Sometimes not being able to rub out your work is an important thing as an artist. It really helps you focus and commit to your work, it also teaches you to not be so precious. There is a lot of beauty in the happy accidents too ;)
Merging ideas with technique is extremely difficult. Even if you have all kinds of ideas and can actually hold onto them, putting them through a practiced technique is another thing. And this guy just seems to have a limitless supply of ideas on top of that. Always intimidating, but always inspirational.
O foda desse cara é q ele sequer faz um sketch antes de começar!ele simplesmente coloca os detalhes ao mesmo tempo em que o desenho toma forma!é relamente um talento incrível!
Its so heartwarming to see how happy Gi gets when talking about Terada, it reminds of their colab where he was looking as a kid living the dream. Very inspiring to see two people we admire and reference showing sich an admiration for each other, and being so humble, while they are clearly world class masters that we doubt we'll catch up to 20% of their skill in life 😂😂 Inspiring stuff
Just Some Girl With A Mustache I don’t think he started at the same point as everyone. His floor of skill is likely much higher than average. Would still be interesting though !
@@monsterxpancake youre right, we should never underestimate him, but, there is a possibility that he was on the same level as us, but with slight advantages
Radek "us"...😂 the reason why he's so good is all he did/does was and is drawing and sketch, no video games, no tv no distractions, he worked at it. drawing can be learned but its a mindset, its a habit and its dedication.
@@rietzhu It is, i wouldnt state otherwise, all I'm saying is that he has talent that he also worked on so much as he said in the interviews he was on , I'm not denying the fact that it's all about dedication, but, some people just have talent, know what an art prodigy is mate? , but hey, I also agree with you so whatever 😂👍
Honestly, I think what he does differently from the average person is more in how he thinks about the objects he sees. His older works probably have more mistakes where his hand didn't move exactly how he wanted, but he also says he doodled a lot as a kid, which definitely helps your motor control.
I am ALWAYS amazed at watching this man, draw! It's like he's just tracing over an illustration that is Already there!! It's both Inspiring and yet intimidating at the same time! 🤯😇
That's right, he even doesn't use a pencil to begin with it beforehands, unlike Karl Kopinski (doesnt make him any less of an artist btw) but the way he's taking his time to be precise and going right in the factual drawing essentially, is just amazing
Watching this guy drawning i always remember the thoughts of Musashi (Vagabond' version) when he tried to understand perfection and the different ways of how you are or act when you are "perfect" in your area. This guy as for me as the same look as those senseis....he really achieved something close of this...a master in his art ...
At 5:45 JunggiKim: Draws perfect lines. Smudges the brush tip all over the neck collar. Me: Ohh, you done it now, boy. You done messed up. JunggiKim: Proceeds to continue adding surprising details and perfect lines around the smudge.
So he can draw something like that in 90 minutes while being in a unusual position for them to film, without any mistakes and while answering a ton of questions? Ok... Are we even the same species?
he's old and he's been drawing his whole life. Your entire life might not have the same circumstances as Jung Gi. 'Prodigy' term aside, the runtime of his art practice is far longer than us all.
@EramSemperRecta yeah. Sometimes certain circumstances helps too. I'm not good at drawing, but definitely not bad either. When I was a kid, I got a lot of blank books. Thus I found joy in drawing. My point is, some circumstances favors one's ability a lot. It's just a jumpstart, the process is what make people great. I remember a certain artist hated it so much when someone said he has talent, or he is a prodigy, or whatever. His works are a product of hard work, not talent per se.
@@helleschi6131 oh yeah also most of his Superani group draw like him. One of his student (not part of superani) called Gharliela. He might not draw like Kim, but he has Air Gear-like technical details. You see, just wait for his students to grow.
ياله من عمل رائع.انت فنان موهوب جدا.لقد اصبحت اقضي اوقات طويله اشاهد رسومك..فعلا انت لاتقدر بثمن..لقد غادرت عالمنا قبل ان تعطينا كل ما لديك..ربنا يرحمك
@@eazykiel9710 yes it completely is. Thousand year old cave scribbles are considered art or are they not by your high standards? Art is a subjective form someone likes some someone doesen't, don't be a pretentious snob
@@eazykiel9710 all you need to do to call yourself an artist is make art. you dont have to be a master like jung gi to call yourself one!! dont act so superior. nobody starts out perfect, and its persevance, passion and the drive to learn that makes people artists
even that is true, he doesn't give a single glance to his glasses, the glasses must be very high tech device, and it is punched through to his brain, and so he constantly getting information from it.