I have just watched the full version of Jim's video and having produced over 100 of our "Painting & Travel with Roger & Sarah Bansemer" television shows for PBS, I can say without hesitation that Jim has masterfully created a masterful video. It not only is very interestingly filmed and edited flawlessly to keep the attention of the viewer but the content flows from one step to the next showing and describing the process of creating the finished artwork. A real behind the scenes look. This is the kind of video that is so nicely produced, I can watch it over and over and find something new each time.
Roger Bansemer Thanks so much, Roger, and I recommend your channel ruclips.net/user/Bansemer and your PBS program, which is on hundreds of channels across the USA.
You all probably dont care but does anyone know a method to log back into an instagram account..? I was dumb forgot my account password. I would appreciate any tips you can give me.
My mother told me, ever scene I was only 2 years old, I found a love for dinosaurs. As time goes by my love for dinosaurs grows, and only a year or two later a passion for art soon developed. My goal in life it to get to where you are, or be a paleontologist, or anything around those lines, I'm still young though, only 13, soon to be 14 so when I tell my teachers and classmates what I want to be, most don't know what that even is, usually giving me a little laugh. My family has and always will support me though my journey. I will say I have a large collection of dinosaur fossils, and figures. I'm mainly just trying to say that you inspire me, and your art work is absolutely beautiful, please never stop doing these beautiful works of art. - Elizabeth Wolfe
+Elizabeth Wolfe Best wishes and blessings for your journey and for your dreams! It´s an immeasurably valuable thing that your familiy supports your. Greetings from Germany!
When I was 14, I recall studying dinosaurs in depth, now 20, I was lucky enough to describe recently discovered Macrocollum, a sauropodomorph that seems, facially to bear an antorbital fenestra perforated by the premaxillary fenestra. I studied anatomy, locomotion and behavioural traits; my favourites were the abelisaurs, with their reduced arms of vestigial trait.
James Gurney is not only a master painter, he is a great teacher as well. His books offer a wealth of valuable information and are filled with carefully selected illustrations that beautifully visualize the points he talks about. I owe a great deal of my skills as an artist to this man.
Good to see you again, my friend. And always fascinating to see another artist's technique while at work. Like Vermeer, you paint with light, which I so admire.
I still a beginner and I work mostly in digital art and sometimes acrylic, but absolutely nothing gets me fired up about art or eager to improve like watching your videos, seeing how you work, and seeing that studio full of models and reference pictures. :) Dinotopia was my obsession as a kid, and now I keep Color and Light in arm's reach whenever possible. It's so amazing to see the theories turn into paintings in real time. Thank you so much! Definitely looking forward to the next video!
I really love how much work and detail you put into your videos (as well as in your paintings, obviously). They always cheer me up and inspire me to get out, away from the computer and try to paint traditionally! I learn so much about how to approach a painting by watching your videos. Thank you very much for that.
I have the feeling stopped appreciating people lately. So - I'm absolute amazed by your work, and can't believe the quality of your videos.. especially since most would put you into the generation of videocontent creators. I'm glade to have found such a passionate highly skilled person on here!
I bought this video and this one is super informative, like «Watercolor in the Wild» and «How I paint Dinosaurs». He is The Master, really. The process is hard to do, yet fascinating. Will wait until the «Gouache in the Wild» air.
Mr. Gurney, I have to say your work astounds me. I am not much of a painter but I am a skilled sculptor. I love what you do and would give my right arm to be able to paint the way you do!
Yo this dude's dedication is on a different level lol, he really puts in the work, but the results are truly beautiful and captivating: totally worth the time and effort. Though I kinda envy mister Gurney for having a job as cool and relaxing as this: not too many can make a living doing what he does. Only a select few have that skill and drive to do this all their lives. I used to dream of doing something like this when I was a child, back when I used to draw dinosaurs all the time. Such a wonderful job, and such a talented artist. Wish there were more of these available on youtube, because.. people wouldn't watch it just to get tips for painting, or advice for which brush to use, most people tend to like watching other people doing what they're good at. Anyway, great stuff!
Oh man oh man oh man! I have to have that video! I already bought your others so I know it'll be really inspirational and informative! Thanks so much for sharing your process with us!
Damn! I thought the painting on the thumbnail was a photo of a 3D sculpture! I expected this to be an exhibition/tutorial of handmade Dinosaur statues. Not disappointed in the least though, those paintings are amazing!!
Wonderful! I love these process paintings and am looking forward to the long-video. I will also have to check out the magazine cover. :3 Keep up the amazing work!
hi James. amazing video. what model/kit sculpture of dinosaur (the maker /dino) is the bigger one in your video. if like to get my hands on one of those :)
Stephen Vinyard The bigger dino sculpt is the Daspletosaurus my Michael Trcic, from the mid 1990s, after he worked as one of the sculptors for Jurassic Park. Some of the other sculpts that inspired me were by Tony McVey and Kaiyodo.
James Gurney awesome ! thanks for the fast response. your work is greatly admired in my household. I just bought an issue of the scientific American to frame with the Qianzhousaurus cover.
Oh boy Mr. Gurney did a great painting of ancient China 125 million years ago. scenes 1:44 to 3:44 A Competition Between 2 TYRANNOSAURS a pack of DILONG & the mighty YUTYRANNUS the 2 close relatives of TYRANNOSAURUS REX. I understand that this is just a sample of a 40 Minute documentary. I hope this comes to DVD just like James Gurney's other Successful documentary HOW I PAINT DINOSAURS.
Hey James, nice video and I'm going to buy the 40min video on your gumroad page to see the all thing. Can you, or will you be ok to do a video on the commercial/client side view of this work (or another work) ? I mean, you said you past more than a week on this project, doing some outdoor research sketches etc... That's great! But I'm very intersting to know how you sell your service for this project, I mean, it's a fine art original piece you did here. That has a huge money value, so I'm surprised that your client didn't prefere to hire some digitial illustrator who can provide same (or almost) final visual result for the cover in maybe less time and with a huge more flexibility and certainly a lower price because it's not an original fine art piece. I dont mean that your client would have hired some one else, it's the opposite I'm interested in :) It,s very cool for you to have this work and I'm interesting of the part of the project who you sell yourself and negociate with the client to avoid him to hire a lower price digital illustrator. (sorry for my english ^^)
Sylvain Klein I can't speak for the client, but I believe they are interested in commissioning the best image to illustrate their article, however it is produced. Neither digital art nor hand-painted art is necessarily cheaper or faster than the other. One good thing about hand-painted artwork is that it can be exhibited in museums. The last illustration I did for this client was included in an exhibition called Focus on Nature at the New York State Museum.
James Gurney Huge fan here. You're my main inspiration for my career, and I agree with what you said here, but how do those clients find the best possible artist for their article/project? I am an aspiring (digital) paleoartist and I have no idea how to get my name out there. There don't seem to be any job postings for this kind of work and contacting all sorts of magazines and museums would seem weird, wouldn't it?
Meggy Vodušek I'd recommend 1. Posting your work to a blog and to other forums like DeviantArt, 2. Go to Society of Vertebrate Paleontology (SVP) and Guild of Natural Science (GNSI) conferences to meet other artists and scientists. 3. Enter work in Focus on Nature (FON), every two years in Albany, NY. 4. Ask at your nearest natural history museums to sketch from their collection--scientists are usually very pleased to help artists who are serious to learn. 5. Submit your work to the reader art to Prehistoric Times. If your work is good, it will get noticed!
James Gurney Thank you very much for your time! I will look into all of those and I hope I can make as much of it as possible without being rich or living in the US.
Great painting man! But I think after the All Yesterdays, you should give up the "shrink-wrapping" or "visible fenestra" style, because with your talent and without the shrink-wrapping these paintings could be the most realistic ones of all, compareble to the master Knight's work (in their age those were the most realistic painting about dinosaurs) :D
It looks very nice from an aesthetic point of view but why do you paint visible fenestrae on the animals as if there was no flesh between the skull and the skin of the dinosaurs?
+James Gurney Hi MR. Gurney, Merry Christmas. "Once Again" It's me DDG The one who last replied to you about your Tyrannosaurs like the image of a pack of Dilong & a fierce Yutyrannus. By the name of Kathleen Geltzeiler. Like I said Those Comments were by me & they were true. My mother doesn't Comment on RUclips. So no hard feeling? Well I finally signed in. Ahem, Anyway, I'm Going to Comment on How I Paint Dinosaurs. I'll also explain about your books of DINOTOPIA again as well. Have a Merry Christmas.
This is amazing! That said, when the mouth of dinosaurs is closed, the teeth should not be showing. They apparently had lips to seal the moisture inside the oral cavity.
They also did not love millions of years ago lol. T rex was also not a predator. Too top heavy, too heavy period, too big for obstacles, and entirely useless if it falls hich all predators do when they attack or change direction quickly. It should be added that some of the dinosaurs were also too large to have existed on earth at present gravity. Bit everyone n their mother keep believing it
Ah, nice with the "coat of feathers" on the dinosaurs. The "completely made of reptile leather" is pretty outdated with new discoveries on feathers. They even discovered feathers in amber that have a unique structure, with more a hair like structure (but still recognizable as a feather) then typical feather shapes. That said, I would like to see an artist go right out. Give a dinosaur a thick layer that hides the small arms (especially on Tyrannosaurids), like they do on Emu birds. And dinosaurs always look as if they don't have skin and fat layers. Maybe a looser skin on T-Rex. Just my thoughts.
No the whole thing is a myth propagated by a small group who want birds to have come from dinosaurs which has been debunked over and over and over and over again.
when you see his work process you can't help but fall a bit in love!
I have just watched the full version of Jim's video and having produced over 100 of our "Painting & Travel with Roger & Sarah Bansemer" television shows for PBS, I can say without hesitation that Jim has masterfully created a masterful video. It not only is very interestingly filmed and edited flawlessly to keep the attention of the viewer but the content flows from one step to the next showing and describing the process of creating the finished artwork. A real behind the scenes look.
This is the kind of video that is so nicely produced, I can watch it over and over and find something new each time.
Roger Bansemer Thanks so much, Roger, and I recommend your channel ruclips.net/user/Bansemer and your PBS program, which is on hundreds of channels across the USA.
+James Gurney do more videos with big meat eating dinosaurs like this
So you're the guy that Torvosaurus gurneyi was named in honor of.
Amazing
Really? Is this true?
If it is, that’s cool
@@theboogeyman1100 Yeah it's true
You all probably dont care but does anyone know a method to log back into an instagram account..?
I was dumb forgot my account password. I would appreciate any tips you can give me.
@Zayden Parker instablaster ;)
My mother told me, ever scene I was only 2 years old, I found a love for dinosaurs. As time goes by my love for dinosaurs grows, and only a year or two later a passion for art soon developed. My goal in life it to get to where you are, or be a paleontologist, or anything around those lines, I'm still young though, only 13, soon to be 14 so when I tell my teachers and classmates what I want to be, most don't know what that even is, usually giving me a little laugh. My family has and always will support me though my journey. I will say I have a large collection of dinosaur fossils, and figures. I'm mainly just trying to say that you inspire me, and your art work is absolutely beautiful, please never stop doing these beautiful works of art.
- Elizabeth Wolfe
+Elizabeth Wolfe Best wishes and blessings for your journey and for your dreams! It´s an immeasurably valuable thing that your familiy supports your. Greetings from Germany!
As a blooming paleoartist, I support you all the way! Good luck!
When I was 14, I recall studying dinosaurs in depth, now 20, I was lucky enough to describe recently discovered Macrocollum, a sauropodomorph that seems, facially to bear an antorbital fenestra perforated by the premaxillary fenestra. I studied anatomy, locomotion and behavioural traits; my favourites were the abelisaurs, with their reduced arms of vestigial trait.
Excellent video as usual, James. Beautifully done content and video production!
wow i like James work.
My money is yours, nothing better than learning from the master.
I have both of your instructional books and they are phenomenal.
This man is a master, a modern genius of visuals.
Daaaamn!! The amount of dedication and time put into this is unreal, i wish i had that much patience and willingness to practice every single day.
James Gurney is not only a master painter, he is a great teacher as well. His books offer a wealth of valuable information and are filled with carefully selected illustrations that beautifully visualize the points he talks about. I owe a great deal of my skills as an artist to this man.
Oh this is fantastic, I love how that painting turned out. I can't wait to see the 40 minute one
I love the enthusiasm you have in making these videos and your art. There are so many moments that make me smile. Thanks!
Thank Mr. Gurney for the great videos! Just bought the 40 min version excited to see more.
I love how almost all of your paintings (I have both books) celebrate light. High key. Which give them very open and comforting mood.
Good to see you again, my friend. And always fascinating to see another artist's technique while at work. Like Vermeer, you paint with light, which I so admire.
I still a beginner and I work mostly in digital art and sometimes acrylic, but absolutely nothing gets me fired up about art or eager to improve like watching your videos, seeing how you work, and seeing that studio full of models and reference pictures. :) Dinotopia was my obsession as a kid, and now I keep Color and Light in arm's reach whenever possible. It's so amazing to see the theories turn into paintings in real time. Thank you so much! Definitely looking forward to the next video!
Rivka Z Wow, thank you, Rivka/Wesley. And best wishes with your artwork.
LOVED!! And the process is beautiful to watch.. great piece of art!
I really love how much work and detail you put into your videos (as well as in your paintings, obviously). They always cheer me up and inspire me to get out, away from the computer and try to paint traditionally! I learn so much about how to approach a painting by watching your videos. Thank you very much for that.
Simply amazing, James, your art just gets better and better and the video is superbly crafted and edited. Congratulations!
***** Thanks, Mauricio and Jeff Miracola, that means a lot from two guys who are both brilliant artists AND you guys both do amazing videos.
I have the feeling stopped appreciating people lately. So - I'm absolute amazed by your work, and can't believe the quality of your videos.. especially since most would put you into the generation of videocontent creators. I'm glade to have found such a passionate highly skilled person on here!
Please keep doing - no sure what, but what ever you can image for yourself - and if possible let us keep watching it.
Bests Alex, 23 from Germany 🖌️❤️
I bought this video and this one is super informative, like «Watercolor in the Wild» and «How I paint Dinosaurs». He is The Master, really. The process is hard to do, yet fascinating. Will wait until the «Gouache in the Wild» air.
I just finished the longer video and it was great! Thanks for releasing it :)
This inspired me so much!!! Thank you!
So fascinated just to listen to your stories.
Always very inspiring to see you at work, I've been a fan since I was a tyke. Thanks for explaining the process from thumbnails to finished painting.
Mr. Gurney, I have to say your work astounds me. I am not much of a painter but I am a skilled sculptor. I love what you do and would give my right arm to be able to paint the way you do!
Brad Hicks Thank you very much for the kind words, but hang onto that right arm!
Yo this dude's dedication is on a different level lol, he really puts in the work, but the results are truly beautiful and captivating: totally worth the time and effort. Though I kinda envy mister Gurney for having a job as cool and relaxing as this: not too many can make a living doing what he does. Only a select few have that skill and drive to do this all their lives. I used to dream of doing something like this when I was a child, back when I used to draw dinosaurs all the time. Such a wonderful job, and such a talented artist. Wish there were more of these available on youtube, because.. people wouldn't watch it just to get tips for painting, or advice for which brush to use, most people tend to like watching other people doing what they're good at. Anyway, great stuff!
My god gurney would u ever cease to amaze me
Bought it with closed eyes! Amazing as usual, thank you!
*jaw drops to floor*
Huh? Wha? How? This is incredible! You are so passionate and put so much effort into these!
i love seeing you draw and paint dinosours
Great as usual. Thanks James!
Just bought it and downloading now. Can't wait to watch it. :)
You sir, are very thorough.
Oh man oh man oh man! I have to have that video! I already bought your others so I know it'll be really inspirational and informative! Thanks so much for sharing your process with us!
Awesome! Great work James!
What an amazing life you've created for yourself.
Damn! I thought the painting on the thumbnail was a photo of a 3D sculpture! I expected this to be an exhibition/tutorial of handmade Dinosaur statues. Not disappointed in the least though, those paintings are amazing!!
Wonderful! I love these process paintings and am looking forward to the long-video. I will also have to check out the magazine cover. :3 Keep up the amazing work!
Hi, can anyone tell me what word James is saying at 1:05. Automatic captions make it "dialogues," but but it neither sounds like one nor fits there.
It’s “Dilong”
He wrote it in the video
@@barselino9877 Yes, I can see it now. Thanks:-)
Bix was always one of my favorite characters from childhood
Fascinating and educational!
Easily my favorite interpretation of Yutyrannus, who is also my favorite carnivore.
So wonderful
Beautiful and inspiring!
DUDE YOUR AMAZING!!!YOU HAVE 1K LIKES AND ONLY 2 DISLIKES!!!
Fantastic stuff!
First time I saw Mr. Gurney's work was in a 1991 issue of Newsweek magazine, along with Gurche and Hallet's
James Gurney
You are Awesome
this video is gold!
Maravilloso un trabajo incomiable que nos hace soñar en una realidad plausible
At 4:02 what is the name of the pen 🖊please
what is he using at 1:01?
Great art e video 👍👍👍
Awesome! Buying the video now. :) What happened to Mr. Kooks?!?
stuckinsj My little parakeet finally died of old age at 11.
Wow ❤️ amazing and I love it
You have great drawings I see, very important stuff.
you're my favorite youtuber
your work is amazing, i have a question, 2:09 minutes you miss the illustrations?
Epic skills! , thank you for sharing. your work is mind blowing :D!!
this is awesome af :( Thank you so much
Sua arte é inspiradora!
Amazing.
Totally subbed, amazing. :D
im curious about "hodgepodge + clutter".
What type of paints do you use?
I use oils, casein, gouache, and watercolor. Usually several brands of each, except for the casein which is only made by one company.
what is that board set up you have on your easel..i believe you have a couple different ones...do you make yourself or buy them.??
Does video/DVD have caption? I'm deaf.
Hi James, have you ever done your illustrations via digital mediums? i.e. Painter or Photoshop? Love the channel by the way... inspiring stuff! :)
whoever puts a thumbs down on these videos is an absolute...
hi James. amazing video. what model/kit sculpture of dinosaur (the maker /dino) is the bigger one in your video. if like to get my hands on one of those :)
Stephen Vinyard The bigger dino sculpt is the Daspletosaurus my Michael Trcic, from the mid 1990s, after he worked as one of the sculptors for Jurassic Park. Some of the other sculpts that inspired me were by Tony McVey and Kaiyodo.
James Gurney awesome ! thanks for the fast response. your work is greatly admired in my household. I just bought an issue of the scientific American to frame with the Qianzhousaurus cover.
wow! thank you!
Excelente!!
where did you get that tyrannosaur sculpture next to yourself in the video? i would definately buy one
dexter morgan There's a gray Daspletosaurus sculpt by Mike Trcic, and various other sculpts by Tony McVey and Kaiyodo.
thank you so much
Oh boy Mr. Gurney did a great painting of ancient China 125 million years ago. scenes 1:44 to 3:44 A Competition Between 2 TYRANNOSAURS a pack of DILONG & the mighty YUTYRANNUS the 2 close relatives of TYRANNOSAURUS REX. I understand that this is just a sample of a 40 Minute documentary. I hope this comes to DVD just like James Gurney's other Successful documentary HOW I PAINT DINOSAURS.
James is a badass!
Hey James, nice video and I'm going to buy the 40min video on your gumroad page to see the all thing.
Can you, or will you be ok to do a video on the commercial/client side view of this work (or another work) ? I mean, you said you past more than a week on this project, doing some outdoor research sketches etc... That's great! But I'm very intersting to know how you sell your service for this project, I mean, it's a fine art original piece you did here. That has a huge money value, so I'm surprised that your client didn't prefere to hire some digitial illustrator who can provide same (or almost) final visual result for the cover in maybe less time and with a huge more flexibility and certainly a lower price because it's not an original fine art piece.
I dont mean that your client would have hired some one else, it's the opposite I'm interested in :)
It,s very cool for you to have this work and I'm interesting of the part of the project who you sell yourself and negociate with the client to avoid him to hire a lower price digital illustrator.
(sorry for my english ^^)
Sylvain Klein I can't speak for the client, but I believe they are interested in commissioning the best image to illustrate their article, however it is produced. Neither digital art nor hand-painted art is necessarily cheaper or faster than the other. One good thing about hand-painted artwork is that it can be exhibited in museums. The last illustration I did for this client was included in an exhibition called Focus on Nature at the New York State Museum.
James Gurney Huge fan here. You're my main inspiration for my career, and I agree with what you said here, but how do those clients find the best possible artist for their article/project? I am an aspiring (digital) paleoartist and I have no idea how to get my name out there. There don't seem to be any job postings for this kind of work and contacting all sorts of magazines and museums would seem weird, wouldn't it?
Meggy Vodušek I'd recommend 1. Posting your work to a blog and to other forums like DeviantArt, 2. Go to Society of Vertebrate Paleontology (SVP) and Guild of Natural Science (GNSI) conferences to meet other artists and scientists. 3. Enter work in Focus on Nature (FON), every two years in Albany, NY. 4. Ask at your nearest natural history museums to sketch from their collection--scientists are usually very pleased to help artists who are serious to learn. 5. Submit your work to the reader art to Prehistoric Times. If your work is good, it will get noticed!
James Gurney Thank you very much for your time! I will look into all of those and I hope I can make as much of it as possible without being rich or living in the US.
Oh cool you put some fluffy feathers on him. I just saw an interesting documentary about that.
Hi from Colombia The land of Sea Mosters I want to tell you that I love your art and want to become a paleoartist!
Great painting man! But I think after the All Yesterdays, you should give up the "shrink-wrapping" or "visible fenestra" style, because with your talent and without the shrink-wrapping these paintings could be the most realistic ones of all, compareble to the master Knight's work (in their age those were the most realistic painting about dinosaurs) :D
James and Jeanette the best team ever!! UH UHHHHH
Thank you, Laura. We enjoyed talking to you. You bring out everyone's best.
It looks very nice from an aesthetic point of view but why do you paint visible fenestrae on the animals as if there was no flesh between the skull and the skin of the dinosaurs?
Is that the music from Assassins Creed?
Bandwidth The music is by Kevin MacLeod, and you can hear more of his work at Incompetech.
James Gurney Thanks James, I'll check it out
+James Gurney Hi MR. Gurney, Merry Christmas. "Once Again" It's me DDG The one who last replied to you about your Tyrannosaurs like the image of a pack of Dilong & a fierce Yutyrannus. By the name of Kathleen Geltzeiler. Like I said Those Comments were by me & they were true. My mother doesn't Comment on RUclips. So no hard feeling? Well I finally signed in. Ahem, Anyway, I'm Going to Comment on How I Paint Dinosaurs. I'll also explain about your books of DINOTOPIA again as well. Have a Merry Christmas.
Love it
I was linked here by a hirohiko araki fan on "araki draws all jojos 4x faster version" on here to your page.
All these paintings are "Big brain.
This is amazing! That said, when the mouth of dinosaurs is closed, the teeth should not be showing. They apparently had lips to seal the moisture inside the oral cavity.
They also did not love millions of years ago lol. T rex was also not a predator. Too top heavy, too heavy period, too big for obstacles, and entirely useless if it falls hich all predators do when they attack or change direction quickly.
It should be added that some of the dinosaurs were also too large to have existed on earth at present gravity.
Bit everyone n their mother keep believing it
dude you are so cool 😃
Eu gosto deste tipo de vídeos RUclips!
I wish I could do that.
U AWESOME... its so REAL
Wow......
i miss mr. kooks :(
loplop91 Me too! He was my saurian advisor.
James Gurney Saurian advisor??
@@SCR_ProductionsYT because birds decent from dino hahah! geddit geddit ;)
the frog be like: look at those big ass lizards fighting like degenerates lol
I Love you art
Ah, nice with the "coat of feathers" on the dinosaurs. The "completely made of reptile leather" is pretty outdated with new discoveries on feathers. They even discovered feathers in amber that have a unique structure, with more a hair like structure (but still recognizable as a feather) then typical feather shapes.
That said, I would like to see an artist go right out. Give a dinosaur a thick layer that hides the small arms (especially on Tyrannosaurids), like they do on Emu birds.
And dinosaurs always look as if they don't have skin and fat layers. Maybe a looser skin on T-Rex.
Just my thoughts.
You use a lego dolly? Cool.
Didnt know you were bald mate
He put feathers on him lol. There is nothing to suggest the T-Rex had feathers.
He’s not painting a T-Rex...
@@MordifertheMalicious true that, regardless, no need for feathers.
John White plenty of need for feathers actually seeing as the species in the vid have direct evidence for feathers
educate yourself
so tyrannos had feathers !!!
No the whole thing is a myth propagated by a small group who want birds to have come from dinosaurs which has been debunked over and over and over and over again.
@@JoshuaHultsare you retarded or do you pretend?
true true but when the t rex came in all the dinosaurs started dying...
I wish it was a tarbosaurus