Title: Vertical Implementation of Wholly Drawing Method: A Case Study in Perceptual Adaptation
Abstract: This report examines an experimental application of the Wholly Drawing method in a vertical orientation, departing from traditional horizontal drawing surfaces. The study demonstrates how spatial reorientation affects observational drawing practice and challenges established perceptual habits.
Methodology: The experiment employed a series of observational drawings created from a single photographic reference, executed on various media including:
Plain paper with mixed media
Kraft paper with white paint and black ink
Architectural paper with integrated technical drawings as background The primary variation from standard practice was the vertical positioning of both drawing surface and reference material.
Observations and Analysis:
Initial Response Phase:
Early drawings exhibit tentative mark-making, evidenced in the preliminary sketches with gestural lines and minimal detail
Red accents in initial studies suggest testing of spatial relationships in the new orientation
Hesitation marks reflect the cognitive adjustment to vertical observation
Adaptation Process:
Progressive confidence shown in white-on-kraft paper studies
Development of more assured mark-making despite spatial reorientation
Emergence of distinctive rhythmic patterns in line work, suggesting growing comfort with vertical format
Integration Phase:
Later works demonstrate successful synthesis of observation and expression
Color introduction (particularly yellow/black palette) shows increased confidence
Technical Developments:
Evolution from tentative lines to bold, committed strokes
Successful translation of three-dimensional perception onto vertical plane
Integration of multiple media while maintaining observational integrity
Findings: The vertical orientation initially created perceptual challenges but ultimately led to:
Enhanced spatial awareness
More dynamic mark-making
Increased body engagement in the drawing process
Development of new observational strategies
The experiment aligns with Wholly Drawing principles through:
Prioritization of process over outcome
Emphasis on direct observation
Acceptance of initial marks without correction
Integration of personal interpretation with objective observation
Conclusion: The vertical application of Wholly Drawing methodology demonstrates the method’s adaptability while challenging conventional drawing practices. The progression from initial discomfort to confident execution suggests potential benefits in varying spatial orientation for developing observational skills and expanding artistic practice.
Implications: This experiment suggests valuable applications for:
Drawing pedagogy
Perceptual skill development
Studio practice innovation
Understanding spatial cognition in artistic processes
The findings support further investigation into spatial variation in observational drawing practices and its impact on artistic development.