"10 Essential Watercolor Masters You Should Know" with Frederick Brosen

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  • čas přidán 3. 07. 2024
  • Artist and League watercolor instructor Frederick Brosen discusses 10 watercolorists.
    The watercolor medium, as the first truly portable plein air painting medium, has played a seminal but often underappreciated role in the rise of modern painting. Starting with 17th century Holland and concluding at the dawn of the 20th century, a brief historical survey of a small group of artists, from the world-famous to those familiar only to specialists, will illuminate the contributions watercolorists have made in the evolution of landscape art in particular, and modernism overall.
    06:30 - Adriaen van Ostade
    11:19 - Giovanni Battista Lusieri
    17:07 - John Robert Cozens
    22:37 - Caspar David Friedrich
    28:14 - Thomas Girtin
    32:03 - William Turner
    34:57 - John Sell Cotman
    37:37 - Richard Parkes Bonington
    43:37 - François Marius Granet
    49:40 - Rudolf von Alt
    55:23 - Works by Frederick Brosen

Komentáře • 13

  • @elizabethkoenig5185
    @elizabethkoenig5185 Před měsícem +1

    Wonderful work! I am a watercolorist and have a degree in art history, and was only familiar with about half of these artists. Kudos to Frederick Brosen from this lecture--and happy to see his own fine work as well.

  • @MarjiWollin
    @MarjiWollin Před 4 měsíci +1

    Great introduction to 8 water colorists I never heard of plus a pleasure to hear Frederick Brosen talk about them.

  • @paulalovesart4545
    @paulalovesart4545 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Wow. I loved learning about these amazing waterolor artists! Including the speaker! Thank you so much for sharing it. We need more like this on watercolor art!

  • @aatt3209
    @aatt3209 Před rokem +2

    Invaluable information shared on watercolor history, thank you so much for your research on the forefathers of this incredibly delicate yet powerful medium. As a late comer to learn and practice watercolor, I certainly appreciate the technical struggles and challenges the artists had faced in the early days. However, the creation of splendor using mixture of water and dyes across a surface continues to be elusive, which only makes the works of these forefathers forever current, modern, and inspiring.

  • @kameliakalinova6909
    @kameliakalinova6909 Před rokem +1

    Truly enjoyed this lecture. Short, summarised but covered a lot of artists that anyone can go and do a more detailed research later if they wished. Thanks!

  • @suchendnachwahrheit9143
    @suchendnachwahrheit9143 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Albrecht Dürer is missing imo

  • @tr33m00nk
    @tr33m00nk Před měsícem

    This historical summary of male European artists known to have developed the 'modern European watercolour techniques' of painting would be more useful if the images projected were not mostly so washed out in the video as to be useless. A brief mention/reminder of "prehistoric" cave painting (also mostly water-based) and "oriental" water-based 'pigmented ink' painting on paper would have been polite. Fortunately the transcript allows one to get the notations necessary to research reproductions of these painters works that reproduce the images with more clarity.

  • @snoopycrc
    @snoopycrc Před rokem

    good tnx

  • @dianawhite4577
    @dianawhite4577 Před rokem +3

    Where are the women??!!

  • @quietflowstheriver
    @quietflowstheriver Před 2 lety +1

    The bit about Cozens did not do justice to the master.Cozens was a wizard. His washes cannot be duplicated easily, if at all. sorry old man, but you missed the bus,

  • @elizabethdarley8646
    @elizabethdarley8646 Před 2 lety +1

    Oh Holy Mother of God, give me strength against your enemies Amen.
    The Jews carry on hating Our Blessed Lord and His holy Mother. Lord, have mercy.
    As a painter who is attempting to continue the theme of Romanticism and as a British painter, I condemn your negative comments on Our Blessed Lord and on Our Blessed Lady. Oh, dear. Lord, have mercy upon them. They do not know what they do.
    I'm currently reading many books on Romanticism and one is the Arts Council's 1982 John Sell Cotman exhibition catalogue.
    As for Caspar David Friedrich, he was Catholic, as I am too, and to insult his work for having Our Lord and Our Lady in them is wrong!
    Elizabeth Darley
    Yorkshire, Great Britain