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Drawing Course | Proko

Weeks passed. The bean became a ribcage. The ribcage became a torso. Stan’s lessons on landmarks (the iliac crest! the pit of the neck!) turned Alex’s figures from floppy ghosts into solid people. He learned to draw hands as mitten shapes first, then knuckles, then tendons. He drew his own left hand so many times it started cramping.

Alex had always doodled in the margins of notebooks—squiggly monsters, lopsided houses, floating eyes. But when his best friend, Jen, showed him a hyper-realistic portrait she’d drawn of their cat, Mr. Whiskers, he felt a pang of envy. “How?” he asked. Jen shrugged. “Proko.”

That night, Alex typed “Proko drawing course” into his search bar. The first video that popped up featured a bald, energetic man named Stan Prokopenko, who spoke about anatomy like it was a secret language. “You don’t need talent,” Stan said, pointing at a simplified skeleton. “You need construction.” proko drawing course

Alex clicked “Enroll” on the free figure drawing fundamentals. The first assignment? Draw a bean. Not a real bean—a curved, two-lobed shape representing the torso’s twist and tilt. Alex scoffed. A bean? He drew a potato. Then a kidney. Then a sad, deflated peanut.

But Stan’s voice echoed in his head: “The bean is the engine of gesture.” So Alex tried again. And again. By the tenth bean, something clicked. The curves began to feel alive—leaning, stretching, twisting. He added stick limbs. Then cylinders for arms. Then blocks for hips. Weeks passed

He showed Jen the next day. “It’s not good,” he said quickly.

Jen tilted her head. “No,” she agreed. “But it’s real .” Stan’s lessons on landmarks (the iliac crest

One night, deep in the “Skulls and Muscles” module, Alex attempted a self-portrait from a mirror. No erasing. No cheating. Just charcoal and paper. The eyes were too close together. The jaw looked like a box. But the structure —there it was, hiding under the mess. The brow ridge aligned with the ears. The sternocleidomastoid muscle swept down the neck like Stan had promised.

That was the moment Alex understood. Proko wasn’t teaching him to draw pretty pictures. It was teaching him to see—the way light falls on a cheekbone, the spring of a spine, the quiet geometry hiding inside every living thing.