I've even taken a lecture directly from him. He is nice and humorous, and has always tried to teach a lot. I already miss him terribly. Let's hope that he will paint as much as he wants in heaven. RIP..
Damn bro- It’s nice to know someone had a chance to get a lecture that no one else will get again from one of the greatest artists. I hope you learned a lot from him and I bet you did! RIP to Kim Jung Gi 🙏
@@reginaldforthright805 definitely not a trick. He often reconstructs different things to basic shapes in his classes. It's years of practice combined with a massive visual library in his head.
Our Cross to Bear If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it. -Matthew 16:25 The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people. In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture. There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities. So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal. He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it” (Matthew 16:24-25) Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century. To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply. In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.” You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant. In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves. We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing. Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
I first do a sketch and then try to draw over it… this man makes the whole drawing with single strokes and pure perfection and then starts to sketch over it.
Our Cross to Bear If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it. -Matthew 16:25 The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people. In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture. There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities. So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal. He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it” (Matthew 16:24-25) Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century. To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply. In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.” You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant. In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves. We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing. Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
Our Cross to Bear If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it. -Matthew 16:25 The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people. In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture. There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities. So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal. He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it” (Matthew 16:24-25) Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century. To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply. In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.” You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant. In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves. We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing. Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
Hope you are resting in peace sensei, thank you so much for your contribution to the art community, and making it such an amazing place to be in. Thank you so much for the translation ma'am you are the savior to all the foreigner artists watching it!
Our Cross to Bear If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it. -Matthew 16:25 The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people. In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture. There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities. So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal. He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it” (Matthew 16:24-25) Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century. To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply. In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.” You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant. In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves. We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing. Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
Our Cross to Bear If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it. -Matthew 16:25 The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people. In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture. There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities. So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal. He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it” (Matthew 16:24-25) Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century. To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply. In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.” You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant. In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves. We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing. Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
Kim Jung Gi becoming a pillar of illustration will probably have a greater impact than a lot of us realize. Before finding Scott Robertson in 2006 I had no notion of perceiving art spatially through repeated perspective exercises. To this day a lot of illustration is taught as referencing and memorization not intricate understanding. In 20-30 years when people finally realize the course an illustrator needs to take (rather than the wasted class time I was subjected to in k-12+college) children will be better than us by 14 years old.
I think you are absolutely right. The access kids will have to be able to look at 3d models of objects right from home will help enormously with learning perspective from a young age. I was always perplexed by the idea that my art teachers instilled in me of thumbnails, then larger, more refined versions of the same drawing from the same perspective. It did help me learn to draw what I see, but I think the idea of drawing the same thing, from as many different perspectives, and in as many different positions (with movable subjects, humans, animals, etc.) as possible will help the artist way more in the long run by understanding perspective and why things are shaped the way they are shaped, and learning the mechanical nature of things is much more important.
Excuse me but art is about reconstructing things for centuries now, only the techniques of doing so got better and better. Jung Gi comes from a time of digital 3D models, fisheye lenses and fantasy/Comic figures... Things like these simply did not exist 100 years ago. And just so everyone knows, stuff like 5 point perspective is crucial to the freedom that Jung Gi had on a page. Drawing is a much different process when you're setting up a city landscape in a 2 point perspective. It's simply different styles and different struggles. Jung Gi's definitely created a new kind of style and a new way of looking at things. But one has got to make clear also that his way of looking at drawing are also best suited for his kind of style. There are so many other art styles out there, where his way of working isn't the most suited.
@@goodtogo2876 although I do agree that children will not nescassarily become better than adult artists at 14, Kim Jung Gi has brought that sort of superb understanding of perspective into the limelight. I think above all studying perspective and mastering it is the most important part of the artists education, as it helps rationalize most challenging part of illustration. So yes, although his method is not suited to all it is something all should study.
You are incorrect. Kim Jung Gi strongly relies on memorization (of morphology), how he explains his drawings is not how he 'feels' them while drawing. Morphology is the key.
Our Cross to Bear If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it. -Matthew 16:25 The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people. In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture. There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities. So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal. He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it” (Matthew 16:24-25) Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century. To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply. In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.” You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant. In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves. We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing. Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
I was one of his student. He never stop drawing even we talk. He love the music "Gekkou"-Onitsuka chihiro. And he hummed that song while he drawing. I miss you. And I listen that music all days.
Our Cross to Bear If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it. -Matthew 16:25 The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people. In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture. There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities. So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal. He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it” (Matthew 16:24-25) Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century. To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply. In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.” You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant. In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves. We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing. Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
One thing I’ve learned from drawing clothing is that you don’t need to go crazy with the amount of lines and folds. The simpler the better a fold can look on drawing
before he starts drawing, he already pictures the image inside his brain all the way to his vision.. his hands only projects the image for us to see.. .... pure talent.. genius
100% Photographic memory! How else are you able to see it inside your mind so vivid without having to look at a reference. absolutely GOD LIKE! Can't stop watching, it's mesmerizing
Our Cross to Bear If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it. -Matthew 16:25 The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people. In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture. There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities. So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal. He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it” (Matthew 16:24-25) Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century. To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply. In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.” You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant. In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves. We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing. Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
I can't imagine a more skillful illustrator, except maybe when A.I. is perfected. As a mid-skilled amateur illustrator and painter, this is wizardry on display. I would like to have sat in the driver seat of his mind to experience how all of this process worked.
I was calculating something about it, I know that many people doesn't too much free time to effort like that, but think about it. imagine that you have 7 free hours a day to do whatever you want, you will focus on an expertise and learn that and be an expert as Kim Jung Gi. you just need get much effort and never give up. an math calculation says that you need 10,000 to be an expert in any human knowledge area. so. Calculation on studying, that works in any area - 7 hours a-day - 49 hours a-week - 196 hours a-month and - if you do it for 1 year and 5 months you will acquire amount of hours from study exactly = 3,400 hours, that's a lot and you will have much experience, talking about drawing, you will can draw literally everything from your imagination, you just need more experience and effort to be an expert and draw any drawing style in different illustrations and different artists. and if you do it for - 5 years with much effort and dedication you will get approximately - 11,760 hours, i.e and expert, congratulations you are right now an expert. - I know that many people don't have much free time like that, but think about, if you have less 16 years old, you don't have a job and just go on the school, you can do it. Good luck.
"Think about the human anatomy underneath the clothes". Great! Got it! Wait....but he's drawing it from the outside! Drawing the clothing first, ALREADY KNOWING what the anatomy is doing.
MIke, We've missed you! Btw, I Recommend clipping the lecture part of this video: ruclips.net/video/Rd9_PFSVKzk/видео.html There's not really any drawing being done, but it emphasizes the importance of figure drawing and life drawing in general through a sketchbook tour.
I've even taken a lecture directly from him. He is nice and humorous, and has always tried to teach a lot. I already miss him terribly. Let's hope that he will paint as much as he wants in heaven. RIP..
Agreed, RIP Kim Jung Gi
rip to kim but if heaven even exist but what is faith without doubt :(
may he finds peace
RIP Master
Damn bro- It’s nice to know someone had a chance to get a lecture that no one else will get again from one of the greatest artists. I hope you learned a lot from him and I bet you did!
RIP to Kim Jung Gi 🙏
Wow moebius learned from jung gi
There are no words to describe how insane doing those hands outta just imagination is
It’s really just a parlor trick. The results using this method aren’t as good as you can get by using construction under drawing.
@@reginaldforthright805 A "parlor trick"? You can't be serious.
@@reginaldforthright805 definitely not a trick. He often reconstructs different things to basic shapes in his classes. It's years of practice combined with a massive visual library in his head.
Ez
imagination is the wrong word. memory fits better
RIP Kim Jung Gi. You was the best of the best.
Our Cross to Bear
If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it.
-Matthew 16:25
The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people.
In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture.
There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities.
So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal.
He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it”
(Matthew 16:24-25)
Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century.
To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply.
In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.”
You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant.
In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves.
We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing.
Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
He died?? Didn't even know
I first do a sketch and then try to draw over it… this man makes the whole drawing with single strokes and pure perfection and then starts to sketch over it.
Our Cross to Bear
If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it.
-Matthew 16:25
The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people.
In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture.
There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities.
So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal.
He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it”
(Matthew 16:24-25)
Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century.
To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply.
In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.”
You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant.
In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves.
We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing.
Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
@@Random-vc2urwhat
@@Random-vc2ur Umm, okay...
every time he does it, it seems like hes walking on a tights rope and is always one step from falling, but never does, great work as always!
great imagination
Our Cross to Bear
If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it.
-Matthew 16:25
The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people.
In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture.
There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities.
So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal.
He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it”
(Matthew 16:24-25)
Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century.
To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply.
In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.”
You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant.
In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves.
We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing.
Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
Hope you are resting in peace sensei, thank you so much for your contribution to the art community, and making it such an amazing place to be in.
Thank you so much for the translation ma'am you are the savior to all the foreigner artists watching it!
Amazing stuff, one thing I’ve always Kim Jung Gi to go into is drapery, he’s the master of all. Thank you Jung Gi.
Our Cross to Bear
If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it.
-Matthew 16:25
The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people.
In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture.
There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities.
So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal.
He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it”
(Matthew 16:24-25)
Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century.
To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply.
In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.”
You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant.
In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves.
We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing.
Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
Rest in peace master, there is a special place in heaven for people with this talent. 🙏
thanks for showing what Kim meant by in the past how they wear baggy cloths
Our Cross to Bear
If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it.
-Matthew 16:25
The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people.
In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture.
There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities.
So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal.
He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it”
(Matthew 16:24-25)
Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century.
To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply.
In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.”
You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant.
In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves.
We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing.
Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
Snail man is so graceful, the motion in the fabric is incredible!
I really like seeing this man draw
Kim Jung Gi becoming a pillar of illustration will probably have a greater impact than a lot of us realize. Before finding Scott Robertson in 2006 I had no notion of perceiving art spatially through repeated perspective exercises. To this day a lot of illustration is taught as referencing and memorization not intricate understanding. In 20-30 years when people finally realize the course an illustrator needs to take (rather than the wasted class time I was subjected to in k-12+college) children will be better than us by 14 years old.
I think you are absolutely right. The access kids will have to be able to look at 3d models of objects right from home will help enormously with learning perspective from a young age. I was always perplexed by the idea that my art teachers instilled in me of thumbnails, then larger, more refined versions of the same drawing from the same perspective. It did help me learn to draw what I see, but I think the idea of drawing the same thing, from as many different perspectives, and in as many different positions (with movable subjects, humans, animals, etc.) as possible will help the artist way more in the long run by understanding perspective and why things are shaped the way they are shaped, and learning the mechanical nature of things is much more important.
Excuse me but art is about reconstructing things for centuries now, only the techniques of doing so got better and better.
Jung Gi comes from a time of digital 3D models, fisheye lenses and fantasy/Comic figures... Things like these simply did not exist 100 years ago.
And just so everyone knows, stuff like 5 point perspective is crucial to the freedom that Jung Gi had on a page. Drawing is a much different process when you're setting up a city landscape in a 2 point perspective.
It's simply different styles and different struggles.
Jung Gi's definitely created a new kind of style and a new way of looking at things. But one has got to make clear also that his way of looking at drawing are also best suited for his kind of style.
There are so many other art styles out there, where his way of working isn't the most suited.
@@goodtogo2876 although I do agree that children will not nescassarily become better than adult artists at 14, Kim Jung Gi has brought that sort of superb understanding of perspective into the limelight. I think above all studying perspective and mastering it is the most important part of the artists education, as it helps rationalize most challenging part of illustration. So yes, although his method is not suited to all it is something all should study.
You are incorrect. Kim Jung Gi strongly relies on memorization (of morphology), how he explains his drawings is not how he 'feels' them while drawing. Morphology is the key.
Our Cross to Bear
If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it.
-Matthew 16:25
The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people.
In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture.
There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities.
So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal.
He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it”
(Matthew 16:24-25)
Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century.
To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply.
In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.”
You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant.
In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves.
We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing.
Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
This guy has mastered clothes no 🧢. He's so good he didn't need a reference for anything he drew. Forget, he has made it👏
What a master genius. Such talent. The drawing comes to life even before he finishes it.
He's strokes and visions are mesmerizing.. I'll reach your level someday
Thank you for not ruining this video by adding music like most people would (stupidly) do.
I was one of his student. He never stop drawing even we talk. He love the music "Gekkou"-Onitsuka chihiro. And he hummed that song while he drawing. I miss you. And I listen that music all days.
1:40 in and I’m disgusted by the amount of talent this man has obtained. Truly amazing
He's just drawing those so quickly. Holy hell, he is phenomenal
Not all heros wear capes some just upload Kim Jung Gi tutorials to yt 💛 thank you
Our Cross to Bear
If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it.
-Matthew 16:25
The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people.
In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture.
There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities.
So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal.
He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it”
(Matthew 16:24-25)
Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century.
To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply.
In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.”
You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant.
In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves.
We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing.
Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
this drawing skill is maximum level this insane good job
Seeing this man draw brings peace to my soul RIP Master
my 12 yr old brain at 8:50 stars laughing
Lolll same
"hehe smol pp" yes yes great minds think alike
TOTALLY lol
Yea... I bet, children..
I have to wonder what if it was a big elephant
01:15 The way he makes the feet 'appear' looks like a magic trick. Pleasure to watch and makes me want to practice more. :)
I’m speechless… wow! Such amazing skills!
One thing I’ve learned from drawing clothing is that you don’t need to go crazy with the amount of lines and folds. The simpler the better a fold can look on drawing
before he starts drawing, he already pictures the image inside his brain all the way to his vision.. his hands only projects the image for us to see.. .... pure talent.. genius
Pure work*
He makes it look so easy!
video popped up so I had to comment, rest in peace Kim Jung Gi. miss him
I don't know if someone on earth have more accuracy than him. What a peasure to watch.
Stephen Wiltshire - check out his art he is just utterly incredible
oh hey i was the one who asked him this question thanks so much for this video🙏
Incredible artistic/methodic way of visualizing cloth creases
Me : Hahahaha . . . Dong
years of practice + talent = Kim jung gi
100% Photographic memory! How else are you able to see it inside your mind so vivid without having to look at a reference. absolutely GOD LIKE! Can't stop watching, it's mesmerizing
Βy far the most epic study i've seen online.
I can't even imagine how much time he spent to master his drawing skill... Wow.
Absolute master at the craft
thank you so much i was just studying folds i hope master Gi can help me understand them better!
Rest in peace my mentor and master...
Fantastic videos and tutorials.Thank you for sharing this lesson from the master.
its too crazy to us see this kind of creation process... just amazing!
다른 사람은 백지 뒤가 보이지 않아도 자기에게는 그리고자 하는 모든 게 보이는 천재였어.
Rest in peace master 🎨
That elephant is great!
always mind
great , thanks Kim
I'm so sad that this legend has passed away :( rip legend
Watching him draw brings me joy
I think this guy, as a kid, lived in a very strange place where the eraser hadn't been invented yet.
Our Cross to Bear
If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it.
-Matthew 16:25
The cross today is a symbol for many. When we see a cross on top of a building, we conclude that it must be a church, because to us, the cross is a symbol of the Christian faith. But for others, it is a fashion accessory. It means a variety of things for a variety of people.
In the first century, however, even the word cross was offensive and bothersome because the cross represented a painful death. The Romans didn’t invent the cross, but they took crucifixion to another level. They designed it to cause pain and torture.
There were more efficient ways to execute someone, but for the worst criminals, the Romans used crucifixion. They nailed them to crosses, which resulted in a slow death. This served as a warning to anyone who dared to revolt against the power of Rome. It wasn’t uncommon to see crucified men on the roads leading into Roman cities.
So, when Jesus told the disciples that He would die on a cross, it meant something to them. But then He made it even more personal.
He said, “If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it”
(Matthew 16:24-25)
Jesus wasn’t merely addressing these words to the disciples in the first century. He was addressing them to disciples in every century.
To “give up your own way” means to put God’s will and desires above your own. Selfish people will find this outrageous, even offensive. Narcissists need not apply.
In day-to-day living, “take up your cross” means to die to yourself. Sometimes people describe whatever difficulty they have in life as their cross to bear. A mother might say, “My children are really trouble. But that is my cross to bear in life.” And the mother’s children no doubt will say, “Our mother? Well, that is our cross to bear.”
You might have a difficulty you’re facing, so you say, “Well, we all have our crosses to bear, and I guess this is mine.” And while we will have our challenges and problems in life, that is not what Jesus meant.
In the first century, if you saw someone walking through the city carrying a cross, it meant only one thing: that person was about to die. Therefore, when we read that we are to take up the cross and follow Jesus, it means that we are to die to ourselves.
We don’t hear messages about this very often. And maybe the reason the church today is so weak and anemic is that we don’t know that much about cross-bearing.
Maybe if we stopped trying to be so much like the world, the world would start wanting to be more like us. Are we really carrying the cross today? Are we really dying to ourselves? This is what Jesus is calling us to do.
any sketch from this guy is great art...
i think he takes so much time watching and observating how things work to draw somenthing from his imagination like that
Rest in peace my hero
Wow this guy is so amazing the he draws so detail he’s the master
Absolutely sublime
you blessin us all thx
Rest in peace master
Master, love you forever!!
드로잉의 신이시여 존경합니다
man it'd be so cool if Kim Jung Gi ever does animation
A master..
Im not ready
Beautiful,nice sharing friend😃✌️.
Subbed & Liked! Enjoyed the video! Good work & God bless in ‘24!
Dude is amazing
I hope I can emulate his greatness
8:44 did he just draw elephant 😭
Quest'uomo aveva una memoria fotografica fuori dal normale. Un qualcosa di prodigioso.
Damn. Such smooth handling
Stunning
1년을 기다린 새영상
영상을 즐기시기 바랍니다
It’s all effortless for him.
Terima kasih Kim Jung Gi
코끼리 보고 구독박습니다 선생님
we miss you.
that lil elephant is adorable
may he rest in peace
@4:55 Wooooooooow!!!!! Thats Smooth!! I can barely do that in 10 tries
I can't imagine a more skillful illustrator, except maybe when A.I. is perfected. As a mid-skilled amateur illustrator and painter, this is wizardry on display. I would like to have sat in the driver seat of his mind to experience how all of this process worked.
I was calculating something about it, I know that many people doesn't too much free time to effort like that, but think about it. imagine that you have 7 free hours a day to do whatever you want, you will focus on an expertise and learn that and be an expert as Kim Jung Gi. you just need get much effort and never give up. an math calculation says that you need 10,000 to be an expert in any human knowledge area. so.
Calculation on studying, that works in any area - 7 hours a-day - 49 hours a-week - 196 hours a-month and - if you do it for 1 year and 5 months you will acquire amount of hours from study exactly = 3,400 hours, that's a lot and you will have much experience, talking about drawing, you will can draw literally everything from your imagination, you just need more experience and effort to be an expert and draw any drawing style in different illustrations and different artists. and if you do it for - 5 years with much effort and dedication you will get approximately - 11,760 hours, i.e and expert, congratulations you are right now an expert. - I know that many people don't have much free time like that, but think about, if you have less 16 years old, you don't have a job and just go on the school, you can do it. Good luck.
Someone knows which kind of fountain pen KJG is used in this video?
rip a legend
17:28 너무 해맑은 거 아닙니까ㅋㅋㅋ
"It'll be like that" .... presto.. like magic. 😆
Bruh really drew the Elephant lol.
RIP mr. kim
all i understood is that clothes fall with gravity
Same
And that's how they look
Press F soldiers
RIP ❤
"Think about the human anatomy underneath the clothes". Great! Got it! Wait....but he's drawing it from the outside! Drawing the clothing first, ALREADY KNOWING what the anatomy is doing.
Thank you so much man
Ощущение, будто он обводит только ему видимый рисунок))
Many thank yous.
Rest in peace 🕊️
Very helpful.
Great vid i have to get mine this way and I definitely need that pen that he has 🔥🔥
Every doodle he does makes me wanna give him a clap alone in my room
RIP to a master
video got recommended, im in fact, missing him, the south korean Heisenberg..
Ok, I will clear it for you guys. Let's forget about the tips. He is not human, he is at another level of drawing.
amazing.inspiring.
MIke, We've missed you!
Btw, I Recommend clipping the lecture part of this video:
ruclips.net/video/Rd9_PFSVKzk/видео.html There's not really any drawing being done, but it emphasizes the importance of figure drawing and life drawing in general through a sketchbook tour.
The sketchbook tour is a good idea for a video. I also wanted to compile the answers/advice given in that stream. Thanks for the recommendation.
wow so cool