees 2
First Sketches
Painting Practice
Drawing from Photographs
How to Draw Quickly
Drawing Shadows
What To Draw
How to Draw Plants
How to Draw Plants 2
Three Laws of Drawing
Light and Shade
Drawing Water
Drawing Clouds

Color
Materials
Using the Right Color
24 Essential Colors
Mixing Colors
Using Colors
Color Techniques
Color Gradation
Watercolor Tints
Using Black and White
Compound Colors
Warm and Cool Colors
Draw with Care

Composition
The Law of Principality
Law of Repetition
Law of Continuity
The Law of Curvature
Law of Radiation
The Law of Contrast
The Law of Interchange
The Law of Consistency
The Law of Harmony








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