The thing that this video doesn’t capture is how painstakingly he prepares the paper before painting. He wets both sides thoroughly, and multiple times, and adheres it to the board mostly by relying on the surface tension of the water on the back. When the sheen is gone, he begins painting - so the paper is not completely dry. His technique relies heavily on knowing exactly how much water is on the brush, in the pigment, and on the paper at any given time. All three vehicles must have the right amount of water for his style to work, and when it does - it’s pure magic. Sergey Temerev is a legend.
You sum it up very well. It was very useful to appreciate that Temerev fine tunes the amount of water he uses relative to the effect he gets from applying the paint to different degrees of dried surfaces he has previously painted. Also in places he paints on relatively dry surfaces and then tinkers with a damp brush. You can appreciate his skill and how necessary it is to experiment with abandon, learn and take note. A very valuable lesson.
so true! He has explained there is very little water in his brush, mostly pigment, and that feathery touch... I wanted to know what easel he is using...very unique that it can tilt and turn by pivoting the easel.
He's too good.i love the way the clouds take on life and that glow around them... He's so painstakingly painting the clouds that they seem to be so real... Thanks
Sorcery!! 😆 Beautiful, stunning, lovely sorcery. I've learned so much from watching you paint this single scene! I love the fascinating mixture of techniques, and the result leaves me speechless. 🎨♥️
Any idea? As to the surface he has taped his paper to, it’s flexible, pliable, yet stable. somehow I don’t think it’s wood, Perspex? Aluminium? The stability of the water between the back surface and paper will play a great deal to his painting technique and wood absorbs too much water, to allow this amazing artistry.
The sky is great....that 100% saturated phthalo blue for the "distant" hill though!!! mind blowing that the same person did both things...in the same picture.
Yes, I find it very hard to read this way. He risks overworking everything to get it just right and then throws in a new focal point at the very end, not even caring how it blends with the water. Strange. Still, great painter though.
Any idea? As to the surface he has taped his paper to, it’s flexible, pliable, yet stable. somehow I don’t think it’s wood, Perspex? Aluminium? The stability of the water between the back surface and paper will play a great deal to his painting technique and wood absorbs too much water, to allow this amazing artistry.
The thing that this video doesn’t capture is how painstakingly he prepares the paper before painting. He wets both sides thoroughly, and multiple times, and adheres it to the board mostly by relying on the surface tension of the water on the back. When the sheen is gone, he begins painting - so the paper is not completely dry. His technique relies heavily on knowing exactly how much water is on the brush, in the pigment, and on the paper at any given time. All three vehicles must have the right amount of water for his style to work, and when it does - it’s pure magic. Sergey Temerev is a legend.
You sum it up very well. It was very useful to appreciate that Temerev fine tunes the amount of water he uses relative to the effect he gets from applying the paint to different degrees of dried surfaces he has previously painted. Also in places he paints on relatively dry surfaces and then tinkers with a damp brush. You can appreciate his skill and how necessary it is to experiment with abandon, learn and take note. A very valuable lesson.
so true! He has explained there is very little water in his brush, mostly pigment, and that feathery touch... I wanted to know what easel he is using...very unique that it can tilt and turn by pivoting the easel.
@@rochelleanngalloway I have a feeling it is probably a computer monitor arm that has been adapted.
I've watched this five times and I plan to watch it at least five more.
Ditto.. to Dan lett
He's too good.i love the way the clouds take on life and that glow around them... He's so painstakingly painting the clouds that they seem to be so real... Thanks
I think this “music” is actually a torture device..
maestro Temerev !! Excelente !! no me canso de verlo es inspirador !! Gracias !!!
25:19 😍
25:46
26:04 blending
28:58 adding rain
31:00 adding storm
36:06 adding waves
38:24 adding depth to waves
40:47 blending & adding details to sea
44:30 adding color / horizon 😍 wow
45:54 ship
Is he painting in a coffee house with an audience or is that his background music track?
Thank you. This was a great opportunity to see a good painting come alive. 🙂
Sorcery!! 😆 Beautiful, stunning, lovely sorcery. I've learned so much from watching you paint this single scene! I love the fascinating mixture of techniques, and the result leaves me speechless. 🎨♥️
Brilliant! Absolutely beautiful! He is very sensitive.. it’s amazing
Gorgeous clouds! Thank you for sharing
WOW! So beautiful! And mesmerizing to watch.
Any idea? As to the surface he has taped his paper to, it’s flexible, pliable, yet stable. somehow I don’t think it’s wood, Perspex? Aluminium? The stability of the water between the back surface and paper will play a great deal to his painting technique and wood absorbs too much water, to allow this amazing artistry.
Can you please tell us, what kind of brushes are you using for the clouds?
Beautiful painting...not sure the sea was needed it was better before it was added...but inspiring none the less,thank you.
I would not be able to paint with the type of chosen music being played.
Wonderful work!!!
What is the swivel contraption he's using? I need one of those!
The sky is great....that 100% saturated phthalo blue for the "distant" hill though!!! mind blowing that the same person did both things...in the same picture.
Yes, I find it very hard to read this way. He risks overworking everything to get it just right and then throws in a new focal point at the very end, not even caring how it blends with the water. Strange. Still, great painter though.
@@CaptainFutureman agree, a new focus from 44.38
What paints does he use? Transparents? Opaques?
Anyone know what colors he’s using? Don’t care so much for that background music.
What is this in the background? Music?
dig the music
Precioso ❤
Is that ink or WC?
Что за штатив не подскажите?
I wish someone could tell me where I could find the stand he is using here! I would love to have one!
Look for an adjustable laptop stand
Sky is amazing
Wow amazing👌👏👏👏
That looks like gouache ?
Alguien sabe el modelo de trípode que Esta usando ???? Es buenísimo
Maybe this one? artristic.com/product/artristic-tripod-mounted-easel/
Lovely
❤❤❤
Cloudscape watercolor Jedi Master
Синяя полоса в конце грубовато, на мой вкус.
I’m not an artist. I reckon the clouds are amazing, then the blue hill is not necessary.
Guau!!!!
R
The sky is magnificent but the water doesn’t read right to me.
The blue part is actually a body of land, like a hill... island etc. The water is everything under the boat... reads good to me.
You're right, it doesn't work.
What a terrible din going on!
Now that's my kind of comment! 🤣
Музыка - ДИЧЬ.
Any idea? As to the surface he has taped his paper to, it’s flexible, pliable, yet stable. somehow I don’t think it’s wood, Perspex? Aluminium? The stability of the water between the back surface and paper will play a great deal to his painting technique and wood absorbs too much water, to allow this amazing artistry.