Portrait Drawings For Sale

Browse portrait drawings for sale on our online gallery and explore our extensive selection of styles, ranging from expressionistic portrait drawings to cartoons to illustrative portraits. Shop today and find the perfect contemporary portrait drawing for your home or office.

About the artists

Fatola Israel's emotive portrait drawings demonstrate how the medium’s softness lends itself well to the study of social issues. In his hyper-real style, the award-winning pencil artist who studied in Nigeria, explores humankind’s struggle within society. Captivity captures an intimate close up of a man behind bars, while “Mojisola” documents an entirely different emotion: hope.

The work of acclaimed artist Nelson Makamo, winner of the 2018 Rise Art Prize, highlights individuality and celebrates society in his native South Africa. The large-scale charcoal drawing, In My Skin sees a young boy standing as if exposed, charged with a self-consciousness recognisable amongst pre-teens. Beauty captures his subject less directly, zooming in to the sitter from the side, his features composed from spontaneous marks and scrawled words.

Lee Ellis uses his portrait drawings to create a darker sense of intimacy, using his figures’ warped features to hint at an inner landscapes of psychological torture. The scratched surface of Cheese Before Bed 11 creates a sense of emotional angst. Ellis’ distinctive figures are repeated throughout the rest of his nightmarish Cheese Before Bed series.

An Intimate Art Form

The history of portrait drawing is intertwined with that of portraiture. However, unlike portrait paintings which have evolved according to the style of the day, portrait drawings have remained a timeless way to intimately explore an individual.

There has long been a fascination with portrait drawings of well-known figures, reflecting a desire to strip them back to their core. Augustus John sketched T. E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia) in both London and Paris. At the time Lawrence sat for John, between 1919 and 1923, the archaeologist and military officer was a household name and John’s drawings of him sold for good money. Commenting on this fact, Lawrence wrote to John: “What do artists' models of the best sort fetch per hour (or perhaps per job)... it seems to me that I have a future...”

Unlike John’s paintings of Lawrence which can be considered fairly formal, the quick portrait drawings show a different side to the sitter. A two-minute sketch drawn at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, shows a more vulnerable Lawrence than the public were perhaps used to - a figure engulfed by his robes, hunched and small.

The intimacy of portrait drawings can reveal a side to a person’s personality that is often edited out from official portraits. In Paul Emsley’s final painting of the Duchess of Cambridge, she appears demure and regal. But in Emsley’s portrait drawings, her gaze is fierce and challenging. Studies of modern politicians, such as Diane Abbott by Stuart Pearson Wright and Ken Livingstone by Andrew Tift, show a softer side to these public figures.

Since 1990, there has been a revival of interest in portrait drawings among contemporary artists, who are drawn to the art form for its intimacy. Matthew Carr’s 2008 portrait drawing of novelist Sebastian Faulks, for example, hints at a sort of existential crisis in the sitter, as we see a floating head in pencil, marooned on the empty page.

Preparatory or Stand-Alone Portraits

Self-portrait drawings offer artists an impulsive method of self-examination. Stanley Spencer’s 1913 self-portrait drawing is sketched onto paper that had previously been used, hinting either at spontaneity or an attempt to weave studio materials into his self-portrait. The piece is thought to be in preparation for his self-portrait painting completed the following year and the drawing shares the same intense stare he later depicted in oil.

However not all portrait drawings exist only as studies in preparation for grander works in painting or sculpture. Frank Auerbach churned over his drawings of Estella (Stella) West, who posed for him between 1950 and the 1970s. Head of E.O.W. took almost 70 sittings and as a result of the artist’s constant drawing and erasing, the paper is torn and patched.

Find out more in our Guide To Drawings.

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    showing 528 pieces
    NU assise aiko by Maude Ovize

    NU assise aiko

    Drawings - 49x69 cm
    Woman Asleep by Randy Klinger

    Woman Asleep

    Drawings - 46x56 cmRent for $190 /mo
    Danse by Sylvia Baldeva

    Danse

    Drawings - 30x21 cm
    Dessin by Jacques Germain

    Dessin

    Drawings - 48x58 cm
    L Envie by Lucie De Saint

    L Envie

    Drawings - 37x37 cm
    Woman at her Meal by Randy Klinger

    Woman at her Meal

    Drawings - 46x56 cmRent for $235 /mo
    Femme nue assise by Guillaume Larroque

    Femme nue assise

    Drawings - 41x29 cm

    Disegno 4

    Drawings - 29x21 cm

    Vanitas

    Drawings - 65x45 cm

    Dessin 107

    Drawings - 49x39 cm

    Woman with a Mask

    Drawings - 34x24 cmRent for $145 /mo

    Prince

    Drawings - 42x28 cm

    "Portrait blue" 2024

    Drawings - 42x30 cm

    Aménophis IV

    Drawings - 34x32 cm

    Nu assis

    Drawings - 29x41 cm

    Video Layer (Disney World) 1

    Drawings - 26x31 cmRent for $105 /mo

    suspicious samurai

    Drawings - 42x30 cm

    Leonora Carrington

    Drawings - 59x42 cmRent for $390 /mo

    Portrait of Juana

    Drawings - 61x46 cm

    Intermission

    Drawings - 45x55 cm

    Woman Looking Left

    Drawings - 46x56 cmRent for $180 /mo

    Maasai women Portrait series Portrait One

    Drawings - 45x34 cmRent for $75 /mo

    graph 1a

    Drawings - 21x29 cmRent for $57 /mo

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