Oh my god, this is one of the most impactful video i have seen in a good way. I love how the impressionism is so free, not like other paintings, and also very bright!
I love how the artists knew each other and made paintings about their lives. You have paintings of Berthe Morisot by her husband Édoard Manet and you have paintings of their daugher Julie by Pierre-Auguste Renoir.
It must have been such a shock at the time !! And yet they brought painting to modernism forgetting religious and mythical themes that they no longer wanted .....1874 was a turning point and art was no longer the same for the artists .Berthe Morisot and Mary Cassatt can t be forgotten either. I do admire and appreciate their works. So talented , so modern even if they painted domestic subjects . Thanks to them all.
The impressionists themselves were okay, but they set in motion the trends that led art to the dire state it's in today. Being influential isn't necessarily a good thing.
Renoir's Luncheon of the Boating Party is a favorite of mine because it shows people of different classes enjoying a long leisurely lunch on the Seine. Leisure time was a new thing & it was being painted by the Impressionists. ^Great video here!^
While once prowling around the Louvre I noticed many huge canvases of the traditional Salon style that are still hung there, by long forgotten artists I never heard of. The square yardage was immense of the space they took up. Very stiff, mythological or historic or just obscure subject matter. Then I turned a corner, and there were the Impressionists’ works and what a breath of fresh air! That contrast between them was like between the living and the long dead, and no wonder the Impressionists are still so well loved today!
Thank you, so well presented. Van Gogh of course pulls my heartstrings. He was also a brilliant writer, teaching English in London! I posess a book :Letters to Theo. Well, so informative and a talented observer and author. Out of print, this book. I treasure it.
First of all, congrants on the amazing channel you've created. Thanks for such a curated and affordable content. Where I come from, the most beloved impressionist painter is Joaquin Sorolla, a master with colour and light, but I can't lie to myself or any other person . Although I really enjoy almost every painter I must say that Gustave Caillebotte is a brilliant artist, the piece that stroke me the most is "Les raboteurs de parquet" (The floor planers, 1875). I'd really love to watch a video on Expressionism or Fauvism. Thanks again for all the effort you're putting on this amazing content! Cheers!
Thank you again for speaking so highly about our work, we really appreciate your feedback 🤗. The video about Fauvism is already in production 🤫. It will be live in 3-4 weeks!
Impressionist works were how I initially became drawn to Western paintings. 😍 Yeah, it seems that Monet was more interested in how to capture the passage of time around the sunlit Rouen Cathedral with varying light conditions rather than depicting the church itself. Monet’s bright and relaxing works always bring me happiness. Pissaro's paintings have a similar effect on me. His tranquil pastoral scenes are literally so picturesque and have such a soothing effect that I would say that he himself may have been an artist with a heart of gold, someone who might embrace everything.🤩 The soothing qualities of his paintings are self-explanatory. Meanwhile, I consider Van Gogh's paintings more inspiring, and think they have spiritually and emotionally more uplifting features, equipped with a sense of passion and vitality. All things taken together, Impressionist works are the very definition of art, I would say.🤔 Again, thanks for all the effort you put into it, Curious Muse!😁
I’ve just discovered your channel was an instant subscriber. Knowing that you get monetisation from watching the adverts all the way thru, I did that to so you get money to produce more of these bite sized docos. Will you be doing architects? I’d love to have Goudi (Barcelona cathedral architect). I’d also be interested to see individual impressionists covered in partic Monet, his series eg the haystacks, and the myriad of lily pad paintings. Renoir and cezanne would also be favourites I’d love to see covered. In the movements before Impressionism I’d love to understand why portraiture was seen as less of an art to historical paintings, and landscapes the lowest form. I know there will be more suggestions I could make but it’s time to make dinner! 😀 I shall have a wonderful time binge watching what you have already done. You have a dedicated new fan here!
That’s so nice of you - thank you for supporting our channel! 😍 We’ll absolutely makes videos about architects, individual impressionists and more, so stay with us! By the way, have you seen our ‘top 5 architects’ video?
I'm not an emotional person but to see a great impressionist painting evokes strong emotions. It's the fact that it's so gorgeous yet makes our brain work.
WONDERFUL ! The best, didactic, with essential explanations at once ! In short, that is, the most complete video in the English language I found for my Italian students, lazy and , the most of them, uninterested in anything that is not football .... apart from some girls ..
Thanks for explaining it in such a detail way! I was always wondering why it is named impressionism art while they are always painting the actual life, and the video mentioned they are trying to tell the world doesn't always have to be represented realistically, we all have our own way to view our life. I love Monet works! I love to see things from different angle and the Rouen Cathedral from different settings allow me to truly imagine myself Im there. and of course, the colour usage of his works are just top notch. It's so satisfying and therapeutic seeing all of them
As an art historian who was hired to write the AP Art History curriculum for all of New York State, I am flabbergasted that Edward Hopper's "Sunday Morning" from 1930 was shown as an example of Impressionism, a 19th century French art movement!!!!! 😡😡I could see if Hopper's inclusion was to support the video's aim: "Impressionism in 8 Minutes; How it Changed The Course of Art". Even my students were shocked and dismayed. Really?!?
thank you @user-pr5us2ux9e for bringing this to their attention and holding them accountable. this has definitely stirred the controversy pot 😨! we need to be more cautious about what we teach our children!!!!
Perfect videos and channels, it's so helpful for me to acquire more art history knowledge in such a short time and I can use it to deal with my art history test. By the way, I found that I am addicted to the art history gradually.
I started collecting paintings last year. I am about to buy to second. I don’t know why I’m drawn to impressionistic styles. I guess it’s the vibrant colors anf the depictions of nature. Or, perhaps, it’s how light is presented and how it enables effects of reflection on nature (like water). But figured I’d start learning about what I’ve been buying. Great information :)
Renoir is my favorite. La loge is my absolute favorite painting. I had the privilige and joy to see it at the Art Institute of Chicago when it was part of a traveling exhibit. So much light, beauty and color exuded from that painting. I was spellbound. It brought tears to my eyes I was so very grateful to finally see it. The Art Institute of Chicago has a very nice section devoted to Impressionism. They also have a very nice Oriental section with Kimonos hanging in the air on display. Gorgeous.
Love the explanations! Really helped me to do my research on art movements, thank you so much! By the way, I’m curious about the website shown in 4:27, what is it :0 it would really help me out Thankss!
I was very much drawn to Impressionism in my youth, but the older I became, the more I gravitated back to the art of the ancients. I love Greek art especially. I love the Minoans. I still love art from other eras, e.g. I love Van Gogh and Jackson Pollock, but Impressionism has little appeal to me overall in my declining years.
@@theotheoth I have not tried to draw, much less paint, since childhood. Sadly, underpriviledged children in Capitalist societies too often have any sort of artistic proclivities drained from them.
I am impressed by the video. It is engaging. I subbed because I can find here a very good summary about other topics other than impressionism ❤ Learned new things about Mary Cassatt . Thank you for this free video
Thanks to them, everyone doing unrefined paintings are now claiming to be creating their own valuable trendy styles 🤪 I have never seen such a complete yet compact recap of this movement before and it is well illustrated so, as always, thank you 👋
Impressionism was more about the mood of a work of art rather than was what depicted. Many many artists painted domestic scenes - as can be seen in Roman mosaics to Vermeer. Impressionism was not about casual scenes but more about works of art showing the shadows of the day versus the spotlights of classical painting. The way sunlight created dappled effects on water and grass and flowers.
I really enjoyed the video, full of great information, though was wondering why you had the Edward Hopper painting 'Early Sunday Morning' 3:56 into the video. He did focus on light in his paintings as well.
Please answer my question or make a video explaining i.e. Why there was frequent change in Art movements for example from Romantic art to Realism art then impressionism leading to post impressionism and then fauvism and so on? Any specific reason for such frequent change or adaptation by the artists please explain in detail?
I a I always think the expression ist art had a lovely fluffy appeal , also some not all, can be copied by many amateur artists , to a similar degree of skill .of course nowadays we can all take photos to copy off, the old masters didn't have that luxury. art is truly is in the eye of the beholder I think that the lockdown has like me, encourage many people to take up art . You tube is great way to find different techniques , it would be nice to have a revival of the art and craft movement !
Together with William Morris ' Arts & Crafts movement , I find these two Artforms the most beautifull the world has ever seen . A house with Morris interior and Renoir's paintings on the wall , does it get any better ?
I was waiting for your explanation of the great artist Van Gogh and his paintings 😊 sadly couldn't see. But well done, thanks for sharing such an informative piece ❤️✨
This video is really helpful and interesting.. but I have a question if you don’t mind, Charles Baudelaire was the artist who invented the term modernity but he focused on traditional subject matter so how did he supported Impressionism even though the idea he invented is kind of the opposite of what Claude Monet and August Renoir did.. as modernity focused on subject matter and Impressionism focused less about subject matter
What a lovely voice and content.Thank you ,greatly appreciated. Later stage follows the abstract impressionism and my feeling is that many of them cannot actually paint. Please correct me!
I really like this video. it saved me! just a suggestion: I'd love to know the name of the paintings when it shows on the screen🥹 pls do that in the future. again, great, GREAT video🌸
Impressionist painting will stick to realistic principles - the artist representing nothing but what he sees. Whereas Turner brought luminosity and romantic imagery to his subjects. His work-initially realistic-became more fluid and poetic, and is now regarded as a predecessor to Impressionism 🙏🏻
@@CuriousMuse I can't wait to see the Turner exhibit at Boston's MFA this month. Really looking forward to seeing some of these great paintings in person. The MFA in Boston is truly one of the great museums of the United States. Definitely worth a visit if you're in Boston.
Hopper considered himself an Impressionist through much of his life :) though a lot of people think of him (or like to think so) as a realist painter. Sargent seems a lot like impressionist though he also painted realism
Impressionist art in my assessment is like acting naturally, environmental and sorroundings portrayal in art, in fact event capturing that pleases the eyes.
IMPRESSIONISMO: ricordo che un pittore russo, che lavorava per un mecenate russo molto facoltoso, dopo un viaggio a Parigi gli disse, che dipingere così, È DA TUTTI.
здивована, що на 0:36 у галереї можна побачити українські підписи під картинами. Цікаво, у мене одна така штука чи це справді було знято в галереї України? Неймовірне відео! 😎
@@Doctor_Clump many of these guy's works were accepted at the Paris Salon at various times, so they clearly began as traditional artists. You sound ignorant
the definition of art had to be change for impressionism to be accepted. sadly true ability became passe . I'll take Rembrandt and his talent over blurred, quick strokes any day of the week. long live the true masters!
"You might be wondering, were there any women impressionists?" I promise you, I was not. I'm here to learn about impressionism, and I don't care what type of genitals its champions had.
Oh my god, this is one of the most impactful video i have seen in a good way.
I love how the impressionism is so free, not like other paintings, and also very bright!
😍
I love how the artists knew each other and made paintings about their lives. You have paintings of Berthe Morisot by her husband Édoard Manet and you have paintings of their daugher Julie by Pierre-Auguste Renoir.
Eduar Mane, bio je Bertin dever, a ne muž!
Beautiful !!!
My favorite art is impressionism.
Just a note, Manet was her brother in law, they were also just really good friends
Yes. It was all in the exhibit "the other Manet" in Luxembourg musée of Paris last year 😊
I love Impressionism. Monet is still my favorite, but they all just make me feel-good.
I love Renoir and Claude Monet paintings.There painting lifts my mood.They created a lasting Impression in our hearts and minds.
It must have been such a shock at the time !! And yet they brought painting to modernism forgetting religious and mythical themes that they no longer wanted .....1874 was a turning point and art was no longer the same for the artists .Berthe Morisot and Mary Cassatt can t be forgotten either.
I do admire and appreciate their works.
So talented , so modern even if they painted domestic subjects .
Thanks to them all.
The impressionists themselves were okay, but they set in motion the trends that led art to the dire state it's in today. Being influential isn't necessarily a good thing.
Renoir's Luncheon of the Boating Party is a favorite of mine
because it shows people of different classes enjoying a long
leisurely lunch on the Seine. Leisure time was a new thing &
it was being painted by the Impressionists. ^Great video here!^
We love this painting too 😍 Thanks for watching!
Just discovered this channel! I am loving it so much. Thank you!!
We're so glad! We have tons of videos so if you're into some topics (art, history, etc), please check out our playlists. Welcome to our community!
While once prowling around the Louvre I noticed many huge canvases of the traditional Salon style that are still hung there, by long forgotten artists I never heard of. The square yardage was immense of the space they took up. Very stiff, mythological or historic or just obscure subject matter. Then I turned a corner, and there were the Impressionists’ works and what a breath of fresh air! That contrast between them was like between the living and the long dead, and no wonder the Impressionists are still so well loved today!
Thank you, so well presented. Van Gogh of course pulls my heartstrings. He was also a brilliant writer, teaching English in London! I posess a book :Letters to Theo. Well, so informative and a talented observer and author. Out of print, this book. I treasure it.
This book does sound like a treasure! 🤩
First of all, congrants on the amazing channel you've created. Thanks for such a curated and affordable content. Where I come from, the most beloved impressionist painter is Joaquin Sorolla, a master with colour and light, but I can't lie to myself or any other person . Although I really enjoy almost every painter I must say that Gustave Caillebotte is a brilliant artist, the piece that stroke me the most is "Les raboteurs de parquet" (The floor planers, 1875).
I'd really love to watch a video on Expressionism or Fauvism.
Thanks again for all the effort you're putting on this amazing content!
Cheers!
Thank you again for speaking so highly about our work, we really appreciate your feedback 🤗. The video about Fauvism is already in production 🤫. It will be live in 3-4 weeks!
@@CuriousMuse It's not my "fault" you guys do such a great job ;P
Thanks for the heads up!
Impressionist works were how I initially became drawn to Western paintings. 😍
Yeah, it seems that Monet was more interested in how to capture the passage of time around the sunlit Rouen Cathedral with varying light conditions rather than depicting the church itself. Monet’s bright and relaxing works always bring me happiness.
Pissaro's paintings have a similar effect on me. His tranquil pastoral scenes are literally so picturesque and have such a soothing effect that I would say that he himself may have been an artist with a heart of gold, someone who might embrace everything.🤩 The soothing qualities of his paintings are self-explanatory.
Meanwhile, I consider Van Gogh's paintings more inspiring, and think they have spiritually and emotionally more uplifting features, equipped with a sense of passion and vitality.
All things taken together, Impressionist works are the very definition of art, I would say.🤔
Again, thanks for all the effort you put into it, Curious Muse!😁
I’ve just discovered your channel was an instant subscriber. Knowing that you get monetisation from watching the adverts all the way thru, I did that to so you get money to produce more of these bite sized docos. Will you be doing architects? I’d love to have Goudi (Barcelona cathedral architect). I’d also be interested to see individual impressionists covered in partic Monet, his series eg the haystacks, and the myriad of lily pad paintings. Renoir and cezanne would also be favourites I’d love to see covered.
In the movements before Impressionism I’d love to understand why portraiture was seen as less of an art to historical paintings, and landscapes the lowest form.
I know there will be more suggestions I could make but it’s time to make dinner! 😀
I shall have a wonderful time binge watching what you have already done. You have a dedicated new fan here!
That’s so nice of you - thank you for supporting our channel! 😍 We’ll absolutely makes videos about architects, individual impressionists and more, so stay with us! By the way, have you seen our ‘top 5 architects’ video?
I'm not an emotional person but to see a great impressionist painting evokes strong emotions. It's the fact that it's so gorgeous yet makes our brain work.
Marie Bracquemond was also one of the three female members of the French Impressionists. She should have been mentioned here.
WONDERFUL ! The best, didactic, with essential explanations at once ! In short, that is, the most complete video in the English language I found for my Italian students, lazy and , the most of them, uninterested in anything that is not football .... apart from some girls ..
Haha 😂, glad to hear you liked the video! 🙏🏻 We have a whole playlist dedicated to major art movements in case this can help you with your students! 😀
Thanks for explaining it in such a detail way! I was always wondering why it is named impressionism art while they are always painting the actual life, and the video mentioned they are trying to tell the world doesn't always have to be represented realistically, we all have our own way to view our life.
I love Monet works! I love to see things from different angle and the Rouen Cathedral from different settings allow me to truly imagine myself Im there. and of course, the colour usage of his works are just top notch. It's so satisfying and therapeutic seeing all of them
As an art historian who was hired to write the AP Art History curriculum for all of New York State, I am flabbergasted that Edward Hopper's "Sunday Morning" from 1930 was shown as an example of Impressionism, a 19th century French art movement!!!!! 😡😡I could see if Hopper's inclusion was to support the video's aim: "Impressionism in 8 Minutes; How it Changed The Course of Art". Even my students were shocked and dismayed. Really?!?
Word
I agree with Shannon- Aidan L.
i agree with this, i as well was shocked when i saw hopper’s art work , it can be very misleading for someone trying to learn about this topic
thank you @user-pr5us2ux9e for bringing this to their attention and holding them accountable. this has definitely stirred the controversy pot 😨! we need to be more cautious about what we teach our children!!!!
FRRRR SHANNON YOU TELL THEM
Perfect videos and channels, it's so helpful for me to acquire more art history knowledge in such a short time and I can use it to deal with my art history test. By the way, I found that I am addicted to the art history gradually.
Wonderful, welcome to our community. Check out our red playlist, it’s fully dedicated to art 🖼
I started collecting paintings last year. I am about to buy to second. I don’t know why I’m drawn to impressionistic styles. I guess it’s the vibrant colors anf the depictions of nature. Or, perhaps, it’s how light is presented and how it enables effects of reflection on nature (like water). But figured I’d start learning about what I’ve been buying.
Great information :)
Impressionism seemed to influence modern animation more than any other movement prior to the first animated films. Specifically for backgrounds.
Oh that's cool, we haven't thought of it from this angle. But definitely some parallels can be made. 👌
Renoir is my favorite. La loge is my absolute favorite painting. I had the privilige and joy to see it at the Art Institute of Chicago when it was part of a traveling exhibit. So much light, beauty and color exuded from that painting. I was spellbound. It brought tears to my eyes I was so very grateful to finally see it. The Art Institute of Chicago has a very nice section devoted to Impressionism. They also have a very nice Oriental section with Kimonos hanging in the air on display. Gorgeous.
Love the explanations! Really helped me to do my research on art movements, thank you so much! By the way, I’m curious about the website shown in 4:27, what is it :0 it would really help me out Thankss!
Very happy to hear this! The website is Google Arts and Culture, check it out :)
I was very much drawn to Impressionism in my youth, but the older I became, the more I gravitated back to the art of the ancients. I love Greek art especially. I love the Minoans. I still love art from other eras, e.g. I love Van Gogh and Jackson Pollock, but Impressionism has little appeal to me overall in my declining years.
Perhaps now is the time to take up the brush yourself and see what comes out.
@@theotheoth I have not tried to draw, much less paint, since childhood. Sadly, underpriviledged children in Capitalist societies too often have any sort of artistic proclivities drained from them.
Very good video. Interesting and creatively presented. Good job!
😍🙏🏻
Art is one of the most beautiful gateways to peace
The hands down greatest movement ever
I am impressed by the video. It is engaging. I subbed because I can find here a very good summary about other topics other than impressionism ❤
Learned new things about Mary Cassatt . Thank you for this free video
Thanks to them, everyone doing unrefined paintings are now claiming to be creating their own valuable trendy styles 🤪
I have never seen such a complete yet compact recap of this movement before and it is well illustrated so, as always, thank you 👋
Great to hear you liked it! So true that this movement gave birth to a lot of artists with their own styles 😉🤣
07:17 The dog's ears are so cute ❤
Ps: how has this amazing video got only 600 views? I instantly subscribed.
Thank you for joining our community! 🙏🏻
3:56 That's Edward Hopper's "Early Sunday Morning" (1930). Not exactly Impressionism.
Thanks for the flag 👍🏻
He wasn't an Impressionist, period!
STUNNING! Thank you!
The story? Production? Or? 😊
Impressionism was more about the mood of a work of art rather than was what depicted. Many many artists painted domestic scenes - as can be seen in Roman mosaics to Vermeer. Impressionism was not about casual scenes but more about works of art showing the shadows of the day versus the spotlights of classical painting. The way sunlight created dappled effects on water and grass and flowers.
Educating and entertaining! Instant sub
😍
I really enjoyed the video, full of great information, though was wondering why you had the Edward Hopper painting 'Early Sunday Morning' 3:56 into the video. He did focus on light in his paintings as well.
Yeah - it’s in the wrong place 😑
Please answer my question or make a video explaining i.e. Why there was frequent change in Art movements for example from Romantic art to Realism art then impressionism leading to post impressionism and then fauvism and so on?
Any specific reason for such frequent change or adaptation by the artists please explain in detail?
I love the way you explain... and I want u to make video on neu impressionism
Another great video! Thanks!
I a
I always think the expression ist art had a lovely fluffy appeal , also some not all, can be copied by many amateur artists , to a similar degree of skill .of course nowadays we can all take photos to copy off, the old masters didn't have that luxury. art is truly is in the eye of the beholder I think that the lockdown has like me, encourage many people to take up art . You tube is great way to find different techniques , it would be nice to have a revival of the art and craft movement !
Together with William Morris ' Arts & Crafts movement , I find these two Artforms the most beautifull the world has ever seen .
A house with Morris interior and Renoir's paintings on the wall , does it get any better ?
This combo sounds perfect 👌🏻
For me Vangough is by far the only artsite that i can connect with x
😍👍🏻
Plz put a video about Dali.❤️
Awww, absolutely - it’s about time! 😍
My favorite is Van Gogh, but I also love Degas and the whole Impressionist movement!!
Great names! 😍 We actually have a video about Van Gogh in case you may want to check it out 🙏🏻
I was waiting for your explanation of the great artist Van Gogh and his paintings 😊 sadly couldn't see.
But well done, thanks for sharing such an informative piece ❤️✨
Welcome - we have a full video dedicated to Van Gogh only on this channel, pls check it out 👌🏻
@@CuriousMuse wow! sure, I'll check it. Thanks 😊
I love van Gogh's paintings! But, technically, he is considered a Post Impressionist.
I really like Impressionism and my favorite painters are Van Gogh and Monet.
😍👌🏻
Have you ever seen a Van Gogh in real life?
Excellent channel..could you please create one regarding Mexicam Muralism
Great topic! 👍🏻 we will see how to make it work 💪🏻
I LOOOVE this channel
Awww, this is so nice to hear 😍🙏🏻
This video is really helpful and interesting.. but I have a question if you don’t mind, Charles Baudelaire was the artist who invented the term modernity but he focused on traditional subject matter so how did he supported Impressionism even though the idea he invented is kind of the opposite of what Claude Monet and August Renoir did.. as modernity focused on subject matter and Impressionism focused less about subject matter
No pueden haber reglas para el Arte. Cambió la forma, se ampliaron las posibilidades, fue un nuevo brote. El Arte es infinito.
Muchas graciassss, por el video, muy interesante y bien sintetizado
It was a struggle for them in those times.
Oh yeah indeed 💪🏻
How can I get the background soundtracks in the video?
Renoir has always been my favorite.
i think impressionism is the most beautiful
😍
What a lovely voice and content.Thank you ,greatly appreciated. Later stage follows the abstract impressionism and my feeling is that many of them cannot actually paint. Please correct me!
You might be right 😅
I love your videos on Art and Architecture. I would appreciate a video on the Islamic art thank you
I NEED more time to study what your showing; as well as a larger screen. I want to learn what faces go with what names!
You’ve got a great plan and thanks for learning with us 😍🙏🏻
Please ,Is impressionism different from romaticism???
In what way is impressionism different?
I have watched two vedios... Really really good... Can you just explain dadaism and surrealism 😇
Wonderful - we actually have both videos on the channel so pls check them out 👍🏻
I really like this video. it saved me! just a suggestion: I'd love to know the name of the paintings when it shows on the screen🥹 pls do that in the future. again, great, GREAT video🌸
Love to see these paintings on my own eyes...
Can you create one video regarding Purism
Great idea 💡
Hey, how is the song you are using in the intro called?
Oh, this video was made a long time ago…. can’t remember 😣
Why isn't Turner considered with the impressionists and more as a romantic painter?
Impressionist painting will stick to realistic principles - the artist representing nothing but what he sees. Whereas Turner brought luminosity and romantic imagery to his subjects. His work-initially realistic-became more fluid and poetic, and is now regarded as a predecessor to Impressionism 🙏🏻
@@CuriousMuse I can't wait to see the Turner exhibit at Boston's MFA this month. Really looking forward to seeing some of these great paintings in person. The MFA in Boston is truly one of the great museums of the United States. Definitely worth a visit if you're in Boston.
Yes I have long thought he should be considered the first Impressionist!
I love Monet and Van Gogh!
My impression is that they use lots of bright colors, the image is abstract, and the subject can be random and informal.
I have an impression that the picture from 3:58 is Early Sunday MOrning by Edward Hopper who didn't belong to the movement of Impressionism at all O_O
You're absolutely right -- it's a wrong image and we apologize for including it.
@@CuriousMuse When you fix it, the video would be just great :)
I like this bite size documentaries
Glad to hear, we have a looooot of them on this channel 🎉
My teacher made me watch this lol
I'm so sorry
Bahahaha me too😭
Большое спасибо. Очень интересная презентация на тему импрессионизма
Love this
Glad you liked it 😍
My 9-year-old preferred little girl in an armchair. My 13-year-old preferred the Van Gogh blue room.
Soo helpfulllll
Yay! 👋🏻
I love Monet
Do you consider Edward Hopper and John Singer Sargent to be “Impressionists “?
Hopper considered himself an Impressionist through much of his life :) though a lot of people think of him (or like to think so) as a realist painter. Sargent seems a lot like impressionist though he also painted realism
I love this video. Did you mean to sneak an Edward Hopper in there? That would be another 60 years later.
Thanks for the feedback! We also have a video about him on this channel.
3:57 What on earth is an Edward Hopper doing in a video about Impressionism?!
Overt explanations 👌
Impressionist art in my assessment is like acting naturally, environmental and sorroundings portrayal in art, in fact event capturing that pleases the eyes.
IMPRESSIONISMO: ricordo che un pittore russo, che lavorava per un mecenate russo molto facoltoso, dopo un viaggio a Parigi gli disse, che dipingere così, È DA TUTTI.
🤔
здивована, що на 0:36 у галереї можна побачити українські підписи під картинами. Цікаво, у мене одна така штука чи це справді було знято в галереї України?
Неймовірне відео! 😎
La popularidad es un daño al Arte. El arte no es popular, es el sumun del sentir de lo humano. Es lo humano realmente
Yep, impression, thats what I'm doing. I'm not a terrible artist, I'm just an impressionist
😁
@@Doctor_Clump many of these guy's works were accepted at the Paris Salon at various times, so they clearly began as traditional artists. You sound ignorant
The fake Facebook live stream was distracting and I had to watch it twice because I didn’t hear anything you said the first time
😳? We don’t livestream on FB.
Impressionism. Art by the blind for the squinty inclined.
the definition of art had to be change for impressionism to be accepted. sadly true ability became passe . I'll take Rembrandt and his talent over blurred, quick strokes any day of the week. long live the true masters!
Long live indeed! 👍🏻
1:46 you definitely have someone from Russia or the surrounding area in your team 😂
What?! No Hassam?!
🧐😅
Learning like a pro I mean...2:09
What in particular about this timestamp?
Impressionism. The gateway drug for modern brutalism.
This is alive and well in the era of digital art... but under threat of getting too kitsch in light of AI technology's prevalent application.
mumble rap is like impressionism
"You might be wondering, were there any women impressionists?"
I promise you, I was not. I'm here to learn about impressionism, and I don't care what type of genitals its champions had.
🫣
Yo Allan a Martin
😊
Umm, is the title in french only for me or is it in french for everyone??
You're over doing the pronunciations.
Documentário ruim. Muita bobagem, que não interessa sobre o impressionismo.
🫣
*sees the art before the impressionist's movement*
We got to go back! WE GOT TO GO BACK!!!
THEY RUINED ART!!!
Mid Video ngl
Modern art sucks.
Based on what?
@@CuriousMuse Based on the Suck Scale. You didn't study that in school?