Oh yeah, I don't have any drawings but I was meaning to ask about art professors/tutors. How would I go about getting a regular one outside of public high school (not an option) and/or college (not an option) and/or paying buttloads of money for a private tutor (also not an option)? Are there any other regular outlets?
"Hi. How can I get a premium service that others have to pay up their ass for at no cost to me?"If you want personal, long-term training, you're going to have to either pay for it or be part of an educational institution or group that is willing to pay for you. That means, as far as I know and unless you have contacts, that your options for formal education are limited to the above.
Your best bet is to go through the education system that you currently are in. It shouldn't hard, and don't underestimate the power of repeatedly asking powerful people for things until you get them.
If you just want to be around a teacher, then you could possibly attend public workshops and other such group events, or stalk an artist. I can't offer you much advice in this field, as I've relied on my teachers and various professional artists/sculptors/designers/professors that I'm familiar with and that I know by proxy.
If you don't even need real people, you can go to the ConceptArt forum that I've repeatedly and explicitly mentioned several times. Hell, go there anyway. They've got a lot of good educational material and some great examples.
I've been drawing real people for a while for the last two weeks, or at least I was until I realized people hate that and shot me nasty looks constantly even when I'm essentially drawing outlines/circles and only barely glancing at them.
If you're "good at drawing", people don't mind as much. :V
Visiting workshops that explicity deal with figure drawing would help.
Remember that you need to be able to look at the person constantly, and do the pencil-comparing dealio for longer sessions. Look at the person as much as you can instead of the paper - when I do it, especially for when I'm looking to do those short ones, I only barely glance at the paper (helps if you have good hand-eye coordination).
Keep doing it and staring at them until they actually tell you to stop, I guess.
I also checked out some art books per LNCP's previous advice. Read completely through one and partially through another while doing some of the exercises. I don't think it's been really beneficial at my current stage outside of general drawing composition and step-by-step stuff. Perhaps anatomy-focused books would be more beneficial.
FYI, a lot of step-by-step, "HOW TO DO [X]" books and most of the anime drawing books that I've seen in libraries are bollocks.
You can borrow biology textbooks and draw from those. If you ask an art teacher that you know and trust, they'll often have good examples.