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Quince
Приєднався 12 сер 2021
Art and wine chat
Відео
The Third of May, 1808 Or: How Goya Revolutionized The Way We See War
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The Third of May, 1808 Or: How Goya Revolutionized The Way We See War
The Ambassadors: A Double Portrait And Death
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The Ambassadors: A Double Portrait And Death
David Shrigley Gives Soho House A Banana
Переглядів 3742 роки тому
David Shrigley Gives Soho House A Banana
NFTs Bring The Vatican Into The Metaverse
Переглядів 4302 роки тому
NFTs Bring The Vatican Into The Metaverse
Cabernet Sauvignon: What You Need To Know About The Great Colonizer
Переглядів 9092 роки тому
Cabernet Sauvignon: What You Need To Know About The Great Colonizer
Andy Warhol: Shot Sage Blue Marilyn | Art Explained
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Andy Warhol: Shot Sage Blue Marilyn | Art Explained
Syrah vs. Shiraz: What's The Difference?
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Syrah vs. Shiraz: What's The Difference?
Composition With Red, Blue And Yellow By Piet Mondrian: Art Explained
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Composition With Red, Blue And Yellow By Piet Mondrian: Art Explained
Chardonnay Wine: A Beginner's Guide
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Chardonnay Wine: A Beginner's Guide
12 Times When Masterpieces Got Vandalised
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12 Times When Masterpieces Got Vandalised
The Most Expensive NFT Ever Sold Wasn't By Beeple
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The Most Expensive NFT Ever Sold Wasn't By Beeple
Chianti Wine: Made From The Blood Of Gods!
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Chianti Wine: Made From The Blood Of Gods!
Beeple Brings NFTs Into The Physical World
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Beeple Brings NFTs Into The Physical World
Picasso's Most Controversial Painting: Les Demoiselles d’Avignon
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Picasso's Most Controversial Painting: Les Demoiselles d’Avignon
The Mystery Of Da Vinci's Lost Masterpiece
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The Mystery Of Da Vinci's Lost Masterpiece
How Dutch Windmills Inspired Abstract Art
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How Dutch Windmills Inspired Abstract Art
Your Analysis are awesome..need more views❤❤
It's really nice..plz continue to post videos like this❣️
And they had only alcohol? Yeah, right. It seems we didn’t learn about the recreational psychedelic drugs they used….
Helpful information. Thanks for sharing 🍷
☺️
2:19 Kingdom of the Apes
1:44: Inventive trunk?? What about the howda is a literal castle tower, and the mahout is driving from the back?
I love, love, love this video. One of my art exploration students brought it to my attention. Why don't more subscribers?
Thank you very much. We're so glad you've enjoyed it!
To the narrator…you may be a great person but your voice is not strong enough for this type of narration
🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬
So what they’re buying is a code basically ? Like cryptocurrency that can go up and down ? That they can buy and sell ? So strange. It was created from literally nothing
It’s not real though right ? It’s basically like bitcoin.
Great vid and narrator!🎉
Thank you!
"A time without progress" Ok try telling that to the dude that invented the wheelbarrow. Oh wait you can't cause he's moving too fast now.
we are currently doing this section in our subject art class , really interesting
Some of his work is very important. He’s one of the best
Medieval Memes
I’m older than most. Didn’t any of you draw on you school books? Mine where definitely art work an I was not skilled. Do you not think a board monk would just do something with extra paper?
Why are they using a photo of Valerie Solanas who shot Andy warhol. Valerie did not shot the artworks. This is just sloppy research editing. No bueño.
Because they were all intoxicated on various plants,tainted water, as well as misinformation
It makes me think that’s what the world looked like at that time.
"The British Museum‚ The only museum that has nothing British"
What a great job you did with this. Would like to see more of your opinions on this information. or similar.
Thank you!
Marginalia were the medieval "Spy Vs. Spy". Bored monks getting silly.
Another little fact that the "enlightened" narrator left out was that these "backward and narrow minded" authors and artists were medieval Catholic MONKS!
The stereotypes at the beginning of the video, are more painful than nails across a chalkboard...🙄
I assume these drawings were drawn by the author(s), so they must've been educated men, who were probably monks. It's funny that these often dirty drawings were drawn by monks! 😂 I wonder why they would put dirty drawings in the margins of religious texts
What if the drawings were literal and the world was completely different back then?
Wow, you are taking a crap on Picasso. You are awful.
At 5:40 ...I have an answer for this drawing...too much mead!!!!!
At 5:24 ...Is she harvesting...uh...well...sausages???
At 5:17 ...I don't even want to know what is going on there...
At 0:26 ...Snail man???
At 0:12 ...WTF is that???
Right off the bat the description of the medieval ages was wrong and very misunderstood. This is crap.
It's almost as if you gave a prompt to chat gpt. Your "sources" are false. Think for yourself 🙄
I enjoyed this video. This painting makes me think of the Robert Altman film *3 Women.*
I'm glad you liked it ☺️ and what an interesting connection!
Love It!🎉
Isnt this art deco narratior?
Nope!
People were weird and quirky back then too and they expressed it. Today we have…furries conventions.
As for rabbit in knight i feel like depecting a colony that bread fast. A colony in the old era where people just have many kids. As in that era contraception not invented yet so if the colony have many childrens perhaps the people at that time would describe it with rabbit. They easily produces offspring. As for dog in knight, it would depict loyal person. Lion would be brave.
Battle a snail..... Hmm.... More like depicting the battle that snaillike. Slow paced battle? But what if it fights a lion? Or a dragon? Was it really a lion or a dragon?
That's also a possible reading! This is also a really great resource from the British Library explaining the many different interpretations of knight v snail: blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanuscripts/2013/09/knight-v-snail.html#:~:text=Other%20scholars%20have%20variously%20described,saucy%20symbol%20of%20female%20sexuality.
When I was in animation school at Sheridan, there was a class I did pretty poorly in, but would love to take again cuz in retrospect I know they were trying to get me to learn to think...but I was too obstinate to see that...(it's where I discovered James Burke and "Connections") Anyway, there was this one video they showed which was trying to demonstrate the power of context. They showed this Goya painting "The Third of May 1808" In the video, they show you the image, and you're a kid, and you're just kinda sitting there.."Yeah OK, old painting"....THEN they show you a short clip of these burlesque girls doing the can-can or something, then switch back to the painting...and you're like..."OK..where is THIS going?".....you're just perhaps bemused, or indifferent. THEN they show a film clip of people in Africa being shot by a firing squad, then they show the painting once more...and now?...That painting hit us like a sledge-hammer to the guts.
@projektkobra2247 This is a brilliant memory, thank you so much for sharing! Even reading about it is striking. The possibilities of good old juxtaposition
@@QuinceStudios Thanks!! I wish I could remember the show, it was probably full of stuff like that.
There's something SO charming about this art. It's old with a tinge of creepy and it feels like something out of a fairytale. Amazing video!
Thank you!
3:06 The thing depicted here is an actual historical event. Charles VI of France and his friends dressed up as wild men at masked ball in 1393. Someone brought a torch too close to the men fully clothed in flammable fur and they all caught on fire. Charles VI was saved, as Duchess of Berry covered him in some clothes, extinguishing fire. Hovewer, despite staying alive, the mental health of monarch was damaged. Later in life he developed either bipolar disorder of schizophrenia. Since he was not fit for rule, that led Armagnac-Burgundian Civil War (two groups tried to establish their influence over the insane king), which then led to the Lancastrian war - a part of hundred-years war, English invasion of France.
Wow if only history had been taught to me this way….
I've always wondered about the ridged adherence to the aesthetic. Why did so many artists in western Europe show humans with rounded arms, strangely elongated hands, and splayed feet.
This was fascinating. Especially the walk through realism as it morphs into abstraction.
Thanks! So happy you enjoyed it ☺️
Honestly... I think they were making the best of smudges and accidentally lines by drawing whatever worked. The writing took hours, so why not Crack a bad joke to save the page and 20hrs? 🤷♂️🤷♀️
No. He's the best.
The Middle Ages are NOT the same as the Dark Ages. The Dark Ages run from the collapse of Rome around 450 until the year 800 when Charlemagne became the first Holy Roman Emperor. The Middle Ages run from 800 until the beginning of the Renaissance which, depending upon the country, can be anywhere from 1350 to 1500
I was taught that the middle ages tarted with the fall of the Roman Empire, and the dark ages were just a part of it.
@@melonmusk8924 there wasnt really a "dark age" where no progress happened, or where "great roman innovation" was forgotten. Not even with the oh so horrible plague. These are myths. Most "evidence" for these myths comes from later times when they wanted to present themselves as being better than the middle ages.
We are just as weird, maybe more so. One day, thousands of years from now, archeologists will dig us up and wonder at a people who stuffed plastic parts in their bodies and mutilated themselves...yeah, we're weird af.