Bill Alexander paints Fall River part 2/3 wet on wet oil painting art

March 8th, 2010 by admin

http://www.alexanderart.com

William (Bill) Alexander was born in 1915 in East Prussia. As a youth he used his artistic talents to paint carriages and murals for local aristocrats. After the war, Bill and his family immigrated to North America to pursue their dream of building a home and to share Bills gift of painting.

Bill and his wife, Margaret, traveled throughout the United States and Canada teaching painting and making friends, often selling paintings to meet living expenses along the way. During this time Bill worked hard to develop his wet-on-wet technique and products. He developed the base medium Magic White, extra-thick oil paints, and special palette knives and brushes. These products work together to help artists, even a beginning artist, create beautiful scenes on the canvas.

By 1974, when he completed his first Emmy-winning Magic of Oil painting television show, Bills dream had become a reality. He had built himself a home in North America a home in the hearts of thousands who discovered with Bills help that they could have the almighty power to fire in and be happy painters too. Today, Bill continues to teach the world to paint through his television shows available on DVD.

Duration : 0:10:0


[youtube -aL5xgPHm_Q]

7 Responses to “Bill Alexander paints Fall River part 2/3 wet on wet oil painting art”

  1. babynicovids Says:

    he`s amazing! I …
    he`s amazing! I had so much fun watching him!!

  2. dft432 Says:

    Alexander > Ross
    Alexander > Ross

  3. Commonwealth96 Says:

    I VIELD DE BRUSH OF …
    I VIELD DE BRUSH OF ODIN!

  4. speculate1 Says:

    No matter how bad a …
    No matter how bad a day I’m having…Bill makes the tension just evaporate!!

  5. 2PacShakurMakaveli7 Says:

    Alexander is Better …
    Alexander is Better From Ross

  6. SteevDragon67 Says:

    go bill! man i …
    go bill! man i learned how to paint watching him!

  7. wilsonbickford Says:

    Still fascinating …
    Still fascinating to watch after all these years.