Thanks, Johan - yes, the woman turned out somewhat reasonable
I didn’t have accent marks in this one, (I’ll have to find out what they are…) so there’s an improvement I can make! I did begin with pencil, though, then worked on in charcoal. At some stages, I was virtually “painting” with charcoal dust and paintbrush, so it was quite the experiment. The distracting background was probably from being unable to erase when I wanted to, and the paper was scrap so was a bit stained to begin with.
Rebecca, thanks. I remember painting a Prudhon in one of the recent workshops. I'll keep trying with these and hope to incorporate all of the good advice.
Re. the toned paper and oil painting, I do tend to make things hard for myself. :)
(I'll get that OFDW20 piece in the improvement thread...soon. :) )
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Another oil update (B & W version of a Rubens woman):
(Still a lot to work on in order to get the resemblance, especially a correct expression - she's looking too miserable at the moment! She should be looking more "serene". :) )
[img]http://spacific.net.nz/yms/rubens_woman5.jpg[/img]
Original (from "Anatomy for the Artist")
[img]http://spacific.net.nz/yms/original_anatomy.jpg[/img]
updated WIP:

Rubens original:

Rubens update (her nose is giving me grief :) )
[img]http://spacific.net.nz/yms/rubens6.jpg[/img]
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For the charcoal / white chalk pieces, I’m curious as to the paper you’re working on. I’ve been trying a few of these types of drawings on textured / toned Canson / Swarthmore paper which takes soft charcoal really nicely. I guess the final thing I could suggest is to draw the whole of the head for the portraits instead of the face only. That will really help to complete the sense of volume, heh, that’s another thing I have to constantly remind myself of.
Great to see the diversity of approach in these and looking forward to updates.