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Dan Ianos
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 11 เม.ย. 2011
My Salvator Mundi
Drawing l did ,immediately after the discovery of the marvelous painting ,authenticated by being Leonardo da Vinci.
The drawing implied an imaginary stage ,which Leonardo could have been done ,before going to transfer the cartone.
Credits for music used :
Faceoff by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Source: incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100403
Artist: incompetech.com/
The drawing implied an imaginary stage ,which Leonardo could have been done ,before going to transfer the cartone.
Credits for music used :
Faceoff by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Source: incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100403
Artist: incompetech.com/
มุมมอง: 2 328
วีดีโอ
How Leonardo da Vinci made his underpaintings - part 2
มุมมอง 10K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Part 2 ,of a video tutorial ,describing how Leonardo da Vinci used a reduced palette ,for giving form and a strong base to his wonderful paintings. The starting point was Leonardo's Treatise on painting ,the paragraph describing how to paint a face on a canvas. Stopping By the Inn by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ...
How Leonardo da Vinci made his underpaintings - part 1
มุมมอง 30K3 ปีที่แล้ว
This video was made to demonstrate how a monochromatic underpainting could give the base and structure to your paintings. The painting technique was inspired by Leonardo da Vinci's Treatise on painting . With descriptions in the subtitles.
How to emulate Leonardo da Vinci's metalpoint drawing techniques
มุมมอง 5K3 ปีที่แล้ว
This video was done ,to demonstrate how to recreate Leonardo da Vinci's metalpoint drawings ,using modern materials. With the preparation of the support ,at the beginning ,and description of each product
How to imitate Leonardo da Vinci's left hand hatching
มุมมอง 3.1K3 ปีที่แล้ว
This small video ,was made to demonstrate how a right handed artist could obtain a left hand hatching,by using his right hand . A small description of Leonardo's materials of choice ,and also information about the reference material l have used for creating this drawing.
New Renaissance drawings
มุมมอง 2.8K3 ปีที่แล้ว
A compilation ,in a slideshow format ,of some of my drawings l've developed in the last years.Some are interpretations ,and some totally invented ,due to my extensive years of study and constant working on the subject
Leonardo da Vinci drawing style
มุมมอง 28K4 ปีที่แล้ว
My name is Dan Ianos ,and l am a painter ,concept artist ,comic book artist ,spending more than 20 years in studying Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo painting and drawing style. This short clip was made to demonstrate a how to draw a basic profile head ,in the style of Leonardo da Vinci . More to come! l will upload the longer version soon ,with voice over and descriptions. Thank!
Thanks ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Yes
what's a coat of weak size?
Thank you for sharing this interesting video, very heplful for beginners like me in oil painting. A mes follower from Spain.
Bellissimo ❤
But why would you want to? One hand mirrors the other. Besides the direction is not dictated by handedness alone but can be cheated by sufficient skill. In any event Leonardo's left-handedness is well-attested.
This showcase of your workflow is Wild. This just upped my underpaint game tenfold. Thank you Dan.
????
Excellent and wonderful muzic
Larga vida al gran.. Leonardo Da Vinci ❤
Thanks Dan.
I think he never used a blending brush.
Look at Adoration of Magi, the unfinished painting. It is not a monocromatic underpainting.
Super fain felicitări 😊🏆👌🥇🏅🌷🤗🥳💐😁
Qué belleza de trazos! Y esa musica 1 me hace llorar 😊
💚2023✨planting seeds.......... #MillenniumLanceAndTheOpenScroll 🌹 🎠🌈🌈💍🌈🌈🔥 Daniel 12 Revelation 21 🎶 keeping the Faith 💜😎
J’ai eu beaucoup de plaisir à suivre les deux vidéos bravo et merci
Thanks ! With pleasure
Super 🥳👍👌🏆🎖🤗🥇
I always want to know the da Vinci sfumato technique. Thanks to share the demonstration
merci beaucoup
merci beaucoup
FINALLY: somebody who knows how it was done (AND knows how to do it well !!)! An underdrawing in umber, followed by a grisaille underpainting in the light parts of the form. This became the classic method for most painters over the subsequent 500 years. Bravo, Mr Ianos, and thank you for posting this for everybody.
Wow, many thanks for this wonderful comment. I've tried to analyze some of his unfinished pieces, and saw , specially on the National Gallery's Madonna of the Rocks ,a more visible dead layer, compared to his other more finished pieces. Seems that the form ,has more grey than we thought.
He made washes, no brush. And not umber but yellow or yellow ochre. Look at Adoration Magi or other unfinished work. Da Vinci didn't work like in the video.
@@Braun09tv I've lived and worked in Florence for the last 35 years and I've looked at Leonardo's Magi many times. I'm also the director and an instructor at the Angel Academy of Art, Florence. The video gets it right, believe me.
@@michaeljohnangel6359 are you serious? Da Vinci has no brush strokes, everybody knows that. You should know that the underpainting is washes, did you see any brush strokes in the skin?
@@Braun09tv Yup, they're there, m'dear. Your misunderstanding probably comes from Leonardo's technique of blurring each paint application, as shown in this video. Go to the Uffizi and look at it closely. There are also some excellent videos on TH-cam that show close-ups taken during the recent cleaning of the Magi. If you have ever painted successfully, you will know that you have to apply brushstrokes before you can blend them.
Underrated channel
Amazing! 👏👏👏
will try to do the same with oils) but that will be 2 times longer, as all layers need to dry🥲
yes, you could do that ,and it will be much more easy. You can correct mistakes with slower drying medium .
Rabbit skin glue mixed with chalk and a pinch of alum and you’ll have the real ground!
Indeed ,you're right ,l also do traditional recipes ,but this ones was done for people who don't have the time to actually prepare the rabbit skin glue. This is the modern take.
What should I practice first to get started
Egg shapes ,with some directional axis.
How did davinci even know he can do this.. The guy was a true genius
i told him he could
at the time they were drawing like this they were studying with the best 🦫
yes ,we can still do it. I did it ,and it works
Did you use watercolor or oils?
tempera grassa . egg and oil emulsion
please make a full tutorial on da vinci sfumato technique please this is so well done.
Thank you! l would really love to ,but l have some other projects and commissions to finish ,so less time for this particular subject. Still experimenting with this kind of tempera ,and will do it probably, in the near future. Best!
@@parpalacus Yay thats great news! its just your so talented, I haven’t seen anyone get it as close to how Da Vinci did it as you did, your painting could be in a museum and no one would question it 😊
This looks exactly like Leonardos artstyle. Good job!
thanks
Perfect
This man is a legend
Why are they so good? i am learning how to draw like the old masters.
they became good,first because they learned from copying their masters. And ,of course dedication .
This is true talent!
Hey Dan, I am very impressed but also curious. Are those oil paint or a different brand? i think i could use them to make underpaintings. Also is this a silverpoint study?
Hi,there! This is actually a drawing ,using white ball pen ,and mechanical pencil.
@@parpalacus Thats impressive
Great job!!
You'll sell much more work copying the masters than you'll ever sell creating your own work. People would buy that drawing long before they'll buy some modern sketch
Thanks fore the encouragement. l feel that ,although is half original ,this is what l love to do .
Leo predominantly used indigo and bone ash. I'm confused as to why you didn't in a video about Leo's technique. I appreciate that you said in the video that it was an improvised method instead of Leo's method, but then why not title the video that way? Also, did Leo not use water to erase instead of a rubber? I'm so confused as how you can call this a Leo technique video. There is almost nothing of Leo's technique in it. He didn't even scrape out highlights or mistakes like the Norwegians did.
Yes ,you're right. Most of this materials are a fast method ,just to emulate Leonardo's techniques of drawing ,but on a superficial level . I've described that in the video. Once the skills are there ,l don't see a reason (just for the feeling sake) to go further. My video is a modern take .
Hi. I do paint in this way as well, cause I've been researching the way of how da vinci paint for couple years. The grisaille he use I also believe that he only add white on umber underlayer, not just use black on the dark area, that's more look like 18th century grisaille: black grey white. But I stuck on how he do the glazing after that.
Depends . National Gallery's Madonna of the rocks has more grisaille on top of umber underlayer. The 18th century grisaille is not the same Leonardo might have used
👍
Thank you for your excelent video. Two questions: 1)The large brush you use for spreading is it a hard bristle? 2) Do you use some medium with your paints?
My pleasure. It's a synthetic brush . I used tempera grassa for this painting. Half oil ,half egg emulsion.
@@parpalacus Thank you very much
You are next living Leonardo da Vinci
Damn son, if only I could do this one day
could be done .patience
Is this oil or acrylic?
tempera grassa . Egg yolk ,and oil.
@@parpalacus gracias!
Can you make a video on how to hatch in general like they did back then?
I will do ,for sure ,if time permits .
👍🙂🤗
I am very glad that more and more people appreciate the true workshop of the old centuries, bravo, may there be more of us
Thanks ! We are already ,a quite big number of followers .
🙂👍