13 Lessons
Strong imaginative work is built through real-world observation and documentation. In this introduction to his workshop, Erik Tiemens explains how photography and sketching at various times of day can help artists can develop a rich understanding of their subject matter that informs more compelling compositions. Erik emphasizes that research and personal engagement with locations create an essential foundation for artistic interpretation and imagination.
Duration: 2m 12s
In this lesson, Erik emphasizes that compositional exploration should be quick, experimental, and focused on fundamentals like value, atmosphere, and abstract shapes rather than details. By working on multiple small studies simultaneously with gouache and watercolor, creatives can efficiently discover the strongest compositional solutions before committing to a finished piece. The approach treats painting studies like a film director or cinematographer would approach shot composition, considering angles, lighting, and framing to achieve the desired mood.
Duration: 22m 8s
This lesson demonstrates the value of creating ultra-mini thumbnails as a creative exploration tool. By quickly working through multiple compositional ideas with minimal investment, the artist can identify the most promising concepts to develop further. The process emphasizes experimentation over perfection, showing how even rough, nearly abstract studies can reveal unexpected possibilities and guide the direction of larger, more refined artwork.
Duration: 4m 22s
Mastery of gouache and watercolor comes from understanding and controlling material properties, particularly paint consistency and brush handling. Erik’s approach of experimenting with abstract warm-ups and various techniques helps painters build confidence and familiarity with the medium before tackling finished pieces. By learning to manipulate water content, layering, and texture effects, the artist develops the control needed to achieve desired visual outcomes.
Duration: 5m 9s
This demonstration emphasizes that thumbnail development is an iterative, exploratory process rather than a linear one. Erik shows how working loosely with limited palettes allows for rapid experimentation with composition, lighting, and atmosphere. These intermediate sketches serve as valuable problem-solving tools, allowing the artist to test different formats, establish focal points through strategic lighting, and make editorial decisions about which elements to emphasize.
Duration: 45m 17s
This demonstration illustrates the intermediate stage between thumbnail exploration and finished painting, where the artist combines planning with artistic intuition. Erik's key lesson is that successful paintings emerge from thoughtful compositional choices, including selectively using reference materials, creating depth through scale and pattern, and maintaining artistic warmth through technique. This "medium sketch" approach allows for exploration and commitment to composition without getting lost in premature detail.
Duration: 6m 51s
Erik demonstrates a confident but loose approach to gouache landscape painting that balances control with spontaneity. By establishing a toned base and working in layers from abstract to refined, artists can create atmospheric depth while maintaining the medium's fresh, dynamic qualities. The primary idea is to avoid timidity by embracing both transparent and opaque applications to fully exploit the unique versatility of gouache.
Duration: 6m 45s
In this lesson, Erik emphasizes the importance of staying loose and painterly during the blocking-in stage of gouache painting. By working with larger brushes, bold shapes, and darker values while avoiding over-reliance on reference photos, artists can maintain creative freedom and develop their own vision of a scene. The key lesson is balancing spontaneity with strategic refinement, knowing when to work abstractly and when to reintroduce necessary details through brush "drawing."
Duration: 9m 27s
This lesson highlights the importance of atmospheric perspective and light placement in landscape painting. Erik demonstrates how the versatile properties of gouache make it ideal for capturing fleeting, dramatic moments in nature. By carefully building layers, controlling contrast zones, and using dry brush techniques, the artist creates depth and guides the viewer's attention while solving compositional challenges.
Duration: 12m 23s
This demonstration showcases an approach to painting atmospheric seascapes, moving from abstract shapes to refined details while maintaining compositional balance. The main concept is that effective landscape painting involves constantly shifting between building up forms, establishing consistent lighting, and strategically softening edges to create depth. Erik emphasizes flexibility in the process while being willing to adjust, lighten, darken, and refine areas as the painting develops.
Duration: 8m
Successful paintings rely on strategic use of value, color temperature, and selective detail rather than rendering everything precisely. By maintaining fresh paint, focusing attention with well-placed lights and darks, and allowing some edges to remain soft, the artist can create evocative industrial landscapes that feel both complete and spontaneous. Erik notes the importance of knowing when to slow down for refinement and when to let loose brushwork suggest detail.
Duration: 14m 59s
In this lesson, Erik builds a complex industrial scene through careful layering of details and effects. The primary lesson is that adding elements like smoke, reflections, and strategic lighting in the final stages can dramatically enhance depth, drama, and the sense of an active, working environment. Erik's attention to historical industrial aesthetics and mastery of contrast techniques bring the harbor scene to life.
Duration: 8m 22s
This final lesson highlights an accessible and efficient approach to concept development through mixed-media sketching. By combining gouache, watercolors, and drawing techniques, artists can quickly explore ideas, establish strong atmospheric elements, and create compelling visual designs. Erik reinforces that concept art does not require extensive time investment to communicate powerful ideas, emphasizing flexibility and enjoyment in the creative process.
Duration: 1m 30s
Project Files
Skills Covered
Who’s this Workshop for?
This workshop is designed for intermediate to advanced artists and designers who want to master efficient concept visualization techniques. Whether you're working in entertainment design, illustration, or fine arts, this workshop focuses on rapid ideation skills essential for professional creative workflows.
Beginner-level artists with foundational painting experience will also benefit significantly from Erik's systematic approach to thumbnail development. Students and hobbyists looking to elevate their conceptual thinking and build confidence in their painting techniques will gain valuable insights into professional-level creative processes and decision-making strategies.
Learning Outcomes
On completion of this workshop, artists will have gained a comprehensive skillset for creating concept paintings using limited gouache palettes and watercolor techniques.
Key skills include:
- How to make multiple mini-sketches that explore different conceptual directions and compositions.
- How to implement lighting scenarios that enhance mood and visual storytelling impact.
- How to create atmospheric depth and environmental effects using limited color palette strategies.
- How to develop high-key and low-key value plans for maximum visual contrast and drama.
- How to achieve proper paint consistency and brush control for clean, confident mark-making.
- How to work effectively on toned paper surfaces to accelerate the painting process.
- How to evaluate thumbnail options and select the strongest concept for final development.
- How to execute a polished small-format painting from initial sketch through to final details.








