Mechanical devices

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Mechanical aids are far less important for art drawing than for any other art form. Many draftspeople reject them altogether as unartistic and inimical to the creative aspect of drawing.

Apart from the crucial importance that mechanical aids have had and continue to have for all kinds of construction diagrams, plans, and other applied drawings, some mechanical aids have been used in varying but significant measure for artistic drawings. The ruler, triangle, and compass as basic geometric instruments have played a major role, especially in periods in which artists created in a consciously constructionist and perspectivist manner. Marks for perspective constructions may be seen in many drawings of early and High Renaissance vintage.

For perspectively correct rendition, the graticulate frame, marked off in squares to facilitate proportionate enlargement or reduction, allowed the object to be drawn to be viewed in line with a screen on the drawing surface. Fixed points can be marked with relative ease on the resultant system of coordinates. For portrait drawings, the glass board used into the 19th century had contours and important interior reference points marked on it with grease crayons or soap sticks, so that they could be transferred onto paper by tracing or direct copying. Both processes are frequently used for preliminary sketches for engravings to be duplicated, as is the screened transmission of a preliminary sketch onto the engraving plate or, magnifying, the painting surface. In such cases the screen lies over the preparatory drawing.

Mirrors and mirror arrangements with reducing convex mirrors or concave lenses were likewise used (especially in the 17th and 18th centuries) as drawing aids in the preparation of reproductions. Even when it was a matter of the most exact rendition of topographical views, such apparatus, as well as the camera obscura (a darkened enclosure having an aperture usually provided with a lens through which light from external objects enters to form an image on the opposite surface), were frequently employed. In a darkened room the desired section is reflected through a lens onto a slanting mirror and from that inverse image is reflected again onto the horizontally positioned drawing surface. Lateral correction can be obtained by means of a second mirror.

Unless the proportions do not allow it, true-to-scale reducing or enlarging can also be carried out with the aid of the tracing instrument called the pantograph. When copying, the crayon or pencil inserted in the unequally long feet of the device reproduces the desired contours on the selected scale.

Most of these aids were thus used in normal studio practice and for the preparation of certain applied drawings. Equally practical, but useful only for closely circumscribed tasks, were elliptic compasses, curved rulers, and stencils, particularly for ornamental and decorative purposes. Only a few 20th- and 21st-century artists, notably Jasper Johns, use stencils or simple blocks with a given shape in larger scale composition, in order to obtain the effect of repetition, often in an arbitrary use, in “alienating” technique and colour.

Mechanically produced drawings—such as typewriter sketches, computer drawings, oscillograms—and drawings done with the use of a projector, all of which can bring forth unusual and attractive results, nevertheless do not belong to the topic because they lack the immediate creativity of the art drawing.

Applied drawings

Applied and technical drawings differ in principle from art drawings in that they record unequivocally an objective set of facts and on the whole disregard aesthetic considerations. The contrast to the art drawing is sharpest in the case of technical project drawings, the purpose of which is to convey not so much visual plausibility as to give exact information that makes possible the realization of an idea. Such plans for buildings, machines, and technical systems are not instantly readable because of the orthogonal (independent) projection, the division into separate planes of projection, and the use of symbols. Prepared as a rule with such technical aids as ruler and compass, they represent a specialized language of their own, which must be learned. For topographic (detailed delineation of the features of a place) and cartographic (map-making) drawings, too, a special terminology has developed that above all systematizes spatial representations, making them intelligible to the expert with the aid of emblems and symbols.

Seemingly far removed from any claim to artistic standing are most illustrations serving scientific purposes, the aim of which is to record as objectively as possible the characteristic and typical features of a given phenomenon. The systematic drawings, used especially in the natural sciences to explain a system or a function, resemble plans; descriptive and naturalistic illustrations, on the other hand, approach the illusionistic plausibility of visual experience and can attain an essentially artistic character. A good many artists have drawn scientific illustrations, and their works—the botanical and zoological drawings of the Swiss Merian family in the 17th and 18th centuries, for example—are today esteemed for their artistic and their documentary value.

Of a similarly ambivalent nature is the illustrative drawing that perhaps does not go beyond a simple pictorial rendition of a literary description but because of its specific formal execution may still satisfy the highest artistic demands. Great artists have again and again illustrated Bibles, prayer books, novels, and literature of all kinds. Some of the famous examples are Botticelli’s illustrations for Dante’s Divine Comedy and Dürer’s marginal illustrations for the emperor Maximilian’s prayer book. Some artists have distinguished themselves more as illustrators than as autonomous draftspeople, as for example the 18th-century German engraver Daniel Chodowiecki, the 19th-century caricaturist Honoré Daumier, the 19th-century satiric artist Wilhelm Busch, and the 20th-century Austrian illustrator Alfred Kubin.

Clearly connected with illustrative drawing is caricature, which, by formally overemphasizing the characteristic traits of a person or situation, creates a suggestive picture that—precisely because of its distortion—engraves itself on the viewer’s mind. This special kind of drawing was done by such great artists as Leonardo, Dürer, and the 17th-century artist Gian Lorenzo Bernini and by draftspeople who, often for purposes of social criticism, have devoted themselves wholly to caricaturing, such as the 18th-century Italian Pier Leone Ghezzi, the 19th-century Frenchman Grandville (professional name of Jean-Ignace-Isidore Gérard), the 19th-century American political cartoonist Thomas Nast, and the 20th-century American Al Hirschfeld.

From such overdrawn types developed continuous picture stories that could dispense to a considerable extent with the explanatory text. Modern cartoons are based on these picture stories. Through the formally identical treatment of peculiar types, these drawings acquire an element of consecutiveness that, by telling a continuing story, adds a temporal dimension to two-dimensional drawing. This element is strongest in trick drawings that fix on paper, in brief segments of movement, invented creatures and phenomena that lack all logical plausibility; a rapid sequence of images (leafing through the pages, seeing it projected on the screen) turns the whole into apparent motion, the fundamental process of animation. The artistic achievement, if any, lies in the original invention; its actual realization is predetermined and sometimes carried out by a large and specialized staff of collaborators, often with the aid of stencils and traced designs. Moreover, since the final result is partially determined by the mechanical multiplication, an essential criterion of drawing—the unity of work and result—does not apply.

Subject matter of drawing

Anything in the visible or imagined universe may be the theme of a drawing. In practice, however, by far the greatest number of art drawings in the Western world deal with the human figure. This situation springs from the close bond between drawing and painting: in sketches, studies, and compositions, drawing prepared the way for painting by providing preliminary clarification and some formal predetermination of the artist’s concept of a given work. Many drawings now highly regarded as independent works were originally “bound,” or “latent,” in that they served the ends of painting or sculpture. Yet, so rounded, self-contained, and aesthetically satisfying are these drawings that their erstwhile role as attendants to the other pictorial arts can be reconstructed only from knowledge of the completed work, not from the drawing itself. This situation is especially true of a pictorial theme that acquired, at a relatively early stage, an autonomous rank in drawing itself: the portrait.