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.
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.
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.
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.
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!
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.
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!!!
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.
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’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...
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.💐
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!
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!!!
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!
Great learning as always. Thank you. I liked the painting more, just before it was completely finished. The contrast before it finished were awesome. 😆
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. ;- )
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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!
Hi Ian, thank you for your demo, great seeing how loosely you paint and always end up with a lovely result. I saw you were using the blunt end of the brush I also do this on occasion but thought you might like to know that if you sharpen the end by using a blade you can get the varnished surface off the brush and it seems to work or scrap better. I thought you might like to try it. 😊
Great! And I just spotted the actual brush you’re using for blocking in! It’s very pliable so you’re getting direction and movement even at that level!!! Can you say what type of brush it is please? 😀
Beautiful painting. I am always taking notes. 🙏 Could you please talk about how you prepare your canvas/panel once? Thank you for sharing your knowledge, experience and wisdom with us. ❤️🎩🙏
Thank you for letting me know you are enjoying the videos. Most of my smaller paintings (like the one in the video you were watching here) I use prepared panels by RayMar, with double primed oil prime on smooth linen. Larger paintings on stretched canvas, usually acrylic gesso to seal the canvas and then a coat of oil prime. That is usually it.
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
Thank you for the brushwork tips. It's too easy to just do blobs for trees in the distance albeit altering the colours The direction of their growth is important to show and adds to their complexity.
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!
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.
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.
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.
As always, wonderful. Thank you.
Great instruction, I am so thankful for all yours demos. Thank you, all the best 🎨
I absolutely love this loose feeling. I strive in this direction but the struggle is real at keeping it loose. Thanks for the great video
Brilliant! Your paintings are beautiful and your videos really, really helpful. Thank you for your generosity.
LOVELY painting and great explanation. Thanks so much!
Loved this! Beautiful. So interesting to watch you work. Thank you!
Just so Lovely in every way!
Watching you paint, especially hearing the choices and decisions you make as you go, is both interesting and useful.
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.
So much acknowledgment I have captured from you! You are my Happy Day! Just subscribed! Looking forward to new Masterclasses. Thank you!
Your work inspires and teaches me as always! Thank you for sharing your process of "Mastering Composition".
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!
Just what I needed! Thank you, Ian.
Extraordinarily helpful and inspiring once again. Thank you.
From prosaic photo to a work of art.
Thank you so much for your generosity in teaching people you don’t even know. God bless you.
Loved it! Do more. Fantastic instructions
I am grateful for these, always pleased on Tuesday morning. Thank you
That is beautiful. Thank you.
You are right, Ian. The finished image has great coloration. 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.
Truly beautiful!
One of your best demos! And such a beautiful painting and composition- thanks again for your generosity and thoughtfulness..
Thank you Catherine. Appreciate your letting me know you liked it.
Just perfect demonstration for brush strokes thank you
Ian, all of your posts are fabulous. I am so thankful that you're doing these demos. Best wishes,
Jane
Thanks so much Jane. Great to hear from you.
Thank you for the lesson on brush strokes.
Beautiful! I’ve learned so much with your videos; thank you!
Great Painting! I love watching your videos. Very informative!
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!!!
I love to watch you paint, Ian. Beautiful painting!
Thanks Kandice. Glad you enjoyed it.
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.
Candace, delighted you are enjoying the videos. All the best to you.
Simply awesome
You are just simply amazing!!!
I’m looking forward to learning more about how colors relate to mood. You do this so well.
Hi Candace, I'll see if I can address that one week. Best wishes.
Finished painting is stunning as usual. 😆👏👏
Hi Ian, I love your Tuesday posts! Thanks for putting them together 🙏
You are welcome. Love you name "Being authentic" Did you know I wrote a book called Creative Authenticity. So I am all in on the idea. Best wishes.
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
Thanks Sandi. Glad you found it engaging. Best wishes.
Loved it.... Thanks again...!
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...
Hi Norman, well that makes my day. Welcome. And glad you find the videos useful.
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.💐
Thanks so much Peter. All the best.
You have a beautiful style, and I love your choice of colors.
Love it!
Beautiful ly captured
Fabulous! Thanks so much.❤️ 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
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!
Happy Thanks giving to you too Gayle. Best wishes, Ian.
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!!!
Marybeth, I gotta hand it to you. You're a quick study. Got the whole thing down in one week. Well done!
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!
Hi Marie, I'm delighted you are enjoying the weekly videos. Best wishes.
Beautiful.
Very good. Spot on. Love the brush strokes. Thanks
Thanks Dan. Appreciate your letting me know.
Your lessons are so valuable, thanks you so very much, From Australia
Great learning as always. Thank you. I liked the painting more, just before it was completely finished. The contrast before it finished were awesome. 😆
To my mind beautiful painting. I love it. Thank you for sharing your work.
Thanks so much Hannah. It is always nice to hear. Best wishes.
Beautiful.....
That is so lovely. Great technique. Captures the serenity of this beautiful spot with life🙏🏻🦋🥰
Thank you Ian
Thank you..great artist, great teacher/ coach! Pascale, de FWI ( guadeloupe)
Really great demo. gorgeous painting thank you !
Thanks so much for letting me know Loretta.
"the adventure starts when you pick up the brush" amen.
Just super. Thanks for your great teaching snd almost giving me the courage to try myself! 😃
Delighted that you found it helpful.
Wonderful painting. Very simple, yet, very appealing. Composition reads easily. You eliminated chaos and created a pleasing painting.
Hi Svetlana, thank you. Glad you liked the painting.
Beautiful
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. ;- )
Great work
Огромное спасибо!
Thank you so much
Thank you. I would never have attempted to paint a scene with so much foreground. I feel like giving it a whirl.
I am showing your work and suggestions on CZcams to my students, Thank You!
Hi Evgenia, thank you so much. I really appreciate that. Best wishes.
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.
Yes, the steps. All those steps before the brush hits the canvas. Painful but true.
Great video! Always wait for them to turn up on Tuesdays. Thank you.
Thank you for letting me know Patricia. I appreciate it. Best wishes/
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.
Every scene interesting....where before it was not...before your painting it. That is landscape painting.
You make an ordinary scene look fabulous.
That is a good composition.
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.
Thanks Helen.
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.
@@IanRobertsMasteringComposition Well, that’s certainly a helpful thing to know, thanks.
As Always very informative - especially the shadow areas...
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.
A beautiful Renoir.
The leson I have learnt and has been highlighted for me is that I am far too heavy handed with my brushwork.
Thank you for this video Ian.
Thank you so much for your fantasic teaching 😍
You are welcome Lisa. Best wishes.
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.
Jaw dropping at the end
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.
Ian thanks for sharing that brilliant way to add tree trunks in those birch trees !!! Maggie
Hi Maggie, it works for birches anyway. Best wishes.
Thank you
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.
Before noticing the artwork, I thought you were in a doctor's office 😊
Thank you for your great content.
Nice painting
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'm delighted you enjoyed it. Thank you!
I think you're doing a very good job, regards
before you I loved my details. today i'm happy to throw them away ... u made me a new painter ... i'm much happier ...
Hi Leandro, It makes me happy to hear it. All the best
Hi Ian, thank you for your demo, great seeing how loosely you paint and always end up with a lovely result. I saw you were using the blunt end of the brush I also do this on occasion but thought you might like to know that if you sharpen the end by using a blade you can get the varnished surface off the brush and it seems to work or scrap better. I thought you might like to try it. 😊
Hi Meg, glad you liked the demo. And thanks for the tip. Best wishes.
Another WOW
Great! And I just spotted the actual brush you’re using for blocking in! It’s very pliable so you’re getting direction and movement even at that level!!! Can you say what type of brush it is please? 😀
A beautiful Painting Ian. what's your focus or center of interest? I'm drawn to the sunlit trees in the background.
Beautiful painting. I am always taking notes. 🙏 Could you please talk about how you prepare your canvas/panel once?
Thank you for sharing your knowledge, experience and wisdom with us. ❤️🎩🙏
Thank you for letting me know you are enjoying the videos. Most of my smaller paintings (like the one in the video you were watching here) I use prepared panels by RayMar, with double primed oil prime on smooth linen. Larger paintings on stretched canvas, usually acrylic gesso to seal the canvas and then a coat of oil prime. That is usually it.
Thanks Ian, brilliant as usual. Can I ask if you use any medium with your paint?
Great lesson I’m starting to understand more how Monet paints because of you . Thank you !!
Monet is a great person to study for the way he painted in say 1870 compared to 1910. Such a radical shift. And still so energetic even in old age.
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 really enjoy your videos! I’m wondering why do don’t post longer videos? I think lots of people would watch & be really appreciative 😊
Thank you for the brushwork tips. It's too easy to just do blobs for trees in the distance albeit altering the colours The direction of their growth is important to show and adds to their complexity.
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!
I often hold the brush like a pen. It just depends. But all the time might as you say start to get too tight.