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Nonsense-Mediated Decay
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 24 มี.ค. 2024
Art interspersed with natural science talk.
All images by by RíEile are in public domain, feel free to use them however you see fit. Contact me for high-res scans.
All images by by RíEile are in public domain, feel free to use them however you see fit. Contact me for high-res scans.
Painting a Study in Scarlet, Reading Leo Tolstoy, Arthur Conan Doyle, and Thomas Goetz
#speedpaint #pastel #art
www.deviantart.com/rieile
cara.app/rieile
rieileart
t.me/rieile
Materials used: Pastelmat paper, Gamma and Unison pastels, sofft tools
Recommendations and references:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna_Karenina
www.arthur-conan-doyle.com/index.php?title=Dr._Koch_and_his_Cure Dr. Koch and His Cure by Arthur Conan Doyle, full text.
www.thomasgoetz.com/inside-the-remedy Thomas Goetz's website
bedside-rounds.org/ an amazing podcast on the history of medicine
www.deviantart.com/rieile
cara.app/rieile
rieileart
t.me/rieile
Materials used: Pastelmat paper, Gamma and Unison pastels, sofft tools
Recommendations and references:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna_Karenina
www.arthur-conan-doyle.com/index.php?title=Dr._Koch_and_his_Cure Dr. Koch and His Cure by Arthur Conan Doyle, full text.
www.thomasgoetz.com/inside-the-remedy Thomas Goetz's website
bedside-rounds.org/ an amazing podcast on the history of medicine
มุมมอง: 41
วีดีโอ
Annwn. Painting Bright Yet Natural in Pastels.
มุมมอง 21916 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
#speedpaint #pastel #art www.deviantart.com/rieile cara.app/rieile rieileart t.me/rieile Materials used: Pastelmat paper, Earthberry pastels, Caran d'Ache pastel pencils, sofft tools Recommendations: archive.org/details/TheMabinogionGuest1838V1/page/n89/mode/2up The Mabinogion, translated by Lady Charlotte Guest (public domain), global.oup.com/academic/product/the-mabinogion-97801...
Presenting My Art: Sweet Initials, Portraits of Scientists at Work
มุมมอง 301หลายเดือนก่อน
#watercolor #art #painting #lab #realism #illustration www.deviantart.com/rieile cara.app/rieile righeile t.me/rieile Materials used: watercolor, Arches and Lanaquarelle 300 gsm paper.
Sunk Cost Fallacy, or How (not) to Ruin the Paper.
มุมมอง 349หลายเดือนก่อน
#speedpaint #watercolor #art #painting #glacier #arctic #landscape www.deviantart.com/rieile cara.app/rieile rieile t.me/rieile Materials used: watercolor, arches 600 gsm paper. Reference by: liza.ershova
You Gave Me Paws! Pastel Painting Process.
มุมมอง 5782 หลายเดือนก่อน
#speedpaint #pastel #art www.deviantart.com/rieile cara.app/rieile rieileart t.me/rieile Materials used: Pastelmat paper, Gamma pastels, Caran d'Ache pastel pencils, sofft tools Recommendations: www.goodreads.com/book/show/117833.The_Master_and_Margarita
The White Dragon in Soft Pastels and the Hittite Serpent Myth of Illuyanka
มุมมอง 1703 หลายเดือนก่อน
www.deviantart.com/rieile cara.app/rieile rieile t.me/rieile Materials used: Pastelmat paper, Earthberry pastels, Caran d'Ache pastel pencils. Recommendations: oyc.yale.edu/religious-studies/rlst-152 - Open Yale Courses, Introduction to the New Testament History and Literature mapsofmyths.com/ www.areasofmyths.com/ References: • Gary Beckman (1982), The Anatolian Myth of Illuyanka...
Inborn Talent is Real and How to Live With(out) It.
มุมมอง 4064 หลายเดือนก่อน
www.deviantart.com/rieile cara.app/rieile rieile t.me/rieile Reference by wonderful Stanislava Voystekhovskaya from_november I used Pastelmat paper and Earthberry and Sennelier pastels. #art #pastel #painting #speedpaint #talent
Roman Ruins in Switzerland, and Why Not to Paint on White Paper.
มุมมอง 4075 หลายเดือนก่อน
www.deviantart.com/rieile cara.app/rieile rieile t.me/rieile Further reading: www.lausanneantique.ch/ Roman archaeology in Lausanne (French only) www.tabula-peutingeriana.de/ Interactive Tabula Peutingeriana
A Sunset over a Lake, and Why We Avoid Symmetry
มุมมอง 3247 หลายเดือนก่อน
www.deviantart.com/rieile cara.app/rieile rieile t.me/rieile Further reading www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/8574712 - The Tell-Tale Brain: A Neuroscientist's Quest for What Makes Us Human by Vilayanur S. Ramachandran www.coursera.org/learn/visual-perception purveslab.net/
I wish I was learned enough to join your monologue, but I fear I'm too lost in that field. However, I can say that the lighting in this portrait is marvellous. I wouldn't have said that's a screenlight - maybe I would, if I could see the original- since it has a divine vibe that endows your model with angelical features ^^ PS: I cannot tell you the reference, but I remember from my Anthropology lessons that red is not considered like the rest of the colors in many cultures. If I'm not wrong, some languages only have a word to name the whole palette, while using another term to specify 'red'. The lessons were pure crap anyway, so don't take me seriously...
Thank you! Actually, this is true, but not because red is somehow special, but there is a certain order in which color terms appear in languages, and for each number of color terms there is a certain way how to divide the visible spectrum in order to minimize ambiguity. There was an original book from Berlin and Kay (1969) 'Basic Color Terms: Their Universality and Evolution', which had some good observations, but larger datasets complicated the matters, but in general this order reflects 'usefulness' of certain terms for efficient communication. Check out this relatively recent research (from Kay himself!) www.researchgate.net/publication/314003825_Word_Meanings_across_Languages_Support_Efficient_Communication
Beautiful picture and interesting story!
@@lanalanina3129 thank you!
That comparison between your sow and the romantic gentlemen in green garnments made me laugh, yet it's so accurate 😂 In any case, I love the opening. It is refreshing to find a respectful, historical description of farm animals. During my Erasmus year I fell in love with a book by Keith Thomas: 'Man and the Natural World', which deeply influenced me - so I wouldn't recommend it to anyone who's not wanting to become a vegetarian or a vegan. For the average, early-modern English human being, sheep were created by God to keep flesh fresh until humans wanted to eat it (a sort of preindustrial refrigerator, I guess...). But that's enough nonsense for now: you did amazing one more time. That palette might not be your favorite, but you tamed it!
@@hauntedalhambra53 animal domestication was just that: having a supply of fresh meat and milk in shaped like a sheep, even though domestication was not really s conscious process back then. But then, one should respect their supplier;) Thank you<3
@@NonsenseMediatedDecay Absolutely, and for sure they would build their Weltanschauung to legitimate such a process. Still, I find it quite interesting to spot the different approaches to the topic ^^
❤❤❤
@@Vdmr_M<3<3<3
шлю крепкие обнимашки и привет из Антверпена! огромное спасибо за этот потрясающий сюрприз!
Спасибо вам! Мне очень понравилось над ним работать!
👏👏
<3
Personal story in paintings. Love it😎
@@Neamoun thank you!
Как сказал один знакомый сегодня: "Боже, до чего же красивая музыка! Я бы написал именно так, если бы Чайковский не сделал это 150 лет назад!" Вот примерно так же я думаю про это видео, только надо заменить музыку на картины, и 150 лет назад на сейчас ❤ Кстати, я думаю, они проживут-таки 150 лет, эти инициалы. Полная противоположность названию канала)))
Спасибо! Ну, NMD вроде как существует у всех эукариот, то есть примерно 2 млрд лет;)
@@NonsenseMediatedDecay Протестую. Творящие искусство бессмертны
This is A-M-A-Z-I-N-G you're incredible
@@angelastein1986 thank you!
Another gem of a video, and you did again: I'd bet that by exposing your self-perceived flaws you are encouraging other artists to be more confident about their own process. I also love the fact that you come back to your older creations and fix them. It feels like a dialoge with your younger self! I absolutely love this series, since it speaks loads about the academic world: a lot of young, contingent researches that come to the lab and leave, leaving nothing but labels and memories behind, as they head to their next 'adventure'... also multi-talented staff like yourself, able to combine enormous skills in several fields. Btw. I cannot help noticing your mention of Burton's treatise about Melancholy. The opening paragraph used to be my favorite synopsis of the 17th century, which as you know is quite important to me :) I feel our times are not as afar from his... I'm already looking forward to seeing an insight into your museum series. Every tipp and lesson is much appreciated <3
Thank you for your support! Or, depending on one's temperament, take it as a warning not to start a work that one is not yet ready to make. You never know. Speaking of Robert Burton, we read this poem in an English poetry of the 17th century class. And as I was memorizing pretty much everything we read there, this text sprung to my mind as an example of the word 'sweet' used just in the right context with the right associations.
@@NonsenseMediatedDecay I think you did right. Otherwise, we would never start a project, don't you think so? PS: sorry for the late answer, I didn't get the notification of your comment until now O_O
I do love the reflection-based composition of this series
Thank you! Edwards's entrails are reflective, too..;)
Totally love the video and your sense of humor)
Thank you!
❤🔥
<3
I enjoyed listening to you talk, not only about the artwork, but science too. :)
Thank you!
If only the common citizens were more educated about the basic principles of human economic action in daily life (as explained in ‘Austrian Economics’), the world would be a much more peaceful, creative, and prosperous world in which political- and other wannabeKingRulers would have far less chance of getting in positions of power ! Great to see and hear your explanation of real-life understanding of, in this case, your example of ‘sunk cost fallacy’ - there are so many other fallacies people fall prey to -
If only... ;)
I'd say we need more content like this on the Internet: mistakes are an essential part of growth, but they seem to be absent in social media, where every artist masks their failures and presents flawless processes. Besides, your point on drawing is so relatable. I'd say that we give up a lot of the effort and personality insufflated to a drawing everytime we cover it with color, but that belongs to the hard decission-making process that involves every single piece of art, I guess. And personally, (water)color pencils might be cleaner, but nothing compares to a greasy pencil... Finally, I love your digression about the Sunk Cost Fallacy, which is one of my favorites... and yet I had never considered it from the point of perseverance and fighting for apparently lost causes. I like the optimistic light that you shed over it, no wonder why you've come so far <3
Thank you! <3 I feel that many mistakes can be overcome with the right strategy, but then we should be talking about those. Actually, the 'event' that reconciled me with graphite lines under watercolor happened before I actually started painting 'for real'. My aunt who is an architect came to our place when I was about 12 and in order to entertain me put a still life for me to paint, and she saw me erasing the sketch lines before I began painting and told me that they will make the final work way more stylish and I trusted her on that. Still trusting that 20 years later;)
I don't know any no russian writer that has medicine background. My mother appreciates Tschechov mostly, I think i share her opinion.
This gentelmen так сказать.
@@jakobspankin поспоришь?)
Beautiful work despite the mishap. I'm always amazed at how the painting progresses from the first layer to the fully fleshed out work. I used to think artists just painted what we saw at the end.
@@davidcostello8152 thank you! It would be too difficult to paint like a printer;)
And here you are, you did it again! I think you're quite brave by dedicating such a prominent place to this piece on your media. And please don't get me wrong: I don't mean that this is worse than your usual works - it isn't - but it's so different from the topics you tackle, it has so many possible readings and I cannot help imagining that your model expresses some sort of reluctance every time you share this. Flattery appart, the way you transfer your sketches to paper really fascinates me. I've tried tracing paper plus carbonic paper, and it worked pretty well to meet my (low) standards. It does soil the paper sometimes, but it's easily removed - and since I ink my linearts, that's not really a thing. Yet your system might allow you to re-draw more freely, and hence might help creating more natural linearts with the security of already having a set structure. I wish I had your patience to try! PS: I noted down your literary reference. Sadly, I have no idea about other authors with medical backgrounds. I used to enjoy reading the treatises of the so-called "medical police" from the 18th-19th centuries, though :)
I feel that it is actually closer to what I actually want to do with my art than most other stuff, to be honest. I want to go more into sensual topics featuring people in neutral colors. And the model... knew the repercussions of marrying me;) I stuck to this method because a) I like sketching on tracing paper b) it can be used with printer paper or even with ruined watercolor paper, although you can't double-check the drawing c) it doesn't require buying extra carbon paper. P.S.: I'll check those out, I love obscure historical documents. XD Btw, my favorite authors of this kind would be Kobo Abe (who never really practiced medicine) and Archibald Cronin.
@@NonsenseMediatedDecay as an admirer of Egon Schiele, I'm more than thrilled to see how your art evolves if you want to follow that path. On the other hand, I wouldn't label the 'medical police (Polizei)' treatises as 'obscure' since they belong to official culture. If I'm not wrong, they gained momentum under German Cameralism to sanitize the cities, so that subjects would live longer and nations would get richer. I'm not sure to what extent should that be understood as a philantropic way of thinking, lol. There should be a good collection of them scanned and uploaded to the Google Books database. Always a pleasure to learn from and to chat with you ^^
Binge watching your videos Rieile! You need to make more :)
Дракошка, отнимающий кисточку, прелесть! И рассказ интересный)
Absolutely love the snake as well as the concept and your reflections on the topic! I keep forgetting that "anguille" and its Latin source word are actually metatheses of the two roots present in "Illuyanka" :) Just one small detail: maybe it's just me but rather than having audio excerpts glued together when they start and end at the full volume - which makes things sound quite abrupt - it might be beneficial to make use of fade in / fade out effects using e.g. Adobe After Effects. Hope that helps!
Thank you for the feedback!
История о мифах офигенная ❤ А вот лингвистические изыскания на англ мне сложновато воспринимать. Змее привет, хихикала весь видос :D
Such a rich color palette, love it!
@@freckled.cellofun these pastels have amazing neutrals indeed! Thanks for commenting!
Штош, было плохой идеей прямо перед сном проверить какие твои видосы я не смотрела . Опять преступная интересность не даёт уснуть 😅 Клёвое видео, очень понравилась структура (как и во всех других) и духота в хорошем смысле слова. Аффтар пеши есчо что называется ❤
Мур-мур!
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. It was surprising to hear that you hate watercolors! 😂 Your paintings are gorgeous!
Thank you! Watercolor is similar to addiction: you hate drugs but you can't stop;)
I especially appreciate that you acknowledge not enjoying the artistic process at all (even hating watercolors!). You just put into words that feeling of distress I usually experience while creating, which I couldn't even identify. But it makes sense: drawing/painting is not necessarily pleasant. I'd say it's relieving, as it helps getting rid of whatever message rumbling in your gut - or just keeping your brain busy while undertaking a mechanical task. Once again, it is a pleasure to hear those thoughts you call nonsense :)
Thank you for sharing! I feel that for some people art is a urge and a necessity, but relieving the tension is worth it.
😮 спидпейнт загипнотизировал. Про итог я вообще молчу, постою полюбуюсь.
Спасибо! Итог странный: из-за низкого контраста эта работа не цепляет взгляд, но при этом она мне кажется удачной в своем жанре.
@@NonsenseMediatedDecay мой взгляд зацепило. Переливы перломутровые прямо.
London is the capital of Great Britain
@@rafaelgrigorian9143 мой любимый спамер =3
Как всегда приятно тебя смотреть ❤))) спасибо 😊))
Спасибо!
Hey, I think I know this one ^^ It's so good to finally see your process! As you know, I've always loved the way you work with light and atmosphere, and now that I can see the amount of work that lies behind, I admire it even more. It is not just about your skills, but about how you delve into technique and color theory. And seeing those watercolor drops on your working table just adds a realism that's usually absent from other process vids. I have to thank you again for taking your time to show this to the world, because this is a gem <3
Thank you! Haha, it’s true, I don’t bother to make anything pretty but the piece itself.
Quite enjoyable video and lovely work, keep it up M!
Thank you!
Интересно сочетается рассказ о месте и о технике с прогрессом рисунка)
There is a certain dryness to the way you deliver all those interesting facts, something a bit mathematical and austere, but what an interesting combination to watch! Were you by any chance interested in botany or geology at some point? Artists-scientists are always somewhat of a rare bird.
Thank you for your feedback! As it’s just my second video I expect to loosen up with time: talking to a camera is very different from talking to a live audience. I’m not really into botany, but I had the university courses in botany, phycology and plant physiology back in the day and I do follow the literature on ion channels in plants XD so maybe they will make a cameo appearance in future videos as well as some granites from the Archean eon:)
It's absolutely perfect. I love your videos
красивое!
we're witnessing the future big art youtuber y'all😎(i'm from your vk community, came to send some love, keep up with the great work ❤❤❤)
<3
It's beautiful! Also love the commentary, it's like what you'd get if Bob Ross were a mad scientist
Красиво! 🙌
Very nice! Thank you
My favourite artist!
Ай донт андерстентд вот юр сеинг, бат йор дров бьютифули ❤
<3<3<3
Mother is the best reference dealer 😎