Landscape Painting: From Photo to Interpretation

Landscape Painting: From Photo to Interpretation In this video, I’m exploring a shift that can completely change the way you approach painting — moving beyond copying a reference photo, and instead learning to see and paint light. Photos tend to trap us in details. They flatten, simplify, and often mislead. But painting isn’t about reproducing what the camera sees — it’s about interpreting light, atmosphere, and presence. Here, I walk through a painting process where the focus is not on rendering every object, but on organizing value, temperature, and edges so the image breathes. You’ll see how simplifying forms, pushing color relationships, and letting go of unnecessary detail can actually make your work feel more real — not less. This approach is especially powerful if you’ve ever felt stuck trying to “finish” a painting or overwhelmed by detail. This is less about technique — and more about learning to trust what you see… and what you feel. Chapters 00:00 – Why photos can limit your painting 02:30 – Blocking in major value shapes 04:20 – Seeing light vs. seeing details 07:10 – Different approach to tools 10:00 – Controlling edges and happy surprises 12:10 – Bringing it together If this resonates with you, consider subscribing — I share practical, non-traditional approaches to painting that help you loosen up while gaining control where it matters.