Oh my gosh! You got Renato Muccillo! He is my absolute most favorite landscape painter! I have done several master copies of his paintings to understand how he paints and how he mixes all those greens making them all appear different and natural and not plastic. I was thankful to hear that he creates his paintings from his imagination. I live in North Texas so our landscape is a bit scrubby to begin with but the whole world is moving here so all those open fields with cattle are being paved over with concrete and the dreaded skyrises are being built so all my references are gone. I have been wanting to create my own paintings from my imagination and what I remember being all around me and I feel like I have been given the go ahead. I love the way you interview, Jeff. It was like watching two friends sit down and have a conversation.
Fantastic! I live in Utah County too, really admire your work and that of all your guests! Hoping to see Douglas Aagard, maybe? He’s local too and I just love his vibrant colors in his landscapes of Utah. Thanks for your wonderful podcast!
Thank you for interviewing one of my favorite landscape artist!! ….. love getting to know him…… thanks for asking for advice to aspiring, not just young ones!👍
Great interview/conversation, Jeff! Renato is a very special painter, and in a way I see his work, - not as landscape paintings, but as landscape portraits. They all have a presence, a soul that I rarely have seen in non figurative work. Just fantastic.
Failures are a REQUIRED part of learning. It just means you’re in a growth phase when you get hit with that awful feeling. It passes as soon as you make a tiny shift forward though it may take a few tries.
Oh my gosh! You got Renato Muccillo! He is my absolute most favorite landscape painter! I have done several master copies of his paintings to understand how he paints and how he mixes all those greens making them all appear different and natural and not plastic. I was thankful to hear that he creates his paintings from his imagination. I live in North Texas so our landscape is a bit scrubby to begin with but the whole world is moving here so all those open fields with cattle are being paved over with concrete and the dreaded skyrises are being built so all my references are gone. I have been wanting to create my own paintings from my imagination and what I remember being all around me and I feel like I have been given the go ahead. I love the way you interview, Jeff. It was like watching two friends sit down and have a conversation.
Que maravilloso!!!!! Me gusta tanto su pintura, sus paisajes, videos, su perro .
Que hermosa es su madre❤
Desde Chile toda mi admiración ❤
One of my favorite landscape artists. Thank you both.
Fantastic! I live in Utah County too, really admire your work and that of all your guests! Hoping to see Douglas Aagard, maybe? He’s local too and I just love his vibrant colors in his landscapes of Utah. Thanks for your wonderful podcast!
GRIT. A great book on that persistence in the face of discouragement.
Thank you for interviewing one of my favorite landscape artist!! ….. love getting to know him…… thanks for asking for advice to aspiring, not just young ones!👍
Great interview/conversation, Jeff! Renato is a very special painter, and in a way I see his work, - not as landscape paintings, but as landscape portraits. They all have a presence, a soul that I rarely have seen in non figurative work. Just fantastic.
Beautiful painting, Muccillo! You are an amazing artist. Thank you for sharing.
Amazing I loved this chat. Jeff you do an fantastic job, you give me sanity on my drive to work😊
Another great podcast!
Yes nice work Gordon Smith!
$35 in 1975 would be around $207 today. Love the podcast!
That’s insanity. He was rolling in cash. 😊
Yeah no kidding, that's a very good starting price, I would be lucky lol
Hey Jeff, great podcasts, all of them! Perhaps you could consider Michael Chamberlain, he's great and I guess also a wonderful guest...
GRIT!
Failures are a REQUIRED part of learning. It just means you’re in a growth phase when you get hit with that awful feeling. It passes as soon as you make a tiny shift forward though it may take a few tries.
Is it drive, or grit?
His paintings aren't that small I think 😆. It's normal sized.