The Surprisingly Mysterious Life of Famed Artist Bob Ross

bob-rossAmongst the pantheon of notable public television personalities, Bob Ross easily ranks alongside the likes of Mr Rogers and Elmo as a star who is almost universally loved and respected by the public. Despite being famous the world over for his balmy, soothing demeanour, his show The Joy of Painting and his amazing ‘fro, we know surprisingly little about arguably one of the best known artists in modern times.

This is partially because, for some reason, nobody ever really asked Bob Ross to do any interviews and he only gave a handful of them over the course of his life. In fact, in one of the surprisingly few quotes from the man himself that don’t come from his show, he stated “I never turn down requests for interviews. I’m just rarely asked”. However, in another interview Ross gave with Egg Magazine, who specifically sought him out because they realised nobody knew anything about him, Ross sheepishly admitted that he liked to “stay hidden” adding that he was “sort of hard to find“. In fact, Ross was so hard to find that PBS once lost track of him, though it would seem few, if anybody, noticed, until Ross called to let them know he’d moved to Orlando after the fact.

As a result of Ross’ love of privacy, coupled with the apathetic attitude of interviewers back then, details about his life are notoriously hazy and difficult to nail down to the point that even the book, Happy Clouds, Happy Trees: The Bob Ross Phenomenon, chronicling his life and career was, in the end, forced to admit that their “text is… about an understanding we have of Bob Ross and his life. If we had wanted to write an accurate biographical book on Bob Ross, that goal would be difficult to accomplish“.

A further hurdle for those looking to write about Ross is that his company, Bob Ross, Inc, today is fiercely protective of their intellectual property and Bob Ross’ privacy, even in death. One of the few things they’ve authorised that would come close to an “official” biography of his life is a documentary titled “Bob Ross: The Happy Painter” that can be viewed by pledging money to PBS or by tracking down a copy of the DVD, which is exactly what I had to end up doing to fill in the huge gaps of what I could find elsewhere about the elusive Bob Ross.

Finally, although Ross was a notable public figure who did a lot of charity work and met with hundreds, if not thousands of people over his lifetime, he only had a handful of close friends who understandably don’t like discussing his life out of respect for his privacy. In fact, some of the only known interviews with Ross’ family and friends about him can only be found today in the documentary mentioned previously.

With that out of the way, lets talk about the little we do know definitively about Bob Ross’ life and how he became the cultural icon he is today.

Born in Daytona Florida in 1942, Ross was the child of a carpenter (Jack) and a waitress (Ollie) who separated, married other people, separated from those new partners and then got married to each other again all before their son had hit his teens. As a child, Ross entertained himself by caring for injured animals, much to the chagrin of his parents who soon became used to coming home to find an injured alligator in their bathtub or an armadillo running around Ross’ room.

Education wise, Ross left school in the 9th grade to support himself as a carpenter with his father, during which time he lost the tip of his left index finger in an accident, an injury he later hid from viewers most of the time with his paint palette. When he hit age 18, Ross joined the Air Force which saw him relocated from Florida to Alaska.

As far as we can tell, one of the few times Ross spoke openly about his time with the Air Force was in 1990 in a sit down interview with the Orlando Sentinel where he explained that he disliked the job because it forced him to be “mean”, noting that he was:

the guy who makes you scrub the latrine, the guy who makes you make your bed, the guy who screams at you for being late to work.

In stark contrast to the quiet, reserved nature Ross displayed on his show, in the Air Force he developed a reputation as a bit of a ball-buster, earning the nickname “Bust ’em up Bobby” from his subordinates.

During his 20 year tenure with the Air Force, Ross developed a taste for painting after attending an art class at the Anchorage U.S.O. club. Luckily, he found himself to be a natural as he frequently found himself at odds with painting instructors at the many art classes he attended. You see, many of them were more interested in abstract painting which was en vogue at the time. In Ross’ own words: “They’d tell you what makes a tree, but they wouldn’t tell you how to paint a tree.”

Eventually Ross found inspiration after watching a show called, The Magic of Oil Painting hosted by artist, Bill Alexander. Alexander touted a style of painting dating back to the 16th century called, alla prima (an Italian term meaning “first attempt”) that allowed him to churn out a painting in little under a half an hour. Alla prima is better known in the art world as “wet-on-wet” because it literally involves applying many layers of wet paint to a single canvas to create an image.

During a typical episode of The Magic of Oil Painting, Alexander would create a single painting, invariably a landscape of some sort, over the course of half an hour while slowly walking the viewers at home through the entire process. Ross would later use an almost identical format for his show, The Joy of Painting, which greatly annoyed Alexander.

But we’re getting ahead of ourselves. After observing Alexander’s technique and learning to use it himself, Ross began earning extra money by painting and then selling Alaskan mountainsides painted on the inside of novelty gold pans. Before long, Ross became fairly famous with locals for his talents and would often give demonstrations to children and the elderly.

After a while, Ross began making more money from selling paintings and offering people art lessons than he was from his day job in the military. As a result, Ross left the Air Force after two decades of service, supposedly quipping that he’d never yell or raise his voice again.

After leaving the Air Force, Ross returned to Florida in the early 1980s intent on seeking out Bill Alexander to learn the finer points of wet-on-wet painting. Alexander, who was an art teacher in his spare time, happily taught Ross everything he knew about painting, blissfully unaware that he was training his soon to be arch-nemesis. (It would seem a missed opportunity that the pair never created a show: Artist Deathmatch, pitting themselves against one another in episodic paint-offs. Viewers could then call in to vote on whose painting was the best on a given episode- master or apprentice- with the winner getting to destroy the other’s losing painting in ever more elaborate ways at the start of the next episode where fans would learn who won on the previous show. This thing basically writes itself. ;-))

In any event, after a few months of lessons, Ross was offered a job with the Alexander Magic Art Supplies Company as a travelling tutor. While working for the company, Ross’ hypnotic, soporific voice and gentle, prodding style that emphasised that there were “no mistakes, just happy accidents” caught the attention of a lady called Annette Kowalski who later admitted that she was simply “mesmerised” by Ross’ personality. After a few lessons with Ross, Kowalski became convinced that if she could somehow “package” the experience of painting with him, she and Ross could make a fortune.

After meeting with Kowalski and her husband, Ross was convinced to leave the Alexander Magic Art Supplies Company and set up his own teaching business. Kowalski was so sure of success, that she sunk her life savings into the venture with Ross and his wife making a similarly daring contribution. In its first year of operation, the business lost $20,000 (about $45,000 today).

With money tight, Ross made the bizarre decision to have his hair permed, exchanging the military crew cut he’d sported for two decades for his now iconic afro. Ross’ reasoning was that if he permed his hair, he’d save money in the long run because he’d no longer need to pay to have his hair trimmed once a week. Ross kept the ‘fro for the rest of his life, though grew to dislike it in his later years.

bob-ross2According to Kowalski, Ross’ afro was such a radical departure from his previous look that many of his old Air Force buddies watching the show only knew for sure it was him because of the missing bit of his finger.

Exactly how Ross went from “perming his hair to save five dollars” to “being on TV” isn’t clear and there are two conflicting stories about how Ross came to the attention of PBS. The version recounted in the aforementioned PBS biopic of his life states that Ross filmed a commercial for the network with his former mentor, Bill Alexander, promoting his art classes that just so happened to catch the eye of the right executive. Another otherwise reputable version of the story states that Kowalski filmed one of Ross’ 30 minute lessons and sent it to the network, who liked it enough to greenlight a pilot. It’s even possible that both of these things is true.

Whatever the case, it would seem Ross flawlessly executed the so called “Steve Martin” method to success- “Be so good they can’t ignore you“.

When the time came to film the first episode of The Joy of Painting, Ross made the conscious decision to speak as though he were talking to a singular viewer, giving the illusion that he was giving a private lesson.

Although the set for The Joy of Painting was positively spartan (a deliberate decision on Ross’ behalf so as to not distract from the painting), a great deal of thought went into almost every aspect of the show. For example, Ross spent significant time picking out what clothes he’d wear on air because he didn’t want to wear any clothing that would “date” the episodes. As a result, Ross almost exclusively wore jeans and a casual shirt throughout the show’s run, a look he felt would be “current” regardless of how many years later an individual episode was aired. Another, less noticeable, thing Ross did was lightly sand his pallette prior to filming so that it didn’t reflect any of the lights in the studio. (In the first few episodes he opted for a translucent palette for this same reason.)

Although the official Bob Ross website claims that episodes of The Joy of Painting weren’t rehearsed, this isn’t exactly true, something that becomes immediately obvious when you realise that Ross began every episode by saying exactly which colors he was going to use. Ross actually painted three copies of almost every painting ever featured on the show- a first that was painted beforehand and used for reference while filming; a second that was painted during the show itself; and a third that was painted afterwards with a photographer, allowing them to get good shots for the many painting books Ross released and sold.

Speaking of which, Ross was never actually paid for appearing in the show and he never sold a single painting featured on it. The show was instead used as a vehicle to promote Ross’ teaching business, interest in which exploded after the show first aired. Over time, the business expanded to include Bob Ross branded brushes, paint, supplies, etc., all making Ross a millionaire.

As for his paintings, with the exception of the ones he sold to tourists during his time in Alaska, Ross gave away virtually all of them made during the show’s 403 episode run. As for the thousands of other paintings Ross made during his life, many of them were similarly given away or, when Ross became a household name, given to various charitable causes to be auctioned off. Ross also disliked the idea of displaying his art in a museum or gallery, stating:

Most painters want recognition, especially by their peers. I achieved that a long time ago with TV. I don’t need any more.

In fact, during his lifetime, Ross only ever allowed one public institution to display his work- the Minnetrista Cultural Center in Muncie.

Old habits, as they say, are hard to break and Ross was secretive to the end, hiding the fact that he’d been diagnosed with lymphoma in the 1990s from everyone but his closest friends and family. Ross continued painting almost until his final days, filming his show until 1994, just a year before he died at age 52. His final resting place is marked by a simple stone marker that reads: “Bob Ross, Television Artist”

If you liked this article, you might also enjoy our new popular podcast, The BrainFood Show (iTunes, Spotify, Google Play Music, Feed), as well as:

Bonus Facts:

  • Bill Alexander became very bitter towards Ross after the success of The Joy of Painting, claiming that Ross betrayed him and stole the wet-on-wet style he’d pioneered. Funny enough, Bob Ross Inc eventually trademarked the term “Bob Ross wet-on-wet” helping to make the technique synonymous with Ross. However, Ross himself openly credited Alexander as the man who showed him how to paint in his show’s first episode.
  • Although immensely popular, Ross was widely criticised by many in the artistic community who felt insulted by his simplistic, anyone-can-do-it approach to art. Ross mostly refused to engage his critics, as he painted for the joy of it (hence the name of his show). An exception to this is the artist, Jackson Pollack, who Ross dismissively referred to as “Jackson Pollard” because he didn’t like the idea of Abstract Expressionism. To quote Ross: “If I paint something, I don’t want to have to explain what it is.
  • In 2014, the blog, FiveThirtyEight, performed a comprehensive statistical analysis of 381 episodes of The Joy of Painting and discovered the 91% of Ross’ paintings “included at least one tree”.
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85 comments

  • ANOTHER FRAUD…THIS ROSS. 99.99% OF ALL PAINTERS AND THIS WHOLE GREAT PAINTINGS AND TECHNIQUES AND ETC ETC AND BILLION TRILLION DOLLAR ART AUCTIONS ETC R FRAUDS….IN FACT THIS WHOLE SHEBANG IS A BAG FULL OF LIES AND PSYCHOLOGICAL DEVICES……SEE GUERNICA BY PICASSO OR FOR THAT MATTER “ANY” TRILLION DOLLAR VALUED PAINTING….EVEN A CAN OF PAINT SPLASHED ON A WALL WILL GIVE A BETTER PAINTING….SO WHAT IS THIS ? I THINK THE STORY OF THE CHILD WHO SHOUTS “THE EMPEROR IS NAKED” EXPLAINS IT ALL…..SO SEE, I JUST SHOUTED….AND U ALL CAME TO YOUR SENSES.

    • Well, that was weird. O_o

    • Let us guess, you’ve tried painting and failed because your “art” was no good?

      Don’t attack people who actually had talent. Especially when they’re no longer around. Improve your ish instead of placing the fault for your failures elsewhere.

      • 🙂 NO DEAR…I NEVER HAD A FLING AT THIS ART EXCEPT THE COMPULSORY PART OF EDUCATION TILL 4TH OR 5TH CLASS. BUT BY ALL APPEARANCES, U SURELY SEEM A PAINTER TO ME. TOUCHY, EH!

      • Bob Ross had no talent , he coped the style from Artist BILL ALEXANDER , Bill tried to sue him but lost ,he copied bill alexander right down to the talk

        • Saying whether or not an artist has talent is a very subjective statement. Some say Jackson Pollack had talent and pay millions for his works, others admire the works of Andy Warhol and pay millions for his paintings. One persons’ garbage is another person’s gold.

        • Bob Ross wouldn’t have been able to “copy” anyone’s’ style if had he not had talent. He might have learned the style from Bill Alexander, but not just anyone has the ability to produce art just because they’ve observed someone else doing it. Not everyone can sing just because they hear a singer demonstrate how it’s done. It takes TALENT. , I seriously doubt that Bill Alexander was the only artist that ever thought of using that particular technique. He didn’t own it. Bob Ross was extremely talented in his chosen style of art. He was very talented at sharing and teaching it as well. He was and still is loved by so many people. He was real and he was offered encouragement and motivation to his audience. He shared the JOY of painting and put emphasis on enjoying the process and making it your own and not getting caught up in perfection and not getting stressed over your art. Anybody that claims he had no talent is just resentful that he made it look so easy and artists want to be set apart and for people to believe that few can create “real” works of art. Each persons talent is different and a personal thing. Bob Ross and Thomas Kincaid were different from each other. But both were talented. Enough said. I just can’t fathom how anyone has the audacity to say Bob Ross had no talent.

          • Jadwiga Kindermann

            Hear, hear :O)

            I’m an artsit who agonises like hell. To see Bob Ross create such beautifukl landscapes in such short time, is a ‘Joy toi watch’ :O)
            You have to have talent to create a world so lovely in such short a time.

          • Well said. His talent wasn’t just painting but getting everyday Jo to feel the same and be inspired. I would never miss one of his programmes. He doesn’t shout or behave like an idiot. It’s half an hour of total pleasure.

        • Bill Alexander copied the idea too …. what’s your point?
          Who cares?

    • How much bitterness and self-loathing do you need to hate someone like Bob Ross. Traditional oil painters tend to dislike him, because he takes the elitism, time, and mystique out of oil painting. If anyone else can do it, I guess it just means you’re not so special babby. Also, anyone with talent can use either method. Get reckd hater.

      • i agree. how anyone can hate on Mr Ross is beyond me. he was all about sharing and love and I love watching his shows even today.a true artist in every sense. peace.

        • What happened to Painter Steve? Steve goes by his mother’s last name, Freeman – not his dad’s last name (Ross). His full name is Steven Andrew Freeman. He is now 44 years old (2019). He now lives in Casselberry, Florida along with his mom Lynda. He filed for bankruptcy on 12/04/16 in a Orlando, Florida; Sophia Cabacum Dean was his attorney. He also filed for bankruptcy on 4/29/05 in Orlando, Florida; Pamela J Helton was his attorney on that occasion. He currently drives a black subcompact car worth $5,000.

          • You must be thinking of someone else. The artist in this article is Bob Ross, not Steven. Bob Ross, the painter in this article died in 1995 of lymphoma. The only Steven Andrew Freeman in the news was murdered in 2018 & he wasn’t an artist.

          • Steve was Bob Ross’s son, he was an artists in the 1980s, but vanished from public eye after his father’s death. Lot of people ask “What happened to Bob Ross’s son Steve?” because he used to be a guest star on his dad’s show and people expected him to take over the show and keep it going after Bob died, but instead the show went off the air and Steve vanished from the painting world.

          • I AM BOB ROSS FIRST WIFE: VIVIAN RIDGE ROSS (AKA) VICKY ROSS.. I Am Also The Mother OF STEVE ROSS… BOB ROSS Invented The Gold Pan Paintings when we were stationed in Fairbanks, Alaska.. I prepared the Goal Pans For Bob, and Bob painted Beautiful Alaska Scenery on Velvet inside of the Gold Pan’s.. ( Lynda Freeman was Bob Ross third wife)That Bob married Two Months prior to his death.. If anyone doubts that I Am BOB ROSS FIRST WIFE: YOU CAN GOOGLE IT ..UNDER “BOB ROSS ” WIVES.” OR Wikipedia..VIVIAN RIDGE ROSS 1965 – 1977..

      • I don’t know if ‘traditional’ oil painters dislike him but, to be fair, I suspect the technique he used makes things easy only if you want to paint landscapes, not portraits or more complex scenes (though I do think he had a guest artist make a portrait once). So it doesn’t take that much out of oil painting.

    • I’m thrilled that Virgin Media over here in the UK are running a series of PBS America episodes of Bob Ross’s ‘The Joy Of Painting’. I’ve been recording them religiously and they won’t be deleted, that’s for sure. What a lovely chap and a true gentleman. Just seen one episode where he introduced his son Steve onto the programme and allowed him to take over – fantastic! A joy to listen to his calm soft tones as he explains his painting technique and as already mentioned his remark that in painting there are “no mistakes, just happy accidents”. God bless Bob Ross.

      • I watched Bob Ross for years & enjoyed him with each show. I have several of his books, brushes & paints. I loved him & I agree with the last text that it was thrilling to see him turn the technique over to his son Steve. He was amazing & so easy going, & shared his talent with hundreds of followers. My mother use to watch a follow, Bill Alexander and I never realized that there were hard feelings between the two of them. I am sure that Bob had his bad days, especially near the end but you were never aware of it. He was always very soft spoken & gentle & I miss him. My mother always said, if you cannot say anything good about a person, don’t say anything, especially if that person isn’t around to defend themselves, & I think by some of the comments posted here that these people should shut their mouths, or at least stop typing.

        • Gloria Curry … My name is Vicky Ross.. The first wife of BOB ROSS.. Although I recently saw a biography oh Bob Ross ..my former husband.. I don’t know how they have my photo of BOB ROSS .VICKY ROSS and Our Only Son..Robert Stephen Ross.. The biography states that Bob Ross had 3 Sons ..not true.. announced that Bob had a Son .Steven … Bob.. and Morgan.. Morgan might have been Bob’s second wife: Jane’s Son by another marriage , but was not BOB ROSS SON..And there is no other Son other than a Son name Bobby ..Bobby was Bob Ross son from his high school sweetheart in 1961.. they were not married.. and Bobby was adopted by Bob’s high school sweethearts first husband..Bobby has a different last name a day is Not Ross… Steve Ross is the only Child of: BOB AND VICKY ROSS ..BOB AN VICKY ROSS WERE MARRIED IN 1965 and DIVORCED IN 1977.. NOW ..THE LAST WIFE OF BOB ROSS ..THAT WERE ONLY MARRIED FOR TWO MONTHS PRIOR TO BOB ROSS DEATH.. HER NAME IS: LYNDA BROWN AND IS NOW SAYING THAT SHE IS THE ONE IN MY PHOTO THAT IS ON BOB’S BIOGRAPHY ON YOUTUBE… THE PICTURE BELONGS TO VICKY ROSS AND SHE HAS POSTED IT TO FRIENDS AT TIMES ON FACEBOOK .. VICKY ROSS HAS LONG BLONDE HAIR..LYNDA BROWN HAD SHORT BROWN HAIR… THIS PHOTO OF BOB..VICKY AND OUR SON STEVE ROSS SHOUTCAST BE TAKEN OUT OF THE BIOGRAPHY ON YOUTUBE ..MY ATTORNEY IS WORKING ON HAVING IT REMOVED … THIS WILL BE STRAIGHTENED OUT ..ALTHOUGH IS VERY UPSETTING TO ME… BOB ROSS WOULD BE VERY UPSET IF HE WAS STILL WITH US.. BOB AND I WERE STILL VERY CLOSE UP UNTIL A FEW MONTHS BEFORE HIS DEATH AND BOB HAD MET LYNDA BROWN AT HIS DR’S OFFICE WHERE SHE WAS EMPLOYED AT THAT TIME AND LYNDA KNEW WHO BOB ROSS WAS.AND SHE PURSUED BOB THROUGH HER SON..SENDING BOB A INVITATION TO DINNER… THE THE GAME WAS ON AND BOB MARRIED LYNDA AS I STATED: TWO MO.BEFORE HIS DEATH…

      • Say that Again. Love love.

    • Billy the "I can see right through you" clown.

      I can say with 100% certainty that there are no “trillion dollar” paintings in existence.
      Also, typing in all capital letters doesn’t automatically make you look smarter, you completely dispelled that myth for us, thankyou.

    • Fraud? How? He took waht he learned and ran with it. Any intelligent person does that.

      • You hit the nail right on the head. That’s precisely what intelligent\ambitious people do when they have a family to support and need to earn a living. It doesn’t taken any talent, ambition, or intelligence to hate on someone like Bob Ross who made the most out his natural ability.

    • Why be so bad towards someone after they have passed, even if he was alive your comment would not be morally or ethically ok because it is not fact; It’s just hateful. I understand you have an opinion but your just being a troll and trying to cause a rise.

    • get back under the bridge, TROLL!!!

    • Umm come again?

    • Michael Faulkner

      What mood stabilizers are you supposed to be on, and when did you run out?

    • All artists copy one another and put their own spin on their work. God is the ultimate creative and all artists have been inspired by His creations.

  • When we moved into our current home, a neighbor informed me that lived down the street from Bob Ross, a great and often invisible neighbor with a constant waft of Mary Jane emanating from his house. Alas, I could not confirm the Happy Painter was a pothead, we’d moved in the year after he passed away. It’s our street’s one claim to fame.

    • If he had lymphoma then it is safe to bet he was smoking reefer. My wife had the cancer and MJ was the only thing that made her feel well AND gave her back her appetite. She is almost 5 years – then she is cured. Blessed GOD

    • Where was this Rob??? Orlando?

  • I maintain that he was actually Jeff Lynne the whole time. Anyone ever seen them in the same room simultaneously?

  • Why no mention of Indiana or what he did here? Did he live in Indiana? You even mention Muncie but no state. Did he work at Ball State?
    Rob I heard it was heavier stuff too but rumors are just rumors. We may never know the truth 🙂

    • My husband grew up near Muncie, in Anderson, and he swears Bob Ross used to live there. They all assumed he was gay because there was another man living with him. He also said they had a bunch of squirrels they cared for. I always assumed it was a case of mistaken identity and teased him about it, but after learning that the show was filmed in Muncie for a time, I’m not so sure!

      • This is an old comment but in the first episode of joy of painting Ross talks about the taking care of squirrels and even shows a video

  • We NEED Artist Deathmatch!!! >:^| artist vs. artist!!!

    • Daven Hiskey

      @Soapykitten: I’d love that show. Spend the episode showing how the artist made whatever piece of physical art and having them explain their craft, tricks, and reasoning (sort of a little edutainment). Then fans all vote at the end. Then some super awesome way of destroying the loser’s art the next episode. Like “will it blend?”, dumping it in a vat of clear acid and watching a time lapse of it dissolving to nothing, etc. Winning pieces are then auctioned off for charity and the winning artist gets some sort of nice payout as well. The winner also gets to move on to the next episode to face a new artist and to create something new each episode.

  • What a wonderful read! Thank you very much for this.

    His life was definitely intriguing…

  • I had the pleasure of meeting and talking with Bob when I worked at a PBS station in Indiana (Bob taped his later shows in Muncie, Indiana). He was just as nice as he appeared on his shows. My biggest mistake was that I had a chance to buy one of his paintings at the stations yearly auction, but decided to give viewers a chance to buy it first. Little did I know at that time that he would soon be dead.

  • Great article until I read where he died at 52. I just turned 51!!! Lymphoma is a SERIOUS B*TCH and it would be good cause for him to smoke reefer.

  • The first real “television art teacher” was Jon Gnagy – a Mennonite managed to be the star of the first TV program broadcast from the Empire State Building, of all things.

    He also did so not for payment, but for the ability to get money from an art supplies company.

    • Adding: His “Learn to Draw” series was cited by Andy Warhol as an inspiration, and was cited by several Caldecott Medal winners, major comic book artists and so on.

  • I was a neighbor to Bob Ross during the early 1990’s. He lived next door
    and was the one of the kindest people I knew in Orlando. He lived on the
    corner lot in a home that was nice, but rather modest for his celebrity. He
    had a screened in back yard swimming pool and had cages along the sides of
    it, where he kept wounded squirrels and birds until he nursed them back to
    health. My children were fascinated with the animals and Mr. Ross was
    always generous enough to show them to the kids. His wife lived ( I think
    he said to us) in Northern Virginia where she handled the “business” part
    of his painting empire. She would visit him occasionally in Orlando. He had
    a small sports car that we often saw parked in his small, circular drive.
    I remember him putting his house up for sale and he showed us the inside of
    his house, hoping to find a buyer. There was a basement (which was unusual
    for Orlando) that contained his studio. We saw it and he said that he often
    taped shows there. He also showed us a collection of his 19th century oil
    paintings. They were scattered throughout his home.

    He usually wore tee shirts and flannels, looking the same and behaving the
    same as he was on his TV show. He was a kind gentleman and I’m glad my
    children got to live next door to an American icon that was truly a “nice”
    man.

    • Thanks for sharing that.

    • My husband was also a neighbor of his in Orlando. He was just a kid at the time, but he remembered when Mr Ross readily signed autographs for him and his friends. He said he was a wonderfully friendly man who was very quiet and humble, his son was also very nice. To this day he still has a signed drawing of a mountain that he did for him.

    • wow. that is so cool. its good to know he was that person also in real life. tending to injured animals and living the artist life. thanks so much Donna for this insight. rest in peace M r Ross.

    • Regardless of all the other comments; i will always remember the story that Donna B recalled. I loved his style and I have watched his shows for years even after his death. RIP Bob Ross. You are forever missed. God Bless my friend.

  • If the author had actually watched a few episodes, he would have ended it with: 91% of Ross’ paintings included a “Happy Little Tree”

  • I am hooked on The joy of painting! Found it on Netflix and have been watching it on YouTube every night before falling asleep. Bob Ross has got to be the most peaceful artist of all time. I love this article, very informative! His calm personality was so mysterious to me I had to look his bio up. I’m so happy to have come across this page! Thank you! And thank you Bob Ross for inspiring me to paint again!

  • I never fully understood nor appreciated paintings until I began watching The best of The Joy of Painting.
    I was instantly intrigued with Bob Ross because I was captivated by his genuine, kind, gentle loving spirit.
    I knew immediately he was a God-fearing man because he often reflected on the creative genius of Almighty God as he painted while televised. Besides, how can any of us who faithfully watched him on television could forget how he would end each show by saying, “God Bless, my friend”. I too am an animal lover and monthly support the HSUS (Humane Society of the United States), and can relate to Bob with his devotion to caring for animals that needed help if it meant just surviving for one more day. I discovered Bob Ross while I was residing in Illinois several years ago, however, I now reside in New York and cannot find his program anywhere. I miss his program greatly and miss Bob Ross even more as the years pass by. I’m convinced Bob is now happier than ever in Heaven and no longer suffering here on earth. We love you, Bob.

    • You can find dozens or Bob Ross episodes on YouTube.

    • Nobody knows whether there is a “god”….It is merely a belief….So it is questionable to assume that Bob Ross feared something that might never have existed….Anyway, even if there were a “god”, why should one fear it?….And if one did fear it, it must have been a very bad god.

  • I grew up watching Bob Ross and was always so relaxed and felt different in a good way when I watched him. Turns out he is without a doubt the king of ASMR and to this day I love watching him. His love of nature is also endearing and his love and care for animals shows just how special Bob Ross was. Someday, perhaps we will get another similar Bob Ross personality but for now Bob is the ultimate artist and naturalist.

  • I remember watching Bob Ross especially on the days I was home sick from school. I loved watching him paint but was so intrigued by his calming almost mesmerizing voice . It almost put me in a trans. He had that affect on me every time I watched him. When he became ill and passed away, I just knew the world lost so much. I was never an artist, never even wanted to learn, watching Bob was enough for me. I love that I am still able to watch some of his shows online. He was a wonderful artist and a true gentleman~

  • Donnajayne Brown

    Love watching Bob Ross who I always termed , , the “happy little tree artist” and ” the “soothing- voice artist”. But what spoke to me most about Bob was his obviously live for nature & animals that ecposed itself through the paintings and at times with visits by little friends at the studio like a little a squirrel, an endearing charming thing about Bob that touched mt heart. Altough I didn’t come to learn about him until later in my life his programming always aired very early in the a.m. …but I would be sure to set my alarm clock before sunrise just to catch his show. Of course, it always ended way too quickly the way everything does when one enjoys something so much! When my father , at age 70 wanted to learn to paint, I purchased him a whole huge box filled with Bob Ross goodies for Christmas one year! I still get up each Sunday before sunrise just to watch the “happy artist”!

  • My son loved Bob Ross’s show, “The Joy of Painting for many years. In 2008 I became a retired USAF veteran. One day I remembered that before my wonderful wife and I had kids I oil painted but could never do clouds. I bought a couple of Bob Ross DVD’s a year or two ago and thanks to his kind manner of teaching got it, after some practice. What a wonderful person. He made this world a brighter place and I think healed many hurting animals and people. God bless him. Hope to meet Him in Heaven.

  • To answer a question above, Bob lived in Florida primarily, he did have a small house in Muncie where he would stay while taping the show. It’s interesting, he lived in Florida, filmed his show in Indiana, and painted pictures of Alaska.

    Bob did turn down one big interview, Oprah Winfrey wanted to have him on her show but he refused. He wanted to paint, she wanted to talk about why he and his wife didn’t live together and why they actually lived in separate states. He was also subject of rumors about his sexuality, because they lived apart and he frequently had house guests. It was thought he was gay, it was also believed and still is by many people, that he did not die of Lymphoma but in fact had AIDS. His last marriage was believed to be an entirely business arrangement, in fact it’s been rumored that Annette Kowalski set the marriage up so Bob wouldn’t be a single male artist. However, if you watch the season of the Joy of Painting when his wife died you can tell he was hurting, and even the beginning of the next season when he thanked everyone for their cards and letters of support. It was shortly after this that he was diagnosed himself. The last episode of Season 31 is rather sad, as it’s apparent he doesn’t think there will be another season.

    • He could have loved her without having pants feelings for her though.

    • I know I’m replying to a very old comment, but it it’s pretty pathetic to me that every celebrity or well know person who dies, will eventually be accused of being gay or doing drugs or both. It’s almost inevitable. Or they’re accused of being child molesters or womanizers. It’s amazing how much people who don’t know these people, claim to know! And it’s also pretty amazing how they don’t give a second thought to spreading rumors about someone who is highly regarded and now deceased and unable to defend their good name and reputation. Thanks to each of you who feel it necessary to try to dirty up his memory and his legacy. May your reputations be soiled and bashed when you have departed this life as well.

      • I agree with most of what you say….But the idea that a person could be “ACCUSED” of being gay is absurd….An accusation can only be applied to a negative characteristic….For example, nobody can be accused of being happy or kind….Being gay is neither negative nor positive….It just IS.

  • Bob and I were close friends. His primary residence was in Muncie. He did visit Florida regularly as his mother and brother both lived in Orlando. Much has been speculated about his private life–mainly because Bob liked to keep things private, especially about his son Steve who he adored. The happy persona that folks saw on TV was pretty true to form.

  • Bob was a true master in his craft. Sure anyone can paint and some could say that people that can’t even paint can still make art or at least produce a object that visually causes a person emotions. It all comes down to the end product, which threw his brush strokes, to the colors he mixed, which is so important, the hues and tones. He was a master.

  • Wolfgang Benfattoum

    No matter what anyone says about Bob. Thank you for enriching my life. My first ever oil painting.

  • Lisa Matejek Stephens

    Bob Ross got people to pick up a paint brush and paint. Made people feel at ease and can do attitude about painting. William Alexander took him under his wing and mentored him. I got to submit a quilt square for the quilt that was made in honor of Bob Ross after he passed away. An artist myself after falling in love with Bob Ross’ Wet-On-Wet Technique. Inspiration to me and millions of people. ..no doubt. “God Bless, my friend ”
    Lisa Matejek-Stephens…fb

  • Bob Ross and Crilley are my favorite teachers 🙂 I wish I could keep as calm of a demeanor as Bob did.

  • Bob Ross, you just can’t tarnish this gentle man. Shut up please.

  • Incredible story. I used to fall asleep as a child listening to the paintings whether it be the brush or the knife or him talking about happy trees and happy mistakes definitely made the cultural icon Hall of Fame. It’s sad but it almost makes sense that someone who lived such contrasting lives & performed so well on TV would die so early in life. Like how the largest stars that burn twice as bright only last half the time…. mathematics suck loljkjkjk

    Imagine if he lived another 30 years?

    • And btw the “wet” method of painting was invented hundreds of years ago as “quick sketch” technique to determine how some of the very large and very long process of today’s iconic art would look like….so it’s not a 20th century technique. What Ross did do was invent some different colors of paint.

  • I was hoping that they would cover the fact that he has a coke nail in a lot of his pictures.

    • The “coke nail” he sported was used by artists for centuries as a way to quickly and easily remove excess paint without grabbing another tool.

  • Love, love, love his painting videos.

  • What part of Orlando did Bob live in? And where did he attend high school (before dropping out in ninth grade)? Thanks!

  • Yeah, you really can’t dislike Bob. You can tell he’s a genuinely peaceful and I would bet, honorable, man. People bashing him here is pretty messed up.

  • Bob Ross was a Christian and wonderful person. Park, you are one angry person and should be ashamed about what you said about Bob Ross.

  • K. King from Idaho

    Whatever. We all know he leaned from Alexander but come on now he has no talent??? Really? U cannot copy someone’s talents and paint like mr. Ross without talent! That is the stupidest comment I have ever heard…