Sketch Book for the Artist

(singke) #1
Femmes Fatales

THESE DEVASTATING femmes fatales force back the onlooker

with their demure, elegant chic and svelte, muscular

aggression. Fashion and fantasy drawings invent prototypes

of ideals and perfection—be they for the catwalk or the

fast-paced pages of comic books.

Rene Gruau's bold gouache drawing of smoothly

swaying sophistication captures a brilliantly cut garment

and frames it with great dynamism in a white, studio-like

rectangle of paper. His model is outlined, as is Spider-Girl

opposite, and both share the power of scarlet and black.

Gruau uses starkly cut negative space (see pp. 58-59) and a

three-spoke balance of cuffs and cropped trousers to create

an almost flag-like emblem of power.

Spider-Girl leaps like an insect, diving to catch us in the

grip of her machine-like limbs. Fine lines drawn against

the building behind her echo the threads on which we have

all seen arachnids drop and hang. Airbrushed reflective

surfaces further amplify our perception of speed.

RENE GRUAU
Italian-French fashion illustrator who in his long
and esteemed career worked with many of the
greatest designers of 20th-century haute couture.
Gruau's highly distinctive drawings have appeared
in numerous magazines including Elle. Vogue.
Harpers & Queen, and L'Officiel de la Couture.

India ink and gouache This swish of confidence and style
enters the page turning everyone's head. Gruau's model
regally swans to the fore with cool pride, demanding our
attention with gesture and flair. She has been drawn with
brushes dipped into India ink and gouache, possibly over a
pencil outline. The black red, and gray pigments were applied
separately. Drying time in between applications ensured the
colors did not run into each other.

Composition Look how well this image is framed in pictorial
space horizontal line cropping the trousers below her
knee is parallel to the bottom edge of the image. The
outermost upright borders of her cuffs are similarly parallel to
the sides of the image, and tilted to the same degree. Space
above her head a little deeper than space beneath her
knees to give her gravity. Compare the compositional device
of cropped trousers here to the device of the white boots
beneath Van Dyke's study of armor on p. 158.

Illustration for Jacques Fath in
L'Officiel de la Couture
1949
RENE GRUAU

COSTUME

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