And of course Hitler, but not as an artist but more as the enemy of modern art. The teacher never even called him an artist, but a mere house painter that thought of himself more. And of course, him burning the so called degenerate art (or the "vile art" as she called it) after the art academy rejected him. Now you got me interested in seeing more of his paintings.
Once a teacher uses phrases like "the enemy of modern art", "mere", "house painter", "vile" and "degenerate", I generally try to stop listening to them before I roll my eyes right out of their sockets.
Here are the facts: Firstly, Hitler never burned down the Academy. There are no credible accounts of this; go ahead, look for them (in fact, the Academy suffered few consequences during the Nazi regime besides having to cut down on Jewish workers). Secondly, there are also no records of Hitler's arrogance regarding his artistic ability during this time, either. The main reason they rejected him was because he simply wasn't quite up to par, and was recommended architecture as an alternative career (which he also could not initiate due to having been expelled from school due to insubordination); after that, he wandered about in poverty for several years as a bohemian artist selling watercolours and as a doer of odd jobs.
I find that far too many teachers skew the facts - and sometimes even make up fiction, as was in all likelihood done here - against Hitler because of their prejudices and because he is generally considered to be a despicable figure (the Satan of our time, I suppose). A shame, too; people deserve to learn what's right.
The moral of this being that teachers are not historians. Go figure.
So, putting my jade-coloured glasses and my sour armor on and off to work! Back to traditional art. By the way, I have no tablet to throw away, I'm too poor to afford one. Drew the pictures with a mouse.
Every time you digitally paint with a mouse, you are forcing Jesus to kill a kitten. Why are you making him kill kittens, yo? You're making him cry, too! You made Jesus cry, you monster! Don't do it!
And about drawing symbols, I'm not sure I understand what you mean by it. I searched back for 50 pages, I'm afraid I missed the subject.
Well, props to you at least for taking the effort to look that far back.
Here's a quote from a website regarding symbol-drawing, which is very prevalent in beginner portraiture (no link to website because it's bleh otherwise):
Most people think in terms of symbols when they draw a picture of something.
They draw the same picture, or symbols, over and over for a certain thing, perhaps a chair, and they definitely do this when drawing people.
The key to creating a good likeness is to draw what you see and not the generic picture symbol you learned in 3rd grade.
Learning what something looks like and drawing its likeness is not the same as drawing the same picture for that object every time.
This section will help you learn how to manipulate that "symbol" you are using for faces so you can draw them however you want.
Here's a very basic and clear example:
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Look at this. It is a circle, containing two smaller circles arranged horizontally above a line. There is no more to it.
Yet, you clearly perceive it as a face. Symbol drawing is similar, as instead of drawing what is actually in front of you, you repeat the same "symbols" (little clip-art stamps, if you will) and draw what your abstract idea of an eye and a nose and a mouth - or simply letting those ideas influence you. The result is almost always a confusing mess, as almost nobody doing this has even the slightest clue of what these facial components
actually look like. They - and you, probably - haven't ever really paid attention to the shape and form of, say, a nose.
Here's another one.
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It's very abstract, isn't it? Not like a face at all, and it consists entirely of "symbols" that are not faithful to what that person truly looks like. If you're like me, you'll be struggling for about five minutes to even recognise it for anything else besides some dots, lines and wobbly shapes.
Here's some more from the same artist.
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THEY ALL LOOK THE SAME.The only distinguishing characteristics are their hair (this is also really terrible character design as explained by Dresden Codak
here. He makes some good tutorials, by the way, so bookmark his blog). This is precisely why you should avoid symbol drawing, because they're unconvincing, repetitive, and will get you rejected from art school.
The best way to practice away from it is to avoid tutorials that focus only on parts of the face (such as just the nose, just the eye and just the mouth), as they'll just worsen the condition most of the time, and to always try to draw what is in front of you and
only what is in front of you. Pretend you're a camera, if you have to.
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This is the second of my two school assignments, a Greek statue head. The teacher teased us and didn't want to tell us which gender it was, and it was absolutely androgynous. Wish I had a better shot of it. A friend got a photo of it while we were skipping school 
I can't see anything here, so I won't bother.
I didn't know your school allowed you to bring wine to field trips.
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Two weaknesses:
- For the love of god, do those damn shading exercises.
- You are bad with depth and form. Focus on those when you practise. Gain an intuitive grasp of perspective and shapes.
Please be gentle :c
nowai, bro
you asked for it