@@JillPoyerdFineArt Thank you so much for this gentle and beautifully written reminder! It reminds me not afraid of making mistakes and just keep trying. I love each single video you have made 💙 and learned so much from your insights. Really appreciate your generosity and kindness, especially during this hard time mankinds are facing!
the carvagio comment is wrong - its not a mistake but do to the tools he used to paint such as a camera obscura (which warped and distorted the image, you can see the hand is also fuzzy which would only happen through a lens )as well as focusing on the individual parts of the human such as the feet that hands the face individually and not being super focused on perfect anatomy.
@@JillPoyerdFineArt Sorry, but that is the typical sort of thing he might say. His early work was awful. There is no perfection but I would take a Vermeer over Dali any day
@@jimisi7424but Vermeer never really broke the mold. Isn’t perfection boring? I mean… just think about it. I once heard, the most interesting people go to hell.
Every time I hear your voice explaining details, it is so soothing. It is quite meditative and your ability to teach is quite evident. Years of teaching experience is visible and we are lucky to be able to listen to you for free. Thank you so much.
Beautiful film, thank you so much for giving me the chance of seeing it. I am a beginner and Dianne's quick tips (which I practice) have helped me more than any teacher or UA-cam teacher. And then I get sent this wonderful film. I will not give up so easily now. Also, it will make seeing great art work more interesting.
This was so very helpful. It reminded me to be patient, stop before I REALLY lose focus , leave the painting and come back in awhile, maybe days and take a new look. I also refer to my original thumbnail or notan and find clues to a clean finish. What fun we have figuring this out. B
Thanks goodness for all the masters, the greatest, the great and the not so much. I feel relieved and thankful. Let's keep the good intentions going on.
I remember visiting the Egyptology section of Bristol museum (UK). I was looking at a funereal canoe decorated with hieroglyphics. I noticed a section where the horizontal line had gone off course. The painter had presumably licked his thumb to wipe off the wayward section and picked the line up. The previous line had not been completely obliterated and even left a thumb print where he had lifted his thumb after the erasure. I suddenly felt a connection with the artist who had painted it 4000 years previously. It's something I have done many times. We had something in common. We shared what we had intended to be a secret. I was young and more inclined to embarrassment than I would be today as I tried to hide the flood of tears I couldn't understand. I understand now, of course.
@@JillPoyerdFineArt As much as I admire a flawless work of art, it's the imperfections and treatment of errors that make a connection with every artist.
You always speak with such a calm maternal voice, wisely explaining things from a perspective of love for your subject. Thank you. I learn a lot from you.
Thank you so much for your videos. You inspired me to pick up my brushes again and get back to work on a painting I've been working on for 20 years, and it's now turning out to be beautiful. Thank you. :D
Thank you for sharing. This topic is a little heavier than those before. Mistakes in Master's hands tell us that they can be like ordinaries, only not easy to approach as the ordinaries. "Creativity is allowing yourself to make mistakes, and art is knowing which ones to keep." Wonderful quote.
@@JillPoyerdFineArt Somehow I understand the reason of frustration that PAUL abandon his art piece. This kind of feeling is actually mutually shared as a so-so artist, or even worse. But We all have time to heal any bad feelings about creativity, or we may also change the design in a much natural way. Human nature, even though blended in with betrayal or treachery, but such behavior would greatly lowed the quality of human relationship, create more distrust and more betrayal in life or relationship. These event always related in higher power system, or with strong support in certain community. An isolated artist is only to accept the reality in a volunteering way to work things out.
Absolutely wonderful and powerful video, thank you so much for this, Jill! I've missed your videos! As artists we're always striving for perfection. When I look to the masters, I always assume that every inch of every piece was perfected and intentional. This will help me embrace the mistakes I make and focus on the piece as a whole, rather than perfection.
Thank you very much Jill for sharing with us this special documentary. It brings so much encouragement to us as humans who strive to be perfect, excellent and many times trying to win recognition. It encourages me to be just as I am as fallible as I am as a human in my work and passion but not letting down to always be better in whatever I am learning & doing. Thank you once again.
This presentation is a masterpiece. A beautiful piece of real constructive criticism. I feel sure, most of these artists would really appreciate. I thank you.
Jill, as always, you are a very special child of God who can fill the minds with so much great information on the Arts. Thank you so much for creating this. Now I can go back and erase all those wrong pencil marks and not feel bad.
I just did a bad drawing today and now I feel better. Thank you Jill for all your fine videos. And thank you Diane Mize for referring me to this video.
You're very welcome, Lisa. I was hoping it would encourage people. As I believe I say in the video, every time I see something that looks "off" in a masterpiece, I feel a little more encouraged.
Exactly so Ron , well put. Its a balance between a sans soucie attitude and good drawing for me. After that experience will guide that never ending journey.
Even a photograph is loaded with choices by the person taking the picture; Framing a scene and EXcluding, as well as, INcluding is a personal decision.
I just discovered your channel recently and it's amazing! It may be the best channel about art on UA-cam, but I can't understand why it's not more popular? You definitely deserve more views!
absolutely fantastic video as usual , thank you Jill , very informative and professional video , you made the learning process more fun , please we want more
@@JillPoyerdFineArt I have an artist friend back in my mother country IRAQ told me they're using your UA-cam videos as a learning materials for art students, he said they trust you as a source for information
@@a-free4909 I am so honored to hear that, A-free. Wow! Thank you so much for letting me know. I do try so hard to research in-depth and present solid but interesting information.
Definitely an eye opener. I try to SEE by walking away, but sometimes I have to wait a few days to have something jump out at me as a problem. Thanks for this!
Another treasure of art and learning beautifully composed. Kintsugi means a lot to my partner and I, we say we are each other's kintsugi. We have had a lot of trauma healed by being together. At the bottom of the beautiful garden he created is a little Summrhouse he built for me, a peaceful, accessible haven (I am now disabled), over the door he put a little brass plaque 'Kintsugi'.
While I agree with all that you stated, most don’t see these “ mistakes” or changes. Sadly, the average person has little experience viewing these works, and would never even look for them. I love your videos. Keep it up and thank you. Being an artist and art history appreciator, while in museums, I too, look for these ‘ changes’. The pentimento as it were.
Actually, one of my hopes is that my work can help change that...even a little. I love it when viewers let me know that watching my videos has enhanced their museum experiences.
Hey Jill! I’m going through all the people I subscribe to and saw you.. stopping in just to say how much I love you and your work. Listening is a meditation. There’s so many things that I don’t know I don’t have access to. The brushstrokes of masters was one. It’s helped me and honestly I’m so grateful that a shmuck like me somehow received such gold. I can’t Thankyou enough.
I'm so glad it was helpful, Lisa. Yes, we are often so hard on ourselves. It's a common thing with artists, which is one of the reasons I wanted to make this one.
I have thoroughly enjoyed every single one of your videos. This one in particular. I'm a painter and I understand each artist has their A, B, and trash work. I rarely show anyone my paintings because I can spot all the areas that I consider mistakes. Many of the mistakes you've pointed out... are the same mistakes I wrestle with each time I want to call a painting Finished.
I am an artist, and have struggled with "mistakes" of many years. Some of the accidents are problems, but some turn out to look good, so I leave them in. Thanks for your good video, Jill. Appreciated.
There's a quote attributed to DaVinci, which I find somewhat comforting: "Art is never finished, only abandoned." We do the very best job that we can, with the knowledge, skills, and materials we have, in the time that we have. Then we let go of the piece, so it stands on its own, with whatever strengths and flaws. It's fortunate when the imperfections make the art even more intriguing and relatable.
Excellent video Jill. I've been learning watercolor lately - aided in part by your courses in Udemy - and I am learning to embrace my mistakes (which in watercolor can mean disaster), by changing my inner dialog when a "mistake" happens, from "On no, those paints will run together!" to "It's ok if they run together, they will blend together nicely." It really helps with not being frustrated and makes the painting experience much less stressful
That's fantastic, Tony. That is a key to be able to succeed in my opinion. That easing up within yourself and learning to work with the times things go their own way. So true in watercolor. Of course, there are also times you CAN fix something, but overall it really eases stress...I agree.
> I am learning to embrace my mistakes Would you embrace mistakes from a doctor, lawyer, businessmen, the mechanic who maintains your car's brakes, a commander who was leading you into military combat? I suppose that if your moral ideal is the crucified Jesus, mans life is irrelevant.
I'm glad that you are showing us artist's mistakes. Artists make mistakes and they have their weaknesses too. As I do. Art schools have us convinced all art is good art. That's good for them to earn money, that was good for my clinical OCD. But it never helped my art career. I had to put in professional effort for that and make actual mistakes.
I really like how you put that, Shreyas. Yes, you have to be willing to accept some mistakes in order to grow and to produce good art. It can be painful, but it's part of the path.
Very enjoyable and educational. I've seen that Ingres painting at the Frick and been so impressed with the overall effect that I did not notice the right arm. Thanks Jill, that was fun.
It would definitily help me to concentrate on my paintings rather than getting worried about lill mistakes sometimes I made..thanks for sharing...with such a positive attitude ...
Thank you for this beautiful and educational video! Good to see that also highly admired masters sometimes had some flaws in their work. Indeed, as you said in the last sentence of the video, it makes them more human again, ... and it helps allow many of us to accept the imperfections of our own rather humble artistic attemps in paintings, drawings, wood cut prints, photography, etc. :-)
My dear you are so right! Many times we miss those mistakes because we take for granted that they were "the Masters" therefore we don't look closely at these paintings when we go to the museums. Thanks for opening our eyes.
It’s amazing how much I focus on my own mistakes, while not even noticing the ones that others make. Interesting video.
Every art student should watch this video! This is so darn comforting to me as a student!
I loved learning about the great master’s mistakes because you showed them more human, more like us all.
Exactly, Liliana. It's something that always impacts me when I visit a museum so I was looking forward to sharing it with you all.
@@JillPoyerdFineArt Thank you so much for this gentle and beautifully written reminder! It reminds me not afraid of making mistakes and just keep trying. I love each single video you have made 💙 and learned so much from your insights. Really appreciate your generosity and kindness, especially during this hard time mankinds are facing!
the carvagio comment is wrong - its not a mistake but do to the tools he used to paint such as a camera obscura (which warped and distorted the image, you can see the hand is also fuzzy which would only happen through a lens )as well as focusing on the individual parts of the human such as the feet that hands the face individually and not being super focused on perfect anatomy.
One of the more beautiful and inspiring videos on UA-cam.
Thank you so much, Ahmed...very appreciated
“Have no fear of perfection - you'll never reach it.” ― Salvador Dali
Great quote!
@@JillPoyerdFineArt Sorry, but that is the typical sort of thing he might say. His early work was awful. There is no perfection but I would take a Vermeer over Dali any day
@@jimisi7424 ok its still a good quote...
@@jimisi7424 so would have Dali...
@@jimisi7424but Vermeer never really broke the mold. Isn’t perfection boring? I mean… just think about it. I once heard, the most interesting people go to hell.
Another brilliant video by a modern-day master! Soooo much research went into this video! Thank you, Jill!
Thank you so much!
You have no idea how much better this video has made me feel about my own paintings. I cannot possibly thank you enough!
I'm so pleased to hear this, Jim. That is exactly what I would want for viewers who paint.
Every time I hear your voice explaining details, it is so soothing. It is quite meditative and your ability to teach is quite evident. Years of teaching experience is visible and we are lucky to be able to listen to you for free. Thank you so much.
Thank you so much, Anil. That means so much.
Beautiful film, thank you so much for giving me the chance of seeing it. I am a beginner and Dianne's quick tips (which I practice) have helped me more than any teacher or UA-cam teacher. And then I get sent this wonderful film. I will not give up so easily now. Also, it will make seeing great art work more interesting.
I'm so glad it was helpful to you! The encouragement you mention is exactly what I hoped viewers would come away with after seeing this.
This was so very helpful. It reminded me to be patient, stop before I REALLY lose focus , leave the painting and come back in awhile, maybe days and take a new look. I also refer to my original thumbnail or notan and find clues to a clean finish.
What fun we have figuring this out.
B
I'm so glad! I had hoped it would help people in that way.
Thanks goodness for all the masters, the greatest, the great and the not so much. I feel relieved and thankful. Let's keep the good intentions going on.
I remember visiting the Egyptology section of Bristol museum (UK). I was looking at a funereal canoe decorated with hieroglyphics. I noticed a section where the horizontal line had gone off course. The painter had presumably licked his thumb to wipe off the wayward section and picked the line up. The previous line had not been completely obliterated and even left a thumb print where he had lifted his thumb after the erasure.
I suddenly felt a connection with the artist who had painted it 4000 years previously. It's something I have done many times. We had something in common. We shared what we had intended to be a secret. I was young and more inclined to embarrassment than I would be today as I tried to hide the flood of tears I couldn't understand. I understand now, of course.
What a great story, Ron. I love it. I felt something similar when I saw a Monet with an obvious (to me) scrub out, but you put it so beautifully.
@@JillPoyerdFineArt As much as I admire a flawless work of art, it's the imperfections and treatment of errors that make a connection with every artist.
@@rontocknell5400 Absolutely. I'm so glad you shared your thoughts, Ron.
You always speak with such a calm maternal voice, wisely explaining things from a perspective of love for your subject. Thank you. I learn a lot from you.
Thank you so much. I'm glad you feel you're benefitting from them.
Who would ever think the masters overlooked their mistakes and kept painting. This is a great video and learning presentation. Thank you for sharing.
It is surprising, isn't it, Stephen? I'm glad you enjoyed it
Very difficult and touchy subjet handled amazingly. great work.
Thank you so much
Thank you so much for your videos. You inspired me to pick up my brushes again and get back to work on a painting I've been working on for 20 years, and it's now turning out to be beautiful. Thank you. :D
That's wonderful to hear, NeonsStyle!
I love the voice. Every time I do my arts, I love to listen her voice
Your voice could calm a thunderstorm.
It also makes absorbing the message very fluid.
So glad to have found your site.
That's so kind, Claude - thank you. Glad to have you as a viewer.
Thank you for sharing. This topic is a little heavier than those before. Mistakes in Master's hands tell us that they can be like ordinaries, only not easy to approach as the ordinaries.
"Creativity is allowing yourself to make mistakes, and art is knowing which ones to keep." Wonderful quote.
True - good point
@@JillPoyerdFineArt Somehow I understand the reason of frustration that PAUL abandon his art piece. This kind of feeling is actually mutually shared as a so-so artist, or even worse. But We all have time to heal any bad feelings about creativity, or we may also change the design in a much natural way. Human nature, even though blended in with betrayal or treachery, but such behavior would greatly lowed the quality of human relationship, create more distrust and more betrayal in life or relationship. These event always related in higher power system, or with strong support in certain community. An isolated artist is only to accept the reality in a volunteering way to work things out.
Your return is appreciated. It’s a pleasure to watch your great videos generous in terms of interesting facts and beautiful images. Thanks.
That's so kind of you, Armafly. I really enjoy producing them.
This is a profoundly useful and therapeutic video for creatives. Thank you!
That was great !! Thank you Jill
Glad you enjoyed it, Belinda!
Absolutely wonderful and powerful video, thank you so much for this, Jill! I've missed your videos! As artists we're always striving for perfection. When I look to the masters, I always assume that every inch of every piece was perfected and intentional. This will help me embrace the mistakes I make and focus on the piece as a whole, rather than perfection.
You're very welcome, Michelle. I do hope it's helpful and that it lessens the pressure we tend to put on ourselves.
@@JillPoyerdFineArt quote michelle: "...embrace the mistakes... rather than perfection" - good luck, dear!
Author's technique: Embossed graphics ua-cam.com/channels/OM9PM-7Nnv2OXkSQfx4hzg.htmlvideos
Master Painters! Thank for sharing 👍👍
Thanks for the presentation. Im glad I found this channel. I really like it.
I'm so glad, Patrick - Welcome!
Great Video. Thanks Jill!
Thank you very much Jill for sharing with us this special documentary. It brings so much encouragement to us as humans who strive to be perfect, excellent and many times trying to win recognition. It encourages me to be just as I am as fallible as I am as a human in my work and passion but not letting down to always be better in whatever I am learning & doing. Thank you once again.
How beautifully put, Alexander. I'm glad it was encouraging. I had hoped it would be.
Very reassuring. Informative. Thank you for this. Have a great New Year!
Thank you - Happy New Year to you as well!
This presentation is a masterpiece.
A beautiful piece of real constructive criticism.
I feel sure, most of these artists would really appreciate.
I thank you.
Thank you so much, Collin. I did, indeed, try to be fair with their work knowing they couldn't speak for themselves.
@@JillPoyerdFineArt You were perfect. I could fault nothing.
oh thank you for this!! I feel much better knowing all artist are human even the masters! Happy painting!
That truly is the main reason I created this one...So glad!
Jill, as always, you are a very special child of God who can fill the minds with so much great information on the Arts. Thank you so much for creating this. Now I can go back and erase all those wrong pencil marks and not feel bad.
Thank you so much for your very kind comments, Michael. That means so much. It does give a new perspective on errors, doesn't it?
@@JillPoyerdFineArt As the popular TV 30 minute artists would say "We don't have errors, we just have Happy Little Accidents".
You have a very soothing voice and your content is excellent. Glad I found your channel and many thanks for making all these great videos!
Certainly - and welcome to my channel, Nathan!
thank you so very much for sharing your passion. you are a good friend to art and artist .
Thank you so much...Means a lot
Fascinating, excellent narration .
thank you for another outstanding video. Everything you do is inspiring. thanks for sharing your spirit
Thank you so much for that, dani. I appreciate it.
I just did a bad drawing today and now I feel better. Thank you Jill for all your fine videos. And thank you Diane Mize for referring me to this video.
You're very welcome, Lisa. I was hoping it would encourage people. As I believe I say in the video, every time I see something that looks "off" in a masterpiece, I feel a little more encouraged.
If you want to see what was important to the artist, look and enjoy the painting. If you want 100% realism take a picture.
facts
I think "photorealism" is a whole new ballgame. It has more to do with the experience of producing it than the experience of viewing it.
Exactly so Ron , well put. Its a balance between a sans soucie attitude and good drawing for me. After that experience will guide that never ending journey.
Precisely!
Even a photograph is loaded with choices by the person taking the picture; Framing a scene and EXcluding, as well as, INcluding is a personal decision.
Your videos are gold. Thank you
You are a true art lover.. Thank you for your effort and dedication..
You're so welcome, Sony. Thanks for that.
Jill, nice explanation. 👍
Your beautiful voice is so soothing to hear. And choosing topics also rare!
Thank you so much!
so nice work.
This is so great! Thank you Jill!
I just discovered your channel recently and it's amazing! It may be the best channel about art on UA-cam, but I can't understand why it's not more popular? You definitely deserve more views!
Thank you so much, Chris! That's very kind of you. I'm glad you're enjoying my videos.
absolutely fantastic video as usual , thank you Jill , very informative and professional video , you made the learning process more fun , please we want more
Thank you! It takes me a while, but more are planned...
@@JillPoyerdFineArt
I have an artist friend back in my mother country IRAQ told me they're using your UA-cam videos as a learning materials for art students, he said they trust you as a source for information
@@a-free4909 I am so honored to hear that, A-free. Wow! Thank you so much for letting me know. I do try so hard to research in-depth and present solid but interesting information.
@@JillPoyerdFineArt
and you are doing a great job , thank you so much .
Ahmed.
Definitely an eye opener. I try to SEE by walking away, but sometimes I have to wait a few days to have something jump out at me as a problem. Thanks for this!
That does help....for sure. Glad you enjoyed the video
Another fascinating production, Jill! Worth waiting for!
Thank you so much, Fred! I'm glad you enjoyed it.
What a wonderful lecture! Thank you so much for sharing with us!!
You're very welcome, Lana
I love your videos. Thank you!!
Thanks!
Thank you so much, GL1800Varoom! That is SO kind of you and very appreciated.
I love this! really need to hear this before doing a piece !
Thank You! I learn so much from your videos!
I'm so glad, April!
Another treasure of art and learning beautifully composed.
Kintsugi means a lot to my partner and I, we say we are each other's kintsugi. We have had a lot of trauma healed by being together. At the bottom of the beautiful garden he created is a little Summrhouse he built for me, a peaceful, accessible haven (I am now disabled), over the door he put a little brass plaque 'Kintsugi'.
How beautiful to hear your story. And what a wonderful partner you have.
While I agree with all that you stated, most don’t see these “ mistakes” or changes. Sadly, the average person has little experience viewing these works, and would never even look for them. I love your videos. Keep it up and thank you.
Being an artist and art history appreciator, while in museums, I too, look for these ‘ changes’. The pentimento as it were.
Actually, one of my hopes is that my work can help change that...even a little. I love it when viewers let me know that watching my videos has enhanced their museum experiences.
Hey Jill! I’m going through all the people I subscribe to and saw you.. stopping in just to say how much I love you and your work. Listening is a meditation. There’s so many things that I don’t know I don’t have access to. The brushstrokes of masters was one. It’s helped me and honestly I’m so grateful that a shmuck like me somehow received such gold. I can’t Thankyou enough.
That is so sweet, bottosrob. Thank you so much for sharing that. It's so wonderful to know how you enjoy and benefit from my work.
Hiya Jill, I love watching your videos, they are so informative and interesting, thanks very much, David.
I'm so glad you're enjoying them, David!
Thanks for creating this. I think it’s inspired! 😊
How nice! I hope so
Thank you for this. It made a difference for me. I often doubt my abilities after one simple mistake.
I'm so glad it was helpful, Lisa. Yes, we are often so hard on ourselves. It's a common thing with artists, which is one of the reasons I wanted to make this one.
I have thoroughly enjoyed every single one of your videos. This one in particular. I'm a painter and I understand each artist has their A, B, and trash work. I rarely show anyone my paintings because I can spot all the areas that I consider mistakes. Many of the mistakes you've pointed out... are the same mistakes I wrestle with each time I want to call a painting Finished.
Do you feel like this video helped ease your feelings about those mistakes? I hope so.
@@JillPoyerdFineArt Absolutely. I can look at my "Finished" paintings and be at peace with my mistakes. Thank you!
Wonderful Job you've done in the Channel, very wise and useful coments on the pictures, thank you a Lot.
Thank you, Edcarlos, and glad you're enjoying it
thank you for continuing making videos! yours are one of the finest art videos!
Thank you so much! I'm honored.
This was wonderful. Thank you. I have two paintings that I now have the courage to continue working on! 👍🏻👏
Excellent video. Thanks so much for this.
You're very welcome!
I am an artist, and have struggled with "mistakes" of many years. Some of the accidents are problems, but some turn out to look good, so I leave them in. Thanks for your good video, Jill. Appreciated.
Yes, exactly, Dale. We sometimes refer to them as "happy accidents" don't we? I do like those mistakes.
I enjoyed this video. It was very interesting.
just came across this video. Very interesting and very well done. I subscribed and hope to see more of your content.
Welcome to my channel, Nomad. Glad to have you!
Thank you so much! love your videos!!!
There's a quote attributed to DaVinci, which I find somewhat comforting: "Art is never finished, only abandoned." We do the very best job that we can, with the knowledge, skills, and materials we have, in the time that we have. Then we let go of the piece, so it stands on its own, with whatever strengths and flaws. It's fortunate when the imperfections make the art even more intriguing and relatable.
Nicely said, Luken.
This was so inspiring.Thank you!
Excellent video Jill. I've been learning watercolor lately - aided in part by your courses in Udemy - and I am learning to embrace my mistakes (which in watercolor can mean disaster), by changing my inner dialog when a "mistake" happens, from "On no, those paints will run together!" to "It's ok if they run together, they will blend together nicely." It really helps with not being frustrated and makes the painting experience much less stressful
That's fantastic, Tony. That is a key to be able to succeed in my opinion. That easing up within yourself and learning to work with the times things go their own way. So true in watercolor. Of course, there are also times you CAN fix something, but overall it really eases stress...I agree.
> I am learning to embrace my mistakes
Would you embrace mistakes from a doctor, lawyer, businessmen, the mechanic who maintains your car's brakes, a commander who was leading you into military combat? I suppose that if your moral ideal is the crucified Jesus, mans life is irrelevant.
Thank you, Jill
You are a true teacher. I learned from this video and was inspired. 16:34
That is so wonderful to hear. I'm honored...
Superb video!
“We don't make mistakes, just happy little accidents.” - Bob Ross
Happy Little Squirrel: I am living here.
Only in landscape painting🙃
@@AlraArt yeah landscape is acceptable
Bob Ross an artist? Humph. All a matter of opinion. I'll take the actual masters in this video...
You right to bring them down to a human level. But also it shows how arduous is the process of making art in painting and in general.
Very true.
I'm glad that you are showing us artist's mistakes. Artists make mistakes and they have their weaknesses too. As I do. Art schools have us convinced all art is good art. That's good for them to earn money, that was good for my clinical OCD. But it never helped my art career.
I had to put in professional effort for that and make actual mistakes.
I really like how you put that, Shreyas. Yes, you have to be willing to accept some mistakes in order to grow and to produce good art. It can be painful, but it's part of the path.
This is art therapy. Thank you. 🙂
This is a wonderful channel! I feel better about my paintings now.
I'm so glad! That is so wonderful to hear
Very enjoyable and educational. I've seen that Ingres painting at the Frick and been so impressed with the overall effect that I did not notice the right arm. Thanks Jill, that was fun.
You're very welcome, Daniel. I do hope to get to the Frick one day...looks amazing.
Superb presentation of valid information. Being an artist myself, I am thankful for all the new info shared. Great video 👍
I'm glad it was helpful, Srikumar
Well done, Some how funny to see that masters made those mistakes.
Love your work and your relaxing calm voice👍
Thank you, Rene
Very nice! Thank you!
Awesome video! Thanks for sharing.❤
I'm glad you enjoyed it, Emman
It would definitily help me to concentrate on my paintings rather than getting worried about lill mistakes sometimes I made..thanks for sharing...with such a positive attitude ...
Really informative thanks I’m struggling with my work this kind of helps.
I'm very glad it helps a little, Jiv.
Really interesting! Thank you so much for putting it together.
Glad you enjoyed it, Mary!
What a fabulous video - seriously enjoyable 💝
Great and interesting video. Thanks for your content.
Glad you enjoyed it
Beautiful sharing. Thank you so much.
I'm glad you enjoyed it, Elizabeth
As always, such a good video. Thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it, Plamena
Thank you for yet another wonderful video, love your channel, thank you :)
I'm so glad you enjoy it!
Great video. Thank you!
Thank you for this beautiful and educational video! Good to see that also highly admired masters sometimes had some flaws in their work. Indeed, as you said in the last sentence of the video, it makes them more human again, ... and it helps allow many of us to accept the imperfections of our own rather humble artistic attemps in paintings, drawings, wood cut prints, photography, etc. :-)
You're very welcome. It really does help. So many of us have such high expectations of ourselves.
very inspired by this realism, thank you.
I'm glad it was inspirational, Art. That's always wonderful to hear.
Thank you for this informative note 📝 ❤
Really great video, I didn’t anticipate the ending! 👍
Thank you!
Loved this
My dear you are so right! Many times we miss those mistakes because we take for granted that they were "the Masters" therefore we don't look closely at these paintings when we go to the museums. Thanks for opening our eyes.
Exactly…and in a way, I feel like the artwork then becomes more meaningful because I can see their human frailty.
Very interesting! Thank you!
loved this one!
Thank you, Pj
you're my favourite channel on youtube ))
Thank you so much, fuzzy mochi! I'm honored