Coming back to these videos, and what a find! Wonderful art lessons from a great perspective, love these deep in depth flavor profiles of the artists and their works. Thanks for everything you do, free lessons for regular people is a treasure.
Oh wow, you look so gorgeous in this video! I showed my girlfriend your videos and she thinks you're the best. Thanks for sharing your time with us. It's a real gift.
You have such a relaxing voice.. your accent really adds to it!! I feel like you'd be amazing at doing like a meditation video, or doing an informative video about reiki or energy healing
strangely the first painting, to me seemed frantic. It looked as though parents were reaching out with their branch arms trying to hold onto their children as they are being blown away violently. Although it should feel soft and comforting, specially with the soft green lightly dancing in the back. It just feels like a windy danger zone to me. I guess it's true that individuals see different things in paintings lol
yanghaiying Thank You for such a detailed explanation of this painting and the artist-it has absolutely captivated me! Every time I watch this I see something else in the painting I didn’t see before. It reminds me of a painting I fell in love with in one of the galleries on The Pier in San Francisco. My ex tried to get the artist down on the price for several weeks because I was so taken with his work-but the lowest he would agree to was $50K. Although we were comfortable at the time and my ex even offered to take out a loan to get it-I felt it was just too much for that time in our lives. I kept up with the artist for quite a few years and noticed he was offering “Prints” of many of his works. I was so excited to find the painting I had become so attached to and immediately ordered the very reasonable print...disappointment. 😟. As I’m sure, as an artist yourself, you know that a print just doesn’t contain the light and the life that the original does. The original appeared to have its own light emitting from it and the trees and flowers seemed to almost move separate from the rest of the painting-the print had none of that and when I showed it to friends, trying to explain the emotions and feeling that the original contained; their unanimous view was that they just “couldn’t see it” and they weren’t impressed at all. My son called me an “art snob” not long ago after I declined his offer to purchase me a replacement Sunflower painting that I had lost in the fire last year. I had lost an original, not very expensive but beautiful hand-done copy of one of Van Gogh’s Sunflowers. It was by a local artist who had added her own twist to it and while she isn’t a “professional”-her painting contained that same life and emotion you can only get from an original. I used to collect Sunflower items because I felt they represented Hope; and her painting portrayed that. I just didn’t think the reproduction print that my Son wanted to get me emitted anything except “oh yea, another picture of a Van Gogh painting...”. I guess I AM becoming an “art snob” in my later years... 😂
yanghaiying I was just watching some of Henri Li’s videos before starting a painting session this morning. I hadn’t seen this one, but when I watched it and saw how he did the subtle color with the ink-I immediately thought of THIS painting! I wonder if he painted the green on the BACK after finishing the trees in ink? th-cam.com/video/D9LtUiRqSOk/w-d-xo.html Also, I may email you a picture-a screenshot of an antique, (18th century) Chinese painting that also captured my attention on Pinterest the other day. Unfortunately, other than the age and saying it was a Chinese winter landscape; it gave no other artist information. What surprised me about it was the obvious TEXTURE. This was the first time I had seen any additional texture on a Chinese brush painting-it looked like snow! (Or more exactly, it looked like the fake spray-on snow some people use to decorate during the holidays. Obviously it wasn’t THAT substance! 😂. ). Any idea what they would use for texture?
Extra fast glimpse. Life, death, sorrow, human body and psyche. Paintings should be viewed with different angles, lighting, et cetera. Fresh air, anatomical sights of lung and kidney blood vessels. Life, the most fragile thing on earth. Close view looks quite harsh.
Coming back to these videos, and what a find! Wonderful art lessons from a great perspective, love these deep in depth flavor profiles of the artists and their works. Thanks for everything you do, free lessons for regular people is a treasure.
Oh wow, you look so gorgeous in this video! I showed my girlfriend your videos and she thinks you're the best. Thanks for sharing your time with us. It's a real gift.
Your girlfriend is the best. Even I fall in love with her, hahah. Enjoy.
I love your whispers in museum, truly unique and interesting. Thank you for what you're doing and just being yourself.
you truly are an amazing person. thank you for sharing ♥
Omg amazing art! And the artist is so adorable. His artwork really takes me to another world.
I love your S,it s like a whistle,amazing!
You look amazing! I remember watching your Chinese calligraphy video's, lovely.
I have been loving your different tours! Museums...towns...wonderful. ❤️
You have such a relaxing voice.. your accent really adds to it!! I feel like you'd be amazing at doing like a meditation video, or doing an informative video about reiki or energy healing
Love you!
Saw a Wu Guanzhong exhibit in Singapore just over a year ago. It was a wonderful experience. Thanks for this.
So Tender, Very Soothing ✨
Yes! Part two! Thank you!
Great video.
I love paintings
strangely the first painting, to me seemed frantic. It looked as though parents were reaching out with their branch arms trying to hold onto their children as they are being blown away violently. Although it should feel soft and comforting, specially with the soft green lightly dancing in the back. It just feels like a windy danger zone to me. I guess it's true that individuals see different things in paintings lol
This is such an interesting and eye opening perspective. Thank you for enlightening.
saphirephoenix23 I see it the exact same way u do. That’s so weird to me.
thanks a lot from heart for sharing
beautiful
I noticed the houses in the picture off in the distance
I would love to listen to more but your soft voice has sent me to sleep
Haiying, can you tell whether he did the green wash before or after the trees?
I could not tell.
yanghaiying Thank You for such a detailed explanation of this painting and the artist-it has absolutely captivated me! Every time I watch this I see something else in the painting I didn’t see before. It reminds me of a painting I fell in love with in one of the galleries on The Pier in San Francisco. My ex tried to get the artist down on the price for several weeks because I was so taken with his work-but the lowest he would agree to was $50K. Although we were comfortable at the time and my ex even offered to take out a loan to get it-I felt it was just too much for that time in our lives. I kept up with the artist for quite a few years and noticed he was offering “Prints” of many of his works. I was so excited to find the painting I had become so attached to and immediately ordered the very reasonable print...disappointment. 😟. As I’m sure, as an artist yourself, you know that a print just doesn’t contain the light and the life that the original does. The original appeared to have its own light emitting from it and the trees and flowers seemed to almost move separate from the rest of the painting-the print had none of that and when I showed it to friends, trying to explain the emotions and feeling that the original contained; their unanimous view was that they just “couldn’t see it” and they weren’t impressed at all.
My son called me an “art snob” not long ago after I declined his offer to purchase me a replacement Sunflower painting that I had lost in the fire last year. I had lost an original, not very expensive but beautiful hand-done copy of one of Van Gogh’s Sunflowers. It was by a local artist who had added her own twist to it and while she isn’t a “professional”-her painting contained that same life and emotion you can only get from an original. I used to collect Sunflower items because I felt they represented Hope; and her painting portrayed that. I just didn’t think the reproduction print that my Son wanted to get me emitted anything except “oh yea, another picture of a Van Gogh painting...”. I guess I AM becoming an “art snob” in my later years... 😂
yanghaiying I was just watching some of Henri Li’s videos before starting a painting session this morning. I hadn’t seen this one, but when I watched it and saw how he did the subtle color with the ink-I immediately thought of THIS painting! I wonder if he painted the green on the BACK after finishing the trees in ink? th-cam.com/video/D9LtUiRqSOk/w-d-xo.html
Also, I may email you a picture-a screenshot of an antique, (18th century) Chinese painting that also captured my attention on Pinterest the other day. Unfortunately, other than the age and saying it was a Chinese winter landscape; it gave no other artist information. What surprised me about it was the obvious TEXTURE. This was the first time I had seen any additional texture on a Chinese brush painting-it looked like snow! (Or more exactly, it looked like the fake spray-on snow some people use to decorate during the holidays. Obviously it wasn’t THAT substance! 😂. ). Any idea what they would use for texture?
感觉你留长头发顯年轻一些
香川広綾 真的吗?
Extra fast glimpse. Life, death, sorrow, human body and psyche.
Paintings should be viewed with different angles, lighting, et cetera.
Fresh air, anatomical sights of lung and kidney blood vessels.
Life, the most fragile thing on earth.
Close view looks quite harsh.