Music, hey everybody! Welcome back to Art by Galen. I'm Galen Islandfelt, and today we're going to begin a new series on my channel based around simplifying constructive anatomy. The purpose of this series is for us to improve our figurative art. One of the keys to doing good figurative art is knowing the structure underneath. Unfortunately, you can't know what the structure is without studying it, so that's what we're planning to do here. I'm doing it so I can improve, and I'm sharing it with you that way you can improve right along with me. So, what we're gonna do, we're literally going to start from the ground up. We're gonna start with the feet and work our way all the way up to the skull. We're going to learn the internal structure, we're going to learn how it moves, we're going to learn how it doesn't move, and we're going to learn how to take those structures and simplify it. That way, it's easier for us to create a character from scratch. So, with that, welcome to Simplified Constructive Anatomy. So, in order to simplify it, we need to know what the structure underneath is. And we're not going to go too into detail as far as the things that don't move. We mainly want to focus on the points that actually bend and articulate, and the rest of it will break down into simplified shapes. This is the top-down view of a foot. This is the inside view of a foot. So, this would be the ball of the foot right here on the inside. This would be the big toe, but it's broken into three sections. If you break the back right across to this point, this is called the Tarsus. The second section is called the metatarsus,...