- Видео 23
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Arti-facts
Австралия
Добавлен 16 ноя 2022
Documentaries about artists and art.
Видео
Thomas Hart Benton
Просмотров 7 тыс.3 месяца назад
The life and works of American painter, muralist and printmaker, Thomas Hart Benton
Norman Rockwell
Просмотров 3,8 тыс.4 месяца назад
The life and paintings of American illustrator, Norman Rockwell
Art and Poetry
Просмотров 1,9 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Discusses poems that have been influenced by artworks.
Edward Hopper
Просмотров 229 тыс.6 месяцев назад
The life and works of American painter and print maker Edward Hopper
Jeffrey Smart
Просмотров 2,9 тыс.7 месяцев назад
The life and paintings of Australian artist, Jeffrey Smart who adopted Italy as his home.
Edvard Munch
Просмотров 9 тыс.8 месяцев назад
The life and works of Norwegian painter and print maker, Edvard Munch.
Toulouse-Lautrec
Просмотров 53 тыс.9 месяцев назад
The life and art of French painter and printmaker, Henri de Toulous-Lautrec,
Gustav Klimt - Artist
Просмотров 406 тыс.10 месяцев назад
The life and paintings of Austrian painter Gustav Klimt.
Jean-François Millet
Просмотров 23 тыс.Год назад
The life and work of French artist Jean-François Millet
Ian Fairweather
Просмотров 40 тыс.Год назад
The life and paintings of Scottish artist, Ian Fairweather, who adopted Australia as his home.
Wassily Kandinsky
Просмотров 90 тыс.Год назад
The life and paintings of Russian artist, Wassily Kandinsky.
You are doing great work. Pleasant voice, great description.
I feel like a fish out of water in South Dakota. Unless you sculpt the friggin' Mount Rushmore you are nobody.
I enjoyed this. Thank you.
Hopper stole his master. Martin Lewis. He took all the recognition..... Lewis is the original
His work is so liminal, there is a real sense of you being held in a surreal void when looking at his work!
Thanks so much for posting
Historykli i konsiderit them laj e big bro❤
Albanian Love and ar very thenkful to Austrija forever on ART, POLITK and KULTUR.
Whi konsideret Austrian lajk a big brpthers❤
ART .GenI❤os
Well, I more or less agree, with L Freud, the Bacon pal. Portraits tell a lot about the paintor and the portrayed ones. But would also say, that Pictures goes about the managing of Symbols and then Landscapes. It goes about transmitting beauty. Though horror, too, as Munch did in his Shout Picture. Art shows and uses reality this way. 🤗🎨👍
By far one of the more modern and creative artists we ever had in our Culture. With hints of contrasted colours here and there, Schiele offered us snapshots of his love life from movies and architecture prospects. His fab drawings did the rest. His daring mind, too. ❤️👍🤗
Cezanne was'nt a bridge to cubism. It stands on its own as modern art and surpasses the cubists in nearly every way. I would call cubism neo-modernism.
Klimnt fue y será, el mejor de los pintores modernosssss..amén....he...dicho..❤❤😂😮😮❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Estoy de acuerdo.
Yes. He was amazingly talented but deeply flawed predator of minors.
Schiele's fascination with drawing, painting, sexualizing children, and being surrounded by them is problematic, disturbing, and reprehensible. Probably he was a pedophile. He and his sister's relationship -- incestuous. Great artist? I find it impossible to separate this artist's despicable behavior from his art.
What a difficult life Gauguin led. I've followed Waldemar's telling as well. The poor man seemed faith less. I admire his work but this doesn't make up for all his selfishness and abandonment. I will not follow another of these biographies. How sad! Terribly sad!
Yes, great painter, but also a man of poor carachter.
I wonder if he had been any different his works would have never been obviously. He definitely was an abandoner.abandoned. But he also got left as well.
Pardon me, you always mention the name of artist "Sheila". But the artist's name is SCHIELE!!!
His name is pronounced in German as "Sheila".
Watching without sound
His art has a feel of "noire" films. Mysterious people.
This series of art docs is amongst the best I have seen. Always full of historically interesting and insightful commentary. Bravo!
Thanks. I'm glad you like them.
This man painted the way Shirley Jackson wrote: hauntingly.
A computer voice spouting sociological uplift.
It's the future.😄
❤ .
🙏interesting narrative of Klints life and his techniques and development as an artist and a true joy to look at his late landscape paintings of gardens, parks, lakes and intensifying compositions with his way of creating patterns and rhythms mostly as a square mosaic and yet resulting in so beautifull and special works 🩵💚🤎🖤
I love to watch the painting - they are so very intense and here the first painting that really showed some of the special qualities of catching a composition and the atmosphere as pure vibration of color is the very beautifull painting of Schubert playing in candle light - it’s so very beautifull and dreamlike 🎶♥️🧡💛🖤🎵
Thank you for your comments. I'm glad you enjoyed it.
@@arti-facts-4uyes I enjoyed the total video - great presentation and it made me even more hungry to once in my life to see Klimt in the real world 🙏for sharing
Another excellent presentation of art and you have improved my opinion of his contribution to modern art💠
Glad you liked it. Thanks for watching.😀
This is about the fifth of your wonderful art documentaries that are allowing me to put my opinions aside and understand better what each artist is trying to convey with his art and Kandinsky was definitely on my ambivalent list - interesting fact that he can hear colors and see sounds. That fact alone increased my curiosity in each picture,
I enjoyed the narration. 🏴
I've usually liked his style - somewhere between realism and illustration and am glad to learn, cranky or not, that he was a supporter of liberal social thoughts, tho as a gay man, sorry to hear he has to deny his homophobia,
I don't think he denied it. He was sacked because of it.
He was not a great Artist as he claimed to be i don't not like his style of painting.
Other people do like him. In 1934 Time magazine featured him on their cover. An honour that had not been granted to any other artist at that time.
It isn't his claim that makes him great.
12:58 "made many drawings from these willing models." Oh stop it! They were children and they weren't old enough to give consent. He was a great artist, but that doesn't mean you have to downplay his pedophilia.
It's not pedophilia to paint pictures of children.
@@arti-facts-4u It's pedophilia to be sexually attracted to children. He was probably a pedophile. If we are going to really look at this artist, let us really see him--the good and the bad.
Benton is new to me. Thrilling....l enjoy his sinuous line. ....and his motivations. Thankyou
You do an excellent job of providing context for this artist and describing the criticism of his work. Tides of art ebb and flow from abstraction to realism and other styles but a fine artist will be rediscovered and speak to us again.
Wow awesome
Many many thanks
17:55 It's funny people talk about these black-&-white Marilyns representing the harsh realities of her life... but I think people are forgetting that before the 1990s almost every newspaper image was black-&-white and that's what it reminds people of the most!📰🗞️
47:40 may I ask what particularities of his work make it so susceptible to light? What paintings did he use that had such poor lightfastness? or what happened to the artwork? smoke? something else that make them so weak to light?
You may find the following link helpful with regard to conservation. egonschieleonline.org/overview/materials-condition-and-conservation
me at the start: how narcissistic could this man possibly be? me at the end: yeah he was narcissistic allright.
Even a year after this video, Hockney is still alive as of Feb.12th 2024. Why using the past tense? And why making it seem he died in 2023???
The last lines of the video say: "In 2023, Hockney is today the best-known living British artist. His verve and curiosity are undiminished. " Certainly not written in the past tense as you suggest.
@@arti-facts-4u Did we both watched the same video? The video starts with "Hockney 1937-2023" and the whole narration is in past tense about him. It makes no sense if he is still alive.
If you look again you will see it says "Hockney 1937-2023+ ". It may be a clumsy way of doing it, but I was indicating that he was still going when I made the video.
Excellent!
Many thanks!
Great artist and great paintings!!!I dint' knew this artist!
Thank you! Cheers!
He did a lot of murals on a big scale...my first time hearing of this artist
Glad you enjoyed it.
Informative and so thoroughly enjoyed, great work and thank you ❤
Glad you enjoyed it!
Wonderful, thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it!
please never stop making these
Glad you enjoyed it.
Thank you for this wonderful series.
Glad you like them!
WHAT A FASCINATING VID!! I'm stuck at home, having to self-quarantine with @#$%^ covid. I learned so much about this wonderful artist. Such a blessing that he didn't make a career as a lawyer.
Glad you enjoyed it.
He be on the sex offenders registers, these days, monster to children
Wonderful artist but his work did have a lot of similarities to Klimt work. Love Klimts work❤❤
I'm a non-professional artist, coming from a long line of artists (my father is a landscape painter, his mother (my grandmother) was an art teacher, a great-aunt was also an artist, and some of my brothers and sisters as well are talented). When I was in my Advanced Placement art class in high school and later on in college, I remember disliking Edward Hopper's paintings. At the time I was only seeing his more famous, popular ones with the alienated seeming people in them, and I guess that's why I didn't like them because of the feeling of loneliness, alienation, and even in the choice of colors -- coldness. Overall, I didn't have good experiences in school as my family moved often and I was always having to start over, so perhaps this also had something to do with my dislike. I always preferred the bright, usually warm, inviting paintings of the Impressionists (who, to this day are still my favorite). However, as I've gotten older and learned more about Edward Hopper and have also searched for more of his paintings, I can now say that I definitely very much admire his work and understand and appreciate the messages in them. I especially like the colors he worked with, because even though they have a cool tonality/hue to them, they are also serene and calming as well as nostalgic. I am so grateful that we can now find these wonderful biographical documentaries with high quality photos of these artists who we all admire.
Glad you enjoyed it.
That was awesome, great video and a nice voice. Thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it.