
The Man Who Inspired Disney - Heinrich Kley ORIGINAL Sketchbook Tour - Proko
video description
Date: 2022-03-14
Related videos
Comments and reviews: 10
ZER0
WOW! Amazing. Beautiful. This is as good as illustration, drawing, etc, gets. What a bastard (I mean that in a good way) And how can 116 people press the dislike button! Jealous, or morons, or both.
Anyway, again, this is fantastic stuff. To be able to draw from one's imagination is a top skill, and to also have such a great imagination is as good as it gets. He can draw anything and it looks good. I can hardly get over it. Lastly, I liked the commentary too, and Proko can also draw amazing stuff.
reply
WOW! Amazing. Beautiful. This is as good as illustration, drawing, etc, gets. What a bastard (I mean that in a good way) And how can 116 people press the dislike button! Jealous, or morons, or both.
Anyway, again, this is fantastic stuff. To be able to draw from one's imagination is a top skill, and to also have such a great imagination is as good as it gets. He can draw anything and it looks good. I can hardly get over it. Lastly, I liked the commentary too, and Proko can also draw amazing stuff.
reply
parade
ok ok, this was a great video but yall messed up moses and the wizard. It's a wizard, his pointy hat is beside him. Moses is holding his beard up, and the wizard is looking shocked at the length, presumably because he thought his beard was the longest. The glasses are a prop to further communicate the looking in disbelief, like someone would take their glasses off in a movie if they see something dramatic. It's like a single panel gag from a newspaper, it's actually silly and great.
reply
ok ok, this was a great video but yall messed up moses and the wizard. It's a wizard, his pointy hat is beside him. Moses is holding his beard up, and the wizard is looking shocked at the length, presumably because he thought his beard was the longest. The glasses are a prop to further communicate the looking in disbelief, like someone would take their glasses off in a movie if they see something dramatic. It's like a single panel gag from a newspaper, it's actually silly and great.
reply
Mr.
I re-watched this video. I hope you got the copyrights to reproduce the book. You could get into a legal battle with the family or company that owns the copyright. Just purchasing a sketchbook does not give you a right to reproduce it. Even if the artist is dead for a hundred years. The purchase of art it is for the personal use of that piece only, no implication that you can make copies and sell them!
reply
I re-watched this video. I hope you got the copyrights to reproduce the book. You could get into a legal battle with the family or company that owns the copyright. Just purchasing a sketchbook does not give you a right to reproduce it. Even if the artist is dead for a hundred years. The purchase of art it is for the personal use of that piece only, no implication that you can make copies and sell them!
reply
evelyne
I-m saddened to see that gloves were not used when page turning.
Plus the pushing down on the paper from the back, and setting things on top of original drawings, made me almost want to stop watching this video. There is no clue here on how to handle old paper, finger oils, or respect for -old- material-. Sad!
WOW! At 7: 08 someone stole the Grinch--. cause there he be.
reply
I-m saddened to see that gloves were not used when page turning.
Plus the pushing down on the paper from the back, and setting things on top of original drawings, made me almost want to stop watching this video. There is no clue here on how to handle old paper, finger oils, or respect for -old- material-. Sad!
WOW! At 7: 08 someone stole the Grinch--. cause there he be.
reply
communism4kids
Pretty sure that God is supposed to be in his pajamas as if Moses had just woken him up to talk about some changes/fixes to the commandments.
The one scruffy sock, the tassle at the end of his night cap, still cleaning his (reading) glasses, the slippers, the star pattern on the robe - all clues!
Also to me it looks like God has bed hair lol.
reply
Pretty sure that God is supposed to be in his pajamas as if Moses had just woken him up to talk about some changes/fixes to the commandments.
The one scruffy sock, the tassle at the end of his night cap, still cleaning his (reading) glasses, the slippers, the star pattern on the robe - all clues!
Also to me it looks like God has bed hair lol.
reply
Dee
(Don't know if this was mentioned) Karlsruhe, the beautiful city where Kley was born, has one of the oldest zoos in Germany. No doubt that is where he was able to study animal anatomy. Strangely, Karlsruhe doesn't have a museum of his work, and the city doesn't seem to acknowledge him in any way. (I looked)
reply
(Don't know if this was mentioned) Karlsruhe, the beautiful city where Kley was born, has one of the oldest zoos in Germany. No doubt that is where he was able to study animal anatomy. Strangely, Karlsruhe doesn't have a museum of his work, and the city doesn't seem to acknowledge him in any way. (I looked)
reply
Dale
Just saw this. Knew nothing about him. Thanks. Apropos the discussion of gnarly people and quick sketch style. Rembrandt did both a few years earlier. Maybe a little different take on subject matter, but even there there are some similarities.
reply
Just saw this. Knew nothing about him. Thanks. Apropos the discussion of gnarly people and quick sketch style. Rembrandt did both a few years earlier. Maybe a little different take on subject matter, but even there there are some similarities.
reply
JJ
I think there is a distance between a sketch and a published work by the way professional standards work. For him I imagine he simply enjoys drawing, its not about quickly dashing something to satisfy an impulse need for pleasure, its an art.
reply
I think there is a distance between a sketch and a published work by the way professional standards work. For him I imagine he simply enjoys drawing, its not about quickly dashing something to satisfy an impulse need for pleasure, its an art.
reply
Clint
I see a lot of Heinrich Kley's imaginative pulse in Kim Jung Gi. Different times, but the same imaginative starting point with anthropomorphized animals and creatures. The creative play with anatomy of humans and animals. Over and over.
reply
I see a lot of Heinrich Kley's imaginative pulse in Kim Jung Gi. Different times, but the same imaginative starting point with anthropomorphized animals and creatures. The creative play with anatomy of humans and animals. Over and over.
reply
MoonshineSazerac
It's quite amazing the notion that in maybe 100 years time someone's going to be looking at the likes of Karl Kopinksi's vast, unfathomable plethora of sketchwork and think -This guy drew almost as much as Heinrech Kley-.
reply
It's quite amazing the notion that in maybe 100 years time someone's going to be looking at the likes of Karl Kopinksi's vast, unfathomable plethora of sketchwork and think -This guy drew almost as much as Heinrech Kley-.
reply
Add a review, comment
Other channel videos















