These are some examples of working finished-to-unfinished from past Drawing 1 students taught by a friend of mine at Oklahoma Christian University. She calls this assignment "Giacometti Drawings" and in each case, the students began with a nice, clean, finished drawing of a skull and then worked on top of it with more gestural, less controlled line-work. Now, you have the option of adding LIMITED value--using it as a means to give you more of a push-and-pull of space--but you'll notice that in these drawings, value is nearly non-existent. Yet, for the most part, these drawings work. Therefore, if I see that we continue to overly lean on that nice crutch of "value" in our drawings, I will either take it out of your arsenal, or I'll give you a specific number of times you can use it within each drawing.
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![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgHiOmNDMfH0G_GkFJDnQGN76JOVA4nuLNHeDB_SVFcBSrRAt_8zXgzze0pY4F5at3OWZuKb3fLOEoCsOtcLW-_dgQfc5_fvaFANLHSMMeNVQE2O8Fy3TLfXvOe3pGPpeq4eFeJwaCu8NO3/s320/l_ebb37d830cb305ec2dfa6cf0eb408421.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhtm1rE-fOa4UAe7zmpkJwuwlC1zBNbMJY5pDZRiGPzhHYtucubsEUSG3Vi08EAAnwVj-4tLbRagM0u-KvPLMjAYwmJCZaqjGk5aqbjRZEehX-uDA7GliIvXhX3IGPyN1Yn8R5sYidSIM2w/s320/l_39c525f8ebaa2c889f3b73dbffe5d8eb.jpg)
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