After an 1865 Sculpture by William Wetmore Story.
In the ancient Greek tragedy by Euripides, Medea was the sorceress who assisted Jason in obtaining the Golden Fleece and later became his wife. When he abandoned her, Medea murdered their two children and planned the death of his new love, Creusa. To nineteenth-century theater audiences, Medea was a sympathetic character forced to choose between relinquishing her children and protecting them by destroying them herself. Medea clenches her left hand in an attitude of smoldering tension, while tightly clutching the murder weapon, a dagger, in the other. Story deemphasized Medea’s active revenge, leaving to the viewer’s imagination the infanticide to come.
Lovely work, keep it up!
Very nice!
Did you sketch a body structure underneath first, or did you just draw exactly what you see?
Thanks! I didn’t do the underlying structures for this one. I used the Charles Bargue method, which is more like drawing a big box around the subject, then “sculpting” out the shape. Going from very blocky to more organic lines. Like this:
https://www.felicecalchi.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/charles-bargue-course-plaster-cast-1.jpg
I didn’t know about this method. I’ll try it out.