A Master Study of SARGENT's Lady Agnew

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 13 фев 2022
  • Full course is out on Patreon ⬇
    / stephenbaumanartwork
    Description: Lady Agnew of Lochnaw is perhaps Sargent's most captivating portrait. It launched his career as a successful society portrait painter and we are going to extract as many insights as possible during the master study.
    Follow me on:
    RUclips - / stephenbaumanartwork
    Instagram - / stephenbaumanartwork
    Patreon - / stephenbaumanartwork
    Website - stephenbaumanartwork.com/
    #artlessons #paintingtips #howtopaint
    About me:
    My work focuses on the human figure. I've given drawing and painting workshops and demos throughout the United States and Europe. I have been making realist drawing and painting tutorials for two years now that I release through my Patreon page.
  • ХоббиХобби

Комментарии • 113

  • @Bhodisatvas
    @Bhodisatvas 2 года назад +56

    I am fortunate enough to live about 10 minutes walk from this astounding work of art. It is even more captivating in real life :)

    • @harshadk4264
      @harshadk4264 2 года назад

      Hi, It's actually "Bodhisatva"

    • @Bhodisatvas
      @Bhodisatvas 2 года назад +5

      @@harshadk4264 yes I’m well aware how to spell it, it was already taken hence my modification

    • @dreamcatcherhomesandland1881
      @dreamcatcherhomesandland1881 9 месяцев назад +1

      I’m jealous.

  • @Zelda_Thorn
    @Zelda_Thorn Год назад +27

    I've seen the original in the Scottish national gallery in Edinburgh several times and it's stunning. The hand at her side is especially incredible, it's really only three or four strokes. We don't really think of Sargent in the same vein as like Monet or Pissarro but he was an impressionist master.
    One habit to train yourself out of, if you want that Sargentish looseness and grace, is making several back and forth brushstrokes every time you touch brush to canvas. That's pretty normal for a more academic heavily modeled look like what Stephen normally does, but it takes away from the effortlessness of a Sargent, or a Zorn. Train yourself to make one steady, confident stroke and then step back and ask whether it works without needing to be brushed out. Most of the time it does.

  • @hopeless8462
    @hopeless8462 2 года назад +25

    Stunning, you're really a master stephen!

  • @ericp1625
    @ericp1625 6 месяцев назад +2

    I have learned so much. Thank you!! She is part of a special exhibit called Fashioned by Sargent at the MFA in Boston. I have gone to see the exhibit twice.

  • @dreamcatcherhomesandland1881
    @dreamcatcherhomesandland1881 9 месяцев назад +3

    That’s my family history in the painting. I’m an Agnew of Lochnaw Clan

  • @jeffhreid
    @jeffhreid 2 года назад +6

    Lovely study. I especially liked your point about how doing a study is an invaluable journey into better understanding an artist’s work. It can be an exhaustive but immensely rewarding experience.

  • @maquisart6324
    @maquisart6324 2 года назад +1

    Thank you very much Stephen! And the way you take the marks at the beginning is clear and instructive.

  • @beckhead25
    @beckhead25 Год назад +1

    So inspiring! Really grateful for your work in putting this kind of quality lesson out there

  • @maysuper453
    @maysuper453 2 года назад +1

    Such a helpful video, thank you!

  • @mayumimori3279
    @mayumimori3279 Год назад +3

    it is so incredible how fast you did her drawing. I struggle a lot to do her eyes!

  • @MarianaAlves-nl4th
    @MarianaAlves-nl4th 2 года назад +2

    Lady Agnew is my favorite ❤. Great job!!!

  • @tedburke8187
    @tedburke8187 2 года назад +2

    Been painting 30 years. All good advice

  • @rumenplamenov733
    @rumenplamenov733 2 года назад +2

    The rhetorics of this video are better than usual. Great narrative over the video!

  • @toddgipe1748
    @toddgipe1748 Год назад

    Thank you for your valuable approach and masterful comments.

  • @tommullinerart
    @tommullinerart 2 года назад +2

    Portrait of Lady Agnew has always been one of my favourite Sargent portraits. Now having watched you recreate this masterpiece really rings true how much of a great portrait painter Sargent really was. I expect you felt that too having followed his journey painting it. Great work, Stephen. Would love to see you recreating a Rockwell portrait too in a similar manner.

  • @davidbenasulin
    @davidbenasulin Год назад

    Thank you sharing for this lesson, knowledge and words! Impressive!

  • @hercaselis1367
    @hercaselis1367 Год назад +1

    I love your way how you teach. My language is Spanish but I’m learning thanks a close captioning thanks

  • @jaimecolodro1588
    @jaimecolodro1588 2 года назад +1

    Great video!

  • @robertotr12
    @robertotr12 2 года назад +3

    Thank you! this was just wonderful man! and your voice is really calm, perfect for me to relax, pay attention and learn!

  • @aliciamolloy5948
    @aliciamolloy5948 Год назад

    Thank you so much for this video. One of my favorite Sargent portraits.

  • @meredith7236
    @meredith7236 Год назад

    U did a breathtaking job

  • @toddtyrrell
    @toddtyrrell 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for reminding me Stephen, it is a wonderful way to study.

  • @anatolearakelian8454
    @anatolearakelian8454 2 года назад +3

    Thank you so much. This is the perfect content I've been looking for years. Inspires me to pick up my brushes

  • @tod7977
    @tod7977 2 года назад

    Awesome, looking forward to following along with this. CHeErS Stephen!

  • @williamschlenger1518
    @williamschlenger1518 2 года назад +3

    Sargent was one of my favorite artist.

  • @sussu3213
    @sussu3213 2 года назад +1

    This was the most well explained video of copy the masters I've seen do far. So clear, you almost made it look easy... Easier lol... Great content, great value. Thank you so much. I'm gonna give it a try ❤

  • @carolinecox719
    @carolinecox719 2 года назад +2

    Fantastic video! You are so good at articulating what you see. I am an art teacher and I learned lots, especially about value and the art of blending. I liked the hairline comment, totally makes sense. Thank you 😊

  • @KeyArtGallery
    @KeyArtGallery 2 года назад +1

    It's fantastic demo work sir 👌🌼💐🙏👍

  • @buckfamily9794
    @buckfamily9794 11 месяцев назад +1

    Easily my most loved painting. I noticed her eyes being "off" long ago but it adds to the beauty. By the way, in the only known photograph of her you can clearly see the misalignment in her eyes. I have always wondered if she had a problem with vision

  • @alagic.emina.atelier
    @alagic.emina.atelier Год назад

    I have seen all kinds of mastercopies of Lady Agnew, but yours is truly respectfully the greatest closest at all, no words needed, and so quick and amazingly like the original painting❤

  • @ev-yt2064
    @ev-yt2064 2 года назад +7

    This was an excellent demonstration of the attention to detail necessary when painting a masterpiece like Lady Agnew. I'm curious why you did not show the gap between the bottom of each iris and the lower eye lid. In Sargent's painting we can see the sclera below each iris and the lower eye lid but I don't see it in your painting.

  • @joycesmith5786
    @joycesmith5786 2 года назад +1

    awesome

  • @darkdeltaepsilon
    @darkdeltaepsilon 2 года назад

    thanks Stephen! great video!

  • @viiictoria
    @viiictoria Год назад +1

    This is SO helpful thank you!!

  • @tomhighsmith
    @tomhighsmith 2 года назад +1

    I was thinking all along when is he going to do the nose. Funny that we don't see anything like that, I've had it myself. But your work is TOP! Thanks;

  • @user-me3pm2yf5h
    @user-me3pm2yf5h 2 года назад +1

    очень здорово))

  • @shuvoDhar.5537
    @shuvoDhar.5537 2 года назад +1

    Great👏👏👏❤❤

  • @catalinarios2701
    @catalinarios2701 2 года назад +3

    Hi Stephen. Absolutely wonderful video. Thank you! When you say Sargent opts for harmony vs over modeling, would you mind showing visual examples of over modeling? I feel it would be so very helpful to many of us if you would consider offering that option in future videos. This video made my day. Can’t wait to visit your Patreon. 🙂

  • @Lagalulu.
    @Lagalulu. 2 года назад +1

    Thank you! :) Great! :)

  • @demetrio47
    @demetrio47 2 года назад +1

    Me ha gustado su exposición del tema y el desarrollo de la pintura, mucho donde aprender y meditar, falta saber los colores que ha empleado. Un saludo

  • @susanwong6471
    @susanwong6471 2 года назад

    Amazing presentation- everything is so well thought out. We see the subject, the palette and the master. Master’s narrative is clear and to the point ! Thank you so much ♥️- it is so inspiring that I wanted to do this study 😍 I wonder could you do a study for flora painting by Henri Fantin Latour please 💕

  • @meaux7409
    @meaux7409 2 года назад +3

    This was really well timed. I'm starting my coursework and I picked him as my 2th artist also English is not my first language so please correct me :)

  • @Irvgingrich
    @Irvgingrich Месяц назад

    Your painting of Lady Agnew and your comments were inspiring, however I was waiting for you to correct her left eye to being it up just a smidge to being it even with her right eye. Sargent painted them even with each other.

  • @henriqueflores8726
    @henriqueflores8726 Год назад +1

    you are the GOAT my friend.

  • @ohbli_oh
    @ohbli_oh 2 года назад

    I wish I was an oil not a watercolour painter. Still I get to learn lots from your wonderful teaching

  • @kristiLB93
    @kristiLB93 Год назад

    Beautiful. Thank you for showing a Sargent study. I really want to paint and draw in his style -- for me, he is the epitome in portrait work! I hope you share a few more studies of his work. And just a side note, unfortunately I have relyed on an art projector to get the exact likeness - how can I go from that to being able to get a likeness without such a major crutch? Do you use the sight method?

  • @alessandropinto5204
    @alessandropinto5204 2 года назад

    Very interesting. I have noticed the highlight in the nose but first and foremost the lighter, bigger mass underneath it from just below the bridge, which brings forward the whole tip of the nose. Don't know if you would agree about that but to me it seems to make a noticeable difference.

  • @josuodriozolaetxaniz1580
    @josuodriozolaetxaniz1580 2 года назад

    Stunning! I love it! What type of canvas are you using in this portrait?

  • @pallad21
    @pallad21 2 года назад +2

    What are the colors on your pallet?

  • @Thesamurai1999
    @Thesamurai1999 2 года назад +4

    Hey, awesome work! I was just curious, when you did the initial color pass I’m sure you used linseed oil to make it glide easier. But when you were modeling it and making sure the blocks of color “blend” into one another, did you use medium then?

    • @stephenbaumanartwork
      @stephenbaumanartwork  2 года назад +6

      I use very little medium at any time- makes the paint too slippery for my taste.

    • @Thesamurai1999
      @Thesamurai1999 2 года назад +1

      @@stephenbaumanartwork Thank you for the answer! :)

  • @sketchartist1964
    @sketchartist1964 3 месяца назад

    Excellent demo! What brand of paints do you use?

  • @leuvaart4982
    @leuvaart4982 2 года назад

    good work i subscribe

  • @stefancounts1391
    @stefancounts1391 4 месяца назад

    What colors were on your palette for this painting?

  • @annaloph
    @annaloph 2 года назад

    👨‍🎨🎨😍🌟

  • @patriciozazzini3182
    @patriciozazzini3182 7 месяцев назад

    Mr Bauman, Is it ok to use graphite on a Canvas? Since Graphite is a lubricant I am wondering if it will move up after a while and be visible over the oils?

    • @stephenbaumanartwork
      @stephenbaumanartwork  7 месяцев назад

      There are some questions around this practice. I have not seen the evidence of negative impact.

  • @xxeyelinerxx4327
    @xxeyelinerxx4327 2 года назад

    Hello im new, what is your surface that you are drawing/painting on, great work love it and i learned much thank you...

  • @michelles2299
    @michelles2299 2 года назад +1

    Limited palette works, well

  • @razym819
    @razym819 2 года назад +1

    How the graffite is not affecting the colors? You fix the drawing with something?

  • @yanamihailova8901
    @yanamihailova8901 2 года назад

    This is really great, I just had a question- how long did it take you to get used to an organized workflow when painting by yourself? I found it somewhat easier to keep a “clean” work process while at art school but when I paint on my own I often get lost by skipping steps because I get distracted by something more interesting that should have been done later on. Also I kinda find that it’s less of a problem with drawing but I’m not sure if this is a common thing.

    • @stephenbaumanartwork
      @stephenbaumanartwork  2 года назад +1

      It took some years of working on my own- the catch is that I worked at the academy teaching and painting for 12 years after graduating so it was a long tome before I really left school.

    • @tedburke8187
      @tedburke8187 2 года назад

      Its very common. Its faster and yields a better result to stick to your plan. Otherwise your painting will get muddy and look too tight. Good luck. Requires some self discipline

  • @IzzyCubito
    @IzzyCubito Месяц назад

    Stephen, if you complete a Master Copy as you, can the painting be offered be sale?

  • @mikedirle520
    @mikedirle520 2 года назад

    Loved the lesson. Questions:
    - Why do artists trim their pencils to such long points? I see no advantage.
    - Why the immediate hat switch? It was funny that you were talking about colors and chroma... And poof!
    Tnx!

    • @stephenbaumanartwork
      @stephenbaumanartwork  2 года назад

      Lots of us atelier types sharpen this way- stays sharper longer and keeps you from choking up on the pencil.

  • @BbBat2019
    @BbBat2019 Год назад

    What palette are you using!

  • @harshadk4264
    @harshadk4264 2 года назад

    As a learning from this study, I would've opted for more opaque underpainting sans diluting the pigment.

    • @stephenbaumanartwork
      @stephenbaumanartwork  2 года назад +2

      That is interesting- I don't really use much oil at all. Really it only has t do with the slickness of the oil ground. Also, in terms of layering oil paint that 1st layer should be able to dry very fast and thoroughly.

    • @harshadk4264
      @harshadk4264 2 года назад

      @@stephenbaumanartwork Thank you for the response. My main point is that Seargant's painting is absolutely opaque whereas our sketch in this video isn't. I'm just a learner, and it's only my observation. Please share your expert opinion.

  • @sublimeister9630
    @sublimeister9630 2 месяца назад

    Cleft shadow missing… 👍

  • @MaverickSeventySeven
    @MaverickSeventySeven Год назад

    Very instructive video! As a Portrait Artist using oils, unless I painted the eyes first with the Expression Desired and then the mouth then no matter how much I could have painted the rest of the image first, blocking-in,rendering etc, if the expression of the eyes and in accord with the expression of the mouth was not that desired then it would all be waste.of time and effort. Have you seen John Howard-Sanders video of him painting this painting by Sargent? - "John Sanders Videos."

  • @medovaca
    @medovaca 2 года назад

    What colors you used?

    • @stephenbaumanartwork
      @stephenbaumanartwork  2 года назад +1

      Flake White and Ivory Black from Williamsburg Oil Colors. Vermillion Extra, Alizarin Crimson Lake Extra, and Old Holland Yellow-Brown from Old Holland. Another color that you will often find in my basic palette is Raw Umber. If I use a more extended palette I will incorporate some of the following: Cobalt Blue, Ultramarine Blue, Cadmium Yellow Light, and/or Viridian.

    • @medovaca
      @medovaca 2 года назад

      @@stephenbaumanartwork ,Thanks.

  • @disasteriz3766
    @disasteriz3766 Год назад

    Sargent was a ala prima painter doe

    • @stephenbaumanartwork
      @stephenbaumanartwork  Год назад

      Are you sure?

    • @disasteriz3766
      @disasteriz3766 Год назад

      @@stephenbaumanartwork goddammit I forgot to delete this comment

    • @disasteriz3766
      @disasteriz3766 Год назад

      ​@@stephenbaumanartwork Im pretty sure I heard or read he painted alla prima somewhere but its stupid to assume he painted all of his paintings with the same fast technique and its also unreasonable to assume you have to draw with the same technique while studying one of his paintings

  • @BunnyLover-jk97
    @BunnyLover-jk97 2 года назад +1

    first

  • @barxsap1574
    @barxsap1574 Год назад

    It seems to me that the eyes are not in the correct position...

  • @jaedenparker6779
    @jaedenparker6779 2 года назад

    😣 P r o m o s m!

  • @maryannemarston854
    @maryannemarston854 4 месяца назад

    Sorry. Close but not really. What would be impossible to replicate is the myriad of angles and spatial relationships, which convey this woman's personality in this, our beloved, Lady Lochnaw. Why attempt the impossible? There are reasons why the original is estimated to be worth L40 million. I suppose you get points for trying....

    • @LuckerStomp
      @LuckerStomp 3 месяца назад

      Okay Mary Anne, it’s just a master study. Study.

  • @Bright-It
    @Bright-It 2 года назад

    Camera position is distorting you face.