From every Demo, I have learned to watch how an artist paints. As he said it is a collection of ideas that I have learned over the years from other painters. I enjoyed this very much. Thank You for posting this.
Every master painter, working today, has learned from viewing the art of former masters, and trying to emulate that artist's working methods. One of his favorites is Isaac Levitan; google his work, ...and be completely amazed, everyone. :)
Dear Mr Aspivig. I have long been an admirer of your work. I was first introduced to your paintings by mr Tom Buechner in corning new york. He owned two pieces of your work. One was a small square painting of an orange. The other was a little bit larger landscape painted in the southwest. These were both stunning paintings. Tom considered you a dear friend. And your paintings were a tremendous inspiration to me. Thank you! god bless.
On 2nd viewing, I must add some criticism to this approach. I am always suspect when I do not like how the artist holds his brush, as I see here. It is too casual and offhanded. But my bigger criticism is this type of use of color. Overall, I see much too much use of white in the pigments, which is not how the best painters paint. The colors appear quite pasty and unconvincing. So, when we are told a certain artist is at the highest levels of achievement in his field, well, I will only believe this if I see it with my own eyes. I do not see this here.
@@artandarchitecture6399 Because of your comment I took another look at Aspevig's paintings. And I fully reconfirmed that they are not good, creative or inspiring by any measure I use, which is informed by many decades intently studying art in the best museums, my personal library of about 1000 good art books, and having studied at university with some of the very top art historians, to say nothing of my own life creating art, awards, important collections, etc. His paintings are really mediocre illustrations at best, certainly not "fine art". And to say that the best artists hold their brush his way, like battering a cake, is just not true. Let's just leave it that we agree on nothing about the merits or lack thereof regarding this artist. He has nothing to teach me.
@@KpxUrz5745 Gee, you are quite a guy, in your own mind, congratulations!! No, sincerely!! We should all aspire thus, based on your inspiration you have so kindly provided!! BTW we say "icing or frosting" a cake; not what you said, the "quaint" language that it is!! ;D LOL
@@ronschlorff7089 I notice that no one comments on the merits or real points under discussion about Aspevig, his paintings and his methods. Instead they toss out silly insults and other nonsense from the Peanut Gallery.
@@KpxUrz5745 LOL. Sorry but I'm allergic to peanuts, so when you bake me a cake and "batter it with frosting", LOL, (that still cracks me up), please no peanut butter in it, OK? LOL As for his work, it speaks for itself better than any of us can, that's all. You're the "peanut head" who first "tossed out silly insults" directed at Mr. Aspevig and his work, and then aggrandized yourself about it! That's considered bad form among working artists here in the USA, and most of the rest of the "civilized world" for that matter! What are you, Chinese, or Russian?! No need for us to comment further on his work. And now, can we see yours? Is it even plein air? Where is it, on a web page, or You Tube? If you show us yours, we'll show you ours; we've already seen Clyde's great work, on many channels here on you tube!! LOL ;D
Just watched this again. Great ideas never go out of style.
From every Demo, I have learned to watch how an artist paints. As he said it is a collection of ideas that I have learned over the years from other painters. I enjoyed this very much. Thank You for posting this.
Every master painter, working today, has learned from viewing the art of former masters, and trying to emulate that artist's working methods. One of his favorites is Isaac Levitan; google his work, ...and be completely amazed, everyone. :)
My absolute favorite artist! What a master he is!
I've been wanting to see a painting lesson from Clyde. Thank you so much!
I admired clydes work for a decade now. hes awesome :)
Dear Mr Aspivig.
I have long been an admirer of your work. I was first introduced to your paintings by mr Tom Buechner in corning new york. He owned two pieces of your work. One was a small square painting of an orange. The other was a little bit larger landscape painted in the southwest. These were both stunning paintings. Tom considered you a dear friend. And your paintings were a tremendous inspiration to me.
Thank you! god bless.
Lovely. Great demo.
What a fabulous artist. From Wales , so he's knew to me but I will study him from now on.
I’ve always been attracted to your work and after listening to you Im even more pleased🙏🏻🥇
Clyde Aspevig,,, a true master of his craft.....too short of a video...!!!
One of my favorite artists!
Here is the my master!!
Felicidades Maestro, habla pinta a la vez, eso se conquista con años de práctica. Mis respetos y admiración.
Thanks Master, I admire you and the poetry in your art
He's a very good teacher aswell as being a talented artist
The best and admired artist !
Thank you for sharing this.
why dont you show the whole lesson ?????
Thank you ❤
Where is the full video?
Such a Legend
Great artist
Could you please turn on Turkish subtitles?
Good
Dear Sir did you paint in the same way when you were 21 ?
Es usted un grande!
❤
“The instruments of torture”. 😂 Painting can really do a number on you mentally.
The thing to do is to write down his color palette…
Do you ever actually do a painting of a painting?
Tuyệt vời
Took him longer to name his paints.
Why the bloody dreary piano muzak drives me mad
If you can sketch, you can paint! Improve your sketching, the rest will come.
Can’t do it that Muzak is so annoying
On 2nd viewing, I must add some criticism to this approach. I am always suspect when I do not like how the artist holds his brush, as I see here. It is too casual and offhanded. But my bigger criticism is this type of use of color. Overall, I see much too much use of white in the pigments, which is not how the best painters paint. The colors appear quite pasty and unconvincing. So, when we are told a certain artist is at the highest levels of achievement in his field, well, I will only believe this if I see it with my own eyes. I do not see this here.
@@artandarchitecture6399 Because of your comment I took another look at Aspevig's paintings. And I fully reconfirmed that they are not good, creative or inspiring by any measure I use, which is informed by many decades intently studying art in the best museums, my personal library of about 1000 good art books, and having studied at university with some of the very top art historians, to say nothing of my own life creating art, awards, important collections, etc. His paintings are really mediocre illustrations at best, certainly not "fine art". And to say that the best artists hold their brush his way, like battering a cake, is just not true. Let's just leave it that we agree on nothing about the merits or lack thereof regarding this artist. He has nothing to teach me.
@@KpxUrz5745 Gee, you are quite a guy, in your own mind, congratulations!! No, sincerely!! We should all aspire thus, based on your inspiration you have so kindly provided!! BTW we say "icing or frosting" a cake; not what you said, the "quaint" language that it is!! ;D LOL
@@ronschlorff7089 I notice that no one comments on the merits or real points under discussion about Aspevig, his paintings and his methods. Instead they toss out silly insults and other nonsense from the Peanut Gallery.
@@KpxUrz5745 LOL. Sorry but I'm allergic to peanuts, so when you bake me a cake and "batter it with frosting", LOL, (that still cracks me up), please no peanut butter in it, OK? LOL
As for his work, it speaks for itself better than any of us can, that's all. You're the "peanut head" who first "tossed out silly insults" directed at Mr. Aspevig and his work, and then aggrandized yourself about it! That's considered bad form among working artists here in the USA, and most of the rest of the "civilized world" for that matter! What are you, Chinese, or Russian?!
No need for us to comment further on his work. And now, can we see yours? Is it even plein air? Where is it, on a web page, or You Tube? If you show us yours, we'll show you ours; we've already seen Clyde's great work, on many channels here on you tube!! LOL ;D
Argee with you on this ine