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Documentary movies
Приєднався 21 сер 2015
BBC Northern Renaissance 02 The Birth of the Artist
Series in which Joseph Leo Koerner argues that the Renaissance in Northern Europe - more so than its Italian counterpart - laid the foundations of modern art. He assesses the career of German painter Albrecht Durer, who harnessed the new medium of printing to become the first world-famous artist.
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Відео
BBC Northern Renaissance 01 The Supreme Art
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Series in which Joseph Leo Koerner argues that the Renaissance in Northern Europe - more so than its Italian counterpart - laid the foundations of modern art. In the early 15th century, the remarkable oil paintings of Flemish artist Jan Van Eyck transformed a lowly craft into the supreme art and began an image revolution that would change art forever.
BBC Fine Art Collection 7 of 7 The Mysteries of Hieronymus Bosch
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BBC Fine Art Collection 6 of 7 Jackson Pollock Love and Death on Long Island
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The original art is a human desire, depicting life through a variety of ways, but who are the masters of it? The expression means they must be unique individuals, while also embracing life. "Art Collection" by the BBC performs elaborate and time-consuming search through the years, shuttling around the museums, galleries and private collections in the world and visiting around artists friends an...
BBC Fine Art Collection 5 of 7 The Gentle Art of Making Enemies Whistler
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The original art is a human desire, depicting life through a variety of ways, but who are the masters of it? The expression means they must be unique individuals, while also embracing life. "Art Collection" by the BBC performs elaborate and time-consuming search through the years, shuttling around the museums, galleries and private collections in the world and visiting around artists friends an...
BBC Fine Art Collection 4 of 7 Rodin 1840 1917
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The original art is a human desire, depicting life through a variety of ways, but who are the masters of it? The expression means they must be unique individuals, while also embracing life. "Art Collection" by the BBC performs elaborate and time-consuming search through the years, shuttling around the museums, galleries and private collections in the world and visiting around artists friends an...
BBC Fine Art Collection 3 of 7 Rembrandt by Himself
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The original art is a human desire, depicting life through a variety of ways, but who are the masters of it? The expression means they must be unique individuals, while also embracing life. "Art Collection" by the BBC performs elaborate and time-consuming search through the years, shuttling around the museums, galleries and private collections in the world and visiting around artists friends an...
BBC Fine Art Collection 1 of 7 Mad About Monet
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The original art is a human desire, depicting life through a variety of ways, but who are the masters of it? The expression means they must be unique individuals, while also embracing life. "Art Collection" by the BBC performs elaborate and time-consuming search through the years, shuttling around the museums, galleries and private collections in the world and visiting around artists friends an...
Durer looks like he knows what an iphome is
I'm just annoyed that he says "vin yards" not vineyards
These presentations support periods of history in flames with constant war or describes a favoured culture group with super hyperbolic plus language.
CGI STUDIO (no birds).
Excellent documentary
This is amazing - great doc!
this is an excellent presentation thank you M
Lots of ads!
Don't think he painted himself as Christ. The 1500 self portrait is not symmetrical. The eyes are different, clearly. His hair darker because he is a dark room. It is pure conjecture. Interesting though that he took the egotistical road to self-absorption and the phycological backlash it will produce. Unlike Bach, a genius that was steady and solid. The former the hero of art teachers and movie goers. The ladder to less self-concerned and more graceful approach.
😂whatever you say crazy guy
I can smell hell from this architecture bro🥺 Its looks scary🥺
35:24 Dennis Hopper
I suspected he possessed a fair amount of arrogance, then I considered that he may have actually understood "the Original Teachings of Yeshua/Jesus", the understanding of "...the body is a temple of God", the realization that all are Soul Energies, of and from the Source, the Creator, "God". I would prefer to think of him in this way, as Higher Minded, Matured through in an Authentic Harmony, and free to express himself without the Lower Mind 's Ego, which actually is our nemesis. Once harnessed, we are free to Explore and Discover, with full understanding of our worth. It's the lack of fear, fear based thoughts, that separates the arrogance from the freely expressing. Beth Bartlett Sociologist/Behavioralist and Historian USA.
I had appreciated Van Eyck on a surface level before, but I was absolutely blown away with the information presented on this documentary. The textures of what he paints are so real, it almost looks like a photograph when close up. The colors, too, are extremely vibrant and alive. It's even more astonishing when placed in context with other works of the time, giving a sense of the true magnitude of his genius.
“what I do” “Monets dead I’m alive” Fucking twat
he is not good at eyes
Well, Mr. (Dr.?) Koerner feels that painting was the “ultimate art,” but I have to disagree, in favor of music, mostly because it’s more abstract than the other arts….it’s the language of sound, with its own mathematics, it’s own physics. That’s my opinion!
Very interesting but marred by far too much focus on the narrator - walking, looking, thinking, standing in front of paintings...A study in ego.
This drives me nuts, too, but there’s another art historian-English, female-with a director who loves to focus his camera on her black ankle boots with chunky 4” heels as she walks from place to place, inside, outside. With 6 sequences of this nonsense in the first 15 minutes, I gave up in disgust. You’d think the fabulous art she was talking about and walking to would have rated the largest look-in….apparently not.
he’s an atheist what do you expect
somewhat annoying overblown claims
Yes, I agree. I balked over painting being the “ultimate art” during the northern Renaissance, but I would say music holds that title, because of its extremely abstract nature. An even bigger issue to me is, what’s the point in ranking within the arts at all, when there’s no objective criteria? <sigh>
Quite simply, superb in every aspect. Thank you.
I love Claude Monet so much.😊😇🥰😍🤗
Does anyone know what the introduction music is?
Durer was as much a mystic as Steiner which is little known. His Melencolia is filled with hidden maths and geometry which the scholars have yet to discover. Search the Durer New Sacred Geometry video which I can’t link to here
It would have been funny if around 21:00 while they're discussing, 'Mother,' if they'd gotten in a giant fist-fight.
Incredible work
This narrator gives me anxiety! Sounds like he's angry and secretly hates anything German.
My favourite version of paintings from his oeuvre are the less detailed, more foggy and impressionistic ones,even though absolutely comprehensible in it's intended depiction of the subject matter. There's something very mysterious and esoteric about those works of his.
hello fellow struggler. In this dark and unfair world, i just thought i'd let you know that God loves you and to never stop loving yourself and pursuing happiness.
There is no god
Must make atheists feel insecure seeing the artistic work of christians, knowing how paltry their own slop is in comparison
Some modern scholars believe Bosch suffered from St. Anthony's Fire, or ergot poisoning, which commonly happened at that time. Ergot poisoning can lead to intense hallucinations, but... the mystery continues.
Help! What is that fantastic music starting around 30:05? The harp and flute. Thanks!
53:20 things like this prove that documentaries themselves can be works of art
Who is this man, please? And thank you.
Albrecht Dürer was as good as any "Messiah", or any other historical figure. His impact was as great as Martin Luther, or Jonannes Gutenberg. One of his greatest admirers was Leonardo Da Vinci. He was a revolutionary, an innovator, and a worker of miracles. His nation stands with him.
Very shalow
Monet makes you feel good. Young Monet was a gorgeous man, were he and his buddies living in this era, he would be a celebrity as famous at the Brad Pitt level. He looked a bit like Antonio Bandaris, and he has always been my pick of his peers.
cheers
Durer always fascinates. .his innovation and vision was so modern and he truly represents the Renaissance . In his later writings, he seemed disappointed that he didn't accomplish much more. I think he would be satisfied with his legacy and he should be.
One of the best art documentaries I have ever seen but you are mispronouncing the"cht" at the end of his first name. It is not sh* as in the English *shook
The presenter is absolutely awful in his blown-up, pompous, pretentious blah-blah. He is much too present, on the expense of the art works. Truy badly made!
It's good to highlight the Northern Renaissance with all those beautiful works, but it is quite unnecessary to do this in a tone as if we have to be sold a second hand car. Also the exaggerated accolades are far beyond reality. And then: the Italian Renaisance was about the recovery of the culture of Antiquity, and that was in a very different style from what we now call the Northern Renaissance. The latter has nothing of the style or the inspiration of Antiquity and the Medieval spirit still reigns supreme. The Northern Renaissance was an outgrowth, a development, of the Middle Ages; the Italian Renaissance was a 'true' rebirth, of the culture of Antiquity.
Briefly only to be melted down to make new confections
Why the fuck did you write like 10 comments
Úsenles but staging costly objects were displayed br
Inside and out
To cover their many residences
Of huge precious tapestries enough
The works the dukes composed included hundreds
The court of the duke of
Lavish culture in Europe is the time the court of burgundy
And this change took root in the most
Began to be replaced by a taste for something new
Such as tapestry