I've tried and failed repeatedly with oils. This is the first time I've ever seen anyone do alla prima that made any sense whatsoever. I've got the urge to give it another go! Thank you!
I like to kid around sometimes, but I wanted to compliment you on your ability to teach oil painting. I think outstanding is the right word. You are easy to follow, and understand. I think a lot of teachers tend to spout off what they know, rather than actually teach somebody something. You are a teacher-truly.
This is a comment from a Brazilian student. I'm watching your videos and learning a lot from your classes, I don't understand sometimes hahaha but your classes are great. I will work hard. Thanks!
A lot of what Mark says reminds me of my painting professor at College. He always told us that all painting is really an abstraction of what we see in reality. Thanks for the videos.
I just want to say that I really appreciate you being here on youtube. i've learned a lot from these episodes, and your other videos of course. Not easy to find someone as helpful as you online, thank you Mark!
Your generous sharing of both your talent and your experience is so very much appreciated. You obviously are a very kind person. I intend to take advantage of all your informative lessons with much anticipation. You are a wonderfully talented artist. Many thanks.
Love all your educational videos showing us how to but I love this so much, watching your process is just lovely, your recent landscapes were so calming and enjoyable too I’ve watched them many times even though I don’t do landscapes. Please if you can consider doing more of these demo’s. I’ve not painted in a long time since I lost my baby boy but watching you paint brings back some joy in me. ❤
Thanks for your time and effort in doing these videos. Yours were the videos that gave me the confidence and basics to start painting a few years ago and now I am hooked. I re-watch (if that is a word) your videos from time to time and seem to learn a little something each time.
my teacher taught just like this in college but not as good with the color mixing advice and color checking. the limited palette is the most helpful advice i ever had. i used to jump all over the place and get lost.
This was really a great learning. I actually placed my cell phone upon my canvas and started painting looking at the photo and your demonstration. I can now compare the three. Takes time to understand what I am looking at.
Mark, great tutorial! Alla prima is my preferred style and this tutorial was clear, educational and helpful. It helps me overcome my reluctancy to use oils.
Just a note to say thanks! I am an art student who is enjoying your art instruction very much. I hope to see many more. You are generous with information that is not found anywhere. Thanks again!
I get so much out of your lessons ! It's fantastic. In a world full of rubbish, your instruction and insight stands out as meaningful & inspirational. I have a constant struggle with dust in studio, so have made a section of studio into a drying area with plastic drop sheets, so it's sealed of from dust etc. Wondering what you do to stop dust settling on wet paint, and if you no what Sargent did or any other masters past or present? I don't find facing them against wall that great an option. Thanks Dustin Stahle
Dustin Stahle The facing-them-against-the-wall method works fine for me, and when I'm actually painting, using a vertical easel instead of a tilted-back easel makes a big difference. If I'm doing work that creates dust in my studio (like wood work), I would do that in a sealed-off section like you mention.
Nice. I have only dabbled in oil painting (many decades ago) but I want to start oil painting again. I know you said that you don't normally do all the paint mixing on the palette -ahead of time - as you did with this painting ... but as someone who has recently dabbled in digital painting, I think how you pre-mixed the various colors on your palette here is pretty cool. It reminds me of my recent digital painting (of a beautiful green pear!). I used a photo image of a beautiful green pear as a reference image and, working in Photoshop, I used the ink dropper tool to create a digital palette for myself. Created a layer, traced the pear, and then used my digital palette and a PShop paint brush to paint it. It came out nicely. I'm now going to paint the beautiful green pear in oil ... starting with only basic colors on the palette. Because that's part of the joy of painting in oil. And even though I only dabbled, decades ago, I was always Alla Prima. I like to be able to be intuitive and spontaneous... but I need time, too. I could never understand why anyone would want to work with fast-drying acrylics.
Muchisimas gracias, estos videos son buenisimos. I just got my first Old Holland Oil paint set and I am so ready to start painting after I have seem this video.
Could you talk about brushes? What do you look for when purchasing? Is there a favorite manufacturer and why? How do you decide which brush to use for a given stroke.
I really love alla prima paiting methode its the real painting or the real art because Photorealistic paintings it looks like photos however alla prima u can feel the art on those paintings , thank you for charing your time with us and im really looking to see some tips from you in How to paint in alla prima, thx.
Everything comes together , and becomes a nice painting. (hopefully), but in my opinion color can inform the viewer as much as execution. Just spouting off from my experience. Great stuff sir.
"Bravura brushwork", that's a word often used in observing Sargent's paintings, beginning with some of his earliest work! That's what you said, in effect, paint with Confidence. I like your work because of that style. Very nice!!! Oh, and if painting a pear, be sure to consume the "model" when done, then no one will ever see if it looks like it or not! LOL :D
I just stumbled upon your work and DVDs today while searching on line for solid tutorials on setting up an artist studio.This is a terrific pear painting. Love the bold, sensual brushwork. Do you ever scumble to softly diffuse edges within the shadows? When I look at an actual pear I'm not able to focus my attention equally along the edge on the shadow side. This would be an interesting philosophical discussion: how we see as humans, versus cameras. I suppose people all see things differently based on their optic nerves. Everyone is wired differently in terms of their "rods and cones." Your approach is cool, and very similar to many contemporary photo and hyper-realists in terms of color isolation. My hunch is that a good portion of classical naturalist painting is rooted in "optical color mixing", which mirrors nature. When one really studies the underlying aesthetic of a Velasquez or a Sargent edge manipulation seems to be a big component. Notice the dissolving edges at the bottom of this Sargent piece: uploads4.wikiart.org/images/john-singer-sargent/gondolier-1905.jpg I'm seeing the same thing taking place within this Velasquez -- there appears to be scumbled, broken brushstrokes breaking through the form of the hair and figure. In my eyes this piece mirrors how we see the world as humans, which is profoundly different from the camera. iamled.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/juan_pareja.jpg
That for me was a very useful video. Actually I am trying to get a more painterly look in my pictures and am thinking a lot about brushwork etc. But as always what counts is getting value and color right and then put it in the right place - and then leave it.
Very nice! I love pears! I'd eat the painted pear before I'd eat the photographed pear, if they were both real fruits! Nice and juicy; like the reason we paint in oils! Yum!!
Really great demonstration. I'm wanting to learn wet on wet with oils. I'm a total beginner with oils so I'm looking up videos to get some idea. I like your videos a lot. A wonderful Alla Prima artist on YT is Peter Chorao. He is worth checking out. I would love to be able to paint Alla Prima one day.
Mark, could you please explain why and how to tone (stain) canvas properly before painting for example, a very sunny bright day with light blue sky and sunlit landscape painting. Also, are there any cases, when toning is not recommended? Thanks.
great demo! Thank you. I have very much a tendency to smooth out all rough brush strokes but would love to paint alla prima. Do you have an advice for me?
Hey mark, when mixing your own paints with delq, when you've used all the paint in your jars, do you clean these jars out before mixing new paint in them. So my real question would be "What is your recommendation on refilling your own paint in previous used jars with sometimes paint that has dried inside?"
I notice that you hold the brush far down the handle rather than high up and anchoring your pinky on the canvas. Can you speak about this? Does it make a difference to the final result?
Thank you for your stimulating videos. I also like your detailed explanation of the subject. I have quite a few paintings hanging on the walls. How often should I clean them and with what material so they have a fresh look all the time. The environment is quite clean and not much dust.
I've tried and failed repeatedly with oils. This is the first time I've ever seen anyone do alla prima that made any sense whatsoever. I've got the urge to give it another go! Thank you!
Instablaster
I like to kid around sometimes, but I wanted to compliment you on your ability to teach oil painting. I think outstanding is the right word. You are easy to follow, and understand. I think a lot of teachers tend to spout off what they know, rather than actually teach somebody something. You are a teacher-truly.
This is a comment from a Brazilian student. I'm watching your videos and learning a lot from your classes, I don't understand sometimes hahaha but your classes are great. I will work hard. Thanks!
A lot of what Mark says reminds me of my painting professor at College. He always told us that all painting is really an abstraction of what we see in reality. Thanks for the videos.
I just want to say that I really appreciate you being here on youtube. i've learned a lot from these episodes, and your other videos of course. Not easy to find someone as helpful as you online, thank you Mark!
Johannes N.H oi
O
Your generous sharing of both your talent and your experience is so very much appreciated. You obviously are a very kind person. I intend to take advantage of all your informative lessons with much anticipation. You are a wonderfully talented artist. Many thanks.
Love all your educational videos showing us how to but I love this so much, watching your process is just lovely, your recent landscapes were so calming and enjoyable too I’ve watched them many times even though I don’t do landscapes. Please if you can consider doing more of these demo’s. I’ve not painted in a long time since I lost my baby boy but watching you paint brings back some joy in me. ❤
You are amazing, such a generous teacher! Thank you a lot! I'm learning a lot with you. Best regards from Portugal :)
Mark I watch a lot of your stuff. its amazing and thank you for putting it all out there free. you cover everything.
Your knowledge is invaluable, thank you so much for sharing your videos.
You are by far the best teacher on youtube. Love it
This tutorial is so soothing to watch and listen. I feel calm and sleepy. By the way, beautiful painting.
Your video has done tremendous meaning to me. Thanks for that Mr Carder . Best regards from Korea
Thanks for your time and effort in doing these videos. Yours were the videos that gave me the confidence and basics to start painting a few years ago and now I am hooked. I re-watch (if that is a word) your videos from time to time and seem to learn a little something each time.
my teacher taught just like this in college but not as good with the color mixing advice and color checking.
the limited palette is the most helpful advice i ever had. i used to jump all over the place and get lost.
This was really a great learning. I actually placed my cell phone upon my canvas and started painting looking at the photo and your demonstration. I can now compare the three. Takes time to understand what I am looking at.
The time you put into these videos is so much appreciated. The pear demonstration answered my next question. Thanks again!
Mark, great tutorial! Alla prima is my preferred style and this tutorial was clear, educational and helpful. It helps me overcome my reluctancy to use oils.
It's just a sheer pleasure to listen to Mark...
Great demonstration Mark. Thanks as always for sharing in such an honest and credible manner.
ComPEAR your values
Congrats on being a dad
you are a nuisance
great demonstration with the brush strokes and great advice on approaching galleries. Thanks.
I have really enjoyed the way you deliver your lessons. I learn with every video I watch
very nice demonstration. i really like your attitude and patience.
Always like to come back and review what you've done.
Really enjoyed this and seeing how you build up value in the color. Adds such depth and volume.
Very good example of this technique. Appreciated.
Just a note to say thanks! I am an art student who is enjoying your art instruction very much. I hope to see many more. You are generous with information that is not found anywhere. Thanks again!
I get so much out of your lessons !
It's fantastic. In a world full of rubbish, your instruction and insight stands out as meaningful & inspirational.
I have a constant struggle with dust in studio, so have made a section of studio into a drying area with plastic drop sheets, so it's sealed of from dust etc.
Wondering what you do to stop dust settling on wet paint, and if you no what Sargent did or any other masters past or present?
I don't find facing them against wall that great an option.
Thanks
Dustin Stahle
Dustin Stahle The facing-them-against-the-wall method works fine for me, and when I'm actually painting, using a vertical easel instead of a tilted-back easel makes a big difference. If I'm doing work that creates dust in my studio (like wood work), I would do that in a sealed-off section like you mention.
Thanks Mark. I look forward to your future lessons as always they are inspiring!
I'm really finding your videos helpful and informative. You're a super teacher - thank-you!
Lots of important information. Thanks for the instruction.
Thank you so much for your apperence here on youtube. Great presentation and skills! 🌞
Thank you very much for explaining very clearly, I am really learning through watching this video.
Nice.
I have only dabbled in oil painting (many decades ago) but I want to start oil painting again.
I know you said that you don't normally do all the paint mixing on the palette -ahead of time - as you did with this painting ... but as someone who has recently dabbled in digital painting, I think how you pre-mixed the various colors on your palette here is pretty cool. It reminds me of my recent digital painting (of a beautiful green pear!). I used a photo image of a beautiful green pear as a reference image and, working in Photoshop, I used the ink dropper tool to create a digital palette for myself. Created a layer, traced the pear, and then used my digital palette and a PShop paint brush to paint it. It came out nicely.
I'm now going to paint the beautiful green pear in oil ... starting with only basic colors on the palette. Because that's part of the joy of painting in oil. And even though I only dabbled, decades ago, I was always Alla Prima. I like to be able to be intuitive and spontaneous... but I need time, too. I could never understand why anyone would want to work with fast-drying acrylics.
Muchisimas gracias, estos videos son buenisimos.
I just got my first Old Holland Oil paint set and I am so ready to start painting after I have seem this video.
Love these videos. I've watched 4 of yours so far and will be watching more, following your method. I'm excited!
Thank you so much! Big hugs from France.
Could you talk about brushes? What do you look for when purchasing? Is there a favorite manufacturer and why? How do you decide which brush to use for a given stroke.
Thank you master Carder!All your videos are so helpful.
You are just fascinating to listen to. Thank you for sharing your expertise with the world.
Thanks for the videos, and for answering my questions in previous videos, and in text.
Great stuff.
Superb demonstration
I really love alla prima paiting methode its the real painting or the real art because Photorealistic paintings it looks like photos however alla prima u can feel the art on those paintings , thank you for charing your time with us and im really looking to see some tips from you in How to paint in alla prima, thx.
Thanks for Your insights Mark. As always, love hearing your thoughts on painting in oils. Thanks for your great advice.
Reeah.
I love it.
you didn't copy the shape and created a beautiful Pear !
Thank you for your instruction. I’m new to painting and this information is such a help to me. Bingeing on your videos.
Everything comes together , and becomes a nice painting. (hopefully), but in my opinion color can inform the viewer as much as execution. Just spouting off from my experience. Great stuff sir.
Thank you for the demo. Simple and clear as usual !
"Bravura brushwork", that's a word often used in observing Sargent's paintings, beginning with some of his earliest work! That's what you said, in effect, paint with Confidence. I like your work because of that style. Very nice!!! Oh, and if painting a pear, be sure to consume the "model" when done, then no one will ever see if it looks like it or not! LOL :D
What a great presentation.
Great tutorials! thank you..Greetings from the U.K.,
Good to see your channel active. I'd like to see more on alla prima. Unless I use Bob Ross paint, I have difficulty
superb video .. such a delight
I've did a similar pear and it turned out fine
You done a pear. It was turned out, real good.
Just playin
beautyfull painting Sir. Thank you very much.
What a great guy. Super video.
So generous as always
Thank you for no music. Thank you for explaining so well.
Excelente, amigo, saludos desde Medellin Colombia, soy tu nuevo suscriptor
thanks for all your info and tips. greetings from argentina!
I learnt a lot from that. Thank you. I was going to try a mango but it’s being dismembered for inclusion in a salsa.
FANTASTIC!!! thanks teachers
Ahhhhhhh, the bumpy pair. Great choice. I'm kidding, but seriously a great choice. I like it.
Wonderful work
Such a fantastic tutorial!!!
What kind of people dislike this video?? Ridiculous to me. This is INVALUABLE information for free.
Love your videos and your art!
Mark, You are fab xxx
Thanks for the lesson 😊
Exceptional video! Thank you so much for sharing this.
I will try wet on wet with plenty of noise thank you Mark
I just stumbled upon your work and DVDs today while searching on line for solid tutorials on setting up an artist studio.This is a terrific pear painting. Love the bold, sensual brushwork. Do you ever scumble to softly diffuse edges within the shadows? When I look at an actual pear I'm not able to focus my attention equally along the edge on the shadow side. This would be an interesting philosophical discussion: how we see as humans, versus cameras. I suppose people all see things differently based on their optic nerves. Everyone is wired differently in terms of their "rods and cones." Your approach is cool, and very similar to many contemporary photo and hyper-realists in terms of color isolation. My hunch is that a good portion of classical naturalist painting is rooted in "optical color mixing", which mirrors nature. When one really studies the underlying aesthetic of a Velasquez or a Sargent edge manipulation seems to be a big component. Notice the dissolving edges at the bottom of this Sargent piece: uploads4.wikiart.org/images/john-singer-sargent/gondolier-1905.jpg I'm seeing the same thing taking place within this Velasquez -- there appears to be scumbled, broken brushstrokes breaking through the form of the hair and figure. In my eyes this piece mirrors how we see the world as humans, which is profoundly different from the camera. iamled.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/juan_pareja.jpg
Wonderful demo! Thank-you!
Excellent !
OOohhhhh! Thank you for showing me a new place to clip the microphone! (';')( ';')... YOU are the MASTER!
+Frederick Dunn I always thought that was so clever haha
That for me was a very useful video. Actually I am trying to get a more painterly look in my pictures and am thinking a lot about brushwork etc. But as always what counts is getting value and color right and then put it in the right place - and then leave it.
you are exellent, thanks for your instructions
I'd like to see more vids of just you painting something
I like the mark making here a lot. It is a shame that clients often seek the smoother styles where every mark has been blended out
Thank you
Realy great help for a beginner
Mart
Great demo
Very nice! I love pears! I'd eat the painted pear before I'd eat the photographed pear, if they were both real fruits! Nice and juicy; like the reason we paint in oils! Yum!!
Thank you so much
Really great demonstration. I'm wanting to learn wet on wet with oils. I'm a total beginner with oils so I'm looking up videos to get some idea.
I like your videos a lot.
A wonderful Alla Prima artist on YT is Peter Chorao. He is worth checking out. I would love to be able to paint Alla Prima one day.
Just wonderfull
gracias Mark¡
Wow! Awesomeness. Thank you.
I bought your tutorial on portrait painting and learned a lot. I was just wondering how long it took to create such an impressive work of art
Very good!
thanks
Mark, could you please explain why and how to tone (stain) canvas properly before painting for example, a very sunny bright day with light blue sky and sunlit landscape painting. Also, are there any cases, when toning is not recommended?
Thanks.
Très interesting. Merci a lot
keep up the great work
really beaitufl painting!
I just realised that Geneva was a brand.... and that there was a link for them. Sorry for shooting off too soon! :)
great demo! Thank you. I have very much a tendency to smooth out all rough brush strokes but would love to paint alla prima. Do you have an advice for me?
Hey mark, when mixing your own paints with delq, when you've used all the paint in your jars, do you clean these jars out before mixing new paint in them. So my real question would be
"What is your recommendation on refilling your own paint in previous used jars with sometimes paint that has dried inside?"
I notice that you hold the brush far down the handle rather than high up and anchoring your pinky on the canvas. Can you speak about this? Does it make a difference to the final result?
Good video! Subbed
Thank you for your stimulating videos. I also like your detailed explanation of the subject. I have quite a few paintings hanging on the walls. How often should I clean them and with what material so they have a fresh look all the time. The environment is quite clean and not much dust.