I've got two questions regarding the first lesson.
If you draw, it is, as far as I could observe it, impossible to see two boxes upfront.
Is that right? I just can't see how it should be possible to have two boxes that are visible upfront without seing parts of their side except the box directly in front of your vision.
This is also part of my second question, should I always imagine a viewer on paper? Like as if there would be one person inside the image, and only exactly one. As all objects are viewed relative to the viewer. I am really confused about this one as this should be the case if the first question should prove to be right. Two viewers shouldn't be possible, maybe I am also thinking to hard about this.
antonthat in the post "NEW TO /r/ARTFUNDAMENTALS? Don't know what Drawabox is? Read this first."
2021-06-24 21:28
I've got two questions regarding the first lesson.
If you draw, it is, as far as I could observe it, impossible to see two boxes upfront.
Is that right? I just can't see how it should be possible to have two boxes that are visible upfront without seing parts of their side except the box directly in front of your vision.
This is also part of my second question, should I always imagine a viewer on paper? Like as if there would be one person inside the image, and only exactly one. As all objects are viewed relative to the viewer. I am really confused about this one as this should be the case if the first question should prove to be right. Two viewers shouldn't be possible, maybe I am also thinking to hard about this.