Herzlichen Dank für dein Video! Ich sehe bei deiner Bildgestaltung immer mal wieder parallelen zu meinen Videos, auch wenn meine Kunst Maltechnik mehr in Mixed Media Bereich liegt. Sonnige Grüsse 🙋🏻♀️
Thank you so much for this video, however I have some questions, you only use thin layer of paint right? And then you let it dry and apply the next layers in this case first gray and let it dry then orange and blue? Also do you make the sponge wet before using ?😊 Kindly 🙏🏽
@Popeye not that I'm an art snob -- because I'm not! Never took art history or anything like it. Don't go to art shows and drink wine and talk about all the pretentious stuff you over here in SoHo art galleries. But I do paint as a hobby and can appreciate how hard it is to do what Rothko achieved. And I saw the Rothko collection in London at the National Gallery years ago. Didn't know who he was. Never heard of him. Never seen one of his paintings before. It is absolutely staggering to see his work in person. Overwhelming. In the first place, they're huge canvases so they just command your attention, but the sheer strength of the color and the layering is beyond words. I don't know the technical words for it, but his paintings do seem to "move" or vibrate or pulse. I don't know how it did it. But it's breathtaking to see them in person. What this gentleman has done is quite nice. I do like it. And yes, it's following the basic form of a Rothko color form painting. But this is something you would buy in Pottery Barn. It's at such a superficial level that you really shouldn't equate it with painting like Rothko. Because he's not.
@Popeye you're right. And I've done my fair share of attempting a Rothko style painting and their awful, which is what makes his work so brilliant. What looks so ridiculously easy and "something a child would do in grade school" is confoundingly complex. And you're also right that Rothko kept his methods a closely guarded secret although his son revealed that while Rothko mixed his own pigments he often used egg whites as a medium among other unconventional material to achieve the layering. His work is just stunning to me. And I do think what this gentleman did here is quite good.
@@harlbertmayerh7523 This is a type of painting that you should feel. If you don't have access, it won't work. Besides, try to paint it and you will see if it's really easy :-)
Herzlichen Dank für dein Video! Ich sehe bei deiner Bildgestaltung immer mal wieder parallelen zu meinen Videos, auch wenn meine Kunst Maltechnik mehr in Mixed Media Bereich liegt. Sonnige Grüsse 🙋🏻♀️
My heart rate goes wild when I look at this . Love his paintings , and you do a fantastic .
Thank you very much
Love it😊
👍👌👏 danke fur vidéo
Thank you so much for this video, however I have some questions, you only use thin layer of paint right? And then you let it dry and apply the next layers in this case first gray and let it dry then orange and blue? Also do you make the sponge wet before using ?😊
Kindly
🙏🏽
Wonderful ❤ what type of colors have you used ?
Yes! Been waiting for this 💓
Now it is ready:
www.kunsterlebnisse.com/online-courses-in-english/color-field-painting-paint-like-rothko/
It speaks the artist knows
me encanta!
i love it
Are you using a sponge?
Yes.
Lovely ! What about your courses ?
Thank you. What do you mean?
of course it isn't rothko, because rothko put countless layers on top of each other - but it isn't bad
well done, nice work,
but that's nothing like rothko
@Popeye not that I'm an art snob -- because I'm not! Never took art history or anything like it. Don't go to art shows and drink wine and talk about all the pretentious stuff you over here in SoHo art galleries. But I do paint as a hobby and can appreciate how hard it is to do what Rothko achieved. And I saw the Rothko collection in London at the National Gallery years ago. Didn't know who he was. Never heard of him. Never seen one of his paintings before. It is absolutely staggering to see his work in person. Overwhelming. In the first place, they're huge canvases so they just command your attention, but the sheer strength of the color and the layering is beyond words. I don't know the technical words for it, but his paintings do seem to "move" or vibrate or pulse. I don't know how it did it. But it's breathtaking to see them in person.
What this gentleman has done is quite nice. I do like it. And yes, it's following the basic form of a Rothko color form painting. But this is something you would buy in Pottery Barn. It's at such a superficial level that you really shouldn't equate it with painting like Rothko. Because he's not.
@Popeye you're right. And I've done my fair share of attempting a Rothko style painting and their awful, which is what makes his work so brilliant. What looks so ridiculously easy and "something a child would do in grade school" is confoundingly complex. And you're also right that Rothko kept his methods a closely guarded secret although his son revealed that while Rothko mixed his own pigments he often used egg whites as a medium among other unconventional material to achieve the layering. His work is just stunning to me. And I do think what this gentleman did here is quite good.
Mmmm I'm still don't understand
What exactly do you not understand?
Nggg ,I just keep wondering why that type of painting is soooooooooooooo expensive rather than other so many beautiful painting😄😄
@@harlbertmayerh7523 This is a type of painting that you should feel. If you don't have access, it won't work.
Besides, try to paint it and you will see if it's really easy :-)
Illusion of rothko...