Melissa Weinman Studies Clyde Aspevig at The Tacoma Art Museum

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2015
  • In May 2015 Melissa Weinman painted a Master Copy of Clyde Aspevig's On the Way To Heaven at the Tacoma Art Museum. Watch to find out what Weinman learned in the process.

Комментарии • 34

  • @josephsevier3927
    @josephsevier3927 3 месяца назад

    Melissa Weinman tells the story of this painting so perfectly. With her we peer through the layers of thinking. I come away with a great admiration for the achievement of the painter. Weinman is masterful.

  • @KTWebDesign
    @KTWebDesign 5 лет назад +3

    I love Aspevig's landscapes and I was so interested by your discussion of his composition and color choices. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @Jackie-pu5jh
    @Jackie-pu5jh 6 лет назад +2

    As someone new to oil painting, I appreciate your analysis so much. Great job.

  • @phillange166
    @phillange166 Год назад

    Thank you for your video about this painting. Your step-by-step analysis is so credible and insightful. Now I must check your other videos.

  • @katpaints
    @katpaints Год назад

    I have been watching things on Clyde Aspevig recently, so having this show up wasn't a surprise!. However that you work out of Ruston is a delight. I love your perspective on this painting. To me, your description of where you have to be standing reminds me of being up at Paradise, looking towards the Tatoosh range, where my mother's horse ran away from her when she worked up there in the 30s. I can imagine being higher than my eye-line and knowing where you have to go in order to get to where you are going. I am truly enjoying watching your videos! I just wish they were in a playlist, in order!

  • @homayounazarnoush5699
    @homayounazarnoush5699 Год назад

    Thank you so much to sharing your experience in painting.

  • @deborahgonzalezknight168
    @deborahgonzalezknight168 4 года назад

    Wow. What an amazing painting.

  • @natlegere
    @natlegere Год назад

    Fabulous interpretation!

  • @judypal55
    @judypal55 7 лет назад +1

    I am trying to decipher Clyde Aspevig's use of close mid-values, as well as other characteristics. Thank you for a fascinating analysis.

  • @robertanderson2881
    @robertanderson2881 5 лет назад

    l admired Clyde's paintings years ago then l found out about his sad passing which shocked and saddened me! he was still way to young to leave us! l nearly brought one of his paintings back in the 1980's wish now l did, l live in Australia nice job Melissa cheers.

    • @melissaweinman167
      @melissaweinman167  5 лет назад

      Robert Anderson, I didn't realize that Clyde had passed! Thank you for letting me know and for watching my video. Clyde was a master!

    • @melissaweinman167
      @melissaweinman167  5 лет назад

      I just saw a blog from Clyde on his website from yesterday. Are you sure he died?!

    • @carefulobserver1166
      @carefulobserver1166 3 года назад

      He's very much alive and painting better than ever.

  • @kanchangupta2038
    @kanchangupta2038 3 года назад

    Great perspective ..

  • @moronsmorons
    @moronsmorons Год назад

    So we'll described. It was very informative

  • @mbrownie22
    @mbrownie22 6 лет назад

    Great video thanks

  • @michael4250
    @michael4250 Год назад

    I would love to see this work if it was in focus.

  • @captainnolan5062
    @captainnolan5062 6 месяцев назад

    Wonderful analysis of the painting, though I take the rock 'trail' up the mountain (my eyes don't 'hike' on the grass).

  • @RobReepArt
    @RobReepArt 6 лет назад

    What type of brush did you find yourself using throughout most of the piece to re-create his underpainting and then his surface texture?

    • @melissaweinman167
      @melissaweinman167  6 лет назад +1

      Hi Rob, I was painting in a much smaller scale than Aspevig, so surface texture doesn't really translate. I've seen Clyde scrub his paintings in the beginning with a bristle brush. Though I was painting alla prima, too, my study was more about color, value, and composition. Sometime I'd like to do a Master Copy of Clyde's work that is to scale so I could learn more about the paint application.

    • @RobReepArt
      @RobReepArt 6 лет назад

      Thank you so much for your quick response.

    • @melissaweinman167
      @melissaweinman167  6 лет назад

      Thanks for watching!

  • @robertradocha6871
    @robertradocha6871 Год назад

    💕💯🎨🎨🎨

  • @brownton5649
    @brownton5649 Год назад

    Biutifful

  • @kirkwilliams6938
    @kirkwilliams6938 6 лет назад +1

    That's a huge palette of colors. I know Clyde does not work in those earth tones out of the tube but creates his own. That is cheating a bit isn't it? Isn't the point to find the colors he used with something similar to his palette?

    • @melissaweinman167
      @melissaweinman167  6 лет назад

      Kirk Williams of course it would have been great to know his palette. Since studying his paintings for me is about becoming a better painter, it was still worthwhile for me to translate his color through my own palette. You may have noticed that my palette (12 colors) was on the right and the colors I made were on the left.

  • @jimjotka2187
    @jimjotka2187 2 года назад

    He got to work from good reference material and that painting could take a long time it's more like working like a illustrator it's a major undertaken how many weeks

  • @devinroberts1984
    @devinroberts1984 7 лет назад +2

    Or rather you are doing a master copy of Clyde Aspevig's copy of a John Singer Sargent landscape. Because although Clyde doesn't credit Sargent, there is a Sargent landscape that is suspiciously similar to Clyde Aspevigs painting here.

    • @melissaweinman167
      @melissaweinman167  7 лет назад

      You are so right! I found an image attributed to Sargent using a Google search that may be the one you are referring to. It isn't in my Sargent monograph and the Pinterest page that posted it appears to be gone. In the Sargent there is a waterfall to the left instead of a deep recess. Are we talking about the same painting?

    • @krkabob
      @krkabob 6 лет назад

      That's all Clyde... no one better.

  • @jimjotka2187
    @jimjotka2187 2 года назад

    Painters like Clyde can't explain what he does he just got to be able to do it too much thinking gets in the way

  • @zerogravity6201
    @zerogravity6201 10 месяцев назад

    Too much theory is what destroys the art. I got mislead by your title and thought you are perhaps capable of practically doing a study like in classical sense, but it turns out all theory and just theory. Sorry, but it's useless.