
Environment Painting with Bryan Mark Taylor - Proko
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Date: 2022-03-14
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Comments and reviews: 6
Parting
-JunoVHS in the stream you had asked. --Could you sharpen this up an infinite amount? Or would it be too loose at this point to really sharpen up-
I can't help but feel i misrepresented what little I know of the painting im trying to learn and that I should make what correction I can.
The way of Paul Ingbreston and his boston school painting is to be as accurate as possible at first, and then to make it more accurate by adjustment. I believe the quote we take as an painting aphorism or painting proverb if you will goes -make it as like as you can, then make it more like- or thats close too it. That being said I cant speak for him of course so you should see what he says about his own ideas if it strikes you, and don't take my summary im new to painting anyways.
The way of painting what is seen and not painting what is not seen, I had a flash of that in my mind and it struck me wrongly as looseness. To paint only what is needed as abstract shapes and nothing else and to yet have the image read demands a great deal of accuracy and it delivers as its natural course an effect of lost and found.
I still stand by what I said though about being able to tighten from looseness to heart's content although for different reason. : If the painting is still wet I find its not too hard to move things around, change angles ect, and if the paint gets thick you can scrape it down with a a pallet knife and remove enough paint to allow for adjustments.
Thanks for bearing with the wall of text it just gets under my skin that I might have misrepresented someone else's ideas lol.
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-JunoVHS in the stream you had asked. --Could you sharpen this up an infinite amount? Or would it be too loose at this point to really sharpen up-
I can't help but feel i misrepresented what little I know of the painting im trying to learn and that I should make what correction I can.
The way of Paul Ingbreston and his boston school painting is to be as accurate as possible at first, and then to make it more accurate by adjustment. I believe the quote we take as an painting aphorism or painting proverb if you will goes -make it as like as you can, then make it more like- or thats close too it. That being said I cant speak for him of course so you should see what he says about his own ideas if it strikes you, and don't take my summary im new to painting anyways.
The way of painting what is seen and not painting what is not seen, I had a flash of that in my mind and it struck me wrongly as looseness. To paint only what is needed as abstract shapes and nothing else and to yet have the image read demands a great deal of accuracy and it delivers as its natural course an effect of lost and found.
I still stand by what I said though about being able to tighten from looseness to heart's content although for different reason. : If the painting is still wet I find its not too hard to move things around, change angles ect, and if the paint gets thick you can scrape it down with a a pallet knife and remove enough paint to allow for adjustments.
Thanks for bearing with the wall of text it just gets under my skin that I might have misrepresented someone else's ideas lol.
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Sadaf
He literally turned the garbage into royal alley. I loved his process I personally like abstract impressionist style it leaves more to imagination and mystery. Their were so many interesting points they talked about I wish though they would have talked more about his process
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He literally turned the garbage into royal alley. I loved his process I personally like abstract impressionist style it leaves more to imagination and mystery. Their were so many interesting points they talked about I wish though they would have talked more about his process
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vikrant
Absolutely interesting subject. Nice cool tints in shadow area. This is first time I am seeing such bright reflected tones in shadow area. This is something new to learn from you. You work is so inspiring Bryan. Thanks for sharing in depth demo.
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Absolutely interesting subject. Nice cool tints in shadow area. This is first time I am seeing such bright reflected tones in shadow area. This is something new to learn from you. You work is so inspiring Bryan. Thanks for sharing in depth demo.
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friedricengravy
Awkward chat at the beginning. I found the artist-s experience in China very interesting (have seen his work before, great stuff for sure) but the interviewer is a bit distracted by the demo not firing up. Lol
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Awkward chat at the beginning. I found the artist-s experience in China very interesting (have seen his work before, great stuff for sure) but the interviewer is a bit distracted by the demo not firing up. Lol
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Bumblefoo
Gah, I'm crushed to have missed it live but this is wonderful nonetheless. I love the content you guys keep putting out and that it's actually hard to keep up sometimes.
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Gah, I'm crushed to have missed it live but this is wonderful nonetheless. I love the content you guys keep putting out and that it's actually hard to keep up sometimes.
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phyllis
There was a famous water color artist and I-m sorry I forgot his name but he said -I-d rather paint a beautiful lie than an ugly truth-. This certainly applies here.
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There was a famous water color artist and I-m sorry I forgot his name but he said -I-d rather paint a beautiful lie than an ugly truth-. This certainly applies here.
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