Television painter Bob Ross. Anyone still watch this guy?

Discussion in 'Visual Arts' started by Steve Hoffman, Apr 17, 2006.

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  1. Steve Hoffman

    Steve Hoffman Your host Your Host Thread Starter

    Location:
    California
    When I was very, very young there was a guy on TV on Saturday mornings before Captain Kangaroo by the name of John Nagy who had a 15 minute filmed show called "Learn To Draw". He used pastel chalk and created the neatest drawings. I actually started to dabble because of him.

    Well, it's Bob Ross who (believe it or not) is inspiring me to paint "happy little trees" and stuff. He makes it look so easy (it's not) but it's kind of therapeutic.

    I was wondering if anyone else has ever watched him. I'm not saying his stuff is the greatest or anything but he sure can paint trees...
     

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  2. Dave G.

    Dave G. Forum Resident

    Location:
    NJ
    Oh yeah! There is plenty of love for Bob, he's kind of an underground legend.


    What a soothing show. He looks so peaceful and it is indeed fun to watch.
     
  3. Doug Hess Jr.

    Doug Hess Jr. Senior Member

    Location:
    Belpre, Ohio
    It's amazing how well his techniques and inspiration live on nearly 12 years after his death! I never could get the water to look right when I tried to paint his way.
     
  4. Roland Stone

    Roland Stone Offending Member

    That show is hynoptically uneventful. I would sometimes stumble upon it channel-surfing and watch. I think it's a "context" show, in that it's weirdly compelling because it's so different from everything else around it.
     
  5. Steve Hoffman

    Steve Hoffman Your host Your Host Thread Starter

    Location:
    California
    This is interesting:

    -----------------------------
    Bob Ross
    "We don't make mistakes here, we just have happy accidents. We want happy, happy paintings. If you want sad things, watch the news. Everything is possible here. This is your little universe."

    Bob Ross (October 29, 1942 - July 4, 1995) was a grandmaster American oil painter who primarily practiced the finer, more respectable arts of relaxation and kindness. His quiet, nurturing disposition was a form of therapy to the weary, and the reassuring intonations of his gentle voice hypnotized entire generations of would-be illustrators into creating a million-dollar art supply store enterprise.

    His PBS series The Joy of Painting duped viewers around the globe into believing they too could create impeccable rectangles of content suitable for framing in just under twenty-six minutes. For this reason, it's no wonder The Joy of Painting is the most recognized and studied art show in the history of television. Ross's light, experimental excursions through nature and beyond have thrived since 1983 on over 300 public television stations -- a phenomenal achievement for programs of this genre. Every thirty minutes, on a public TV station somewhere in the United States, Bob Ross is just starting (or just finishing up) another masterpiece.

    The phrase "harmless international cult" certainly applies. Foreign distribution of The Joy of Painting began in 1992. Responsive audience members armed themselves with palette knives, brush beater racks and base coats across the United Kingdom, Mexico, Canada, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, the Netherlands, Turkey, Iran, Hong Kong, Costa Rica and Germany. The Bob Ross machine continues to be an unstoppable force, as many of his original broadcasts tickle people's imaginations from the safety of a VCR or DVD player. What television neighbor Fred Rogers does for the lonely, alienated child, Bob Ross does for the isolated, emotionally unavailable adult. Or at least a person who considers his own existence to be more of a mistake than a happy accident. He accomplishes in mere minutes what it's taken Dr. Phil, Dr. Laura, and the Deepak Chopracabra a lifetime to fail at.

    "We tell people sometimes: we're like drug dealers. We come into town and get everybody absolutely addicted to painting. It doesn't take much to get you addicted," Ross says while touching up the branches on a birch tree with Titanium White. He gestures toward a limb with his angled sponge brush: "That's where the crows will sit. We'll have to install an elevator to get 'em up there because they can't fly. They don't know that, but they still try."

    Not a tremendous amount is known about Ross's youth, but he spent most of it in Daytona Beach, Florida. He mentions from time to time his childhood pets: an alligator who constantly chomped at Ross's fingers until finally it was set loose, and an armadillo who "tore up" everything in his father's carpentry workshop. He intuited that painting could change a person's life in much the same way people gravitate toward music, writing, or gardening. Following a brief career in the U.S. Air Force, Ross started to develop a quick-study oil painting technique meant to appeal to the masses. By distilling the artistic process into steps and keeping the number of colors to a minimum, he grew to be one of the few artists whose name is associated with the "wet on wet" technique: the progressive addition of oil or watercolor to a canvas without wasting enormous amounts of time waiting for content to dry.

    "Little bit of black, a little bit of blue.. some criss-cross strokes, or little x's, whatever you want to call them. Whatever. There you go."

    His half-hour television performances unspooled before the cameras in more or less real time. The only sequences edited out were bloopers: his enormous house painting brush had a habit of knocking the canvas off its easel while Ross rhythmically dap-dap-dappled fall colors onto sycamore trees. And there were intermissions between strokes -- ranging anywhere from five minutes to an hour -- so layered undercoats of white or black gesso were allowed to dry. Not everything has to be "wet on wet," of course. This is your universe; feel free to experiment with hilly landscapes dotted with craggly trees, lush meadows, or snow-dusted farmhouse panoramas suitable for abandoning in a thrift store. While some folks distract themselves toting iPods of ****** music around like colostomy bags, others prefer to remain focused on a cardboard canvas with a modest fan brush.

    Bob Ross was like a chef on the Food network capable of turning an ungreased cookie sheet into white chocolate cheesecake with caramelized apples on the side, simply by producing from under the counter a time-lapsed version prepared prior to taping.
    Viewers sometimes felt like they were left standing in their kitchens without a VCR, struggling to follow along. The real reason folks at home couldn't immediately replicate his paintings? Ross infused about thirty years of practice into every stroke.

    As he streaked his flat, disposable foam brush down the entire length of the canvas to paint the soft craggling of a birch, he'd pause to "dirty" his instrument on the palette so the painting would look better on television. By loading the bristles in a deliberate, gradated manner which took into account the fractal nature of bark patterns, or the leafy, hyperkinetic color schema of fall, or the predetermined uniform direction of celestial light sources, he was able to provide as much instruction as one could possibly telegraph into a video camera.

    Bob Ross historian and former business associate Annette Kowalski (along with her husband Walt and their daughter) presently run Bob Ross Incorporated from the quiet, secret suburbs of Washington, D.C. People clamor for his books and videotapes, his brushes and paints, his discarded dropclothes. What kind of easel does he use? What's gesso? They want to know everything, and they're prepared to put it all down on their Discover card.

    The Bob Ross empire leverages no small degree of delicate sorrow from its participants: often audience members fall in love with Ross before they realize he's been dead since 1995. Viewers who maintain emotionally wrenching, co-dependent television relationships with him latch onto him even harder once they discover he's "not here" any longer. They simply cannot let go.

    Nearly twenty-four hours a day, a team of four operators fields calls from American viewers. Overseas sales are handled abroad. An army of dedicated, enthusiastic would-be painters strive to populate our world with the Bob Ross aesthetic. His namesake company has recruited and trained over 2000 art teachers, all of whom proudly wear the "Bob Ross Certified" logo, and all of them capable of delineating the proper technique for landscapes, wildlife, and flowers. Students have been known to pay $375.00 for an hour of instruction in the Bob Ross technique.

    Co-owner Walt Kowalski: "The vast majority of people do have a private urge to be creative. Generally speaking, people think you have to be blessed with talent to be a painter. I think we've pretty much reversed that whole notion."

    After Bob Ross died at the age of 52, the majority of his original oil paintings were donated to charity or PBS stations.

    Meanwhile, a Louisiana band calling themselves The Bob Ross Experience continues to play gigs. Their influences include Poison, Dave Matthews and Lynyrd Skynyrd. Ross did in fact do a promotional spot for MTV (as well as posthumously appearing in a Celebrity Death Match videogame opposite Jerry Springer), but the bona-fide Bob Ross can only really be experienced in the syndicated wilderness of public television.
     
    Ignatius likes this.
  6. Tony Caldwell

    Tony Caldwell Senior Member

    Location:
    Arkansas
    Whenever I come across one of his programs, I never fail to stop and watch it until the end.
     
    ben_wood likes this.
  7. Evan L

    Evan L Beatologist

    Location:
    Vermont
    Our local PBS station here shows him every saturday afternoon.

    Remember the bumpers he did for MTV?

    "The land of shiny happy trees...." :laugh:

    Evan
     
    MikaelaArsenault likes this.
  8. mrstats

    mrstats Senior Member

    I remember John Nagy in the early 60's when I lived in Torrance, California. Was he on a local channel in the LA area?
     
  9. Steve Hoffman

    Steve Hoffman Your host Your Host Thread Starter

    Location:
    California
    KNXT. The CBS channel in LA. Remember his theme song played on a cheesy sounding organ? "An Artist's Life". That was a very long time ago!
     
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  10. Lord Hawthorne

    Lord Hawthorne Currently Untitled

    Location:
    Portland, Oregon
    John Nagy I remember as being on early Saturday morning when my parents were still in bed and we had to wait for them to get up, as we could not reach the cupboards where the cereal was kept. While John made sketching sounds my stomach made "woi" sounds.
     
  11. Pinknik

    Pinknik Senior Member

    I had (maybe still have) a John Nagy Learn-to-draw kit. Never saw the show, but the box came with a book and drawing supplies. Even though I got it new, the book look like it was printed in the 50's or 60's.
     
    carrick doone likes this.
  12. Larry Mc

    Larry Mc Forum Dude

    Bob Ross was a cool guy. He made it all sound like fun, I think he turned a lot of people on to painting. I still watch him on PBS once in a while.
     
    ben_wood likes this.
  13. Christopher J

    Christopher J Norme Con Ironie

    Location:
    Fort Worth, TX
    Bob Ross is the man. He had an encyclopedic knowledge of the methods and tricks of painting with oils and more importantly he could relate those tricks in common-sense language to practically anybody who watched - which is more than most of the art teachers I've dealt with over the years could do. Plus, the man was obviously superhumanly calm and centered. I think Bob Ross could've had a second career as a hostage negotiator - he'd be able to talk the most desperate criminals into taking up painting while serving their sentences. I still record Joy of Painting regularly and watch it with my kids. And pretty soon we're all going to be playing the Bob Ross Video Game:

    "The Bob Ross video game, currently untitled, is planned to be developed for PC, the Nintendo DS handheld & on Nintendo's next-gen system coming later this year, code named Revolution...The Bob Ross game will utilize the unique inputs that the Nintendo DS and Nintendo Revolution have that can truly immerse the players while they learn to paint like Bob Ross..."

    Incidentally, I had the John Nagy Learn To Draw kit as well. Three different shades of charcoal and a stomp. Took three months out of my life and all I had to show for it was 50 smudgy drawings of a covered bridge.
     
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  14. The Wanderer

    The Wanderer Seeker of Truth

    Location:
    NYC
    I watch and enjoy Bob Ross whenever I can find him. He's so relaxed and it's relaxing to watch his deceptively simple looking skill.
    A few months ago a friend told me he's been dead for more than 10 years and that there was a front page article about him in the Wall Street Journal six months or so ago, cataloging his continuing earning power. Unfortunately, he chose not to sell or reproduce his paintings (unlike, say Thomas Kinkade).
    I also remember John Nagy, but found my Winky Dink plastic screen more useful for my skill level (still).
    Anyway, Bob Ross lives on and I just sit and watch.
     
  15. hamburgerpimp

    hamburgerpimp New Member

    Location:
    Kent, OH
    I had the pleasure of meeting Bob Ross at an arts & crafts store a few years before he passed away. And yes, he was just as laid-back in person as he was on TV. :cool:
     
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  16. munson66

    munson66 Forum Dilettante

    Location:
    Toronto, Ontario
    I see Bob Ross on PBS every so often, but the chap I really remember fondly is Bill Alexander, who hosted The Magic of Oil Painting in the '80s. He also used to talk about "happy little trees" (though with his accent they were "hoppy"), but his main thing was to load up a brush and "fire it on in!"

    Funny: he loved to paint those trees, but they were almost invariably evergreens. Easier to paint with a knife, I guess. Deciduous trees just had too much going on, I suppose...
     
  17. stereoptic

    stereoptic Anaglyphic GORT Staff

    Location:
    NY
    I remember John Nagy as well. I had one of the Learn to Draw books as a kid. I drew a lot back then. Interesting piece about Bob Ross. The show was hypnotic and looked so easy.
    So Steve, are you going to post a scan of one of your pretty trees?
     
  18. Steve Hoffman

    Steve Hoffman Your host Your Host Thread Starter

    Location:
    California
    Not on your life. I still draw like I'm 12.
     
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  19. stereoptic

    stereoptic Anaglyphic GORT Staff

    Location:
    NY
    :laugh: The last time I really concentrated on drawing was when my kids were young. They would really get into it also, drawing Road Runner and Slyvester and getting a proud feeling when they got a good one. Too bad they didn't keep up with it either. :( Did you give your son a brush and easel, too?
     
  20. mdphunk

    mdphunk Sharing in the groove

    Location:
    Northern VA
    When I was a kid (in the early-mid 80s), his show was always on PBS after about 3 or 4 hours of Sesame Street. I can't tell you how many days I drifted off into my afternoon nap listening to his soothing voice. So my girlfriend and I have this theory that the kind people at PBS purposely put his show on at this time in order to calm children everywhere down and give parents a break for a few hours.

    Also, I dressed up as Bob Ross for halloween this past year. Here's a pic of my makeshift costume (forgive my nutty girlfriend's "pose"). I have another one taken while we were jamming, can't find it now though...
     

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  21. Tubeman

    Tubeman New Member In Memoriam

    Location:
    Texas
    But that tree "in your world" may lean a little this way.
     
  22. Watching him paint was so chillaxing.
    Seemed like a really nice guy, and I loved groovy his fro, man.
    I watch on PBS when it shows.
     
  23. Dawson

    Dawson New Member

    My old man was a big Ross Fan, bought the kits, even did a few decent paintings we still have. I'm thinking Bob's wife was a local girl from around here, Monongahela or thereabouts.
     
  24. Propinquity

    Propinquity Forum Resident

    Location:
    Gravel Switch, KY
    I'm waiting for the show about "happy flat transfers"
     

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  25. mrstats

    mrstats Senior Member

    I don't remember the music, but I remember being being in awe of his drawing ability. You're right, it was a very long time ago (1961 or 1962).
     
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