Tom Keating On Painters - Monet

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Komentáře • 83

  • @colinwebster4356
    @colinwebster4356 Před 4 lety +11

    Criticism is so easy to dispense. Instead pick up a paint brush and try to apply your abilities to the broard spectrum of this man's abilities. A natural artist, a talent few people have. Very accomplished and inspiration .

  • @hmax1591
    @hmax1591 Před 7 lety +31

    My god, this is like watching the master himself paint. This is incredible. I am completely blown away by this man's talent and ability to explain.

  • @vinm300
    @vinm300 Před 6 lety +9

    "The eye is rewarded by looking in to areas and seeing the many colours ".
    Nice turn of phrase Tom.

  • @joyh2125
    @joyh2125 Před rokem +4

    Thank you Tom Keating. I know you are on the other side now, but so present here in your teaching. I’m absorbing this gratefully like a sponge

  • @NJeanB
    @NJeanB Před 3 lety +5

    I love watching and listening and thinking about Keating’s explanations. So talented! I can’t ever get enough of his teaching.

  • @michaelrose8290
    @michaelrose8290 Před 4 lety +11

    This Chap was my art teacher at Ravensbourne College Catford London! He was a great chap! Texture Texture it's all about texture........A couple of us were invited to his house, it was full of half completed frames! I do not think he intended any criminal intentions.

    • @SuperBenette
      @SuperBenette Před 4 lety +4

      What an honour, I wish I was there too. He is a person you would like to hug, warm and tender and brilliant, thanks for the sharing the other side of him, I also tried restoring old frames or use them again, it usually ends up in the attic. Be blessed.

    • @antiheroannie539
      @antiheroannie539 Před 3 lety +1

      What kind of paint did he use? At the end he touches a part of the painting and he sais it’s a bit sticky. And in the beginning he sais he waits for it to dry. Oils don’t dry that fast and acrylics dry faster than I think is seen here.

    • @EjDantes
      @EjDantes Před 3 lety +4

      @@antiheroannie539 Pretty sure it's impasto and more precicely Egg Tempera Impasto. Dries faster, great texture and end result is more of an oil then acrylic.

    • @patrickcharles7190
      @patrickcharles7190 Před 2 lety +2

      @@antiheroannie539 Ive seen several videos of him using acrylic, regardless of what artist and medium he's demonstrating, to speed drying time.

    • @DavySTUN
      @DavySTUN Před 2 lety

      @@patrickcharles7190 Id be curious to see thiose, if your able to share where they are found. I thought I had seen all that are available, and didnt see acrylic. Appreciate it.

  • @SilasRobinson
    @SilasRobinson Před 3 lety +4

    A wonderful experience to watch. Very inspirational. Thank you. :)

  • @mariaserefinatribunella419

    ❤️❤️❤️what a master!

  • @Dariuz001
    @Dariuz001 Před 8 lety +12

    These are so wonderful.

  • @heatherbanks9086
    @heatherbanks9086 Před 7 lety +7

    Educational and very valuable to an student painter. 😀🇨🇦👍

  • @maggiedeveney
    @maggiedeveney Před 8 lety +5

    Wonderful. So much to learn. Thank you

  • @kerbeare
    @kerbeare Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for your insight about Monet and skill in mastering his work. I visited his house and garden when I was last in Paris, Giverny. Wonderful to immerse yourself in his life.

  • @theadoresmith2777
    @theadoresmith2777 Před 8 lety +12

    I can't find the article, but I recall this painting sold at the time for 15000 genuine english pounds .. One art critic at the time said something like " 99% of the quality of a Monet at 1% of the value " ... A wonderful masterful painter indeed tho.

  • @robynschoon3270
    @robynschoon3270 Před 7 lety +13

    A pleasure to listen to him, without the hideous music that often accompanies these programmes, and some valuable lessons to learn...

    • @jlusk999
      @jlusk999 Před 2 lety +1

      YES!!!! I cannot stand how every instructional program is littered with music. We don't need music to accompany stirring in a cooking show!

  • @svee6171
    @svee6171 Před 6 lety +4

    Thank you very much!

  • @NickPenlee
    @NickPenlee Před rokem +1

    Tom has delighted me throughout his series on the various techniques employed by artists such as Turner and Rembrandt. There does however remain the question as to how he knew what those techniques were. I've read several art books on many of these 'masters', but all omit to specify the exact nature of their working methodology. "He would have..." is a phrase often used by Tom when discussing these artists but the question remains as to the certainty of his knowledge. He does ultimately manage to capture the essence or style of his subject, but I suspect there are many paths that could achieve the same result.

    • @transientimages
      @transientimages Před 2 měsíci +1

      Late response but he is an incredibly learned individual. He probably also read letters and anything he could get his hands on.
      He also was a painting restorer, so he had a very intimate knowledge of the paintings, almost down to the molecular level.
      It also is a good amount of trial and error honestly. Also doing side to side comparisons.

  • @damianc80
    @damianc80 Před 2 lety

    Amazing

  • @ironfistarrival
    @ironfistarrival Před 7 lety +1

    Great Job ...

  • @ninawernick6501
    @ninawernick6501 Před 7 lety +3

    there's something of Cezanne in the buildings, especially around 12:00 minutes or so.

  • @ingridye9509
    @ingridye9509 Před 8 lety +7

    hi Tom, you are wonderful

  • @greylilyfineart3440
    @greylilyfineart3440 Před 6 lety +1

    Excellent

  • @raniaselim1761
    @raniaselim1761 Před 3 lety +1

    😍👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @lizettramos9275
    @lizettramos9275 Před 3 lety

    Hello I wanted to let you know that I found a cuadro of yours and I wish I knew more of the cuadro wow it is a big big CUADRO and it says Keating you know what I feel in love with the find I did of your for me this is a CUADRO that I will take care and I think your a smart artist and I will take care of my find and I'm glad it's part of your work Found it in calexico california and this person buys stuff from around the WORLD well this was my year ❤️nice job Lizett Ramos cosia From calexico California

  • @pixiedixie3682
    @pixiedixie3682 Před 5 lety +2

    Anyone could tell me , what is the introductory music work?
    Beautiful!
    Thank you!

  • @mr.ramjangles5165
    @mr.ramjangles5165 Před 3 lety

    My Starry Night Yarn Painting Time Lapse so far...🙂🧶🎨👍🏻
    1. The Moon, Stars, & Venus
    czcams.com/video/ccnOlrB9rJk/video.html
    2. The Swirling Wind
    czcams.com/video/-tRYCg2nnms/video.html
    3. The Cypress Tree
    czcams.com/video/yRy8Io64ZoE/video.html
    4. The Church & Village
    czcams.com/video/9lKLekxhJGE/video.html

  • @perzeoh1
    @perzeoh1 Před 6 lety

    genio con genio

  • @marciopais4743
    @marciopais4743 Před 2 lety

    This Sr. is amazing .....where i can get more information from him?

  • @andrewmurray5542
    @andrewmurray5542 Před 9 měsíci

    These days, we have Bob Ross and his happy little accidents!

  • @AudiobookLibrary24-7
    @AudiobookLibrary24-7 Před 4 lety +1

    Way to "qualify" the painting, Tom!

  • @culturabuzios3000
    @culturabuzios3000 Před 3 lety +1

    Free paint style , but first , you need to study so much light ,color , composition and technique to use oil and varnish times to get a nice process

  • @jlusk999
    @jlusk999 Před 2 lety +1

    His painting is amazing but I wonder why he went for a much more somber, subdued color palette than the original?

    • @transientimages
      @transientimages Před 2 měsíci

      Because its a winter scene, as the other is done in spring (or summer)

  • @RobertJonesWightpaint
    @RobertJonesWightpaint Před 4 lety +2

    Things in this I can't believe - eg, that Monet would have painted over varnish (and it wasn't even necessary to do that to achieve the result at the end: I can't work out why he did it). The other thing was the throw-away line that he'd used "a bit of tempera" in the white .... that may well be the way Tom forged paintings, but it surely isn't the way Monet would have painted - unless anyone out there knows better? He's always interesting, but I suspect you need to take a pinch of salt with some of these videos.

    • @banzy3
      @banzy3 Před 4 lety +2

      I haven't watched the video yet, so can't comment on what's been said, but I saw your comment and thought I'd chime in. Monet wouldn't have wanted any of his paintings varnished, he specified to galleries that he wanted to keep them unvarnished, although they went against his wishes (I think Mr. Keating even said this himself in another video). He certainly wouldn't have painted over varnish or used tempera. He did leech the oil out of his paints by putting them on some sort of blotting paper, to keep them a little drier and to maintain a matt finish. He'd often spend an hour or so getting down his sketch in nature, then take it back to the studio. He also frequently came back to paintings and worked on them several years later, although he was his own PR man, so didn't typically advertise the fact. Not that there was anything wrong in doing that, it would certainly have helped with the layering and drybrush.

    • @culturabuzios3000
      @culturabuzios3000 Před 3 lety +1

      I agree , monet would be use little varnish in especific areas . The mediums are the final touch to make your technique fast , or slow .

    • @jaylucas8352
      @jaylucas8352 Před rokem +1

      @@banzy3 It’s a common practice in oil painting to cut 2 parts gamsol, 2 parts varnish, and 1 part turpentine to create a medium density medium to work with . An old masters recipe.

    • @jaylucas8352
      @jaylucas8352 Před rokem

      1 part linseed oil I meant , not turpentine

    • @jaylucas8352
      @jaylucas8352 Před rokem

      It’s not a varnish top coat it’s a medium technique or blend to work the paint all a prima

  • @elizabethhurtado2829
    @elizabethhurtado2829 Před rokem

    HUGHES

  • @allenvoss7977
    @allenvoss7977 Před 2 lety

    Anyone know the mixture for scumbling?

    • @lanslater
      @lanslater Před rokem +1

      Tempura then varnished then stippled this I just learnt from another of Toms programs on Turner search Snow storm on the sea

  • @allenvoss7977
    @allenvoss7977 Před 2 lety

    No glazing for Monet

  • @goph999
    @goph999 Před 6 lety +4

    Better than Monet.

  • @banzy3
    @banzy3 Před 4 lety +1

    No disrespect to Mr. Keating, he was around before the internet and a great many well written books on the subject since his passing, and he has a great manner of talking, but there are some erroneous points being made. Monet, like other impressionists nearly always worked on a light toned ground of some sort, not white. He would not have drawn out his subject matter in pencil or charcoal, but would have made a few marks with a brush, and some rudimentary gestural stokes or rhythms and nothing more, before starting, therefore he would have had a very good idea already in his head about where he was going.
    He would have begun with some sort of Étude (block in) mostly in fairly thin paint, and would either do several studies that he might return to or work on in his studio, sometimes returning to them again and again over several years. A few of his paintings are compromised of a great many layers, although Monet said he disliked his over worked paintings, and preferred to get it down correctly and simply the first time.
    There's often a lot drybrush technique, which can generally only be done successfully if the painting is dry beforehand. He leached the excess oil out of his paints with some sort of blotting paper, to keep the pigment drier and more matt. He did not want his finished work to be varnished.

  • @z1522
    @z1522 Před 8 lety +3

    Mr. Keating works far better as an old master or traditional academic. Two missing elements re: Monet - one, the underappreciated surety of brushstroke in even brief outdoor sketches, with half an horizon drawn in a single wide stroke, paint revealing multiple unmixed colors left on each side of the stroke. It was not all small dabs, all the time. Second, greater spectrum of implied colors came from subtle juxtapositions of warm/cool variations, as well as near-complementary optical blends. The Impressionists did not produce a more accurate way of seeing - they took advantage of learning how the eye and brain CAN see and create a mental picture from abstract pieces, which may vary from the measured spectrum of the subject. The semi-opaque blue-gray glaze near the end deadened, rather than heightened, any sense of color vibrancy Monet would have drawn out.

  • @bru1015
    @bru1015 Před 8 lety

    Being he was so very poor for some time, how did he afford to paint?

    • @jeremiahembs5343
      @jeremiahembs5343 Před 8 lety +2

      Like most artists he probably sacrificed his own comfort and skipped many meals to pay for supplies and people probably gave him supplies out of charity and friendship. A lot of people buy things they never use and pass them on to people that can use them. What little money he made probably went back into his work to buy the few things he couldn't get in other ways.

    • @bru1015
      @bru1015 Před 8 lety

      +Jeremiah Embs. makes sense, I do his work 🤗

    • @Mr960silva
      @Mr960silva Před 7 lety +1

      In lately years at Giverny when paint waterlily , where he dies at 86 of age. But he became rich after married with a rich woman, Hoschedé. A widow of a baron ,( by what I read in his biography ) about his life ! his first wife dies at 1870, he remarried again. Won a lottery a good prime at Paris, once after he buy the place, where is today his home at Giverny !

    • @ulutiu
      @ulutiu Před 7 lety +2

      Except the fact that Hoschedé's were already bankrupt when he married Alice. By the 1880 Monet was already established painter and very popular. And in fact he died as a millionaire.

  • @xxxyyy1880
    @xxxyyy1880 Před 7 lety +1

    To my eye this doest look like Monet althought some paiting stakes might be similar.

  • @ethanthompson3198
    @ethanthompson3198 Před 7 lety

    virgin ... labored breathing ... blocks

    • @ninthgate100
      @ninthgate100 Před 7 lety +3

      Mr Keatings lungs were seriously damaged during world war 2 as a result of his service in the Merchant Navy,s Baltic convoys.Hence his LABOURED breathing.The man was a hero as one in three sailors died during this campaign. His death in his late 60s was partly due to this complaint.

    • @ethanthompson3198
      @ethanthompson3198 Před 7 lety +1

      Had no idea

    • @ninthgate100
      @ninthgate100 Před 7 lety +1

      I appreciate that Ethan,it is all explained in his book titled Fakes Progress published in the 1970s.It is now quite expensive but is an excellent read.

  • @LadyCoyKoi
    @LadyCoyKoi Před 7 lety +2

    For an academic artist, he sure is under-educated when it comes to basic color theory. Yellow isn't complementary to blue. Orange is complementary to blue. Yellow is complementary to purple.

    • @nickfanzo
      @nickfanzo Před 7 lety +2

      Yusiley Sierra correct.but maybe he was just keeping it simple?.
      he also uses the word tempera in a lot of episodes when he isnt using tempera. confusing.

    • @marke.5609
      @marke.5609 Před 7 lety +22

      Yusiley Sierra ....we're all waiting for your astounding and academically ,100% correct tutorial videos where you reproduce the techniques of the old Masters as successful as Tom Keating.... waiting...and waiting

    • @veronimeier2789
      @veronimeier2789 Před 7 lety +1

      Winterlandschap

    • @PhrygianPhrog
      @PhrygianPhrog Před 7 lety +4

      It is for *mixing*, but yellow is complement of blue in the additive color wheel, where yellow is a secondary color made from red and green (they are also complements in the CYMK wheel, interestingly). I think there's a difference between opposites for mixing (i.e. subtractive light) which we need for neutralising, and the actual perception of complements when viewing light. Debatable and interesting area. Van Gogh was obsessed with complementaries, and note that he used yellows and blues as "opposites". That aside, yeah, I get the sense that some of the time keating is winging it. I mean, after all, he made a "career" of bullshitting people.

    • @woutdezeeuw1604
      @woutdezeeuw1604 Před 7 lety +2

      He's just balancing warm versus cold like many painters do, rather than exact opposites.

  • @stuartbritton4811
    @stuartbritton4811 Před 7 měsíci

    There's nothing pretentious about this bloke!

  • @thomascetnarowski8822
    @thomascetnarowski8822 Před 7 lety +1

    It has nothing to do with the way Monet technique of painting. sorry.

  • @nicholaspaul3075
    @nicholaspaul3075 Před 7 lety +1

    I don't know what pople see in this guy, that painting is hideous, sorry

    • @derekbradbury749
      @derekbradbury749 Před 7 lety +8

      Nicholas Paul
      Look up his fakes of Samuel Palmer. They fooled a lot of experts. The bloke can paint in any style he chooses, and anyway it's only a demonstration for a telly show. His knowledge of all the techniques of the masters took a lifetime to understand.

    • @phunkface
      @phunkface Před 6 lety +7

      Let’s see your paintings Nicholas. Fuck outta here

  • @37BopCity
    @37BopCity Před 7 lety

    Who is this guy? What a fraud. He's terrible!

    • @hmax1591
      @hmax1591 Před 7 lety +2

      That's who he was. LOL. Read up.

    • @judithgoulden972
      @judithgoulden972 Před 7 lety +6

      a very knowledgeable artist.shame about the critics.

    • @borderlands6606
      @borderlands6606 Před 6 lety +1

      His forgeries were full of hidden clues for people who could see, under painted messages that would be revealed at the first x-ray, or painting on varnish so the picture would disappear at the first restoration.
      Sadly greed makes people oblivious to these things, so other people passed his work off as original. It's why Tom was never convicted, although his poor health and injuries from a recent motorcycle accident may have contributed to the court's leniency.
      He was better at mimicking some artists than others, but given sufficient time he could make a good imitation of most because his understanding of technique was so complete. These programmes didn't allow him that time, so they are more an approach than an exhaustive study. He was ill when they were made and died shortly after.

    • @chriswhitehouse8982
      @chriswhitehouse8982 Před 5 lety +1

      @David James Actually the case against him was dropped due to his poor health. After that, he was asked to do the TV show.