This is such a thrill for me, I am constantly on 'lockdown ' being bedbound, and to have your knowledge alongside the work is a ray of sunshine. Thank you!
I would have loved to have seen this exhibition. I still have the 2 books I purchased on Beardsley's drawings from the Tate gallery on a daytrip from school in 1983 when I was about 16 years of age. I had seen a tv documentary on the artist and as I drew with a dip pen I thought the artist's drawings were absolutely stunning. The book I have is called 'Aubrey Beardsley Sixty selected drawings'. Price £3.95!!! Lovely to seen these beautiful drawings now filmed so beautifully here, you can even see the washes of black ink when the camera closes in! Thank you Tate gallery.
Aubrey Beardsley at Tate Britain - Exhibition Tour | Tate 0935am 2.5.23 i missed this as well.... as i did the paul clee exhibition a while back... doesn't it irk - when you know you would have appreciated it? i do have the tome Morte de Arthur as illustrated by him - wonderfully purchased from some minor bargain book store prior to the goons ruining Rochdale... and my purview.
Brilliant. I've seen this exhibition twice. Thanks for sharing these wonderful exhibition conversations with curators, i love them. See you soon, Tate!.
Thank you for sharing this - had my train ticket booked to come and see this before lock down and devastated not to see the exhibition, especially after seeing how he influenced both Tim Walker (at the V&A) and Cecil Beaton (at the National Portrait Gallery). Hoping that the exhibition will be extended so we can still delight in vision after lockdown..
I loved Beardsley when I was in college, I used to go to the V&A Library and read the magasine ' The Yellow book' he illustrated for, no one else seemed to appreciate him as I did. I did quite a few copies of his work as I also worked in pen and ink at the time.
Thank you as I may not be able to see this in person due to the lockdown. Who knows if galleries will be able to reopen these exhibitions when all the restrictions are lifted. Thank you, again.
(Hello? I live in Seoul. It's a test period ahead of the full-fledged UA-cam activity. I am not fluent in English.) It's my first time posting comments, and I'm always grateful for them. It's really beautiful. It's like a movie.
Conheci a obra de Beardsley pelas ilustrações que fez para Salomé e de imediato virou uma grande influência e um dos artistas que mais admiro. Extraordinário trabalho, mesmo com uma vida curta deixou seu legado e sua marca, muito original e ousado.
Aubrey Beardsley at Tate Britain - Exhibition Tour | Tate 0931am 2.5.23 i get to write the words: otto osman spare (pronounced spar-hey)... but i will, as always, be siding with the lithe handed geek of drug induced mysticism and obscurity... people should get tattoos of his drawings etched on their skin... she was a provocative fukker and cost me an arm and a leg!!! ahahaha... you could, if you want to indulge me, wander off into the witty and noxious world of the great god pan. the golden dawn rears it's ugly head - again!!
Excellent. Just a correction: it has now been established by Wilde scholarship that the book Wilde was carrying when he was arrested, was almost certainly a copy of the Yellow Book. In fact, the French novel he was thought to hav been carrying [Aphrodite] was not published until a year after Wilde’s arrest.
Given what's going on right now, I was hoping you could post Beardsley's art to your website, but instead we have a list with "Sorry, No Image Available" for the vast majority of his works. www.tate.org.uk/search?aid=716&type=artwork What a disappointment.
Alas, my American ear had trouble understanding the two women. Are their accents particularly baroque, let's call it, or just standard issue for wherever they're from?
celticboy1950 They are the curators of the exhibition. Smiling and having a pleasant conversation does not mean the subject matter is not serious. It is a perfectly pleasant and equally serious conversation about an artist between two clearly knowledgeable people.
@@spiralpython1989 You must have serious academic conversations about art, not pleasant ones. I'm sure Brian Sewell would have would had the right level of brevity in the discussion. Please, no more giggling schoolgirls.
This is such a thrill for me, I am constantly on 'lockdown ' being bedbound, and to have your knowledge alongside the work is a ray of sunshine. Thank you!
My dad introduced me to Beardsley when I was very young, I was instantly captured by his art.
Thanks for showing. AWESOME!
Managed to get in for 20 mins or so just before the Lockdown. Glad to have a little more time, with the pause button . Thank you.
I would have loved to have seen this exhibition. I still have the 2 books I purchased on Beardsley's drawings from the Tate gallery on a daytrip from school in 1983 when I was about 16 years of age. I had seen a tv documentary on the artist and as I drew with a dip pen I thought the artist's drawings were absolutely stunning. The book I have is called 'Aubrey Beardsley Sixty selected drawings'. Price £3.95!!! Lovely to seen these beautiful drawings now filmed so beautifully here, you can even see the washes of black ink when the camera closes in! Thank you Tate gallery.
Aubrey Beardsley at Tate Britain - Exhibition Tour | Tate 0935am 2.5.23 i missed this as well.... as i did the paul clee exhibition a while back... doesn't it irk - when you know you would have appreciated it? i do have the tome Morte de Arthur as illustrated by him - wonderfully purchased from some minor bargain book store prior to the goons ruining Rochdale... and my purview.
Thank you for the exhibition tour. Very interesting work, detailing, drawing.
Thank you for posting this video. It was on my agenda to see this exhibit this month but, of course, I cannot travel now. I'm delighted to see this.
Thank you. Was so looking forward to this, and of course couldn’t attend.
Brilliant. I've seen this exhibition twice. Thanks for sharing these wonderful exhibition conversations with curators, i love them. See you soon, Tate!.
Forget Beardsley's work, I could just watch this just to hear both of their gorgeous voices.
Thank you for this! Really enjoying all the videos Tate (and other galleries) have to offer during quarantine. ☺️
Can you recommend me other channels? UA-cam only recommend me Tate and MoMa
Amazing Beardsley, hope to see the exhibition some time when we are free...
Discovered Beardsley long ago. He was unique.
So interesting. Thank you very much for this unique virtual experience ❤️
I loved this exhibition, the book is fantastic too. The embroideries are astonishing
Thank you for sharing this - had my train ticket booked to come and see this before lock down and devastated not to see the exhibition, especially after seeing how he influenced both Tim Walker (at the V&A) and Cecil Beaton (at the National Portrait Gallery). Hoping that the exhibition will be extended so we can still delight in vision after lockdown..
Thank you for sharing this extraordinary exhibition and the presentation of Aubrey Beardsley!
Lucky enough to see this before lock down. It's really good.
I loved Beardsley when I was in college, I used to go to the V&A Library and read the magasine ' The Yellow book' he illustrated for, no one else seemed to appreciate him as I did. I did quite a few copies of his work as I also worked in pen and ink at the time.
Thank you as I may not be able to see this in person due to the lockdown. Who knows if galleries will be able to reopen these exhibitions when all the restrictions are lifted. Thank you, again.
(Hello? I live in Seoul. It's a test period ahead of the full-fledged UA-cam activity. I am not fluent in English.) It's my first time posting comments, and I'm always grateful for them. It's really beautiful. It's like a movie.
Excelente artista, un genio, dejó lo mejor de sí en cada obra porque sabía que el tiempo era oro y no podía darse el lujo de desperdiciarlo.
Wonderful, thank you!
So eager to see this in person ❤
Aubrey Beardsley's artworks are beautiful ❤️😍✨✨
Conheci a obra de Beardsley pelas ilustrações que fez para Salomé e de imediato virou uma grande influência e um dos artistas que mais admiro. Extraordinário trabalho, mesmo com uma vida curta deixou seu legado e sua marca, muito original e ousado.
Aubrey Beardsley at Tate Britain - Exhibition Tour | Tate 0931am 2.5.23 i get to write the words: otto osman spare (pronounced spar-hey)... but i will, as always, be siding with the lithe handed geek of drug induced mysticism and obscurity... people should get tattoos of his drawings etched on their skin... she was a provocative fukker and cost me an arm and a leg!!! ahahaha... you could, if you want to indulge me, wander off into the witty and noxious world of the great god pan. the golden dawn rears it's ugly head - again!!
Thanks to Tate for this video. We Like it. Greetings
Excellent. Just a correction: it has now been established by Wilde scholarship that the book Wilde was carrying when he was arrested, was almost certainly a copy of the Yellow Book. In fact, the French novel he was thought to hav been carrying [Aphrodite] was not published until a year after Wilde’s arrest.
Thank you!
Really hope to be able to see this
great interpretation, thank you
Very interesting artist...🕊️
How can someone produce so much work in a short life?
lucky enough to have seen this before Lock down, the exhibition i did get to see
nicely done video
Awesome
Brilliant
Good
👏👏👏👏👏👏💕💕
1:11 Le Morte d'Arthur (whoever made that card up should have known better)
Given what's going on right now, I was hoping you could post Beardsley's art to your website, but instead we have a list with "Sorry, No Image Available" for the vast majority of his works.
www.tate.org.uk/search?aid=716&type=artwork
What a disappointment.
14 ‘hearties’ disliked this!
It's a bit out of focus. Well for me anyway.
Alas, my American ear had trouble understanding the two women. Are their accents particularly baroque, let's call it, or just standard issue for wherever they're from?
agree
Jugendstil in reinster Form.
he worked on it for two yeeeaaaaarsss, wow their voices are so annoying
.................
Sex is not freedom.
incel
OK Artist
Why do we have two grinning women talking about high art. It's a serious subject not to be taken lightly in any manner.
celticboy1950 They are the curators of the exhibition. Smiling and having a pleasant conversation does not mean the subject matter is not serious. It is a perfectly pleasant and equally serious conversation about an artist between two clearly knowledgeable people.
@@spiralpython1989 You must have serious academic conversations about art, not pleasant ones. I'm sure Brian Sewell would have would had the right level of brevity in the discussion. Please, no more giggling schoolgirls.
@dontzenyourselfout I assume he's being facetious. If not, it's genuinely hilarious.
How dare they enjoy talking about their specialism and interest! Shameless harlots!
Thank you!!