More Adventures in Watercolor Portraits
Tony Swaby: Portraiture Beyond Likeness Tony Swaby is a portrait artist and teacher whose work and pedagogy revolve around capturing not just facial features, but something deeper — the essence, the emotional presence, the "lifeforce" behind a person’s face. His philosophy challenges the notion that technical mastery alone (geometry, measuring, perfect replication) suffices. Instead, Tony believes that without an emotional connection, a portrait can look accurate yet feel lifeless. Key Principles of His Approach Here are several pillars of Tony’s method: Mindset First He believes the artist’s mindset is foundational. Expectations, fear of failure, comparison with masters — these mental obstacles often block expressive work. By reshaping one’s attitude, the entire process becomes more natural, more open. Connection with the Subject Tony emphasizes empathy, observation, listening — not just looking. What is the subject feeling? What moment are they in? Capturing a glint, a relaxed posture, a moment of laughter or glance, rather than stiff posing, is central. He even suggests using video rather than static photos to catch moments of natural behavior. Observation + Reduction Drawing everything you see isn’t necessary. Tony teaches line and shape reduction: you draw enough to convey what matters, what holds the likeness, what makes the portrait feel alive. He wants artists to identify relationships among lines and shapes, between tones, highlight vs shadow — and then simplify. "Tonal Balance" and Medium He often works in charcoal, which is well-suited to exploring tone, contrast, texture. He uses techniques to balance the tonal values rather than simply focusing on outline. The way light and dark areas are placed relative to each other plays a major role in shaping the portrait’s character. “Ticking-in” and Relationships One of his technical devices is the idea of placing key reference points (“tick marks”) to map out how features relate to each other — not so much copying exactly, but measuring the spatial relationships in a loose, responsive way. The idea is to get things roughly in proportion early so that you’ve freedom to respond to what you see and feel. Fearlessness & Reset He encourages artists to let go of perfectionism. Resetting prior assumptions, being fearless of getting things “wrong,” being okay with experimentation. Much of his teaching is about freeing the student from self-criticism so that drawing becomes more spontaneous. How Tony Teaches It Tony Swaby’s teaching materials and structure reflect his philosophy: Online workshops, private tuition, and group courses. These include short, focused workshops (e.g. “4 Steps to Better Portraits”) as well as longer, intensive programmes lasting months. Lesson library: videos, demonstrations, assignments. Students can watch, draw along, revisit, and get feedback. Regular live or recorded “portrait-lives” or demos, where Tony draws and reflects in real time — talking about what he’s seeing, how he chooses what to emphasize. This helps students see not just the finished work but the process, the corrections, the decisions. Why His Approach Feels “Unique” It’s not method-heavy in the sense of rigid rules. Tony doesn’t want everyone to draw like him. He wants people to find their own voice, but armed with tools for emotional honesty and observational clarity. He blends technical discipline (tone, proportion, relationships) with emotional openness (mood, empathy, spontaneity). He emphasises that you don’t need perfect references or ideal photos; capturing a lived moment — laughter, glance, relaxed expression — often yields more authenticity. He encourages stepping back, seeing the big picture, simplifying, rather than getting bogged down in every small detail early on. Conclusion Tony Swaby is a portrait artist who pushes beyond mere likeness to the inner life of his subjects. His unique blend of mindset coaching, observational skill, tonal/shape reduction, and emotional connection offers an alternative path to portraiture — one that is both disciplined and freeing. For anyone wanting to draw portraits that feel alive, not just accurate, adapting Tony's approach could be a very powerful way forward. Check your artist's mindset here: https://forms.gle/25LLTRMKmkL47TAP9 For more information about my approach Join my channel: / @tonyswaby Check out my courses: https://www.thejoyofportraiture.com

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