Abstract Realism by MARC FOLLY | Painting Masters 35
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- Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
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In today's episode of Painting Masters we'll be looking at works by Marc Folly, a watercolor painter from Lyon, France.
What captivates me the most about his work is the emphasis he puts on composing the paintings in a very interesting way. It's like he has the viewer in mind when planning his works.
He also merges a lot of shapes, and in some cases almost fully abstracts his work. The result is fascinating to me, as I think it puts a mirror on my own work and where I can still grow a lot.
I hope you enjoy this one!
Marc's website: www.marc-folly....
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Music by Joakim Karud / joakimkarud
Music by @joakimkarudmusic - Хобби
I had a chance to do a Workshop with him. He originally learned from an oil painter and he mixes Watercolour like that, believe me it works. He starts with the darks and he is a master to connect shapes!
So are you able to tell us about how he does the lights? Paper or white or almost white paint? Also, does he do detailed pencil drawings first? Does he work from photos or from the scene itself? How lucky you are to have done a workshop with someone like that. I can see that he has oils background. All the principles are there. Thanks, Tzipora
@@tziporaneemanfeder1813 white paper with relatively detailed drawing. He usually does this from his own reference photos.
@@wystemd Thanks for letting me know.
@@tziporaneemanfeder1813 Mark works from photographs, first he does simple pencil drawing, then light washes carefully avoiding his whites. he pours watery pigments out of his bowls or trays and dances with his paper mixing the washes. He uses a lot of brush splashing around almost carelessly. Then he uses hair dryer to dry light washes. then he uses stronger pigmentation but still watery putting it on paper with rigger brush(long and thin) kind of dancing with it but doing concrete shapes of things, changing colour load for different colours yet mixing them on edges, splashing again, always connecting things together revisiting his whites and all. And the colour scheme is surprising as Liron pointed very well by his observations. A real Maestro!
Mark Foley' work is insane! HE could make a pile of trash look beautiful. Wow! Thanks for sharing.
Hi Liron, another artist who painted with an abstract approach to traditional subjects was Claude Croney. A signature member of AWS, he was a popular workshop artist back in the 70s and 80s. Not many examples of his work are online. Claude's work is featured in the book, "Watercolor Impressionists" by Ron Ranson. Cheers!
Thank You Liron for an Informative and Helpful and packed with Insights❤👌✨️🪷 Cape Town
Thank you so much! 🙏😊
I love the way you study other artists, and take us with you
😊🙏🏼 Thank you for watching
The third painting was a woman weaving. Those "wires" were warp threads. The small colored items in the front are bobbins of colored thread or yarn to be woven into the warp threads. She is probably weaving a rug or a tapestry.
Thank you for the clarification! I never know the words to anything 😂🙏🏼🙏🏼
One of my favorites. Now he has an Instagram page and frequently posts videos about the process of his work. Thank you so much for this, Liron!
I love listening to you explaining the paintings as much as I love the paintings! Thanks for this!
Thanks for showing us Mark Folly's art. You're right, his approach isn't a crutch. Rather it's a different emphasis completely from what most of us do. He's not painting things at all. He's painting effects - effects generated by light patterns. Stefan Baumann talks about this a lot.
Exactly 😉
His work is AWESOME. I like how he leaves much to our imaginations - like the "hot dog stand" or whatever we visualize it to be. The "weaving" one is also so interesting. I feel so inadequate :)
Thanks for introducing me to Marc Folly's art, he is fantastic! It's amazing to me how he can make a humdrum scene beautiful.
Haha yes, it’s a real gift 😊 Thank you so much for watching!
One of my favorites , if not favorite masters
Marc Folly made me realize, along with Marzio Tamer that the sort of "watercolor" establishment.. meaning all the bigger magazines and websites have really elevated some weak watercolorists to the top and how 99 percent of the watercolorists out there are all painting the same really thin sketch quick looking work where every figure looks like the same little dash with a bright red highlight etc. You look at the diversity possible in the medium and you realize its as diverse as oil paint but its not taken as seriously because too many of the watercolorists are quite frankly not really good at what they do and dont experiment or try finding their own approach. Style is what happens when you develop your technique and paint application method.. if everyone is painting the same technique and way the work becomes so bland it all looks like the same artists except for a few gimmicks they may throw on top.
Totally agree!
Oh wow! Thanks so much for showing this artist’s works. They’re absolutely gorgeous. So much texture and granulation in his paints, which I love!
Yes, he’s really a master of textures and adding splashes and interest, in addition to the larger shapes and composition 😁
Excellent vid Liron, I love Marc Folly’s work his comps are amazing and his use of bright colors and light are outstanding! Thanks for posting.
So happy you enjoyed this one! (:
Thank you Liron for making this video! I've casted this on a large tv-screen, there was so much to look at! Especially with your in depth guide through it all!
Haha amazing 😁😁 I should do that too (for my own vids 😂). Thank you for watching!
Great video...you're reviews and analysis of other artists' works are superior. I'm wonder whether we will see any more outdoor painting from you? I have always found it very interesting to watch you develop a painting on site.
Yes, there will definitely be more of that! I barely made time to paint plein-air recently. But will make more time and do it soon! 😊🙏🏼 thank you so much for watching, very happy you enjoy these!
Thank you very much. I learn very much from your comments.
Really great analysis of amazing artwork
Live Marc’s work...great breakdown and analysts!!:) T
Great artist, I agree
Great vid as usual, thanks Liron ! May I suggest you to have a look on Ron Ranson's watercolor works. He paints everything with a limited palette and a Hake brush… How to simplify as he does is wonderful.
Thank you for watching! 😊🙏🏼 He’s on my list as well (: Will look more into his work and probably feature in the future
What a great video....thanks for your thoughts on one of my favorite painters. Marc Folly is epic! I wanted to let you know that the last piece you show is a potter's bench, with the wheel in the foreground with a completed bowl.
Also another artist who I think is stellar and would love to hear your review is John Lovett from Australia. Please keep me posted if you can, if and when you post a review of him.
Should have known that! 😂 Thank you 😊🙏🏼
Will definitely add John Lovett to my list - wasn't familiar with him!
@@LironYan Awesome! That's great. Before seeing your video here I was debating whether to buy Marc Folly's new book. Your video convinced me and it is on it's way to me now. He even wrote me a personal email. Thanks again. Looking forward to following your videos, too.
It seems like it follows subject shading and other things of art but abstract
Great vid, Liron!! Marc Foley's color choices remind me a little of Viktoria Prischedko 🙂 I would love to see you feature her on Painting Masters!
Indeed very similar, very primary based 😊 She’s on my list so will feature in the future!! 😊🙏🏼
@@LironYan So happy to hear that! I'll keep an eye out for it!!
He is on instagram & works from dark to lights!
His work reminds me somewhat of Richard Bolton's. Richard paints things like old tractors, old cars, rusty things. If you've not seen his work, check him out. One of his books is called "Texture and Detail in Watercolors".
Yes, they have very similar subjects, yet a different style 😉 Richard’s on my list as well 😁
Loved this analysis Leon….have long been an admirer of Marc Folly’s work..he has been featured in a few past issues of ‘The Art of Watercolour’ ans it’s French sister magazine, L’Art d’Aquarelle
He's incredible! So happy you enjoyed this episode as well 😊🙏🏼
Beautiful Artwork = really something for me to aspire to thank you By the way I really love this video series
Thank you so much 😊🙏🏼 Means to world to me to know you enjoy it!
He is my favorite painter. I learnt a lot from you as well :) by the way, now you can find a video on his process. You can find it by searching : Demo de Acuarela Marc Folly.
Thank you! 😊🙏🏼 I watched it and some of what he posts on IG (which is indeed much shorter vids) and it's fascinating to see! 😍
Liron, this fellow's work is simply wonderful. He uses hard and soft edges to get his focal point. I'm curious if the light/white areas are the paper or does he use, for example, white guache or something. I'm assuming that he does careful drawings beforehand. I've been trying not to draw ahead but I'm not very successful. With oils, it was soooo much easier. I'd love to be able to paint like this too. The colours he's using seem to be simply complimentaries in one form or another - blues/oranges for example. Thanks for this ! Tzipora from Jerusalem.
Hi Tzipora, hope you’re doing great 😊 I believe he’s saving 90% of the highlights!
I'm fine, thanks, Liron. Struggling with my painting but better than before. Would LOVE to paint like Marc Folly. I think I have to spend more time on my pre painting drawing and the rest should fall in line. I hope. I've been trying more free flower type stuff and sometimes they're ok and sometimes a disaster. I'll keep trying.@@LironYan
Saving 90% of the highlights?? Not sure what that is? Thanks for Great video!
Wonderful artist! I like his work. Can you make something about Xavier Swolfs, he is a Belgium artist, wonderful work too. And Jeanne Dobbie is fascinating too, may be you can make a video about the both are working.
Marc Folly has an Instagram channel with brief videos of his process
👍👍👍thank you❤🌹🙏
Already a fan of this guy after this video, may end up in my personal podium of favorites with Chung-Wei and a third one (which I'm sure not sure if could be Castagnet or maybe another guy i don't recall his name now... Derek something?). Hey Liron, what is the status 📴 your personal 3 or 4 favorite watercolorists? Thanks for the video, cheers.
He has videos on Instagram
What colours does he use in his pallet?
i think he uses french ultramarine, sepia, indiam yellow, permanent rose and a touch of turqoise 👍
Does Marc Folly draw pencil conture prior to painting?
Hey Liron, If you haven't seen it yet, there's a demo by Marc Folly on RUclips : ruclips.net/video/XF2IJn7lZfc/видео.html It's surprising, to say the least!
Liron, I just googled him and I see he's on Facebook. I'm not on Facebook but perhaps you could contact him there. I'd love to know more about his process. Tzipora
Will do some detective work 😉
@@LironYan Did you?
I've seen two other videos of Folly painting. Here's one: ruclips.net/video/fF16x_WBg6A/видео.htmlsi=tqLNQsbWjIUtFsFP. (In French.). There is a lot of really interesting process: pools of paint, tilting the paper this way and that, and even using the pool as a sort of pallete to take paint from! The other one is from the Victorian Watercolor Society; it is very short and I didn't get much from it - you might get more.
I fell in love with Marc’s work initially because of his colour palette and then I came to really appreciate his style - he too is one of my favourite artists. There is an American artist, Jeanne Dobie, who is, among other things an expert on the use and mixing of colour and design in relation to values, contrast and composition, many currently well known watercolour artists like Thomas Schaller credit Jeanne Dobie for influencing the way they use colour and design in their work. In my opinion no one explains and shows the effects in mood and atmosphere which can be achieved through using differing colour themes like she does and her design principles are fundamentals I believe every artist needs to know and understand and she explains them in such an easy and practical way. Her book is called ‘Making Colour Sing’ and here is a link to her website gallery www.jeannedobie.com/paintings.html
Yes, I have her book and it's simply wonderful. I agree entirely with you. The other American watercolorist who's books are a gem is Jeanne Carbonetti. I have the Tao of Watercolor but she has others.
Tzipora Ne'eman Feder Thank you for the tip, I’m always on the lookout for artists I haven’t yet discovered and I will definitely look up Jeanne Corbetti👍
Sorry, I misspelled her name - predictive text!!!!! - I meant Jeanne Carbonetti
Yes, that's her. You'll love her work/approach@@frenchgrama
Abstract Realism???? WTF is that???
A little something I made up 😂
To me it describes his work perfectly haha