10% OFF EVERYTHING (Including NEW MERCH + Digital Products!) - www.jazzastudios.com - launch sale ENDS SOON! Oh, and the "A" in the merch, stands for ARTY! Arty merch for Arty people!!
When you try to do abstract art, it's not that it is bad, you just don't have much variety. You always tend to go the same direction, try going all sorts of directions and bring in even more textures and movement by using different types of brushes and spatulas. Even scraping away some of the paint that you already put down can leave an interesting effect, especially if you're using a thicker medium. You know how to use negative and positive space, that is something that also can really work well in your favor. These are tips that my college professor gave me when I was dealing with the same kind of problem. My favorite is abstract expressionism, if you look at it, there is so much depth to all the movement within the painting. If you see this then I hope it helps.
Yeah, I agree, (also a look to modernism[history of Art, even suprematism, and constructivism ] will help to understand what are the basic of abstract art, and make it more clear and easy to understand)
You're awesome, Kaylea! Thank you so much for recognizing what seemed amiss and for providing a solution to that minor problem as well. I literally just learned that abstract expressionism is literally what I do for warm ups before I start painting and drawing.
I think a big issue is Jazza wants a subject, but abstract art generally has no subject, the art itself is the subject. Aka, using it to build backgrounds and subjects works, but a lot of abstract art is directionless or disturbed formations, not a cool background with a subject in the foreground like he seems to prefer.
I had a class where we talked Michelangelo and how he had to paint the Sistine chapel ceiling on his back. For my assignment in that class we taped a paper to the bottom of our desks and had to draw. It was really hard and it would be a fun video idea to see you do something like that. Like try painting upside down to get the real Michelangelo experience.
I've seen people put super thick paint in piping bags and use frosting tips to create an array of flowers, let them dry (for like, a week) and then put it all together to create a 3D Bouquet or other paintings. Would LOVE to see you try that!
I wish that he would just watch some tutorials for things and give other artists that he gets these ideas from a little credit. He sees this stuff being made elsewhere and then he decides he wants to figure it out, not learning about it first, and playing around, which is valid, but also I wish he'd learn a bit from others and then share what he learned and credit them. This particular style isn't as big of a deal but sometimes he's working with really complicated stuff that others have spent years perfecting.
@@BelindaShort What credit is there to give exactly? The first impasto painters of the 1400's? It's ridiculous to think you have to credit someone jumping in on (or even starting a trend) a style that's been around for centuries, which spoiler alert, is most of art. As for him actually educating himself a bit before making a practice session into a full on video, I actually dislike most of his content lately for the sake of the craft. Most of it has been looking incredibly rushed and sloppy as of late, but I also understand that the video production is his business. Dude's got his family and his employees families to worry about. Expecting him to spend weeks or simply even days off camera learning a new technique is incredibly unrealistic.
"Maybe I need to go bigger?" This is the question that has haunted this channel since the day it was born... and it's the reason we have the beautifully spectacular mess of a channel we have today. Never change, Jazza. Never change.
Abstract art is all about one big thing: Capturing an emotion or feeling. Doesn’t matter what you do, as long as you look at the piece and feel a complete or specific feeling, then you nailed it!
I think the middle one worked because you weren't trying to draw a picture as such, both the first and last one had an object that could have been easily replaced with normal paint and look just as good (if not better). Would be great to see you go really abstract and embrace some elements of your mop and drip paintings!
The red-to-yellow canvas makes me think of dragon scales, which is what makes it my favorite. That, and the colors being great. Honestly surprised you didn't draw a dragon, as cool as the medium was.
What I really like about your approach is that you use a Play-Experiment-Create approach when you are trying new things. A lot of people confuse the play and experiment bits of the process and they are actually very different.
One helpful way to practice impasto is to do some warm ups before you create (take the tool you are using and swatch some textures and and stokes before you do the final piece) I find that, like with drawing, if you warm up your hand and wrist beforehand it makes it easier to do impasto. Tip #2 if you are working with chunkier or more detailed pieces let it dry a bit then add make more strokes the paint paste will hold its shape better. Tip #3 if you have the problem with the cheap paints (lightening of the pigment) I know some artists that paint on top of the paste after its dry then you get a richer colour on a budget.. Try them out and hopefully they will be helpful to those who want to try
I loved each one for different reasons, The persona of what you described as a soldier was very edgy, serious, moody, and delivers a clear emotion along with a satisfying texture and color palette. As a fan of art and a creator of art who doesnt love a good gradient? the Texture and matte finish it had with those THICC gloops looked great. Lastly the Abstract bird, Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and my favorite way to observe art is to see it next to the artists other paintings, it gives perspective into the person who created the pieces and allows for better appreciation of all the pieces. Loved it. Thanks for always giving your all Jazza & thank you to all the team members that make the videos happen :)
I'm not an artist and also have no idea what you're doing. But I really liked the modelling paste version, looks like icing. My limited "art experience" is simple doodles with lines, knitting, or cake decorating (which I've had the most fun with but don't have an oven in my current home).
@frootie love your comment, someone at work asked if I’m an artist just because I love to be able to spread happiness to my clients at work because I can feel they love art but I got stopped because an actual art instructor will be joining us soon so I being not an actual certified “artist” asked to step aside even before my program gets to start since then I have been wondering if only people who studied arts in schools are artists or anyone who create anything = artists too
Jazza your pieces came out totally fine. I know you're not use to abstract but your 'bird' one is definitely abstract. You created a mood, which is most important for abstract. Your yellow to red one look like a crowd of people to me. And I love your portrait one!
When Jazza just try’s to hype up the satisfaction of the paint during the first bit, can’t help but just cringe but giggle at the same time. I almost love that way only he can make that feeling seem like an old friend ✨
Since white is a tint it can only lighten something wrather then over take it like other colors xan because other colors have shade in it which is why mixing just a little black will darken something extremely and can overtake the color
the reason professional paints are expensive is because they have more pigment in them. Lots of pigment is key and that is why the professionals use high quality paints.
That's why there are usually two kinds of white for all or almost all artist professional paints: one is Zinc white, more transparent, and tge other is Titanium White, which us more opaque. It's the pigment being more opaque, not just the end product. The Zinc white is often called "mixing white" because it's more useful in mixing. I would assume the impasto medium is relatively transparent on its own.
Did you know Bob Ross was a drill sergeant while in the service? That's why he used his quiet voice. Once he got out of the service, he swore never to yell again.
ALL RIGHT, MAGGOTS! RIGHT HERE, WE ARE MAKING A HAPPY LITTLE MOUNTAIN! JUST GOING TO TAKE SOME OF THE BROWN WITH A DAB OF GREY AND JUST LIKE THIS! REMEMBER, THERE ARE NO MISTAKES, JUST HAPPY ACCIDENTS! I DON'T KNOW WHAT I'VE BEEN TOLD, NEXT WEEK WILL BE A SUNSET GOLD!
This is great! As epic and awesome as the recent videos have been, I've missed just seeing Jazza talking to the camera and being there with him as he "mucks around" with stuff and tries new things - being there with him at the table for the process. Love it! Thanks, Jazza! Also- I love the warrior in the fire. It prompts me to want to write about him. What's his story? What has brought him to this moment? Is this a moment of defeat or just after a hard-won and costly victory? So good!
the portrait you made looks awesome!! I'm more into surrealism rather than abstract myself, but I have a friend who creates really magnificent abstract art. And I think she would agree that you nailed that warrior portrait!
You can also paint on the impasto in its original form and paint over it with your paints after! havn't finished the vid yet so maybe you did but if not, that's my preferred way of using it :)
One thing that helps me with abstract concepts is to picture the final image/work in front of a massive, plain wall. How is it going to look in a blank space (light or dark)? Or how would it look in a crowded room? On a crowded wall. The work itself may be great, or bad, but the context of its placement might strengthen it after or influence the ideas before, when conceptualizing it.
Hey Jazza! I’m assuming you may not see this, but I just wanted to say I’m really glad to have grown up with you and your channel. You’ve truly fostered my creativity and willingness to take risks and try new things. Thank you for everything you’ve done. 🥰
Hey Jazza! There is another really cool way to paint. Try these things called paint pours. Mix acrylic paint with glue( eyeball it) and add a little water and a few drops of silicon. Then pour onto the canvas and let it dry for a long time. Pouring with the canvas flat is the best way. It comes out really cool!
I would love to see you experiment with art in the style of Eric Carle! Painting textures on tissue paper and cutting those into shapes to make the final artwork.
I think a big part of the art form is the blending texture- maybe stepping back from structure and let the shapes be helped with the art form instead of trying to make closed shapes like the dove? Idk what I’m doing
I read something bout modeling paste that they are not to be mixed with paints but rather are applied directly in a gessoed canvas, shape em by the texture you want to achieve, let it dry, and sand it after if necessary. After all of it, you can lay your paints there. Modeling paste truly lightens your paint if you mix em.
Haha, this was great. I appreciate that you share something despite not knowing what you're really doing, but trying to have fun with it and learn something new at the same time. I learned something new, that I can make my own impasto paints with simple ingredients. Thanks Jazza!
this is the jazza i love! humble with sense of humor and sharing good and bad experiences!! good job man i loved and enjoyed this video more than those u do voice overs
I LOVE the modelling paste one. The texture is just chef's kiss. The piece itself (with the light yellow at the bottom) looks like loads of people in a crowd and I find it really appealing.
I would love to see him try to make the same art (something simple and repeatable) with all the different mediums to really compare them! Great video!! Yes, it was super satisfying :D
I think the guy in the storm impasto painting is the best one of all. I too am learning impasto based on Van Gogh's style. I am currently painting a series of animals from the Chinese Zodiac as a way to practice impasto. At the end of the day, art is art, there's no wrong answer because beauty is in the eye of the beholder. But also practice makes perfect.
new idea: try scultured florals with icing bags (like for confectioner purposes) The artist abstracts by adrienne does beautiful floral bouquet with really heavy heavy acrylics.
I've seen a trend on TikTok where artists mix very fine sand in with their paints. It gives an impasto and grainy texture that they use to make really cool artwork. It would be cool to see you try that out, if you want.
This looks so fun! I think it would be cool for you to go bigger and thicker (excuse the innuendo) I’ve seen people make paintings that are pretty much 3d sculptures
From what I have experienced, abstract comes from having fun and constantly playing with the medium and adjusting until you look at it and think anything more will ruin it, you basically just need to start with some colors you like, and not thing, just do, and you can creat some cool abstract pieces, the best are ones that start as nothing, but then you start to see something in it so you bring it out just a bit more so others can see it too.
Love the video! You should try an extremely thick acrylic paint. Gaffery art materials have a higher line of thick paints that you sculpt with rather than use a brush.
Honestly I have wanted to play with this form of painting for so long...but the cost investment is hell..especially if you want to do any decent sizes ..... 😔
The orange ombre is my fave because it reminds me of that cool lazy hack animation style to fill in background charaters like a baseball statium.. I love that because of how simple it is it leaves so much to the imagination, I imagine all the faces, expressions what they are eating, if they have hair, no hair or hats...i could go on and on I just *LOVE* it
I really enjoy watching you make literally anything. This video makes me want to create and make. We are our own hardest critics. Thank you for making my creative brain excited.
I would really like to see you do a huge painting, something really abstract and borderline “dumb” but then take it to a legit art show or auction house and see how much money you could sell it for! Like see if you can somehow get a million dollars for a painting lol then maybe give a lot of the money to charity or something 👍🏻
The second painting was definitely my favorite! The colors and textures just looked so cool! I kinda wonder if you’re just over thinking things. When you just try to do what colors compliment each other it looks cool. Honestly I wonder if you would have better luck with it blindfolded or some other limitation. That could be cool!
Thank you for sharing this experiment. As a middle school art teacher on a shoe-string budget, it’s always nice to know that there are ways to create lessons with materials I can create myself.
These new shirts look so much better than the old ones (in my opinion). The old ones looked like the kind you would buy at walmart in the kids section. Never what I thought an art youtuber would make. These new ones are 10/10
So I think that maybe you're being too tight and refined. Impasto is more of a suggestion of subject and overworking is so easy to do. Maybe try giving yourself an extremely limited time to do a canvas, like a minute or two to force yourself to only do the most basic shapes and rely on texture, hue, and tone to convey the subject and to limit dangers of overworking as you can't work on one area for long.
The way those colors are in the middle of blending looks like ocean waves, and doing something like that inspires me to try painting like that. (And that’s coming from a bone frequent painter)
... I think I'll watch this when I'm _not_ sat on the toilet with my kids shouting thru the wall asking why Dad is listening to moaning Australian men 😐
I'm so glad I ordered my "I'm an adult" sweatshirt like 2 days ago then 😂😂 I got the T-shirt for myself, my boyfriend, and my mom like a year ago. It's the only merch I've ever gotten from an influencer, but I absolutely loved it. I'll miss it, but I'm so glad you made merch that you're proud of, the new designs are beautiful 💖
Knife painting is so great. When I was in high school i did an earth day project where I painted a tree frog on a moldy log, and was able to make it look almost real with this method. So much fun and so easy
for the modelling paste people usually make 3d art with them by mixing them with paint and putting them in piping bags creating flowers/cute fruit designs and more !! u should check this out
I would love to see you learn more about and do abstract art. Nice to see someone else struggle for a change and curious how you would approach improving.
Awesome fire scales! the texture and vibrant colours are beautiful. The jazza punky portrait is great too, I like the colour again to make it pop out as well as the direction it all seemed to flow, diagonal. I liked the direction of the paint haha
Hey jazza! I just wanna say thank you for all of the inspiration to use different art styles! U really have inspired me to mess around in different media and I wouldn’t be the artist I am today ❤
the gradient is really cool. if you hang it with the darker colours on the top, the shapes the tool created look like people. just one big anonymous crowd in the sunset or something
My favorite is still wet on wet oils, ala, Bob Ross/Bill Alexander. The nuance needed to master it takes time but it is so enjoyable to lay down a beautiful landscape in minutes vs days. I do love adding depth to more traditional paintings and having so many little details to bring a piece together but from a fun and enjoyable style, the wet on wet wins it for me. Probably because I don't really like all the abstract as much. Just tossing around colors probably is pretty satisfying ;)
Jazza's face when he said that he is going mad with creativity is just so funny!! Love ur art it. is amazing!! abstract art is a lot different to any other art form but it can still be really fun!
I feel like the secret is overlapping for the texture. When you were doing the feathers on the bird, there were really big gaps. Feathers don't do that. The ending of the first layers of strokes should be covered by the second layer. You can either stretch out the strokes, or bunch the layers in closer, but if you don't bury the ends...it's basically just dots.
the first one with the person was actually really great. Theres this one artist who does scenery and townscapes using really vibrant mixed colors all with a pallete knives that I really LOVE. The textures and colors look so cool and it always has this air of realism to them like it just finished raining and the colors and part of the reflections on the street. The second one looked like really cool scales and could be cool for sculpting, costume design and cosplay applications. Maybe even if you wanted to decorate/detail one of those toy cars kids use their feet or pedal around the yard, or one with a battery in it. Thatd be cool.
10% OFF EVERYTHING (Including NEW MERCH + Digital Products!) - www.jazzastudios.com - launch sale ENDS SOON!
Oh, and the "A" in the merch, stands for ARTY! Arty merch for Arty people!!
First to reply, nice
Wow, you really want to make that ARTY word a thing.
your really cool, jazza. Us australians really are the best
Hi
When you try to do abstract art, it's not that it is bad, you just don't have much variety. You always tend to go the same direction, try going all sorts of directions and bring in even more textures and movement by using different types of brushes and spatulas. Even scraping away some of the paint that you already put down can leave an interesting effect, especially if you're using a thicker medium. You know how to use negative and positive space, that is something that also can really work well in your favor. These are tips that my college professor gave me when I was dealing with the same kind of problem. My favorite is abstract expressionism, if you look at it, there is so much depth to all the movement within the painting. If you see this then I hope it helps.
Said like a poet.
Thanks for the tips!
Yeah, I agree, (also a look to modernism[history of Art, even suprematism, and constructivism ] will help to understand what are the basic of abstract art, and make it more clear and easy to understand)
You're awesome, Kaylea! Thank you so much for recognizing what seemed amiss and for providing a solution to that minor problem as well. I literally just learned that abstract expressionism is literally what I do for warm ups before I start painting and drawing.
I think a big issue is Jazza wants a subject, but abstract art generally has no subject, the art itself is the subject.
Aka, using it to build backgrounds and subjects works, but a lot of abstract art is directionless or disturbed formations, not a cool background with a subject in the foreground like he seems to prefer.
I had a class where we talked Michelangelo and how he had to paint the Sistine chapel ceiling on his back. For my assignment in that class we taped a paper to the bottom of our desks and had to draw. It was really hard and it would be a fun video idea to see you do something like that. Like try painting upside down to get the real Michelangelo experience.
He could paint ceiling of one of rooms
Cool idea!
@@kalinaszek Yeah!
I like your thinking! It'd be fun to watch as well as I'm genuinely curious how tough/ fun it'd be!
He did paint upside down once
I've seen people put super thick paint in piping bags and use frosting tips to create an array of flowers, let them dry (for like, a week) and then put it all together to create a 3D Bouquet or other paintings. Would LOVE to see you try that!
I wish that he would just watch some tutorials for things and give other artists that he gets these ideas from a little credit. He sees this stuff being made elsewhere and then he decides he wants to figure it out, not learning about it first, and playing around, which is valid, but also I wish he'd learn a bit from others and then share what he learned and credit them. This particular style isn't as big of a deal but sometimes he's working with really complicated stuff that others have spent years perfecting.
That seems pretty cool!
Fantastic idea!!
Heck, has Jazza ever tried decorating a cake? I'd love to see him do something more traditional and a hyper realistic cake.
@@BelindaShort What credit is there to give exactly? The first impasto painters of the 1400's? It's ridiculous to think you have to credit someone jumping in on (or even starting a trend) a style that's been around for centuries, which spoiler alert, is most of art.
As for him actually educating himself a bit before making a practice session into a full on video, I actually dislike most of his content lately for the sake of the craft. Most of it has been looking incredibly rushed and sloppy as of late, but I also understand that the video production is his business. Dude's got his family and his employees families to worry about. Expecting him to spend weeks or simply even days off camera learning a new technique is incredibly unrealistic.
If love to see this!!!!
"Maybe I need to go bigger?"
This is the question that has haunted this channel since the day it was born...
and it's the reason we have the beautifully spectacular mess of a channel we have today.
Never change, Jazza. Never change.
I love that he says, "Idk what I'm doing" but made an amazing warrior in fire... Love it Jazza... LOVE IT!!!
I guess that‘s what lots of experience with all kinds of materials and methods is good for.
Abstract art is all about one big thing:
Capturing an emotion or feeling.
Doesn’t matter what you do, as long as you look at the piece and feel a complete or specific feeling, then you nailed it!
Perfectly said
I think the middle one worked because you weren't trying to draw a picture as such, both the first and last one had an object that could have been easily replaced with normal paint and look just as good (if not better). Would be great to see you go really abstract and embrace some elements of your mop and drip paintings!
The red-to-yellow canvas makes me think of dragon scales, which is what makes it my favorite. That, and the colors being great. Honestly surprised you didn't draw a dragon, as cool as the medium was.
What I really like about your approach is that you use a Play-Experiment-Create approach when you are trying new things. A lot of people confuse the play and experiment bits of the process and they are actually very different.
One helpful way to practice impasto is to do some warm ups before you create (take the tool you are using and swatch some textures and and stokes before you do the final piece) I find that, like with drawing, if you warm up your hand and wrist beforehand it makes it easier to do impasto. Tip #2 if you are working with chunkier or more detailed pieces let it dry a bit then add make more strokes the paint paste will hold its shape better. Tip #3 if you have the problem with the cheap paints (lightening of the pigment) I know some artists that paint on top of the paste after its dry then you get a richer colour on a budget.. Try them out and hopefully they will be helpful to those who want to try
I loved each one for different reasons, The persona of what you described as a soldier was very edgy, serious, moody, and delivers a clear emotion along with a satisfying texture and color palette. As a fan of art and a creator of art who doesnt love a good gradient? the Texture and matte finish it had with those THICC gloops looked great. Lastly the Abstract bird, Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and my favorite way to observe art is to see it next to the artists other paintings, it gives perspective into the person who created the pieces and allows for better appreciation of all the pieces. Loved it. Thanks for always giving your all Jazza & thank you to all the team members that make the videos happen :)
I'm not an artist and also have no idea what you're doing. But I really liked the modelling paste version, looks like icing.
My limited "art experience" is simple doodles with lines, knitting, or cake decorating (which I've had the most fun with but don't have an oven in my current home).
You can always buy a premade cake and decorate it yourself? Or muffins, and ice them?
@frootie love your comment, someone at work asked if I’m an artist just because I love to be able to spread happiness to my clients at work because I can feel they love art but I got stopped because an actual art instructor will be joining us soon so I being not an actual certified “artist” asked to step aside even before my program gets to start since then I have been wondering if only people who studied arts in schools are artists or anyone who create anything = artists too
ur definitely an artist! U create art!✨
@frootie thanks dear, oops i should change my words in regards that..! thanks for reminder!
Jazza your pieces came out totally fine. I know you're not use to abstract but your 'bird' one is definitely abstract. You created a mood, which is most important for abstract. Your yellow to red one look like a crowd of people to me. And I love your portrait one!
Garreth is like that one side character in a TV show that everyone loves but doesn't get much screen time
When Jazza just try’s to hype up the satisfaction of the paint during the first bit, can’t help but just cringe but giggle at the same time. I almost love that way only he can make that feeling seem like an old friend ✨
It's mind blowing to me how you can mix so much white into a little bit of paint and it still keeps its color. How
Since white is a tint it can only lighten something wrather then over take it like other colors xan because other colors have shade in it which is why mixing just a little black will darken something extremely and can overtake the color
the reason professional paints are expensive is because they have more pigment in them. Lots of pigment is key and that is why the professionals use high quality paints.
It also depends on how opaque your white paint is.
That's why there are usually two kinds of white for all or almost all artist professional paints: one is Zinc white, more transparent, and tge other is Titanium White, which us more opaque. It's the pigment being more opaque, not just the end product. The Zinc white is often called "mixing white" because it's more useful in mixing. I would assume the impasto medium is relatively transparent on its own.
Did you know Bob Ross was a drill sergeant while in the service? That's why he used his quiet voice. Once he got out of the service, he swore never to yell again.
I was going to post this, but I'm glad someone else did
ALL RIGHT, MAGGOTS! RIGHT HERE, WE ARE MAKING A HAPPY LITTLE MOUNTAIN! JUST GOING TO TAKE SOME OF THE BROWN WITH A DAB OF GREY AND JUST LIKE THIS! REMEMBER, THERE ARE NO MISTAKES, JUST HAPPY ACCIDENTS! I DON'T KNOW WHAT I'VE BEEN TOLD, NEXT WEEK WILL BE A SUNSET GOLD!
@@MrChristianDT Amazing
@@MrChristianDT hehehe ...
Jazza + Bob Ross voice + painting knife = ultimate satisfaction
I love the orange-yellow one
The texture, the simplicity, the wabi-sabi…
This is great! As epic and awesome as the recent videos have been, I've missed just seeing Jazza talking to the camera and being there with him as he "mucks around" with stuff and tries new things - being there with him at the table for the process. Love it! Thanks, Jazza!
Also- I love the warrior in the fire. It prompts me to want to write about him. What's his story? What has brought him to this moment? Is this a moment of defeat or just after a hard-won and costly victory? So good!
the portrait you made looks awesome!! I'm more into surrealism rather than abstract myself, but I have a friend who creates really magnificent abstract art. And I think she would agree that you nailed that warrior portrait!
You can also paint on the impasto in its original form and paint over it with your paints after! havn't finished the vid yet so maybe you did but if not, that's my preferred way of using it :)
One thing that helps me with abstract concepts is to picture the final image/work in front of a massive, plain wall. How is it going to look in a blank space (light or dark)? Or how would it look in a crowded room? On a crowded wall. The work itself may be great, or bad, but the context of its placement might strengthen it after or influence the ideas before, when conceptualizing it.
Hey Jazza! I’m assuming you may not see this, but I just wanted to say I’m really glad to have grown up with you and your channel. You’ve truly fostered my creativity and willingness to take risks and try new things. Thank you for everything you’ve done. 🥰
I like the orange painting best with light on top. It looks like kinda like feathers. A big impasto rising Phoenix would be awesome!💛🧡❤
I love the portrait! That looks amazing, frankly!
4:10 OH MY GOD! JAZZA, you are my favorite person ever. Dude, I feel this minute so hard.
You can use impasto in oil paint with icing bags and cake piping tips to get some cool effects
Thank you for being the first comment to actual spell out the word 'impasto" so I could be certain of what he was saying.
Hey Jazza! There is another really cool way to paint. Try these things called paint pours. Mix acrylic paint with glue( eyeball it) and add a little water and a few drops of silicon. Then pour onto the canvas and let it dry for a long time. Pouring with the canvas flat is the best way. It comes out really cool!
I would love to see you experiment with art in the style of Eric Carle! Painting textures on tissue paper and cutting those into shapes to make the final artwork.
I did that as a kid and loved it.
I think a big part of the art form is the blending texture- maybe stepping back from structure and let the shapes be helped with the art form instead of trying to make closed shapes like the dove? Idk what I’m doing
Its super funny how I always get an art add anytime I watch one of Jazza's vids. And I never see it anywhere else
I only see similar adds on Baumgartner Restoration
I read something bout modeling paste that they are not to be mixed with paints but rather are applied directly in a gessoed canvas, shape em by the texture you want to achieve, let it dry, and sand it after if necessary. After all of it, you can lay your paints there. Modeling paste truly lightens your paint if you mix em.
Haha, this was great. I appreciate that you share something despite not knowing what you're really doing, but trying to have fun with it and learn something new at the same time. I learned something new, that I can make my own impasto paints with simple ingredients. Thanks Jazza!
this is the jazza i love! humble with sense of humor and sharing good and bad experiences!! good job man i loved and enjoyed this video more than those u do voice overs
Hey jazza been following you for quite awhile and just wanted to say thank you keeping me on track in my art journey.
I love the camerawork where they pan to things off camera as Jazza explains it, but not in a ‘TH-cam zoom” way
The Gareth and Jazza banter makes me laugh. Becoming one of the best comedy duos lol.
I got the same jazza thing you did is it a scam
@@ArchaicHammer nah it's a scam. Jazza has a tick against his name.
@@shamroc34 thank you so much have a great day
I LOVE the modelling paste one. The texture is just chef's kiss. The piece itself (with the light yellow at the bottom) looks like loads of people in a crowd and I find it really appealing.
I would love to see him try to make the same art (something simple and repeatable) with all the different mediums to really compare them!
Great video!! Yes, it was super satisfying :D
First Jazza vid I’ve watched in a while and now I’m heading back to binge the rest 😂😂🫶🏻
I'd be interested in the drying time of all of these and also how they hold up over time!
I think the guy in the storm impasto painting is the best one of all. I too am learning impasto based on Van Gogh's style. I am currently painting a series of animals from the Chinese Zodiac as a way to practice impasto. At the end of the day, art is art, there's no wrong answer because beauty is in the eye of the beholder. But also practice makes perfect.
new idea: try scultured florals with icing bags (like for confectioner purposes) The artist abstracts by adrienne does beautiful floral bouquet with really heavy heavy acrylics.
I love how your immediate inclination is to "go bigger". Love it mate
I've seen a trend on TikTok where artists mix very fine sand in with their paints. It gives an impasto and grainy texture that they use to make really cool artwork. It would be cool to see you try that out, if you want.
This looks so fun! I think it would be cool for you to go bigger and thicker (excuse the innuendo) I’ve seen people make paintings that are pretty much 3d sculptures
From what I have experienced, abstract comes from having fun and constantly playing with the medium and adjusting until you look at it and think anything more will ruin it, you basically just need to start with some colors you like, and not thing, just do, and you can creat some cool abstract pieces, the best are ones that start as nothing, but then you start to see something in it so you bring it out just a bit more so others can see it too.
Hahahaha. When loud people try making ASMR for the first time. XD You're wonderful, Jazza. Don't ever change.
Love the video! You should try an extremely thick acrylic paint. Gaffery art materials have a higher line of thick paints that you sculpt with rather than use a brush.
Honestly I have wanted to play with this form of painting for so long...but the cost investment is hell..especially if you want to do any decent sizes ..... 😔
I'm gonna try oil with acrylic. My white tube is already half empty..
The orange ombre is my fave because it reminds me of that cool lazy hack animation style to fill in background charaters like a baseball statium.. I love that because of how simple it is it leaves so much to the imagination, I imagine all the faces, expressions what they are eating, if they have hair, no hair or hats...i could go on and on I just *LOVE* it
I really enjoy watching you make literally anything. This video makes me want to create and make. We are our own hardest critics. Thank you for making my creative brain excited.
The art medium sounds like "impostor" to me and now I can't unhear it😭
I like doing art just because it's satisfying to draw lines. Lines are my friends!
I would really like to see you do a huge painting, something really abstract and borderline “dumb” but then take it to a legit art show or auction house and see how much money you could sell it for! Like see if you can somehow get a million dollars for a painting lol then maybe give a lot of the money to charity or something 👍🏻
The second painting was definitely my favorite! The colors and textures just looked so cool! I kinda wonder if you’re just over thinking things. When you just try to do what colors compliment each other it looks cool. Honestly I wonder if you would have better luck with it blindfolded or some other limitation. That could be cool!
Jazza: "in conclusion.... i still have no idea what I'm doing..."
A goal every youtuber needs for merch is it to be good enough that people who don't know u would still buy and u nailed that ur merch is Amazing
The sound at the start literally gives me goosebumps XD Not in the good, satifying way though T_T
Thank you for sharing this experiment. As a middle school art teacher on a shoe-string budget, it’s always nice to know that there are ways to create lessons with materials I can create myself.
These new shirts look so much better than the old ones (in my opinion). The old ones looked like the kind you would buy at walmart in the kids section. Never what I thought an art youtuber would make. These new ones are 10/10
the last painting looks alot like a man with wings for arms or an angel falling
paint a Pirate ship in the waves fighting the Kracken in a storm! that would look sweet impasto
I'm gonna be honest. The last one you made is my favorite. It reminds me of an angel.
So I think that maybe you're being too tight and refined. Impasto is more of a suggestion of subject and overworking is so easy to do. Maybe try giving yourself an extremely limited time to do a canvas, like a minute or two to force yourself to only do the most basic shapes and rely on texture, hue, and tone to convey the subject and to limit dangers of overworking as you can't work on one area for long.
the modeling paste is actually uses marble as both its thickener and colorant, so it is sort of like truly sculpting and painting at the same time
3 mins also you are really awesome
30 mins
I so late 😢
The way those colors are in the middle of blending looks like ocean waves, and doing something like that inspires me to try painting like that.
(And that’s coming from a bone frequent painter)
... I think I'll watch this when I'm _not_ sat on the toilet with my kids shouting thru the wall asking why Dad is listening to moaning Australian men 😐
I think that the modeling plaster and paint is essentially making a wet fresco, so if you want to go bigger put it on a sheet of drywall.
Instead of bigger...maybe just...more? Practice y'know
I'm so glad I ordered my "I'm an adult" sweatshirt like 2 days ago then 😂😂 I got the T-shirt for myself, my boyfriend, and my mom like a year ago. It's the only merch I've ever gotten from an influencer, but I absolutely loved it. I'll miss it, but I'm so glad you made merch that you're proud of, the new designs are beautiful 💖
Hoi
Knife painting is so great. When I was in high school i did an earth day project where I painted a tree frog on a moldy log, and was able to make it look almost real with this method. So much fun and so easy
1min
The yellow-orange one looks like a crowd of silhouetted people and it's SO PLEASING
hio
for the modelling paste people usually make 3d art with them by mixing them with paint and putting them in piping bags creating flowers/cute fruit designs and more !! u should check this out
SECOND COMMENT LEATS GO
I would love to see you learn more about and do abstract art. Nice to see someone else struggle for a change and curious how you would approach improving.
first
second lol
This is the first time I've seen you create art on the level of an amateur beginner, like a child or mr normalo. You humbled yourself
orange painting looks like a crowd ow people no matter if you look at it upside down or not. Reminds me Cornelius Escher a little bit.
Awesome fire scales! the texture and vibrant colours are beautiful.
The jazza punky portrait is great too, I like the colour again to make it pop out as well as the direction it all seemed to flow, diagonal. I liked the direction of the paint haha
Hey jazza! I just wanna say thank you for all of the inspiration to use different art styles! U really have inspired me to mess around in different media and I wouldn’t be the artist I am today ❤
The gradient one, when the red is on the top, looks like a crowd of people. I like it.
the gradient is really cool. if you hang it with the darker colours on the top, the shapes the tool created look like people. just one big anonymous crowd in the sunset or something
I love how you use yourself in most of your merchandise pictures!
My favorite is still wet on wet oils, ala, Bob Ross/Bill Alexander. The nuance needed to master it takes time but it is so enjoyable to lay down a beautiful landscape in minutes vs days. I do love adding depth to more traditional paintings and having so many little details to bring a piece together but from a fun and enjoyable style, the wet on wet wins it for me. Probably because I don't really like all the abstract as much. Just tossing around colors probably is pretty satisfying ;)
Loved the piece done with modeling paste. It spoke out to me as a crowd of people with the gradient and different outlines made by the tool
Jazza's face when he said that he is going mad with creativity is just so funny!! Love ur art it. is amazing!! abstract art is a lot different to any other art form but it can still be really fun!
So talented I love your videos I’ve been watching your video for so long keep on being great
Just started this video and I'm about to fall asleep watching this😴😴
Can you try the paint style where you sand away the top to reveal the art and detail underneath!!??!!??!!
Annoying but consistent at the end there. Love it ❤
I feel like the secret is overlapping for the texture. When you were doing the feathers on the bird, there were really big gaps. Feathers don't do that. The ending of the first layers of strokes should be covered by the second layer. You can either stretch out the strokes, or bunch the layers in closer, but if you don't bury the ends...it's basically just dots.
the first one with the person was actually really great. Theres this one artist who does scenery and townscapes using really vibrant mixed colors all with a pallete knives that I really LOVE. The textures and colors look so cool and it always has this air of realism to them like it just finished raining and the colors and part of the reflections on the street. The second one looked like really cool scales and could be cool for sculpting, costume design and cosplay applications. Maybe even if you wanted to decorate/detail one of those toy cars kids use their feet or pedal around the yard, or one with a battery in it. Thatd be cool.
Jazza,
Try using it with acrylic paints & letting the layers dry before adding more. It doesn't seem to lend itself to a wet on wet method.