Holy moly, this video is basically an outline for a master class in portraiture. I’m gonna be watching this literally for weeks and working on the skills. NICE.
@@rhysgiudici5797 Ive been doing this for about a week now, it feels really good to be able to bring a face to light. (I got my mother and sister to pose for me so I could practice other faces. I'mm terrible at drawing male faces, though.) I spend about 30 minutes a day on it, using the same face with all the different levels and I would totally recommend it.
I actually had TM my freshman year of college! He always had such a thoughtful and empathetic approach to teaching. He encouraged us to look into the beauty of things, there was no question that he had a deep and loving outlook on art. 6 hours with him always flew by, and we left class feeling refreshed. TM was easily one of my favorite professors during school, hands down. He is so important, protect him at ALL COSTS~~
On the one hand that is a beautiful way of interpreting his words. On the other hand, he's merely describing a fact that, when you get into that level of observational drawing, you cease to look at the human face as whole and instead see it as an endless complexity of subtle colors and lines and planes that works together fascinatingly. In that frame of mind, judgements and thoughts about culturally-normative beauty and ugliness kind of go away, and you only see the complexity itself which is beautiful by its very existence. This state of mind can be found in many fields and skills where you slow your mind to really observe or do something. It's also a state of mind some meditators achieve, the ultimate purpose of mindfulness. Our brains are fascinating instruments.
I'm only 0:55 seconds into the video and I'm already kinda blown away with the way he describes and explains things. If his art wasn't enough of a hint that he's a pro, the way he thinks/talks about it really confirms it to me.
Awesome video. As a physician (with no artistic skill) I was blown away by your eye-opening explanation of how physiology & anatomy contribute to skin tone. How skin thickness and bony protuberances contribute to "ruddiness"; how melanin is responsible for the relative lack of blue in skin color by absorbing the potentially injurious higher frequency wavelengths. Such a very cool, educational and beautiful video. You are not only a great artist, you are a fantastic teacher as well!
@@phitran514 In the way that I understand it, your brain doesn't perceive reality 1 to 1, it always fills in and assumes things. It takes deliberate attention to be able to see, or hear in my case, what is actually presented to you.
@@hattie_burns @Pat Parker yeah, pretty much. It kind of goes back to when he demonstrates step 1 & step 2 in this video. We intuitively know that faces are supposed to have two eyes, a nose, and a mouth. and in drawing, we usually fudge reality to place these features where we THINK they should go (i.e. the 5 drawings of Van Gogh he had people do- several of them instinctively tried to level out the eyes bc our "ideal" face is one that's symmetrical). The mark of a learned artist is one that can push past these natural biases and trust yourself to see and draw exactly what's in front of you, even if not "perfect". This is why more advanced levels include the push and pull of light and shadow in addition to the basic understanding of underlying planer forms. The more you understand the subtle relationships between these things and allow yourself to copy down the variations, the more accurate your drawing will be.
"I have never encountered a face that wasn't a pleasure to draw" - see, people, that applies to all of you and all of us. We are all worthy to be seen, and there's good to be seen in everyone.
1:56 "People tend to get frustrated when their language is greater than their feeling of reality in the drawing" = A polite way of saying one's frustration in having the better ability to describe something than it is to draw it when their drawing ability isn't good
holy crap he's such a great teacher??? i know they said he's a teacher, but he's is SUCH a teacher. i've learned so much with this video. Please thank this man for me.
yeah there is no way people get art degrees.. i really dont believe that, its probably as much of a thing as canada existing Think about it, who would i hire, someone who makes insane art, or someone whose art is okay but has a degree?
13:22 "This is one of the great joys of portraiture for me. I have never encountered a face that wasnt a pleasure to draw" I agree so so much with this statement. I often draw when I am sitting in a train and there are just so many different shapes in faces. It is incredible and really inspiring. Also for me this was the realisation that we truly are all beautiful in our own distinct way.
As an artist, I honestly think people who truly want to get better at drawing should keep rewatching this video until you have it memorized. It will help you so much..
that's the part of learning to draw something intricate like a face. It is the step where the most difficult ideas are the most important to realize. once you reach this step, the world of faces opens up. Every. single. kind. of face that is drawn, even as he illustrated with different styles, is built upon some structure.
@@TDGCmote As someone who’s trying teach myself, I kinda skipped level 3 and 4 straight to level 5 then somehow got level 3 and 4 in the process and now I’m learning colors without knowing anything at all and hope to learn it on the way.
There's a branch of philosophy called Aesthetics which is about the nature of beauty and art and all that jazz. People have been philosophizing about art for millennia.
they exist! the good ones don't take themselves so seriously such that it seems like they have sticks up their bums. this guy is a perfect example. such a cool dude
i’m currently pursuing a fine arts degree, my first class was a realism course that cost me over $1k. this guy taught me (in 25 mins) literally everything my professor taught me in 3 months.
Feedback is valuable though, and part of that value is forcing you to take the time to practice what you learned. But, yeah it feels like he dumped a whole semester of knowledge on us. lol
Yeah to people who actually understand everything he’s saying and doing, most people who literally have no idea what it takes to draw anything outside a stick figure or the different tools used and etc..it’s not something that can be absorbed as easily as the experienced artists that are watching this. I watched the origami video and I was completely just lost..so I can imagine people who have never drawn feeling as overwhelmed.
"But we are all... not blue" The way he hesitated when saying this, or the fact that he drew a sun before explaining the color wheel were all just too cute.
Teaching is an entirely different craft than just doing an art. So not only is he, and Bob Ross, talented in their artistic craft, they also are talented enough communicators to explain the ideas behind what they do and why they do it when doing that art.
This was such an unpretentious, clear and unjudgemental video; I am so inspired to draw again, and I've been looking for something like this for some time. Thank you so much, I wish I could have a hundred of these videos by this teacher in all kinds of artistic areas to learn 🙏❤
@@hamburgerkiddo3319 unfortunately life has gotten in the way, including health, but I am heartened by your comment ❤ much love and thank you for asking
TIL art is not just expression but science and physiology. I've always been astounded by talented artists but this gives me an even greater appreciation of them. This guy is absolutely brilliant.
i didn’t know that blocking was called blocking, but honestly it is the single most helpful technique for practicing accuracy in my experience. super fun, too! the first couple tries can be rough, but now it’s so deeply ingrained in my drawing process that i can’t imagine how i drew without it. i remember watching this video a couple years ago and feeling out of my depth, so it’s satisfying to come back and see how my skills have sort of independently progressed to the same place he’s recommending.
This is the kind of teacher that completely inspires you to dive into something you never thought you would, and fall in love with the subject. Absolutely blown away by this one!!!
What an awesome teacher! I love the fact that he mentions the popular mistakes and also he explains not only what to do and how to think, but also "why" (like for example - why in some places the skin is more red, while in others it's pale). Very professional This oil version in the end... Amazing.
I don't see anyone making timestamps for each level, and I actually need it whenever I want to come back to this video to review it. So, here it is: Level 1: The Solar Head - 0:56 Level 2: Identifying features - 1:35 Level 3: Volumes and Proportions - 2:18 Level 4: Planes of the Head - 3:54 Level 5: The Block-In - 7:16 Level 6: Contour - 12:05 Level 7: Light and Shadow - 13:40 Level 8: Highlights and Accents - 15:54 Level 9: Gradients and Value - 17:39 Level 10: Establishing a Flesh Tone - 19:25 Level 11: Color as Value - 22:04 I'll also want to include the concepts mentioned (without definition) for each level here.
I doubt he will read this, but if only he knew the number of times I watched this not only to learn and apply to my own art, but just to appreciate his mastery and command of his craft, and his ability to teach and explain it. Bravo, you're an inspiration to find one's niche (be it art, or something else).
This video inspired me to start drawing. My level just 3 weeks ago was tragic, I could mess up a circle 🤣. I have no relations at all to the world of arts and have never taken any class. I purchased one of those draw in 30 days book and now after a month, i look at things differently. So far, it has taught me circles, spheres, cubes, hollow cubes and this week I'm learning complex cubes. But most importantly, i look at mundane objects with mystery now: how the light touches them, how heavy they look, smooth, textured. Wow have I even truly looked at anything ever ! I CANNOT BELIEVE i can draw something now!! Now i don't look at this video with despair. I'll probably never get to the level of this genius, because I don't like it enough to dedicate my life to it. But i like it enough to draw 10 mn a day, which i believe will take me far enough in a few years. If you're an absolute beginner, start drawing, anything, TODAY.
this immediately reminded of me and couple other "cool guys" only drawing pictures of our Art teacher every time he gave us a free period to do what we wanted. I remember being surprised that he let us do this EVERY SINGLE TIME. later I realized that we learned SO MUCH because we had to keep coming up with new versions of it to make each other laugh
"I have never encountered a face that wasn't a pleasure to draw." Edit: thx everyone for the likes. Interesting how a feeling I had for just a moment has echoed around the world like that. :-)
Haha I've been told my face isn't ugly, but I guess it's a bit differently shaped when it comes to proportions. I was doing a self portrait in an art class and I couldn't figure out how to draw myself, so my teacher took a stab at it and she struggled for 25 mins before she gave up XD At the end she just muttered, "Your face is difficult!" She gave me a bit of a break on that assignment :P
the part he said about drawing symbols for eyes was really similar to something my first drawing professor told me in my first year of art school about 10 years ago. our first assignment was a charcoal self portrait, and afterward he gave us a lecture/over all group critique. i remember one specific thing he said was “you’re not drawing eyes, you’re drawing the symbol of an eye” and honestly it took me almost a year to really understand the value in what he was trying to tell us. we were drawing the symbols for our features instead of actually looking at the curves and shapes that come together to make our faces anyway we did about a month of blind contour exercises after that
TM Davy is such an excellent teacher! He managed to condense my entire art degree into 25 minutes. He has such a great way of explaining everything, I will be returning to this video for sure!
OMG. I've watched so many art tutorials and this basically summed up what other people take 1000 pages of textbooks and hours in classes do. Thanks Wired and RM Davy!
lv16 when life is art and u are drawing reality, now ur mind and body have became some thing beyond reality tho still a simple abstract art , mind and body slowly crash into each other creating a mass of "creativity " whose reality is undefinable
Level 17 will be that reality is an illusion you fix by existing in the abstract universe as art and you warp time and space to create the art everyone is scared of. It is too strong for them, but you created your own life in paradoxically challenging circumstances.
The moment he slowly turned a blob of oil painting into photo-realistic portrait of himself is mind blowing. It's like watching the universe created itself.
@@alekosthecrow There's a general idea of a person who knows what they're talking about or is an expert in their field. We might think of somebody in a suit or a lab coat or other formal/professional wear. He's wearing a very casual piece of clothing (a hoodie) but speaking like a professional.
if he would have sold this as a course instead, he would have been rich by now. you're amazing man, thank you so much for providing us with this much amount of info for free!
Level 7 and level 8 are switched for me, I always start with the darkest and lightest parts before going to the midtones Also: this video made me feel better about my art, thank you! I feel like artists sometimes get bogged down in their mistakes and how far we still have to go (and being surrounded by other artists means that-though there’s benefits- you lose perspective of how far you’ve COME)
What an amazing tutorial! As a self taught artist, at 67, I feel honored to absorb such great information. Which at the same time gives more confidence to continue my journey. I will watch this video until I can no longer have issues with portraiture drawing. Congratulations and so grateful to have found you. A master of his own art. Blessings, be safe and take care.
Level 10 and up was a color theory class I've always wanted with a practical approach. Those last 5 mins outdo my entire university education in color theory... Thank you, WIRED and TM Davy! XD
You're awesome....I'm a self taught artist, and I just realised that a lot of things you told us...has been followed by me subconsciously while creating portraits
"Draw what you see not what you think you see" a very important tip for those who are trying to learn drawing. And remember anything is possible you just need patience and practice!
More than a lot of the other “levels” videos, this one strikes me as really impressive. It must be so hard to have the skill to do all the levels and to intentionally hold yourself back and draw a level 4.
As an ex teacher and trainer for half my life, now 70, three years ago took up teaching my self Oils and WC using RUclips and I have watched far more than I could ever say how many, so it is excellent to find 'gold' in the form of a true technically competent artist who can actually draw and knows his pedagogy. Sadly, you are very much a rare breed of here.
Hats off for that man.not only for his marvellous ability,but also for his scientific explanation which led to his painting into a divine way.it proofed he is an all-grounder at his field.
My god, he is an amazing teacher!!! I am a self taught artist who loves to do portraiture, and he explained things in such a clear and understandable way. Even though I am quite experienced and do these things without thinking about it, I have come away with so much more information and understanding of what it is (and why) I'm doing it. Would love to have this guy as a teacher!
2:00 i love that the laugh lines were part of his defining characteristics. they definitely are something that makes a guy look distinguished, but they're easy to miss. this really /is/ one of the charms of the visual arts. i love the psychology and self-expression bend to this video; it puts the "arts" in "visual arts", and it's a refreshing take against all the discouraging "i'm not good enough!" i feel in my own current visual arts education!
Watching this took me back to high school ☺❤ I remember learning all of these things in my art classes. It's a reminder of just how complex art can be. To be be able to create art is to be able to observe, analyze, study, represent, etc.
i love watching people make self-portraits, this series of portraits, with the different levels and styles, its so interesting to see how people view themselves
Holy moly, this video is basically an outline for a master class in portraiture. I’m gonna be watching this literally for weeks and working on the skills. NICE.
Same here ☀️
Im already failing at level one :(
how's the progress?
@@rhysgiudici5797 Ive been doing this for about a week now, it feels really good to be able to bring a face to light. (I got my mother and sister to pose for me so I could practice other faces. I'mm terrible at drawing male faces, though.) I spend about 30 minutes a day on it, using the same face with all the different levels and I would totally recommend it.
theoriginaledi watch Angel Ganev he goes very deep into the planes of the face
I actually had TM my freshman year of college! He always had such a thoughtful and empathetic approach to teaching. He encouraged us to look into the beauty of things, there was no question that he had a deep and loving outlook on art. 6 hours with him always flew by, and we left class feeling refreshed. TM was easily one of my favorite professors during school, hands down. He is so important, protect him at ALL COSTS~~
:D that's really cool m8
Where?
• Oh Dang • in School of Visual Art
Cool.
I’m only 7 minutes in and he seems like a lovely teacher
“I have never encountered a face that wasn’t a pleasure to draw”
A single sentence that proofed to us what a pleasant person he is in real life.
Hes not saying they aint ugly doe 💀
@@martinebonita2658 You made me spit my drink lol
On the one hand that is a beautiful way of interpreting his words. On the other hand, he's merely describing a fact that, when you get into that level of observational drawing, you cease to look at the human face as whole and instead see it as an endless complexity of subtle colors and lines and planes that works together fascinatingly. In that frame of mind, judgements and thoughts about culturally-normative beauty and ugliness kind of go away, and you only see the complexity itself which is beautiful by its very existence. This state of mind can be found in many fields and skills where you slow your mind to really observe or do something. It's also a state of mind some meditators achieve, the ultimate purpose of mindfulness. Our brains are fascinating instruments.
@@Blinky.Catttt thats pretty epic
couldve known before lol u gotta test him like that
13:23 - "I've never encountered a face that wasn't a pleasure to draw"
This put the biggest smile on my face!!!
Like Bob Ross's "happy little trees", but it's "happy little faces"!
@@JoshuaCatchur exactly!!!
I heard pressure lmao
I heard puzzle
TM Davy if he meets me : "u know what nevermind"
Guy's a pro, not just at making art, but explaining his techniques. His students are lucky to have him as a teacher.
and hes easy on the eyes too ☺️
I'm only 0:55 seconds into the video and I'm already kinda blown away with the way he describes and explains things.
If his art wasn't enough of a hint that he's a pro, the way he thinks/talks about it really confirms it to me.
Awesome video. As a physician (with no artistic skill) I was blown away by your eye-opening explanation of how physiology & anatomy contribute to skin tone. How skin thickness and bony protuberances contribute to "ruddiness"; how melanin is responsible for the relative lack of blue in skin color by absorbing the potentially injurious higher frequency wavelengths. Such a very cool, educational and beautiful video. You are not only a great artist, you are a fantastic teacher as well!
A large part of art school is learning anatomy. I was required to take two anatomy classes and especially in drawing classes it's discussed a lot.
I’m a final year med student who’s also an artist- art and medicine intertwine so nicely!
I've never heard all the info put together this way. I love this way of looking at art and physiology
Dude you Rock!
A lot of physiology is relevant to art, even down to color theory!
one of the biggest mantras of my college drawing professor was "draw what you see, not what you THINK you see".
Similar to sound design for film and tv, your brain morphs everything
that's a bit vague, could you elaborate?
My drawing professor had the same mantra.
@@phitran514 In the way that I understand it, your brain doesn't perceive reality 1 to 1, it always fills in and assumes things. It takes deliberate attention to be able to see, or hear in my case, what is actually presented to you.
@@hattie_burns @Pat Parker
yeah, pretty much. It kind of goes back to when he demonstrates step 1 & step 2 in this video. We intuitively know that faces are supposed to have two eyes, a nose, and a mouth. and in drawing, we usually fudge reality to place these features where we THINK they should go (i.e. the 5 drawings of Van Gogh he had people do- several of them instinctively tried to level out the eyes bc our "ideal" face is one that's symmetrical).
The mark of a learned artist is one that can push past these natural biases and trust yourself to see and draw exactly what's in front of you, even if not "perfect". This is why more advanced levels include the push and pull of light and shadow in addition to the basic understanding of underlying planer forms. The more you understand the subtle relationships between these things and allow yourself to copy down the variations, the more accurate your drawing will be.
Somebody give this man his own RUclips channel .
He already has a good job, probably doesn't need a youtube channel unfortunately
there's plenty of art youtube channels, some more entertainment-focused, some more education-focused. look up Proko for starters
Somehow reminds me of Ethan Becker.
@@alexket3581 Irrelevant.
@@anthonyd9844 Marco bucci is good
"I have never encountered a face that wasn't a pleasure to draw" - see, people, that applies to all of you and all of us. We are all worthy to be seen, and there's good to be seen in everyone.
Some people are crap! Pure crap!
till that to omegle people lol
you haven't seen my school's principal's face then
except for hitler.
U obviously havent seen my face
1:56 "People tend to get frustrated when their language is greater than their feeling of reality in the drawing" = A polite way of saying one's frustration in having the better ability to describe something than it is to draw it when their drawing ability isn't good
it's just so calming to watch the guy draw and speak about the skill he has tried to perfect for many many years
holy crap he's such a great teacher??? i know they said he's a teacher, but he's is SUCH a teacher. i've learned so much with this video. Please thank this man for me.
This is literally free information that I would’ve payed thousands to learn in college
Ppl do which is funny
yeah there is no way people get art degrees.. i really dont believe that, its probably as much of a thing as canada existing
Think about it, who would i hire, someone who makes insane art, or someone whose art is okay but has a degree?
true
@@lynxlagoon best case scenario...raw talent plus education.
Thats why you go for strict career oriented courses and minor in your passionate hobbies or ventures you'll want to take.
13:22 "This is one of the great joys of portraiture for me. I have never encountered a face that wasnt a pleasure to draw" I agree so so much with this statement. I often draw when I am sitting in a train and there are just so many different shapes in faces. It is incredible and really inspiring. Also for me this was the realisation that we truly are all beautiful in our own distinct way.
As an artist, I honestly think people who truly want to get better at drawing should keep rewatching this video until you have it memorized. It will help you so much..
@A RUclips channel why attend classes when you can watch a free video on repeat until you have it memorized
Jesus Christ died for your sins please repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand 66378345776354996842736272663
Level 1 : cmon i'm not 5 anymore
Level 2 : so far so good
Level 3 : .... yup I can't do this.
yep that's me as wwell.
that's the part of learning to draw something intricate like a face. It is the step where the most difficult ideas are the most important to realize. once you reach this step, the world of faces opens up. Every. single. kind. of face that is drawn, even as he illustrated with different styles, is built upon some structure.
@@TDGCmote As someone who’s trying teach myself, I kinda skipped level 3 and 4 straight to level 5 then somehow got level 3 and 4 in the process and now I’m learning colors without knowing anything at all and hope to learn it on the way.
@@dinnerboons1504 Keep going. Its fun when you can literally draw anything you see.
Desperately chasing level 4
This guy feels like an art philosopher, if such a thing exists
Art is indeed a topic in philosophy and there are art philosophers :)
There's a branch of philosophy called Aesthetics which is about the nature of beauty and art and all that jazz. People have been philosophizing about art for millennia.
@@tobistein6639 haha that’s funny that you said all that jazz since jazz is such a prominent form of expression as well ;)
they exist! the good ones don't take themselves so seriously such that it seems like they have sticks up their bums. this guy is a perfect example. such a cool dude
all aesthetic judgments are moral judgments
This was the coolest art tutorial I've ever watched on RUclips
i’m currently pursuing a fine arts degree, my first class was a realism course that cost me over $1k. this guy taught me (in 25 mins) literally everything my professor taught me in 3 months.
cool
But, did you get a piece of paper out of this video? I don't think so.
@@rickman297 don’t need one really
Feedback is valuable though, and part of that value is forcing you to take the time to practice what you learned. But, yeah it feels like he dumped a whole semester of knowledge on us. lol
Yeah to people who actually understand everything he’s saying and doing, most people who literally have no idea what it takes to draw anything outside a stick figure or the different tools used and etc..it’s not something that can be absorbed as easily as the experienced artists that are watching this. I watched the origami video and I was completely just lost..so I can imagine people who have never drawn feeling as overwhelmed.
"But we are all... not blue"
The way he hesitated when saying this, or the fact that he drew a sun before explaining the color wheel were all just too cute.
This man was meant to teach. Not to diminish either artist, but big Bob Ross vibes
Exactly what I'm thinking. Very firm, stern, but also somewhat calm and grounded.
Teaching is an entirely different craft than just doing an art. So not only is he, and Bob Ross, talented in their artistic craft, they also are talented enough communicators to explain the ideas behind what they do and why they do it when doing that art.
Yes he definitely comes across as the bob ross of portrait art
Teaching well is so difficult.
Can we take a min to appreciate how many hours of working, drawing, editing, planning... are behind this video?
Well, zoom-cutting in and out every 1.5 seconds will do that. Sheesh.
@@nikgervae LMAOO
Jesus Christ died for your sins please repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand 66378345776354996842736272663
Ya the editing isn’t that hard I could do that and I just started makeing vids xd but the drawing are insane
@@thegamercave5160 yeah i don't think i've said that it's hard or anything tho...
It's time consuming, which is what i'm talking about 🙃
I think I might be in love with this man. When he started describing how my eyes have rhythm and flow, I melted.
i mean 👀👀😩
"we are all a little different, but we are all not blue"
This man has just ended racism with one sentence
What about Avatar
@@Kiki15578 they Suck i guess!?
@@ianm2610 (இωஇ )
@@Kiki15578 sucks for him then
Almost all people ruclips.net/video/b2dqjcN4NdA/видео.html
Me doing the 2nd level: Sometimes my genius is... Its almost frightening
Lmao
Quoting Clarkson, a man of culture I see.
😂
This was such an unpretentious, clear and unjudgemental video; I am so inspired to draw again, and I've been looking for something like this for some time. Thank you so much, I wish I could have a hundred of these videos by this teacher in all kinds of artistic areas to learn 🙏❤
Try schoolism, its a good website with amazing classes
I don't know if you'll see this but I want to be updated on your journey!
@@hamburgerkiddo3319 unfortunately life has gotten in the way, including health, but I am heartened by your comment ❤ much love and thank you for asking
He’s a keeper, WIRED.
This is nice. Can you make 11 levels of story writing next?
Thirded
Fourthed.
Fifthed
Sixthed
Seventhd
TIL art is not just expression but science and physiology. I've always been astounded by talented artists but this gives me an even greater appreciation of them. This guy is absolutely brilliant.
i didn’t know that blocking was called blocking, but honestly it is the single most helpful technique for practicing accuracy in my experience. super fun, too! the first couple tries can be rough, but now it’s so deeply ingrained in my drawing process that i can’t imagine how i drew without it. i remember watching this video a couple years ago and feeling out of my depth, so it’s satisfying to come back and see how my skills have sort of independently progressed to the same place he’s recommending.
This is the kind of teacher that completely inspires you to dive into something you never thought you would, and fall in love with the subject. Absolutely blown away by this one!!!
he really did that whole amazing drawing then chucked in a cheeky painting just to flex
Everybody gangsta until the level 12 painting comes alive and starts moving
4 D P A I N T I N G
What an awesome teacher! I love the fact that he mentions the popular mistakes and also he explains not only what to do and how to think, but also "why" (like for example - why in some places the skin is more red, while in others it's pale). Very professional
This oil version in the end... Amazing.
Amazing is an understatement
I don't see anyone making timestamps for each level, and I actually need it whenever I want to come back to this video to review it. So, here it is:
Level 1: The Solar Head - 0:56
Level 2: Identifying features - 1:35
Level 3: Volumes and Proportions - 2:18
Level 4: Planes of the Head - 3:54
Level 5: The Block-In - 7:16
Level 6: Contour - 12:05
Level 7: Light and Shadow - 13:40
Level 8: Highlights and Accents - 15:54
Level 9: Gradients and Value - 17:39
Level 10: Establishing a Flesh Tone - 19:25
Level 11: Color as Value - 22:04
I'll also want to include the concepts mentioned (without definition) for each level here.
thanks a lot... very useful.
Not just Art, he taught anatomy, science, physiology, dermatology,chromatology, biology, anthropology,Optics etc.
Basically he taught more than schools do in whole year.
How dare you -- he also taught us history, a little.
Anatomy is biology
I like your pfp did you draw it? 👏
Dont forget pathology and sociology
6:53 I look away for one second, and the man has put a beard on Wonder Woman
@@ishansalamon3178 lmao look at the timestamp
He's drawing himself as Wonder Woman
dude has destroyed racism and gender norms in a single video
@@gionnifer sexists _hate_ this guy
@@JeremiahFernandez definitely lmao
This is the content that Wired should be producing
Boy do I have some news for you
People really underestimate how much practice and knowledge of so many subjects good art requires. This video really helps to show it.
He: "Step one. Draw a circle."
Me: "I'm out."
for tutorial watch how spongebob made a circle
I doubt he will read this, but if only he knew the number of times I watched this not only to learn and apply to my own art, but just to appreciate his mastery and command of his craft, and his ability to teach and explain it. Bravo, you're an inspiration to find one's niche (be it art, or something else).
he was my freshman drawing teacher at SVA, one of the best teachers I had
I’ve watched more art videos to count and in this single video, he taught me more than all of them. I’m sure he was amazing
Him at level 9 : " We can create a drawing that most people would consider finished "
Me : skdgsgkdkdg I considered it finished at level 2
kareemah ajina preach 😂🤣
I'm not level 2 but my proportions are bad so I don't reach level 3 😭
You can create a drawing that looks finished on all of these levels. It just have to look and feel coherent.
This video inspired me to start drawing. My level just 3 weeks ago was tragic, I could mess up a circle 🤣. I have no relations at all to the world of arts and have never taken any class. I purchased one of those draw in 30 days book and now after a month, i look at things differently. So far, it has taught me circles, spheres, cubes, hollow cubes and this week I'm learning complex cubes. But most importantly, i look at mundane objects with mystery now: how the light touches them, how heavy they look, smooth, textured. Wow have I even truly looked at anything ever ! I CANNOT BELIEVE i can draw something now!! Now i don't look at this video with despair. I'll probably never get to the level of this genius, because I don't like it enough to dedicate my life to it. But i like it enough to draw 10 mn a day, which i believe will take me far enough in a few years. If you're an absolute beginner, start drawing, anything, TODAY.
He just called me bad at art in a million different languages and all I want to say is "Thank you"
i like how he breaks down the complexity of portraiture using understandable n existing artworks as comparisons to explain each level
Sooo not to brag or anything, but i'm an expert on level 1 self potrait
U shure 👀 I mean I've ben studying arts for years and im some what near or getting to 1
your lying no one can get to level one I've been trying for years
masteeeeer can you pleasee teach me
There's levels?!?
Been trying for years and still can't get the first stroke he made down..
THE CIRCLE
Staring at his face for 25 mins now makes me appreciate his face and im in love..
20:30 the circle looks awesome
21:35 “We are all... not blue” very inspiring in this trying times
this immediately reminded of me and couple other "cool guys" only drawing pictures of our Art teacher every time he gave us a free period to do what we wanted. I remember being surprised that he let us do this EVERY SINGLE TIME. later I realized that we learned SO MUCH because we had to keep coming up with new versions of it to make each other laugh
Petition for him to have his own RUclips channel🙌
"I have never encountered a face that wasn't a pleasure to draw."
Edit: thx everyone for the likes. Interesting how a feeling I had for just a moment has echoed around the world like that. :-)
I shed a tear 💔
As an artist i feel this with my very soul
that feeling of "that's just because he hasn't seen my face"
@@griqs same! Faces and bodies, the more you look the more you're 😍
Haha I've been told my face isn't ugly, but I guess it's a bit differently shaped when it comes to proportions. I was doing a self portrait in an art class and I couldn't figure out how to draw myself, so my teacher took a stab at it and she struggled for 25 mins before she gave up XD At the end she just muttered, "Your face is difficult!" She gave me a bit of a break on that assignment :P
the part he said about drawing symbols for eyes was really similar to something my first drawing professor told me in my first year of art school about 10 years ago. our first assignment was a charcoal self portrait, and afterward he gave us a lecture/over all group critique. i remember one specific thing he said was “you’re not drawing eyes, you’re drawing the symbol of an eye” and honestly it took me almost a year to really understand the value in what he was trying to tell us. we were drawing the symbols for our features instead of actually looking at the curves and shapes that come together to make our faces
anyway we did about a month of blind contour exercises after that
this man seems like he has unlocked the secrets of the universe
at least one of them
Jesus Christ died for your sins please repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand 66378345776354996842736272663
TM Davy is such an excellent teacher! He managed to condense my entire art degree into 25 minutes. He has such a great way of explaining everything, I will be returning to this video for sure!
OMG. I've watched so many art tutorials and this basically summed up what other people take 1000 pages of textbooks and hours in classes do. Thanks Wired and RM Davy!
His teaching skills are as good as his drawing.
lvl12 - emotions / expression / personality lvl-13 pure imagination/no reference mixed with desired emotions/personality
my man just got scientific about drawing a circle and a smiley face
Step one: have the courage to look yourself in the mirror
You alright there chief?
Step 2: have the courage to draw with the fear it won’t be perfect
I'm so sick of this self depicting "humor" honestly
That's why I suck at self portraits. I'm so ugly the glass shatters.
@@ani_n01 let the unconfident people live bruh. This dude commented exactly what I was thinking
Wired should be thanking you, TM, For condensing an entire art degree into 25 minutes! Different levels of sculpture would be so interesting!
Simp
Level 13: the right hand side video of the person talking has been a self portrait the entire time and you didn't notice
So that's what they mean by "life like"
Level 14 would be that YOU are the portrait.
Level 15 the portrait comes to life. This is known as "Creation" and is the level a certain someone is at
lv16 when life is art and u are drawing reality, now ur mind and body have became some thing beyond reality tho still a simple abstract art , mind and body slowly crash into each other creating a mass of "creativity " whose reality is undefinable
Level 17 will be that reality is an illusion you fix by existing in the abstract universe as art and you warp time and space to create the art everyone is scared of. It is too strong for them, but you created your own life in paradoxically challenging circumstances.
21:20 Wow!!! eye opening moment. Color theory/skin tone finally made sense to me!!! This guy is amazing!!!!!
The moment he slowly turned a blob of oil painting into photo-realistic portrait of himself is mind blowing. It's like watching the universe created itself.
This guy speaks like he's not wearing a hoodie. Love him
What 😂
What does this mean
@@alekosthecrow There's a general idea of a person who knows what they're talking about or is an expert in their field. We might think of somebody in a suit or a lab coat or other formal/professional wear. He's wearing a very casual piece of clothing (a hoodie) but speaking like a professional.
@@tobistein6639 Thanks
@@tobistein6639 that was beautiful
if he would have sold this as a course instead, he would have been rich by now. you're amazing man, thank you so much for providing us with this much amount of info for free!
This makes me miss taking art classes in high school. If I had a teacher like this maybe I wouldn’t have quit
There’s good art teachers out there, why don’t you take classes and try again?
Buy a sketch pad and use RUclips, quit blaming others.
@@tgF321jikko yeet
@@sequentiacyclica as a wise man once said, a man either yeets or is yeeted
High school art class didn’t learn any technique tbh lol
I could spend a million hours with this man and still feel the same passion and excitement and wonder that he is lighting up in my heart right now.
Level 7 and level 8 are switched for me, I always start with the darkest and lightest parts before going to the midtones
Also: this video made me feel better about my art, thank you! I feel like artists sometimes get bogged down in their mistakes and how far we still have to go (and being surrounded by other artists means that-though there’s benefits- you lose perspective of how far you’ve COME)
"Level 12, if you want it".
What he really meant:
"Watch me flex".
LOL
Me: Wow!! Circle of head, jaw, and proportions - so cool already, we must be close to the end of the video!
3:36
Oh.
Why is my 7000 dollar College Class being shared on RUclips for free?
Cuz colleges are scam
@@ryanmikes5644 college isn’t a scam art courses are a scam lmao
@@ryanmikes5644 not true
Our lives is a f*cking joke
Always has been
What an amazing tutorial! As a self taught artist, at 67, I feel honored to absorb such great information. Which at the same time gives more confidence to continue my journey. I will watch this video until I can no longer have issues with portraiture drawing. Congratulations and so grateful to have found you. A master of his own art. Blessings, be safe and take care.
when u realise u were reaching a new level over the years and didnt know u were doing it
Level 10 and up was a color theory class I've always wanted with a practical approach. Those last 5 mins outdo my entire university education in color theory... Thank you, WIRED and TM Davy! XD
You're awesome....I'm a self taught artist, and I just realised that a lot of things you told us...has been followed by me subconsciously while creating portraits
The final time lapse of the painting (especially starting at 25:00) is mind-blowing.
One of the best teachers i've ever met. And obviously an amazing artist.
"Draw what you see not what you think you see" a very important tip for those who are trying to learn drawing. And remember anything is possible you just need patience and practice!
When you’ve been drawing for about 5 years and realize you’re only on level 3....
5 years isn’t very long, though, you’re doing good. you’ll do better
Level 3 looks amazing! I think it’s a great style. You should be proud of yourself 👍
I think its more of a complexity thing than a "quality of art" one, he mentions disney characters in level 3 or 4
I'm 18 and I've been drawing my entire life and im level 8, you will get there
@ELITE the same concepts apply to everything in art when drawing. subject matter is irrelevant
More than a lot of the other “levels” videos, this one strikes me as really impressive. It must be so hard to have the skill to do all the levels and to intentionally hold yourself back and draw a level 4.
It’s not even restrictive he’s giving us a cumulative knowledge of self portraiture. It’s amazing
This dude is a living camera but even more amazing
As an ex teacher and trainer for half my life, now 70, three years ago took up teaching my self Oils and WC using RUclips and I have watched far more than I could ever say how many, so it is excellent to find 'gold' in the form of a true technically competent artist who can actually draw and knows his pedagogy. Sadly, you are very much a rare breed of here.
This is the best portrait tutorial on youtube hands down. So informative. Great job WIRED and TM Davy!
Most of those drawings where what I expected but then he did that oil painting, and I was floored 😭
His face itself, is art.
Jesus Christ died for your sins please repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand 66378345776354996842736272663
This man is so talented. And gorgeous. 😭
i saw him first
@@gabrielahimsa4387 :')
Gosh, he's absolutely incredible, both as an artist and as a teacher.
"We are all... not blue." Is one of the best sentances ive ever heard
This showed how complex art really is
This guy sounds like an amazing teacher
Hats off for that man.not only for his marvellous ability,but also for his scientific explanation which led to his painting into a divine way.it proofed he is an all-grounder at his field.
My god, he is an amazing teacher!!! I am a self taught artist who loves to do portraiture, and he explained things in such a clear and understandable way. Even though I am quite experienced and do these things without thinking about it, I have come away with so much more information and understanding of what it is (and why) I'm doing it. Would love to have this guy as a teacher!
2:00 i love that the laugh lines were part of his defining characteristics. they definitely are something that makes a guy look distinguished, but they're easy to miss. this really /is/ one of the charms of the visual arts.
i love the psychology and self-expression bend to this video; it puts the "arts" in "visual arts", and it's a refreshing take against all the discouraging "i'm not good enough!" i feel in my own current visual arts education!
This guy is brilliant, he knows what he's talking about and he explains it well.
Conventional Artist: this nose is complicated
Manga artist: _|_
Yes im a portrait and anime artist
Stylisation ftw
Or just .
_looks at hirohiko araki_
How about:
Watching this took me back to high school ☺❤ I remember learning all of these things in my art classes. It's a reminder of just how complex art can be. To be be able to create art is to be able to observe, analyze, study, represent, etc.
04:08 the level 4 colossal titan
i love watching people make self-portraits, this series of portraits, with the different levels and styles, its so interesting to see how people view themselves