Beautiful harmony and puzzling calm arrived at through purely random micro events across a surface, the creative engagement solely resultant on where the initial medium is placed, how fast or slow and the direction of the tool is used. Simply magical.
I stumbled across this video in my recommendations. I am still numb after watching it. While several thoughts are bouncing back and forth in my head, the one that has me utterly perplexed is why Dombroff Productions produce more of these stunning videos, particularly about artists? Emily and her staff, like Casselman, have created a work of art. Please give the world more of this. Please.
Stanley Casselman is a curious mind, intelligent, dedicated, and creative. His process is varied. Where the art fails is that the process is the subject and the resulting work barely breaks the surface of being decorative.
Beautiful authentic story … thank you for sharing. Stanley’s work is simply a masterpiece. The innocence and magnificence of art remains independent of who created it.
Thanks for showing that the practice of art is, like a children's game, a mixture of fantasy, adventure, discovery, gratification, part laboratory and discipline, part mud mess. Most importantly for me, I see here the possibility of adult respect for and preservation of the sensibility of the child.
Well, you know the saying in the Art World "Good artists copy, Grate Artists Steal" ! Ricter will indubitably still command a higher value and if lucky drive Ricter's squeegy art even higher. A good example of marketing and branding.
Wow !!! I have no words to say how much I enjoyed this . Not to be compared to no other , Stanley Casselman paintings are Art History in the making !!!! Thank You !
every abex painter's fantasy - to have a huge studio space with gallons and gallons of paint to fling around and play with! (With all the bunny suits for studio assistants and visitors being an added perk!)😉
This was really well done. Getting the feeling from the artwork and the man himself while telling the story. Very inspiring. Goes to show how 1 leap of faith to may the fake changed Stanley's life.
Awesome, I'm giving architecture a break and now painting and making modern classic furniture...your work is sublime and jealous for your studio...glorious glorious..
I love the controlled randomness of his methods and the finished paintings! Right now, my brain is trying to imagine ways to incorporate the method into my own work. I'm so glad I came across this video. Thank you for making it.
This is pretty darn cool. Thank you for sharing. The name Stanley Casselman is now firmly in mind! Great work sir! Keep going and keep innovating! There is more to do and you know it!!!
I loved the video, especially how it talks about his inspiration and artistic evolution. I wish they could make more videos about artists. It's not easy to find videos that last more than 15 minutes about artists doing their work. Thanks for sharing, and I'm glad I got to know this artist thanks to this video.
Wow! Never heard of Stanley and came across this by a youtube rabbit hole. Love his story and the process. Would love to hang and visit his studio one day. In a weird way I can see a collaboration with one of my characters.
Wow! First comment? “If it doesn’t sing, if it isn’t magnificent on some level, the world doesn’t need it.” What a wonderful video. Stanley seems like a really cool guy. And so well spoken. I love the nature vs nurture metaphor. Physics and chemistry determine the details, but the high level approach and execution is his. Much like life, no? And the randomness is not only tolerated, it is celebrated. It is the key!
I know he paints directly onto the silkscreen for this style of painting, but how does it go from what looks like being suspended in a large frame to being mounted on what I assume is wood with the paint wrapping around the edges? Is he just overshooting his end dimensions and then wrapping it on the frame when it's dry? I'm super curious to try this at home.
Beautifully done short mini doc. Watching the process carefully it still makes me question the definition of art. Is wiping pools of paint across a screen with a huge squeegee the work of an artist? Talking about how the work is like the hand of god leaves me scratching my head. Maybe it is. Or maybe I’m just too old.
perhaps there is still a chance this guy can grow out of the shadow of this gherhardt person, he would need to improve and evolve his style to become something beyond the looks of similar art styles
The article seems to express shock that a Richter could be created in 2 hours, lol, it’s paint thrown on a canvas and spread with a squeegee. Who couldn’t complete one in 2 hours? Art is almost dead.
No, this has nothing to do with nature, it’s a man in a city making “art” with man made tools and materials, lol, just cause there is green involved doesn’t make it connected with nature. But I understand having to come up with some kind of explanation for art with so little depth and so easily created.
Beautiful harmony and puzzling calm arrived at through purely random micro events across a surface, the creative engagement solely resultant on where the initial medium is placed, how fast or slow and the direction of the tool is used. Simply magical.
I stumbled across this video in my recommendations. I am still numb after watching it. While several thoughts are bouncing back and forth in my head, the one that has me utterly perplexed is why Dombroff Productions produce more of these stunning videos, particularly about artists? Emily and her staff, like Casselman, have created a work of art. Please give the world more of this. Please.
Stanley Casselman is a curious mind, intelligent, dedicated, and creative. His process is varied. Where the art fails is that the process is the subject and the resulting work barely breaks the surface of being decorative.
Beautiful authentic story … thank you for sharing. Stanley’s work is simply a masterpiece. The innocence and magnificence of art remains independent of who created it.
Stanley is the most honest artist and friend I know. So conclusing all this. Big hug!
15 minutes felt like a beautiful hour ❤
13:40 Another great quote - if it’s not magnificent on some level in then world doesn’t need it
the come toJesus moment in NY art museums, the artist in all of us knows well. brilliant work Stanley C
Thanks for showing that the practice of art is, like a children's game, a mixture of fantasy, adventure, discovery, gratification, part laboratory and discipline, part mud mess. Most importantly for me, I see here the possibility of adult respect for and preservation of the sensibility of the child.
Humility with an edge of punk rock surely goes a long way!
Love the later stuff. Has an organic nature. A surprise in every creation. Simply beautiful.
Guys legit. Intuitive experimentation always makes the best art.
Well, you know the saying in the Art World "Good artists copy, Grate Artists Steal" ! Ricter will indubitably still command a higher value and if lucky drive Ricter's squeegy art even higher. A good example of marketing and branding.
Wow !!! I have no words to say how much I enjoyed this . Not to be compared to no other , Stanley Casselman paintings are Art History in the making !!!! Thank You !
every abex painter's fantasy - to have a huge studio space with gallons and gallons of paint to fling around and play with! (With all the bunny suits for studio assistants and visitors being an added perk!)😉
Love seeing the process of Casselman’s style, so inspiring.
🕊 Thank you so much for this level of inspiration.
This was really well done. Getting the feeling from the artwork and the man himself while telling the story. Very inspiring. Goes to show how 1 leap of faith to may the fake changed Stanley's life.
Interesting paintings!!!! I love hearing "That was a come to Jesus moment". Jesus is my favorite person. Thanks for this video! USA
Thank you.
I totally get this artists soul.
Thank you for your soul.
Your achievements are astounding!
Awesome, I'm giving architecture a break and now painting and making modern classic furniture...your work is sublime and jealous for your studio...glorious glorious..
I love the controlled randomness of his methods and the finished paintings! Right now, my brain is trying to imagine ways to incorporate the method into my own work. I'm so glad I came across this video. Thank you for making it.
This is pretty darn cool. Thank you for sharing. The name Stanley Casselman is now firmly in mind! Great work sir! Keep going and keep innovating! There is more to do and you know it!!!
I loved the video, especially how it talks about his inspiration and artistic evolution.
I wish they could make more videos about artists.
It's not easy to find videos that last more than 15 minutes about artists doing their work.
Thanks for sharing, and I'm glad I got to know this artist thanks to this video.
Beautiful process! Much different from what I do, mesmerising and surreal. Love it!
Stunning at 9:24
Well filmed. Love listening to that story.
This video is encouraging.
I am in wow!
Nice work and process. Everything said is so true.
its like watching the electrocardiogram of a moment in time.
Awsome work; studio; methodology and narrative
I love Gerhard Richter and he's teknik but, I think to it can evolve.
Just terrific! Thank you for posting.
Beautiful paintings, i love them
Beautiful process and result.
Wow. Incredible.
Wonderful!
Stunning! I love it!
Thanks for sharing this! Beautiful work! ❤
This randomly came up.
Watched it
Excellent 👌🏼
Wow! Never heard of Stanley and came across this by a youtube rabbit hole. Love his story and the process. Would love to hang and visit his studio one day. In a weird way I can see a collaboration with one of my characters.
Fascinating insight into the methods at play- thank you!
Dude, WOW!!!!!
Looks like fun, and such a delight for the eye.
But how wondervul to gain that audience! The chance to show them YOUR work and introduce them to yourself as artist.
Thank you for sharing
Really enjoyed this short doc.
Beautiful
Fantástico!!!
2:30 best quote
This is amazing...what kind of paint did he use
Wow! First comment?
“If it doesn’t sing, if it isn’t magnificent on some level, the world doesn’t need it.”
What a wonderful video. Stanley seems like a really cool guy. And so well spoken. I love the nature vs nurture metaphor. Physics and chemistry determine the details, but the high level approach and execution is his. Much like life, no? And the randomness is not only tolerated, it is celebrated. It is the key!
bravo, fantastic video!
This is a great video. Love the artwork.
amazing, this made my day, thanks
I took silkscreening in highschool. Is he laying the silkscreen over a substrate such as canvas? Or is he just painting directly onto the silkscreen?
Sublime ♾️
Nice.
Is the silk screen will be the canvas?
❤❤❤
No body knows. Only time will tell.
Amazing work. I am wondering if the silkscreen is the surface that becomes the final work, or does the artist silkscreen onto a canvas?
I know he paints directly onto the silkscreen for this style of painting, but how does it go from what looks like being suspended in a large frame to being mounted on what I assume is wood with the paint wrapping around the edges? Is he just overshooting his end dimensions and then wrapping it on the frame when it's dry? I'm super curious to try this at home.
Hi. What is that you're appllying with a roller at 10:28 minutes into the video?
I'm almost certainly wrong, but I think Richter uses some very special silky printing ink, not paint. At least in the black on white series.
Beautifully done short mini doc. Watching the process carefully it still makes me question the definition of art. Is wiping pools of paint across a screen with a huge squeegee the work of an artist? Talking about how the work is like the hand of god leaves me scratching my head. Maybe it is. Or maybe I’m just too old.
Haaaah Haaaaa HA!
perhaps there is still a chance this guy can grow out of the shadow of this gherhardt person, he would need to improve and evolve his style to become something beyond the looks of similar art styles
Copying another artist like this and admitting to it is hard to believe.
Too bad your ex could not believe & support your talent. I guess thats why shes an ex.😢
I like the outcome but the process essentially the same as acrilyc pouring, but on silk screen rather than,paper ? Apply paint, pull through it.
Thank you for sharing. I really enjoyed this and your work. All the best @jcmfineart.
This the guy that made a fake richter painting for Jerry Saltz for exposure and $100. It almost is as good as the real thing.
The article seems to express shock that a Richter could be created in 2 hours, lol, it’s paint thrown on a canvas and spread with a squeegee. Who couldn’t complete one in 2 hours? Art is almost dead.
No, this has nothing to do with nature, it’s a man in a city making “art” with man made tools and materials, lol, just cause there is green involved doesn’t make it connected with nature. But I understand having to come up with some kind of explanation for art with so little depth and so easily created.
So does he backlight these?