Hello Ian ... I hope everything is fine ... I'm from Roo de Janeiro , Brasil ... I watch your lessons every day ... I painted for 45 years with a classic tendency rich in details ... you radically changed my painting with simplification and a new focus in design ... painting only what really matters ... I am very very very happy with the freshness of my new work ... stay with God ... lots of health ... sorry about my english ... It's like Tarzan ... 😂😂😂
Hi Leandro, well even as Tarzan you certainly made it clear. Thank you for letting me know how my videos have helped. Makes me happy to hear it. Best wishes to you as well.
Hi Leandro, Funny, I too have been painting a while, and have been stubbornly (self-taught) sticking to my usual routine, mostly over painting my work, with occasional success. After watching Ian, and a few other earnest artists, I feel like I am breaking out of my shell, however old habits do die hard, and it is a constant battle between my alter egos. Ian definitely has his act together and I respect his conclusions. Thank you and good luck.
Loved seeing a painting done without a traditional blocking in stage. I'm a very detail-oriented person, and I have such a hard time with big blocks of color that I know will be covered by something else! Thanks for another great lesson.
I like to take a day and concentrate on color mixing and using my different brushes. There is a definite learning curve with watercolor but I enjoy it. I paint to help me with the loss of my Son. It keeps my mind busy.
Ann Sowers, can I say I’m so sorry for your loss. I am able to say I know how you feel, because I really do. It’s been many years since I lost my twenty six year old son. I don’t know if your loss was recent, but painting will help you. I’m a watercolor painter, but I dabble in oils also. Keep painting , keep your mind and hands busy. The pain of losing a child never goes away fully, but you can learn to live with it. You do. Tallahassee Florida .
Im so sorry for your loss. It’s been 9 years since I my son and painting and creating with oils and learning has given me an inspiration that helps with that loss.
Margaret was right, this is worth another viewing for the brushwork. It was also a good review of the steps: crop the view, sketch the road map, draw the value masses, all this before painting. Now I have a third mantra: crop, sketch, draw, paint. It's great that these videos stay up for revisiting. Thanks again Ian.
I’ve just started watching you and already feel more comfortable with your teachings than all the 1000’s of painting videos I’ve watched...I will continue...thanks...
I echo my previous comments. Always fresh and beautiful - you inspire tremendously. Lately I've been able to create a space to work in oils, and soon I'll begin playing with oils. Thank you again!❤🔥💐
Came to your sure through James Gurney. Always been a watercolorist , but a friend is having me take acrylic classes with her … and I miss the great lights that I used to get with watercolor . You sir , have proved to me that an opaque technique can be full of LIGHT! Thank you , and you deserve the $60/month I’m paying for these classes!!!
The brushwork of all the different greens in the foreground creates a lot of movement. Love the way you have accentuated the blue in three places. Thank you
I have been totally blocked in my painting for the last 15 months or so, not knowing what to do about it. Having just stumbled on your videos Ian I feel as though I have some starting points to get back into it. I’m going to give it a try today, so thank you so much.
I love what you did. Honestly, I didn't see much in the photograph to interest me, but you turned it into a thing of beauty~ LOL...I've probably passed by a thousand such opportunities. ;- )
Just completed my Ian Robert’s marathon! I’ve watched ALL the videos in about one week! Notes...screenshots printed out! This has helped me more than I can ever express. I was imprisoned in pursuing every detail! Now it is photo-crop-armature structure-shapes-hue/intensity/value. All this with flow to focal point!! The “treasure map”, then “the journey begins when you pick up your brush”. And that is what I am about to do!! Again, 🙏 thank you so much!!!
Every time I encounter a new work of yours, I instantly recognize it, and the same initial appeal of your subtle colours has me caught yet again! I've no room to paint, but I take your compositional and colour information to my work digitally. Thank you huge.💐
Great lesson on brush strokes. I notice you twirl the brush as you drag it across the canvas and many of your marks are similar to those in your drawings. Another good reason to do the drawing first! Thank you Ian for another fantastic video!
I look forward to your Tuesday videos and sunlit paintings. It's a joy seeing new scenery--alleyways to canyon walls. Your demo and tips have helped me gradually improve each week. Thank you so much for generously sharing your knowledge.
Thank you for your wonderful “handholding “ to take us with you through your process. I’m new at this and am soaking up instruction, no longer thinking it isn’t authentic if I don’t stumble on truth all on my own!
Wonderful demo Ian. Your brush strokes are so relaxed and effortless to my eyes. Years of painting experience for sure. Interesting watching you go from light to dark. Your greens are beautiful, transitions, movement, direction and complexity and much more show how to move through a painting. I’m becoming a Tuesday regular when I can. Thank you. Stay safe and well.
I am finding so much benefit in these short compositional videos. Thank you very much for taking the time to show us these basic ideas. I am trying to learn to draw and paint on my own and the light is starting to shine.
Great demo Ian. I can relate the laying of the vertical lines in the middle ground field and the more oblique lines coming to the foreground to painting ocean waves. Waves are horizontal toward the horizon and often oblique when coming to shore. It makes a more interesting design. I am always looking forward to your Tuesday morning teachings! Thank you!
I love it. I am one of those resistant planners. I am really not sure why. I am going to exolore that this week. I dont think its just being lazy. Maybe its because I enjoy the paint so much..skip the veggies right to dessert? I dont know. I do know when I do some sketching and have a design, it turns out much better.
I didn't like this...even as you painted through it...but at the end you showed us your finished piece. I thought it was great! Ya done good here. I have some more detail than you do with yours, but so far, you usually, "pull it out" and I end up really enjoying what I watched while you painted over your panel. Thanks for a good, educational time.
I've watched several of your videos but haven't made a comment, which omission I correct now. Yours are the most instructive and useful videos of all I've encountered. I don't know by what circumstance one of your vids first appeared on my whatever it is one sees on going to youtube, but I'm very glad I clicked on it. I've become quite a fan.
Excellent video! Seeing your brushstrokes and the subtle flicking up for trees is helpful. And of course you always use a decent sized brush, even for details which is a good lesson I’m still internalizing with own painting.
Glad that was helpful Robin. The thing with the big brush is getting enough paint on the end that in fact you can make a small mark with it, rather than a half full brush which pretty much makes the mark the width of the brush.
Fantastic, all around! Painting😍 I use to be afraid that planning a painting would turn it into a killjoy activity. Yet it can actuality clear the way for more in the moment expression 'cause the big things are already taken care of.
To my mind, that is it exactly. Sure there may be some experimental idea that requires just trying something to see what happens. But mostly I think a map is what you need before heading into the woods.
Hi Ian, I am watching your vedios for the sake of my 9 y old arty boy who wants doing his own stuff. It seems I can be an artist now with you simplified some of the features :D is there a chance of a simple series for kids?
I agree with almost every comment here. This beautifully done. I always find your lessons to be so helpful! I do have one question…I noticed the consistency and flow of your paint is so much better than what I use straight out of the tube and wonder what medium you use (if any) or is it the brand of oils paint?
Thank you, Ian. You are an inspiration and great source of very important information to those of us trying to find our way with painting. Happy Thanksgiving!
Whoever gave this a thumbs down was NOT listening!!! This is brilliant!!! Ten thumbs up! Love the hero on a journey WITH a map! When we meet those monsters along the way we know how to get around them with your teaching us how to make and follow the map! And still have fun along the way of course! Ps.. those flowers could be some sort of Yarrow, fleabane or plantain? ( nature nerd, moi)
You're probably right. I thought it was too small for Queen Anne's Lace. It was Maine in the early fall. Glad you enjoyed the video. And one thumbs down just seems to me to be someone in a bad mood.
@@IanRobertsMasteringComposition I am a big lover of Queen Anne’s Lace , so much so I used to gather the seeds and spread them all over my yard when I was lucky enough to live in Cleveland, Ohio. Sadly they don’t grow here in Texas. I think your flowers are not those simply because of the time of year and the more compact appearance. But I bet there are a few dried specimens in that photo. Thank you again for sharing your knowledge so openly. Two of my friends will receive your book for Xmas. And I will spread the word about my new guru! Canadians have to stick together eh? 🤣🤣 thumbs down people probably accidentally touched their screens...
I paint with Pastels, but have found the foundations that you are talking about apply to my medium too. I'm looking forward to applying these ideas to my paintings.
HI Rebecca, you bring up a good point. Even though as someone working in pastel and you watch a video on brushwork. Regardless of medium, the idea of structure underlying the image, and the orchestration of value masses, are the foundation of making paintings work consistently. Glad you are finding the videos helpful.
A revelation! I just noticed where you’re holding the brush! This makes the touch on the canvas very fluid. I couldn’t understand why I veered towards photorealism when I really don’t want to! It’s because I’m holding my brush like a pen 😱🤣 and thus making a RECORD of my subject, not an impression!
Great learning as always. Thank you. I liked the painting more, just before it was completely finished. The contrast before it finished were awesome. 😆
Thanks so much, Ian. As usual, a thoughtful and useful video. Your point is well taken about getting values right and refining color later, but in some future video please discuss what you did to the blocked-in painting to arrive at final hues. Did you, for example, achieve that late afternoon warmth by applying a thinned layer of deep yellow/ochre to all the vegetation to knock down the bluish cast of the block-in colors? Just ordered a copy of MASTERING COMPOSITION, eager to see what it contains.
I’ve only been painting for about a month but I painted his woman with parasol Surprisingly I didn’t really struggle with it very much and it turned out pretty good wish I could send you a picture and get your opinion
I really enjoy impressionistic painting but also academic or detail painting I kind of want to combine the two somehow I suppose that’s the style that interests me the most
I've been enjoying your videos a long time now! I've been wondering what type of brush you use. Are they mainly filberts? Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us!
Hello Mr Roberts it's Juliana from Melbourne Australia. I am 71 I just started watercolour. But I have been watching your short series and I was thinking I would like to maybe try oils, or are acrylics ok to? But I'm on a pension can I afford the canvas? Do you make your own frames and stretch the canvas or do you buy it already made? Please what brand of paints do you use ? Can I afford them in the pension? P.s I think your work is lovely and your a lovely easy to follow teacher. Thankyou Mr Roberts.
Hi Philippa, it is so nice to hear from you. Hope all is well and your painting is going well. Thanks for letting me know you liked the video. Best wishes.