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Hacking Your Brain to be a BETTER ARTIST

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  • čas přidán 18. 08. 2024
  • Alla prima artist Chelsea Lang is here to show you some innovative practice advice rooted in psychology. By changing the way you think about and approach practicing, you can reinvent your approach in a way that works for you. Learn how to practice effectively and start working toward your goals, while giving yourself plenty of room to experiment.
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    ABOUT PROKO:
    Instructional How to Draw videos for artists. My drawing lessons are approachable enough for beginners and detailed enough for advanced artists. My philosophy is to teach timeless concepts in an entertaining way. I believe that when you are having fun, you learn better. I take pride in producing high quality videos that you will enjoy watching and re-watching.
    CREDITS:
    Artist | Instructor - Chelsea Lang ( / chelsealang )
    Producer - Stan Prokopenko (www.stanprokope...), Sean Ramsey (www.peoplewhodr...),
    Script - Chelsea Lang
    Editing - Sierra Tillman ( / anart.likeeverythingelse , Sean Ramsey
    Music Used with Permission
    Intro - The Freak Fandango Orchestra
    Additional music by Epidemic Sound

Komentáře • 420

  • @ProkoTV
    @ProkoTV  Před 2 lety +150

    Thanks for the advice, Chelsea! For more of her work, be sure to check out her channel at czcams.com/users/ChelseaLang

  • @ViktorKruger99
    @ViktorKruger99 Před 2 lety +1560

    I'm going to argue that there are people who learns much more faster than others
    I've been taking art seriously for 10 years now after drawing for almost my entire life, and turns out that I find a 15 year old is waaaay better than me despite the age difference and practice
    This is what I think people meant by "talent" is just that some people absorb information quicker than the rest, is not that they didn't worked hard to achieve it, but they develop their skills at a faster pace

    • @ryanmcw7878
      @ryanmcw7878 Před 2 lety +251

      child prodigies exist in every field so not much point comparing yourself to them unless you are finding multiple 15 year olds producing 'better' art in which case it's likely that they have been learning and practicing a much more effective way than yourself

    • @frostdragon_7887
      @frostdragon_7887 Před 2 lety +100

      They may have started earlier and were more consistent and focused at an earlier age then you were.

    • @SparkleTheater
      @SparkleTheater Před 2 lety +129

      think she addresses this about 3 minutes in, you can sit down and do mindless reps but without a goal in mind of course you wont gain anything

    • @ritac.g3314
      @ritac.g3314 Před 2 lety +16

      Yeah, everyone has it's paces, not every person learns as fast, but even if those fifteen year old at the end product look better, you have more knowledge on art.

    • @eevee8046
      @eevee8046 Před 2 lety +20

      you probably need to change your approach on how you learn certain concepts and skills

  • @tradesmanjaegs4992
    @tradesmanjaegs4992 Před 2 lety +1084

    "hacking your brain" one step closer to the matrix

  • @eevee8046
    @eevee8046 Před 2 lety +382

    i find setting a clear goal for art practise difficult for me, i think the thing with self-taught artists is that they dont really understand what it is that they're missing in their skillset. So they're basically testing certain things that may or may not be the thing that is actually holding them back.
    Getting a macro view of your learning process is probably the hardest thing for a beginner

    • @aegresen
      @aegresen Před 2 lety +42

      This is where honest friends become important. I've got plenty of friends who'll look at a piece and say, 'wow, you're so good' but their opinions matter way less for me than just the one friend who'll brutally, honestly tell me what he doesn't like. Sometimes I get hurt but then I realise that he's right and work on that. I'm a self taught artist myself and it took me years to get where I am now and the greatest tool in my bag was his opinion; he's honest and wants me to continually get better, it's the greatest gift, more than I could hope for.

    • @whyvern6817
      @whyvern6817 Před 2 lety +16

      I agree with you.From my experience being a self taught artist, I mostly go with gut and intuition with what I feel is lacking. Though right now I have better understanding of what I'm lacking, It's always good to join a discord server or whatever that is accessible for you and ask around. Just keep in mind that, people have different views and take it with a grain of salt because some advice is a land mine.

    • @ginocide007
      @ginocide007 Před 2 lety +8

      @@whyvern6817 do you know of any discord servers that would be willing to critique my work if I joined??

    • @lilggs4813
      @lilggs4813 Před 2 lety +6

      Even if you were go into art, through the academic route, the same thing would apply, there’s no one syllabus that has all the perfect modules which will teach you everything, so in effect, no matter what route you take, there’s going to be a rather large aspect where you find yourself “winging it”

    • @edelleaa
      @edelleaa Před 2 lety +3

      @@aegresen the problem with that is that art is very subjective.. most of my friends not only like but also have bought what to me looks like horrible bad art that a toddler can make that i would never spend money on.. and when i receive a compliment from them it doesn't hold much weight to it even if they are genuine. then again, if they give criticism (depends on the critique of course) it can be a similar case because.. well they don't really understand what they are talking about and dislikes can also be subjective.. so i feel like it's pretty hard to get valuable feedback sometimes

  • @tinytarakeet
    @tinytarakeet Před 2 lety +195

    really really appreciate that you show the actual process of mixing the paint too!

  • @viper847371
    @viper847371 Před 2 lety +302

    As a non-artist who keeps saying “I can barely even draw stick figure” while secretly wants to learn art - Art seems like magic at time. In the video during the “process” stage, all I see are random big brush strokes with heavy paint that might look like an outline of the finished product - but then suddenly it became the finished image on the left without me realising when or how.
    My brain is truly not thinking/seeing like an artist.

    • @piorism
      @piorism Před 2 lety +8

      Squint your eyes (pretty hard) and you'll figure it out. Or even, look at the video upside down.

    • @fuzzedOut
      @fuzzedOut Před 2 lety +43

      Sounds cliche, but you just have to practice, and do many paintings before it clicks. Realize the first few may/ will be hard and look bad, but after it gets easier and you learn from mistakes

    • @arthspidey666
      @arthspidey666 Před 2 lety +11

      My adviced is when you want to learn how to paint or draw just enjoy the time you have and have a clear goal in mind what you want to achieve. You can have a simple goal at first and as time goes on your goal will grow and so will your skill.

    • @whyvern6817
      @whyvern6817 Před 2 lety +10

      Trust the process, finish the drawing/painting even if you make a mistake "a piece is not finished until it's finished". Even if it turns out looking bad, you can learn to be able to let go of mistakes, adapting to it and ultimately learn from the mistakes.
      Why wait for the "perfect time", when you can start now and become better. I certainly understand your predicament, I started about 7 months ago waiting for the right time and now Im hoping I started earlier because the time I use thinking if I could've done it or not could be used to actually *EXECUTING* it - Advice from fellow stick man gang

    • @MrLeFilipfloppyvelarde
      @MrLeFilipfloppyvelarde Před 2 lety +9

      Watch the anime blue period

  • @chukukaogude5894
    @chukukaogude5894 Před 2 lety +91

    I've been digital painting for about 1.5 years (far less if we go by days when I painted) and I found channels like Chelsea Lang's that helped my skills grow exponentially from where I was before. The thing that made me get better than I was before was building a reproducible process. Then being opened to changing my process and mindset when they gave me information that I tried in a simple painting and saw better results with. When the information was to high over my head I looked for the fundamentals.
    I digital paint and went from choosing colors from the color wheel to actually mixing the paint on the painting pad. The act of mixing colors opened up a floodgate of information I was missing out on when I was using the color wheel. My skills jumped so much higher after learning how to mix paint I am still playing around with color concepts (i guess they call it color theory).
    This is when I realized how important knowing the fundamentals were. Now I am finding the problems in my art and tracing them back to fundamentals I ignored in the passed year and then my skills are jumping when fix/implement those changes. I don't try to implement everything at once. I keep them isolated to see the changes. Then put it together at the end.
    I should say I don't undo, I don't use layers, I don't color pick. I try to keep it as close to traditional as possible for now. Later I'll go in and learn the extra stuff of digital painting.

    • @ScilexGuitar
      @ScilexGuitar Před 2 lety +9

      Well written and good points. Fundamentals and not limiting the mind to a single medium is gold. Im a pixel artist for 1 year now and learning fundamentals and watching videos of digital art and traditional art is soo benefitial

    • @velvetchiharu
      @velvetchiharu Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you for sharing, this comment was very helpful!

    • @polaroidandroidjeff6383
      @polaroidandroidjeff6383 Před 2 lety

      You should share a link to your portfolio

  • @sarahFYI
    @sarahFYI Před 2 lety +52

    There was a lot of great advice in this video. Especially liked the parts about being intentional with your learning; how copying masters doesn't take away from originality because you're learning techniques; and to remember to enjoy painting and keep it playful.

  • @silverblue73
    @silverblue73 Před 2 lety +145

    One of the most challenging things I’ve ever done was copy a master drawing for the course I was taking. I thought I made a simple choice, but the deeper I looked the more complexity I saw and found myself doing mental gymnastics trying to reverse engineer it.

    • @edelleaa
      @edelleaa Před 2 lety +12

      i have wanted to copy a masters painting for so long as i've heard of many artists doing that and suggesting others do it for practice too, but it's so intimidating! i have a hard time even choosing which one.. i can totally see how it might look easy at first and as you progress you realize the complexity of it

    • @MK-dn2ll
      @MK-dn2ll Před 2 lety +4

      ​@@edelleaa Is there any artist that isn't worth learning from? You can't choose wrong : ) Even if it turns out horrible, you're guaranteed to pick something up.

  • @paintcoach
    @paintcoach Před 2 lety +291

    Great painting Chelsea!

  • @garzapinups
    @garzapinups Před 2 lety +15

    I used to not want to do any studies before doing a final painting. As I grew up I realized that doing studies was extremely important to work out the details, colors etc. Though sometimes a painting comes out fully realized without having to do any sketches or planning. That’s a good feeling lol

  • @mato7618
    @mato7618 Před 2 lety +8

    title almost turned me off, but Chelsea Lang's made me stay with her deep insight into art practices.

  • @dorkchops
    @dorkchops Před 2 lety +49

    Me while watching this: i can definitely do this
    Me in front of my canvas: hehe paint go brrr

  • @junaliceart
    @junaliceart Před 2 lety +5

    thank you so much. i have been in such a hole lately, feeling very insecure about my art because i had painted everyday for so many years and I felt like i couldn't achieve what the artists i loved could do. you really helped me take away that i should focus on what i love instead of trying to create a "masterpiece 'everyday". thank you for also saying that it takes hard work instead of talent... you have really brightened my day today. thank you so much

  • @linnkoln11
    @linnkoln11 Před 2 lety +25

    Experiencing last advice for myself and OH GOD it is strong advice. I had tried to achieve so many things with my drawings that made my drawing routine incomplete because I thought that the pieces I was making didn't worth being finished. That left me with only academic pieces that I had to finish anyway. Of course, it wasn't healthy for my art routine. I become so tired of courses, that I had dropped all of them for half a year. But in about that time I started doing my webcomics. It was fun, easy to finish and overall forgiving for imperfections. After a year of making it, I can say with full confidence: It was worth it so much!!! Having a fun time with your current skill is crucial to exploring your art confidence. Sure, my webcomics didn't make my shading skill grow much, but it gave me the power to work with more serious projects "for fun" and finally apply my academic knowledge to something that is worth to be done.

    • @marsofficial3798
      @marsofficial3798 Před 2 lety +5

      I have like seven paintings I didn’t finish because of that very reason. The idea of pushing through also makes me not want to finish them. For a long time I thought I was just uninspired & unmotivated but truth is they aren’t the kind of art I want to make. Maybe I should let loose on some canvases & make sure it’s something I really want to pursue

  • @artavenuebln
    @artavenuebln Před 2 lety +6

    this video is 100% good just without audio (you can watch her painting a face calmfully) and 200% good with audio and all the tipps. Great work!

  • @iBowTieFrenchFry
    @iBowTieFrenchFry Před 2 lety +17

    not even a painter but this is still pretty inspiring. i can kind of apply the same mindsets to making music.

  • @kimberlypatton9634
    @kimberlypatton9634 Před 2 lety +11

    I have found early on in my art and crafting experience that the hardest thing do over all is when it is time to STOP and walk away...Over time and confidence you reach milestones with ..you need to give yourself the limitation and self awareness to tell yourself to find that "place" where if you continue on in that doubt ( on a personal self awareness level) you can step back and say that if you DO more on the project ,is it going to possibly make the project worse or looked overworked? Is it making the idea or message you intended to portray in a genuine intense feeling way to the person seeing it? It takes time to discover when it feel right to set down those brushes or needle or glue gun to leave it at its best stage ..Be gentle,kind and patient with yourself,it will happen!

  • @apresmidi153
    @apresmidi153 Před 2 lety +53

    This is a great painting tutorial even though the commentary is not at all a play by play of what's going on...it's almost like two videos in one...I like it!

  • @margareeta1369
    @margareeta1369 Před 2 lety +9

    "Go into each practice session strategically" But you see, I'm an artist and my goal is to work in a messy way all throughout my life, making the art I wanna look at, not caring about having structure. Random bursts of energy and inspiration are what shall power my way

    • @chopi8072
      @chopi8072 Před 2 lety +2

      I get that, it's your personal way of how you approach the painting process and that's great. This video, thought, is meant to give you advice on ways to grow effectively as an artist. Your way of doing things may be more personal and more expressive, probably sacrificing a bit of efficiency but that's ok, everyone has a different way of approaching art. That's what makes art so interesting.

    • @_sumina
      @_sumina Před 2 lety

      If you watched the video at the end she says something similar to that..to a lot artists the point of art is to enjoy it, it enhances life (imo)...artists all have different goals with their art but it should always be fun or enjoyable or expressive for urself.. pointless art is just commercial, what's the point ?

    • @kristinoatley4710
      @kristinoatley4710 Před 2 lety

      @@_sumina I'd argue that commercial art is important and can be imbued with so much personal touch and iconography that it ends up having a deeper meaning, maybe even if the original intent is just to create a product.

  • @edueirdo
    @edueirdo Před 2 lety

    i'm brazilian, have been studying english, drawing and anatomy, and my principal goal is learn and can understand English better for a better benefit of these videos. Thanks, Proko team

  • @russaz09
    @russaz09 Před 2 lety

    those hands are amazing, so much practice went into that. She just slaps them down with a brush 0_0 incredible

  • @pastelpanta2966
    @pastelpanta2966 Před 2 lety +10

    You must think in an abstract way in order to make great art. For example thinking about the shadows before the outline or drawing all at once.

  • @sgtpepper91
    @sgtpepper91 Před 2 lety +4

    A guest artist who is articulate and has a nice voice, is this a special day or something?

  • @esztercsaki1
    @esztercsaki1 Před 2 lety +1

    Omg this speaks to my soul! Once I started taking complete, quality reference photos, the game changed completely

  • @Khatri3D
    @Khatri3D Před 2 lety +12

    Thank you Proko. you have been a great help to us Artists.

  • @elsagrace3893
    @elsagrace3893 Před 2 lety

    “What would be fun to paint today?” Thank you for this question. OMG, she’s so pretty.

  • @stellartofu2827
    @stellartofu2827 Před 2 lety +4

    Just when I needed it the most... IT'S HERE. Thank you so much for this!!!

  • @RandomBailey2011
    @RandomBailey2011 Před 2 lety

    I'm not currently a painter, but this is rich universal growth advice towards any craft or artform! I'm a filmmaker, and I'm developing my third short in a series I've been working on for a few years. I've been a bit stifled, by all these thoughts and expectations... I think while my goals were starting to feel too lofty, I was also forgetting to play. So much wisdom! Thank you for guiding me back toward the tracks

  • @davidjones8070
    @davidjones8070 Před 2 lety +7

    I think the most destructive thing you can do is compare yourself to any other artist. Outside influence can be destructive to your own growth process. I will look to any medium for inspiration but i dont want to copy someone elses style or believe that im better or worse than anyone. art is subjective and interpretive.

  • @wishful_makeuping
    @wishful_makeuping Před 2 lety

    Richard Schmid’s daughter’s work is rich with her Father’s hand. Thank you for calling attention to his hand & style. He is our Family & we lived with his work our whole lives. You have succinctly described the inner self. The approach is Play. Do not critique your work.
    Thank you for sharing your vision & skill set💓

  • @sketchartist1964
    @sketchartist1964 Před 2 lety

    Now this is the kind of painting I understand! Flat brushes, filberts, loose handling, idealization of color, etc. It can be kept loose or refined to a high degree of realism quite quickly without laboring over the canvas for hours on end using tiny brushes.

  • @TheEalaa
    @TheEalaa Před 2 lety +1

    It's not just about talent. It's about learning the techniques to make what you imagine come true. It takes as much work as it takes vision, if not more.

  • @Sylph-Eater
    @Sylph-Eater Před 2 lety +15

    So, I found art advice in a really strange place. In Jeffrey Epstein's Netflix documentary there's an artist who became incredible and said she put herself through artist bootcamp, literally painting nonstop and doing everything she had problems with over and over while watching info on how to get better, really on a major grind for about a year, and by the end of it she was selling her paintings for over 20k at auctions.

  • @mollys1439
    @mollys1439 Před 2 lety +1

    seeing your process and watching you build up on the piece is helpful in of itself

  • @AieshSingh
    @AieshSingh Před 2 lety +2

    This was so freaking cool to watch!!!
    P.S. I'm the model Chelsea painted 🖌 🎨 ✨ ❤

  • @TheArtMentor
    @TheArtMentor Před 2 lety +2

    This advice is rock solid 👍 having a goal sets you on a trajectory that mindless and unfocused efforts cannot

  • @luxlox9029
    @luxlox9029 Před 2 lety +25

    This is such an incredible video omg, it’s made me want to get back into painting so bad. Thank you so much!!!

  • @aliciamazingg
    @aliciamazingg Před 2 lety

    I love seeing the whole painting process, it's mesmerizing and helps me focus on what she's saying

  • @emeric7855
    @emeric7855 Před 2 lety

    This is a game changer… I’ve been painting for about 12 years, and this changed my entire perspective

  • @kayleenelson7613
    @kayleenelson7613 Před 2 lety +12

    This was such an awesome video! It’s so relieving just to hear to do master studies of the artists you love to apply that to your work and I respect that she ended the video by telling us to still make art for fun. Honestly just seems like a full proof plan to succeed. I can relate to this too. I getting super frustrated trying to draw my character and I started crying and my brother consoled me and helped me talk out my frustrations. And I still wanted to draw, so I just copied one of my favorite artists work to get rid of the stress of making something original and then I felt confident enough to start drawing my own character again

  • @katdakota9467
    @katdakota9467 Před 2 lety

    Thanks Chelsea! A great "start" for 2022! I realized I continue to put very high expectations on myself to the point I become hesitant to start another painting. So time to take the time to practice - have fun with the practice - plan and paint what I enjoy to paint vs what others may believe is more marketable in the area. I agree that painting what we enjoy or want to paint plays a big part of success as a professional painter!

  • @paulrivera797
    @paulrivera797 Před 2 lety +4

    This was so fantastic. It got me out of my scared zone and move forward in my own art. Thank you so much.

  • @dimwarlock
    @dimwarlock Před 2 lety +2

    Not a painter, but this applies to what I do too, lately I've found myself simplifying color, studying styles of inking and trying expressive lines for my sketches (with varied results). I've been feeling a lot more satisfied with the results since I stopped both drawing mindlessly just to "draw every day" and following tutorials step by step.

  • @fuggleeartshow
    @fuggleeartshow Před 2 lety +9

    I don't think I pulled more than one or two practical ideas from this. I'll probably have to watch it again to try and understand what's even being talked about in some parts of this video. To be fair though, I'm not a traditional painter nor do I even like traditional painting, so I probably won't get things coming from that view point on the first go. I think the ideas are more abstract than I'd like, which makes them less actionable to me in a practical way.

    • @Mochi_Demon
      @Mochi_Demon Před 2 lety +18

      Things I took away
      -consider everything before even making a mark, composition, colour scheme, lighting, techniques, materials and even brush stokes. By going in with a plan it takes out a lot of the painful guess during the painting process.
      -look at others work for inspiration and reference. Not just on an “I enjoy this level” but down to all the above. Try to work out how and why that images works for you. Consider the techniques the artist has used, how they achieved them.
      -constantly evaluate what new techniques you want to work on to improve. Using the above point of looking at other artists work, work out what’s inspiring or what you feel is missing from your “toolkit” Then within your next piece/pieces work on those techniques.
      -If you feel burnt out from constantly trying to push yourself, stop and appreciate how far you’ve come by doing something fun/safe/comforting. Her example is using this model, but it can be anything.
      Hope my 2 cents helps

    • @CallumKartoredjo
      @CallumKartoredjo Před 2 lety +3

      @@Mochi_Demon It is really helpful to see the message of this video in a short list like manner, thanks!

    • @whyvern6817
      @whyvern6817 Před 2 lety +1

      From what I can understand from this video are basically learn from other artist, meaning their techniques,views and perspective when it comes to art. You would be able to connect dots and apply it to your art. The first part was from my opinion, don't do mindless reps and practice/studies with a clear goal in mind.

    • @fuggleeartshow
      @fuggleeartshow Před 2 lety +2

      @@Mochi_Demon I think that does clear it up for me a bit. Much more concise. Thanks

  • @sourgreendolly7685
    @sourgreendolly7685 Před 2 lety

    Inspiring words while watching beautiful art come together? I absolutely adore this 💕

  • @akkavoskuil9720
    @akkavoskuil9720 Před 2 lety

    1. This video is super helpful, a lot of great takeaways
    2. That painting turned out GORGEOUS, i can't stop looking at it. 12/10 would hang this in my home. Thank you for sharing your art

  • @annemariefieraru
    @annemariefieraru Před 2 lety

    Wow! This is beautiful! Thanks God for meeting you on youtube! ❤️❤️❤️

  • @tamikolieangel2041
    @tamikolieangel2041 Před 2 lety

    yes , the right mindset ALWAYS important

  • @CirceAlida
    @CirceAlida Před 2 lety

    I forget how much I love doing master copies in between doing them. They are often the most fun exercises because they're about learning. You know it's not going to look exactly like the thing you're copying - that's not the point! You just want to walk away with 1 or a few "ohhh that's how they did that, maybe!" and that's such a fun exploration.

  • @nienkevletter
    @nienkevletter Před 2 lety +3

    Watching your painting process was absolutely insightful, alongside the advice you talked about. Absolutely great video!

  • @PhantasmThe
    @PhantasmThe Před 2 lety +2

    I find many CZcams Artists channels are mainly to get people to sign up for courses and paid content, most channels seem to skip important details in the process of painting

  • @clintenaragona6271
    @clintenaragona6271 Před 2 lety

    yep the book OUTLIERS changed my life, I say it all the time but you said it in applicable way to art. The process of iterations with analysis and deep deep reflection on what you tried for 10,000 hours. I have challenged people to fail 1000 times in a playful way and show me the 1001 effort in anything. You will astound yourself. Trust the process.

  • @jenkinshall4434
    @jenkinshall4434 Před 2 lety

    Did not realize this was a video about painting when I clicked on it. But I still watched it all the way through just in awe at the pure amount of skill, thoughtfulness, and her ability to break down her approach to improvement in the medium of painting. Unfortunately most of it does not apply to the kind of art I am trying to make but this still was such a great watch.

  • @donlee_ohhh
    @donlee_ohhh Před 2 lety +1

    Love Chelsea's approach to this discussion. Thanks for sharing it!

  • @monicamourad
    @monicamourad Před 2 lety

    Her voice calms my doubts and relaxes my thoughts

  • @FreedomEscapismASMR
    @FreedomEscapismASMR Před 2 lety +3

    ✨🌟✨🎨🖌️Proko is a brilliant art channel. Thank you, Stan, Skelly, guest artists and Stan's staff🌟🎨🖌️

  • @kimberlypatton9634
    @kimberlypatton9634 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi Chelsea! I know this sounds maybe a little odd or strange to say ,but I think most artists and creative people are highly intuitive ,empathetically wired people as it is ..same with musicians ...and often when I gave painted works of a master,I sometimes can tune in to the feeling and missed of the heart and emotion of the original artist from the nature of their style and actual techniques they use to produce the work itself....it is amazing how you can almost feel the passion and joy that ,say, Van Gogh felt at the time painting his "Sunflowers " for example...it is a part of humanity we all share if we remain open to it

  • @gimmealargesalad
    @gimmealargesalad Před 2 lety +4

    This....was actually super fucking helpful, holy crap!

  • @RustyGamesMC
    @RustyGamesMC Před 2 lety

    Thank you not even halfway through and love what's being said. Its already helping me.

  • @aliciamolloy5948
    @aliciamolloy5948 Před 2 lety

    Beautiful painting, thank you so much!

  • @timmooney3345
    @timmooney3345 Před 2 lety +1

    Good advice for some, but too much effort for others. By which I mean that many painters actually do have an intuitive approach, from "reinventing the wheel" from years of playing, copying, tracing, fumbling, without overthinking and planning... But maybe I'm just jaded. I have been painting since I was a child, and now, at nearly 67, I've come to realize that it isn't about the Work, it's about the Guess.

  • @Dovahzuull
    @Dovahzuull Před 2 lety

    I have been burnt out for 5 years now, this video made me excited to make art again 🙂

  • @FutileGrief
    @FutileGrief Před 2 lety

    Excellent insight of something I've tried to comprehend for the longest time.

  • @cluelesscludles
    @cluelesscludles Před 2 lety

    This painting is so good, wow!!

  • @Rakuen91
    @Rakuen91 Před 2 lety +3

    making things waay to complicated for learning art. simplifying the explanations would help people actually want top concentrate on the explanations in the video instead of process. "treating art as play" was kinda the most useful advice in this.

  • @jonroads8281
    @jonroads8281 Před 2 lety

    Absolutely love Chelsea, she's fantastic and her channel is awesome.

  • @daviddiavolo6547
    @daviddiavolo6547 Před 2 lety +1

    Necesitó un vídeo así en español

  • @patbollin
    @patbollin Před 2 lety

    Beautifully said

  • @periclesstamatis7549
    @periclesstamatis7549 Před 2 lety +2

    I personally don't paint (would like to try some day). I mostly sketch, but I still found this advice really helpful, thanks a lot!

  • @brentvladmirlopez4445
    @brentvladmirlopez4445 Před 2 lety

    Watching this actually help me clear my mind and what i want to do in art. Thanks!, this motivates me

  • @MiiPaintings
    @MiiPaintings Před 2 lety +1

    Amaazing video. Than you for doing this. Greetings from an artist from the Czech republic

  • @noeopus159
    @noeopus159 Před 2 lety

    I'm the only one who loves the hands at 4:09 ? so silky and the color is beautiful and the texture is super interesting

  • @miadietrich7347
    @miadietrich7347 Před 2 lety +1

    What a quality cross over! I would love to see Marshall and Stan interview Chelsea, similar to how Marshall did with April Solomon.

  • @izzybail2261
    @izzybail2261 Před 2 lety

    I would seriously buy this painting it’s so captivating n stunning 😍

  • @sandypiltch1206
    @sandypiltch1206 Před 2 lety

    Thank you to Chelsea and Proko!!!! Both visual and advice are excellent.

  • @truth884
    @truth884 Před 2 lety

    I’m not a painter but her technique and approach make painting seem approachable for anyone. My ¢2

  • @ibrahimettolba1314
    @ibrahimettolba1314 Před 2 lety

    Hello proko i love the recent videos and lives but i've always enjoyed YOURE tutoriels unfortunetly its rare that we get to see them lately

  • @robynguinn8941
    @robynguinn8941 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for not only sharing your process but also the valuable advice that I will remember.

  • @sandyphillips2467
    @sandyphillips2467 Před 2 lety

    Just fantastic thank you Sandy

  • @unpr0gr4mm3d
    @unpr0gr4mm3d Před 2 lety

    Nice painting and video. Thank you for sharing!

  • @Enderhax
    @Enderhax Před 2 lety

    as a music producer, i feel the struggle, this is too good

  • @tcieslewicz152
    @tcieslewicz152 Před 2 lety

    Fantastic video all round. The painting was beautiful to watch, and the ideas so clearly expressed. Well done.

  • @filipemecenas
    @filipemecenas Před 2 lety

    Wat great talk on painting !!!! , Thanks alot Chelsea !!! I love It !!!

  • @RamboSegovia
    @RamboSegovia Před 2 lety

    That thing about play is true. Once you start to lose the fun in making art, it starts to get depressing making art

  • @BBrinckmann1992
    @BBrinckmann1992 Před 2 lety

    This was beautiful! Wonderful to watch and very sound advice!

  • @camilolino
    @camilolino Před 2 lety

    i´m pretty sure that i won´t be starting to paint. i just got seriously injured a month ago i all i want to see is nice and inspiring people. So... Muchas gracias

  • @MissShembre
    @MissShembre Před 2 lety +1

    This is exactly what I do and it's such a non-stressful way to paint!

  • @LonelyLeliel
    @LonelyLeliel Před 2 lety

    Such a beautiful work and great advice! Thank you, Chelsea!

  • @williamronne699
    @williamronne699 Před 3 měsíci

    You might want to explain how you not only add paint but often remove paint to adjust your drawing etc.

  • @Droidzi
    @Droidzi Před 2 lety +1

    great share @Proko. And so very well talked-through by Chelsea. I always get caught up in sketching out the line art before painting. Chelsea seems to nail it without sketching. My positive mindset wants to take me there (not needing to sketch prior), though in the mean time I guess I'll sketch 🙂

  • @itsannemt
    @itsannemt Před 2 lety

    This was purely mesmerizing

  • @sejize
    @sejize Před 2 lety

    thank you, needed this!

  • @GoldenLeafsMovies
    @GoldenLeafsMovies Před 2 lety +2

    If only I had good self esteem.

  • @malcelinho
    @malcelinho Před 2 lety

    Watching the painting gain 'life' as you where talking was so soothing...nice video, Proko!

  • @jennw6809
    @jennw6809 Před 2 lety

    Great advice and very enjoyable seeing the process. Yesterday I was re-creating a Georgia O'Keefe watercolor, and having so much fun and challenge doing it. I love what you said about copying masterpieces. Also so helpful to remember, we can't grow if we only practice what we're already good at. We have to practice what is hardest for us to truly get better.

  • @markdonovan1540
    @markdonovan1540 Před 2 lety

    Very helpful and inspiring to hear you talk about these processes and approaches. I love your idea of a personalised Pinterest Board which you look at before painting. I have been accumulating many Pinterest watercolour paintings, but I hadn't thought if using them in the way you mentioned. It's definitely worth trying. First step, make the right selection that interests me and that covers the type techniques I want to work on.
    There are great insights in this video, and those take-aways at the end were key for me: ask yourself what will be fun to paint today as well as what exercises will make you a better painter. That's exactly the tip I needed to hear right now, thank you so much. Happy New Year to you.

  • @silverblue73
    @silverblue73 Před 2 lety +1

    The most difficult part of improving is learning to get over your self.

  • @mamvdberg
    @mamvdberg Před 2 lety

    Lovely painting and very motivating

  • @FishingtheSkyxd
    @FishingtheSkyxd Před 2 lety

    this was incredibly valuable, as someone who's trying to grow as an artist on their own, thank you!!