Clyde Aspevig at the Montana Quarterly Festival
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- Опубликовано: 29 июл 2014
- Hear Clyde Aspevig, America's leading landscape painter, speak and see his work as he presents at the "How it Happens" festival. He gives his thoughts on interpreting landscapes into paintings, and on changing the way you look at landscape. Clyde touches on landscape history, bringing music into painting, and seeing music in landscapes.
Thank you Clyde for the most informative presentation that is heart- felt and life altering for me after more than a decade of sketching and painting.
Ive observed his work in person at a local gallery. Fantastic! Very grateful to understand more about the person behind the brush.
Thank you very much!❤
What a great artist! A musician, a poet and a painter. That was marvelous!
Well done Clyde. You are an inspiration to us all.
Inspiring discussion and great landscape painting! Thanks for sharing.
You are today's master as Edgar Payne is today. Share your knowledge today so many need it. There's so much not taught and going a stray. Many artists and inspiring painters , kids upcoming in the landscape realm of oil painting need your knowledge. Edgar Payne left behind his notes, you can leave your impression throughout the now. Lectures, dvds or book form the world of painters need your notes as an orchestra needs the conductor.
Just one video... well, better than nothing! I am looking for more!
always loved your work
Superb!
Thanks for posting, Clyde! I just found this.
My favorite painter in the world!!!
Great presentation. Thank you!
Wonderful art talk, thank you for sharing.
I've always believed that plein air painting began when the French impressionists could not get into the formal art academy, so they started to attempt to learn painting fundamentals by themselves outdoors. They basically were self-taught, and so the fundamentals were displayed in their work. That's why impressionist paintings look like art student work.
GREAT VIDEO THANK YOU!!!
you are a wicked painter
Easy to see why he is considered the world's best living landscape painter.
As for the urinal, I don't think that Marcel was saying that it was art. He was saying that the powers that be - the monied class that bought art - could say whether it was art or not.