Masters of anatomy book 4
Lectures are great for presenting the material, but to really learn students must exercise the knowledge. This gives a humorous, but educational, look at common anatomical mistakes that beginners and professionals alike make in their work. Each lecture also sees Scott review the best (or worst) examples of “what not to do” by dissecting images in his infamous Gallery Abominate. In addition to the lecture material, each week Scott thoroughly reviews previous lectures and posts video replies to questions received about earlier lessons. Bonus Lecture: Introduction to Animal AnatomyĮach week students get access to self-paced video lectures covering the regions of the body outlined above (2-2.5 hours of lecture per week).Introduction, Proportions and the Skeleton.Click on the topic for a summary of the week’s lesson. The weekly lectures are broken down into the following topics. If you are serious about your anatomy knowledge you owe it to yourself to attend.” Scott’s course is by far the best resource I have encountered during these years, it is the best of the best.
“I’ve been collecting anatomy books, DVDs and reference photos for over seven years.
It has also helped build a solid anatomical foundation for students from art schools and academies including the the Florence Academy of Art, the School of Visual Arts (SVA), the Savannah College of Art and Design, Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), and the Art Students League of New York. This course has been taught to artists from around the world including artists from leading animation, game, and visual effects studios – Industrial Light & Magic, Blizzard, Pixar, Ubisoft, LucasArts, Disney, Warner Bros, Sony, Valve and many others. The course takes the daunting task of learning human anatomy and distills it into artist-focused lessons that cover the critical foundation that every figurative artist needs to know. The course is online to share the anatomy lessons of the old masters with artists intent on mastering the human figure. Welcome to Scott Eaton’s Anatomy for Artists online course page.