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I used to watch him paint Saturday mornings on PBS. Judging by his demeanor, I never would have thought he was a career military man though.
I took an art appreciation class in college, and it taught us about the history of the medium, as well as the many different advances in painting techniques introduced by various art masters of the time. Bob Ross' method can be added to those ranks, as well, in my opinion.
BTW, some of the great art masters came from Italy, Eddie...course, I reckon you already know that.
I used to watch him paint Saturday mornings on PBS. Judging by his demeanor, I never would have thought he was a career military man though.
I took an art appreciation class in college, and it taught us about the history of the medium, as well as the many different advances in painting techniques introduced by various art masters of the time. Bob Ross' method can be added to those ranks, as well, in my opinion.
BTW, some of the great art masters came from Italy, Eddie...course, I reckon you already know that.
Yeah Rusty....I've visited a lot of places where you can see all this fantastic art...The Uffizzi Gallery in Florence is just amazing!
That was what occurred to me! When I used to watch the 'Joy of Painting',I never knew anything about the man. I would never have thought that he was a military man and 20yrs service aswell. Was a real shame that he died so young. I thought his paintings were fantastic...His Mountains were just awsome!
Who else in the history of painting ever painted with a brush,the size of which,you would use to paint your garage door with?
He introduced many,many people to the world of painting,including myself!
Completely forgot about Rusty, really liked the show.
Thinking back, he would put an undercoat on a canvas and then detail it with carefully placed swirls, nicks, stratches and splatters. (I would not want to have parked next to him.)
Bet you he would have been great at removing swirls, scratches and overspray without damaging the underlying paint too. A great detailer had he picked a different path.
Success is never final, failure is never fatal. It's courage that counts.
by John Wooden
Big fan. I would love how it would always appear he was screwing up the painting, like adding a mountain that covered a field or a tree that covered a lake, but in the end it would always looked better.
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