Portrait Practice — Painting the Asaro (Variant) Head

My last few works — a portrait and a “portrait” of the Asaro head — have been in the cartoon realm, so I’m skipping posting those for now!

Instead, I found a video on YouTube that walks you through drawing the “Loomis Head” and converting it (for lack of a better term) to a planar head (what the artist calls the “memorized Asaro head”). After watching that, I drew the planar head on my 8×10 canvas with willow charcoal.

What I discovered in my failed attempt at painting the Asaro head is that the color Ivory Black is fairly transparent, and doesn’t cover well. I ended up going to Michael’s and bought some Mars Black from Liquitex Basics. It’s student grade compared to the artist grade Ivory Black, but wow, what a difference!

Anyway, here’s the Asaro head done; sage green for the background.

Below is a copy of the reference photo I used to paint, as well as a close-up of my value changes. In some cases like the upper lip, the value change is too abrupt, while in other cases there’s not enough of a value change. I’ll have to keep practicing.

Practice Sketches from Lee Hammond’s How to Draw Lifelike Portraits

Portraits and the human figure are what interest me the most in drawing, and I love the way Lee Hammond shades her drawing. The blending is so much smoother and looks like paint, compared to, say, cross-hatching.

So, I am following along in her book and doing a few exercises in between working on my ArtTutor.com class.

These are just a few of the images/exercises I’ve done, focusing primarily on clothing and draped fabric.