Free drawing lessons from the Great Master Hokusai

Katsushika Hokusai is well known for his iconic Great Wave off Kanagawa. He was a master in the true sense of the word. Hokusai also produced a three-volume series of books of drawing lessons. These are now online free. The title is translated as Quick Lessons in Simplified Drawing.

These books neatly demonstrate how drawing is taught today too! For instance, if you have ever done any basic drawing classes, you have probably been asked to draw a sphere, a cube, and a cone. It is a drawing exercise that many courses start out with. The idea is that many things we see can be broken up into these basic geometrical shapes. I was totally flummoxed one day when a woman told me that she tried to take a class, but all she learned was how to draw a cube, a sphere and a cone. She had not understood that we can make better sense of the things we see, if we break them up into basic shapes, then attempt to draw them.

In Volume I, Hokusai breaks down each subject into simple geometric shapes. Each volume is a book, so I have just selected a few page-spreads to share. On all of these pages, I can hear him say to his students “look for the shape of the form”. Or, because he has composed each motif, he might alternatively say: “find pleasing arrangements of forms”

On this site they have used one of those flip through book formats but if you double click on the images they become larger .

Volume II is different, as it would be what we call a combination of ‘contour’ and ‘gesture’ drawing. It is quite wonderful. I have spent a fair bit of time thinking about this book, as it is a combination of two types of drawing techniques.

Let me explain because the combination of these techniques in Hokusai’s hands is quite wonderful. Usually, a gesture drawing class starts off with a model doing a number of 30-second poses then 2-minute poses, then 5-minute poses, and so on. Some teachers use gesture drawings as warm-ups as they are a great way to focus the mind. The idea is to find the essential gesture or action of the form. They become an expression of movement and are done quickly.
Contour drawing, on the other hand, is done very slowly and consists of drawing the outline of the subject or object. It sounds simple enough, but the way it is taught in many schools is to use ‘blind contour’ drawing. With ‘blind contour’ drawing, you have something set in front of you, and you are asked to draw it by putting your pen to paper and tracing around the object by NOT looking at the page. It is very hard to do. The only way I can manage it is to imagine I am touching the edge of the object and feel the edge very slowly with my pen. Some students hate the exercise. Everyone makes a drawing that looks odd and out of proportion. But that is not the point of the exercise.

An aspect of blind contour drawing is to train the brain to draw what you see, not what you think you see. To notice what is actually there. Do enough of them, and at some stage, something in your brain clicks and when you need to, you can see the world around you as 2D – in other words, the exercises have taught your brain to interpret all this 3D information in a flat way. It will not happen if you don’t practice and concentrate when you do it. It will also not happen if you try to draw from photographs because the photographs have already done the conversion to 2D for you.

Anyway, I am getting sidetracked, because often people use a mix of continuous-line drawing (outlines) and contour drawing where they do look down at the page as they draw. This is called modified contour drawing because it is a modified form of the blind contour exercise. This form of drawing can be very expressive, particularly when you vary the weight and quality of the line.

In Volume II if you look, Hokusai is still referencing key shapes, but while doing so, he is also combining gesture and contour. It really is brilliant. I really have to study this volume more!

Volume III is a series of wonderful diagrams that record each brush stroke. They are the equivalent of a step-by-step tutorial. Some would say these diagrams are formulaic – but this is a step-by-step from a master! Move aside from YouTube for the moment, and take a good look at what Hokusai is trying to show us. For me, this whole volume became about mark making – or perhaps I should say, mark making with a brush and ink. Each mark is economical, expressive and descriptive.

I was taught, with each new purchase of art materials, to explore the marks it can make. This volume is a visual demonstration of why you might want to follow that advice. I know when I buy new art gear, I jump right into using it and I don’t give myself time to explore just making marks with the new pens, pencils, brush etc. Looking at this volume, I think I need to go back to doing some very basic mark making exercises.

There is so much to learn from these three volumes by Hokusai. Anyone interested in drawing, would find it worthwhile setting a month or two or three aside, and really studying each volume and using them as jumping off points for your own exercises. I am not suggesting doing this to copy slavishly, but to analyse what he was doing. I am sure these “Quick Lessons in Simplified Drawing” would prove to be amazingly helpful – and not so ‘quick’!!

Katsushika Hokusai Quick Lessons in Simplified DrawingYou can find out more about Katsushika Hokusai (1760–1849) on Wikipedia
You will find these three volumes and other works on the Catalogue Raisonne of Katsushika Hokusai website
If you enjoy Japanese prints there are thousands in the huge woodblock print database of Ukiyo-e.org.
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