Painting like Van Gogh

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  • Опубліковано 27 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 187

  • @nicoleshekhtman
    @nicoleshekhtman 8 років тому +357

    I love how he got so scared when he started "drawing" with the black paint haha. Black is such a terrifying color to work with sometimes, I'm so glad I'm not the only one who thinks so.

  • @jacquesmertens3369
    @jacquesmertens3369 8 років тому +892

    First I tried cutting my ear off. Didn't work.
    Then I watched your video. Much better!

  • @davidbennett5862
    @davidbennett5862 8 років тому +115

    Quite a lot of strong feeling. I think Vincent may be pleased that so many still appreciate his work.

  • @krustycrap8957
    @krustycrap8957 7 років тому +47

    Looking at people painting is so satisfying

  • @gumba55
    @gumba55 9 років тому +35

    The vibrations you continually refer to are the result of Van Gogh placing contrasting pieces of paint next to each other and is arguably the essence of his genius.

  • @TacoLlamaYES
    @TacoLlamaYES 9 років тому +18

    The green shadow/underpainting really brought out the Van Gogh-iness. Super nice dude!

  • @IzzyCubito
    @IzzyCubito 9 років тому +1

    I'm not a painter, artist but a person who enjoys the painter constructing the art, you are very good and I will come back for more....

  • @fractalspace1111
    @fractalspace1111 9 років тому +125

    I really like the painting but I feel like Van Gogh had a distinctive brush stroke. It does look similar to Van Gogh but even in the faces he had some sort of swirly brushstroke. He was a strange person.

  • @theedrstrangelove
    @theedrstrangelove 9 років тому +18

    Just so you know, the fabric for potato and flour sacks in the 1880's was a little more refined than what we think of as burlap today. There are suppliers who sell a very very close if not exact copy, but you'll need to stretch them yourself. I must say, your tutorial was quite good.

  • @noumine
    @noumine 7 років тому +104

    lol at some of the comments posted. Sheesh go get your refunds. oh wait, it's free to view. I, for, one, was able to pick up some valuable pointers. I appreciate your video. Thanks.

  • @mwill6611
    @mwill6611 10 років тому +39

    Excellent demo and really appreciate how you have the camera close to the canvas. Yes would enjoy watching your version of how others paint!

  • @h.a.4975
    @h.a.4975 8 років тому +2

    The best thing is the transition once u get into this freelines and style and can mix the colours in what way whatever you want. Thats what i like about him ;-)

  • @mistermalta
    @mistermalta 9 років тому +8

    I really enjoyed your walk through on this and tried it myself with satisfactory results. Canvas is much better than board for this style.

  • @bigsister7922
    @bigsister7922 7 років тому +2

    Thanks for making this video. I was recently commissioned to paint a copy of "Cafe Terrace at Night," so this video is giving me quite a bit of insight into how Van Gogh might have painted.

  • @mwild189
    @mwild189 9 років тому +9

    Awesome, you are very skilled my friend!

  • @christopherwalker6056
    @christopherwalker6056 9 років тому +33

    Very well done man. You are inspiring me to get back into oil painting. Watching you work, I'm getting that 'itch' again to get some oils and paint again. Thankyou!

  • @st8employee
    @st8employee 8 років тому +1

    Thank you. I've been trying this forever. Needed the right perspective.

  • @philippecolin151
    @philippecolin151 8 років тому +5

    It would be interesting to see Van Gogh reaction to this technique and final work, I wonder what he would say?

  • @LindaMcRae42
    @LindaMcRae42 8 років тому +16

    Wow this is incredible! How could anyone not love this tutorial? Great end result, looks amazing!

  • @tracimarie273
    @tracimarie273 9 років тому +2

    Bravo !!! ... to film your first try at this - Very Nice !!! ... Van Gogh, Always with intense emotions - Just doing it from your soul ... Thank You So Much !!!

  • @suewoulfe3904
    @suewoulfe3904 8 років тому +1

    enjoyable and an education, and very entertaining. This took courage !

  • @anushamadapura6212
    @anushamadapura6212 9 років тому +252

    Lol, Van Gogh is Van Gogh coz he is Van Gogh..

  • @rafeelGilabert
    @rafeelGilabert 8 років тому +7

    I LIKE IT THANK YOU VERY MUCH ,YOU ARE A VERY GOOD TEACHER

  • @elvisslo
    @elvisslo 8 років тому +2

    Really great! I enjoyed your teaching. I want to try a Van Gogh portrait myself now.

  • @melamoquin8772
    @melamoquin8772 8 років тому +3

    Thank you so much for that inspirational video! That lesson made me want to buy some supplies and paint again! The pronunciation is irrelevant compared to the visual! Fabulous, thanks again! ☆

  • @67foxcharlie
    @67foxcharlie 9 років тому +3

    Quite nice. Relaxing to watch.

  • @stephaniele933
    @stephaniele933 8 років тому +6

    That was amazing! I wish I didn't have to work tomorrow, I want to learn how to paint as freely as that. Thanks for the video.

  • @ritapatel9530
    @ritapatel9530 8 років тому +1

    11:07 "So if you can't do this stage, well, you need to practice drawing more" LMFAO

  • @littleolerockerchick
    @littleolerockerchick 8 років тому +3

    Who the heck is Fauv. Nevermind, I loved what you taught me. Thanks!

  • @robynboyd9741
    @robynboyd9741 8 років тому +158

    Who cares how its pronounced. The tutorial was great.........thankyou

    • @60xFPS
      @60xFPS 7 років тому +17

      nah nobody gives a shit

  • @spyralspyder
    @spyralspyder 8 років тому +7

    It looks great but the one thing I would suggest reworking is the mouth placement. Needs to come up a bit.

  • @foggyvhs8790
    @foggyvhs8790 7 років тому +3

    This is so inspiring.. thank you!

  • @Leopoldus7
    @Leopoldus7 9 років тому

    Best video on how to paint like Van Gogh

  • @susifranco1643
    @susifranco1643 8 років тому +68

    I truly enjoyed your video---awesome work !~ Van Gogh was NOT a Fauvist, however; he inspired the development of the Fauvist movement with his use of bright and pure color. I've never seen him referred to as a Fauvist, but a Post-Impressionist, which is the school Van Gogh painted in. In his early years he knocked back color with darks but as time went by he did much less of that, opting for brilliant color, which is what mesmerized Matisse. Henri Matisse was the founder of Fauvism and did so after being inspired by Van Gogh's work as well as a few others. If you're going to invoke the Great Masters, please do get the Art History correct. Not trying to be a snot, just feel a gift of his magnitude deserves to have his story referred to factually. He inspired that movement; he was not a Fauvist but a Post-Impressionist. Here's a respected link for you to research for yourself: www.britannica.com/art/Fauvism P.S.---your followers who'd like to have more texture in their 'squiggly lines' can use Impasto Gel with impressive results. Best Regards to you and wishing you much success~

  • @youarealwayslovedxoxo
    @youarealwayslovedxoxo 9 років тому +1

    I wish I could paint, but watching and listening to you is more enjoyable. I'm mesmerized. It's like painters are a kind of different breed, something not in my DNA.

  • @constancepaul8263
    @constancepaul8263 8 років тому

    Very good teaching. Thank you.

  • @CameraEd1
    @CameraEd1 9 років тому +5

    Very successful exercise as well as a nice portrait. And you know, "smelly lines."

  • @tonyhopman8308
    @tonyhopman8308 10 років тому +8

    brilliantly executed . . and very clear camera work , Keep it up

  • @rolzwild8150
    @rolzwild8150 8 років тому +1

    Wow man! Congrats. This is really good. Thank you.

  • @macdad159
    @macdad159 9 років тому +9

    The signature green hue in his paintings is his nod to absinthe as he was an absinthe drinker.

  • @Crashoverall
    @Crashoverall 8 років тому +5

    sometimes i think the impasto technique was used to hurry things up a little bit.
    I know its not the only reason but come on, mixing paint directly on the canvas is the fastest way to get an insane amount of paint to the canvas.
    It takes too many strokes to build it up slowly.

  • @shawnieyang1587
    @shawnieyang1587 9 років тому +37

    I had no idea Zach Galifianakis could paint!

  • @jocelynmartin1482
    @jocelynmartin1482 9 років тому +1

    I will be trying this technique for my final in drawling 2. Thanks for the share

  • @ArtOnlineUkraine
    @ArtOnlineUkraine 8 років тому +1

    Thank you for the lesson! Naturally your work looks better than me in practice it turns out!)

  • @nategrady
    @nategrady 9 років тому +2

    ahaha smelly lines! awesome work thanks for the tips

  • @joytalk7
    @joytalk7 9 років тому +4

    Thanks for that! Really nicely done:-)

  • @matthewmcknight7512
    @matthewmcknight7512 8 років тому +3

    Nice video, but Vincent was a Post Impressionist. Fauvism came about in 1905. (15 years after Van Gogh's death.)

  • @Dr10Jeeps
    @Dr10Jeeps 9 років тому +2

    I would say that is a pretty damn good imitation of Van Gogh's style! Very well done. Thanks for sharing this.

  • @malachi5813
    @malachi5813 9 років тому

    i would use more stand oil as a first coat and than no thinner and thicker clumps of paints, van gogh mixed with thicker chunks.

  • @putu6
    @putu6 7 років тому

    Very impressive and helpful.

  • @jamesgober8269
    @jamesgober8269 8 років тому

    thanks for the lesson on him. kindest Regards

  • @rexmundi2237
    @rexmundi2237 8 років тому +7

    Early in his career Vincent simply liked drawing far more than painting. He thought black and white more expressive and "serious" than colour, plus paint materials were too expensive for someone who had so much trouble just feeding himself. Wasn't until the last few years of his life that he fully appreciated Impressionism.

    • @Anomalyn1
      @Anomalyn1 8 років тому +1

      +Rex Mundi Everything you said is wrong, Read some books about his life or his letters to his brother, then talk.

    • @rexmundi2237
      @rexmundi2237 8 років тому +3

      Mihai Coltofean
      I've read LOTS of books including his letters. At time of commenting I was reading the bio by Stephen Naifeh and was paraphrasing that. So suck on that you condescending egotistical oik!

  • @jamesjumpin5873
    @jamesjumpin5873 8 років тому +1

    Great job!

  • @angelaengo5925
    @angelaengo5925 9 років тому +1

    Its really nice

  • @UncleJohnsEnjoyer
    @UncleJohnsEnjoyer 8 років тому

    What a good tutorial! Thanks :D

  • @cindychambers1588
    @cindychambers1588 8 років тому

    This is awesome work!! Thanks

  • @zainabkamal5957
    @zainabkamal5957 7 років тому

    this is really cool
    u did very good

  • @IISandyCandyII
    @IISandyCandyII 8 років тому

    so cool

  • @ianmacleod1703
    @ianmacleod1703 9 років тому

    Really good

  • @steve24822
    @steve24822 9 років тому +1

    Do the Dutch know how Van Gogh's surname should be pronounced? If yes, then it is Goff not Go.

  • @vincentfalsaperla
    @vincentfalsaperla 8 років тому

    beautiful!

  • @mojowin1
    @mojowin1 8 років тому

    very nice!

  • @tubekulose
    @tubekulose 8 років тому +1

    Man, this painter has a right to be pronounced correctly. English speakers could try it by saying "Fun Chochh" (with "ch" as it is used in "Bach" for example)!

    • @tobyeglesfield4403
      @tobyeglesfield4403 8 років тому

      You know Bach is pronounced 'Baaaa' right?

    • @tubekulose
      @tubekulose 8 років тому

      Toby Eglesfield No, it's pronounced "BaCH".
      phonetically: [ç/x], like a cat's hiss.

  • @stevesatterwhite5141
    @stevesatterwhite5141 8 років тому +4

    How can I contact this teacher? email or whatever.

  • @patwyman6814
    @patwyman6814 8 років тому

    very interesting and informative

  • @violetwilbert7160
    @violetwilbert7160 8 років тому

    What kind of paint are you using? and in what colours? :)

  • @sonicfreak04
    @sonicfreak04 7 років тому +1

    he would pefer to use a very fine linen canvas

  • @themadmarmoset16
    @themadmarmoset16 8 років тому +2

    did he say he only uses 3 colors?

    • @PaintingCourse
      @PaintingCourse  8 років тому +2

      +Matt Brueggen Yeah, I just use 3 colors and white. I've added a few more over the years, but basically it's just cad yellow, cad red, pthalo blue and white.

    • @themadmarmoset16
      @themadmarmoset16 8 років тому +1

      Did you let the background color dry first? I watched this tutorial and bought oil paints (only prior work was in acrylics) painted my canvas a 'burlap' color and attempted to 'draw' my lines with paint as you did and only managed to muddle the colors. Thanks in advance, beautiful work.

    • @bobbybrown8167
      @bobbybrown8167 8 років тому

      How the hell do you use cad red as a primary? wouldn't it be two yellow and bright? wouldn't alizerin crimson work better?

  • @Yatukih_001
    @Yatukih_001 9 років тому +1

    I just subscrived to your channel!!!!!!!

  • @angierose1076
    @angierose1076 8 років тому +4

    That almost sound like indirect shade at the viewer. "if you can't do this stage, well, you need to practice drawing more."
    XD

  • @renzo6490
    @renzo6490 8 років тому +1

    I'm questioning why you put a brown base to the painting.You say that van Gogh painted on burlap which can be a dark brown color, yes .But wouldn't he have covered that fabric with white gesso? I suspect he did ! If so, he painted on a white surface unless he added color
    to his gesso. Your purple is muddy because you're using Cadmium red, which contains yellow. A bluish red like alizarin crimson mixed with your ultramarine blue (which contains red ) would make a fine purple.

    • @muppetmaster04
      @muppetmaster04 8 років тому +1

      Gerald Greenblatt I have seen his art and he painted straight on to the brown/ocre burlap. gesso would have been to expensive for him and he would have mentioned it to theo at least once.

    • @renzo6490
      @renzo6490 8 років тому +4

      Gesso is applied to prevent the oils in the paint from coming in contact with the raw cloth because those oils will, in time, rot the material.If van Gogh painted directly on raw burlap 125 years ago, we would see that rotting process in evidence on his paintings.
      I found this information here:
      www.artistsandillustrators.co.uk/how-to/oil-painting/984/how-to-use-colour-like-van-gogh
      (“You’ll ask - please - père Tasset or père Lhote the lowest price for 10 metres of his primed or absorbent canvas,” van Gogh states in one of his letters to Theo.
      He liked to use finely woven linen on wooden stretchers, sized and then primed with Lead White, chalk and barium sulphate. The white ground was usually tinted using small amounts of pigment - Yellow Ochre, Carmine and a touch of Yellow gave a characteristic pink tint here. )
      And this from Wikipedia:
      The Red Vineyards near Arles is an oil painting by the Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh, executed on a privately primed Toile de 30 piece of burlap in early November 1888.
      Finally from the Sotheby website referring to van Gogh's painting L'ALLÉE DES ALYSCAMPS:
      Van Gogh described the support on which he painted to be "burlap," but recent scholarship suggests that it is actually rough jute. He and Gauguin had purchased this material in bulk and primed themselves, and Van Gogh used it for the first time for this picture.

  • @claudiaburgarelli
    @claudiaburgarelli 9 років тому

    loved! thaks!!

  • @ethancanin
    @ethancanin 8 років тому +3

    I'd get some burlap, and the passion he painted with. The end result is not close to Vincent. Nice, but too controlled and lacking the emotion. Fun to see someone try, but get back to us when you get a little looser in you technique.

  • @BEATNIKMACHINE
    @BEATNIKMACHINE 9 років тому

    Supe cool dude !

  • @ojpartist3411
    @ojpartist3411 9 років тому

    Great work! :D

  • @Sowlev1
    @Sowlev1 9 років тому

    Nice!

  • @orogu
    @orogu 8 років тому

    What´s the music at the background at 3:10?

  • @creative_strengths
    @creative_strengths 8 років тому +1

    What kind of paint do you use

    • @a.waller2494
      @a.waller2494 8 років тому

      I believe he's using oil paints.

  • @Yatukih_001
    @Yatukih_001 9 років тому +1

    One other thing. Sometimes he painted his other eye so that they eyelid would form a slit.....this has happened on at least one occasion. My apologies if this comment is awkard......

  • @RemoteIndigoIndex
    @RemoteIndigoIndex 9 років тому

    Good tutorial. Aesthetic set-up you got there. Informative points.

  • @tobyeglesfield4403
    @tobyeglesfield4403 8 років тому

    4:14: Van Gough is Van Gough - love it.

  • @skidplate1234
    @skidplate1234 9 років тому +1

    do you sell these? great work

  • @ahmad0farah
    @ahmad0farah 9 років тому

    thanks

  • @thatleftylennon6569
    @thatleftylennon6569 8 років тому

    Oil or acrylic?

  • @poorboyink
    @poorboyink 9 років тому +1

    nice

  • @VincentdeBarnby
    @VincentdeBarnby 8 років тому +3

    A rubbish attempt at replicating Van Gogh.
    However, a brilliant exercise for you as a painter.

  • @silvialuridiana8147
    @silvialuridiana8147 9 років тому

    thank you!!!

  • @mccalltrader
    @mccalltrader 8 років тому

    nice man!

  • @maryelizabeth7222
    @maryelizabeth7222 8 років тому

    Hey, found yr vids today. Love how you teach. Considering giving support yet I don't find your actual name in vids or comments . lmk thnks ( need to be careful these days)

  • @paruyrarabadjyan482
    @paruyrarabadjyan482 8 років тому +8

    at last someone who dosent paint like fucking bob ross!
    Glad iI found you.
    Wish you luck, try to use different styles from different artists, and from that you can make your own style.

    • @svaksmeta
      @svaksmeta 7 років тому +6

      Do not take God's name in vain

  • @dae-ong4935
    @dae-ong4935 9 років тому

    really good! you're amazing! what kind of using program? I can't listen to your voice this video 5:33 seconds parts... i'm so~ need this program

  • @mullarky
    @mullarky 8 років тому

    thanks nice vid

  • @anishac4349
    @anishac4349 8 років тому

    what kind of paint is used in this painting!!!?????? anyone tell me...reply if you can +Painting Course

    • @jasleendhaliwal2794
      @jasleendhaliwal2794 8 років тому

      Oil paint because that was what Van Gogh used

    • @PaintingCourse
      @PaintingCourse  8 років тому

      +Anisha Chowdhury These are just cheap oil paints from Umton. Nothing special about them really :)

    • @anishac4349
      @anishac4349 8 років тому

      +Painting Course and +Jasleen Dhaliwal....THANK YOU!! I basically have to do a Van Gogh style portrait of myself for my artwork...which I am finding really difficult to do...So thank you xx

  • @wiseman862
    @wiseman862 8 років тому

    Dope

  • @mukundan1
    @mukundan1 7 років тому

    Is it oil painting or acrylic?

  • @perrylinda18
    @perrylinda18 8 років тому

    Like Van Gogh..meaning?

  • @aniwhitetree3543
    @aniwhitetree3543 9 років тому +2

    Now every time I look at a Van Gogh I'm gonna see cartoon 'smelly lines' rising from behind the subjects.

  • @christopherwalker6056
    @christopherwalker6056 9 років тому +1

    You should do a feature on 'Painting like Bob Ross'. lol I can't decide who I like better, Vincent Van Gogh or Bob Ross?

  • @cosmin1537
    @cosmin1537 8 років тому

    Meanwhile, I can't paint any portraits, I paint with acrylics and I suck so much :(

  • @barnabywylde2224
    @barnabywylde2224 7 років тому

    Some people theorize that Van Gogh was colorblind.