Cubist composition, movement, line, shape, and so much more.. it's highly immersive and wonderful to engage. I think the one element that stands out to me (and I can see why the Futurists were so inspired by this) is movement. Cubism paintings slide, shift, fluctuate, bend, scale, zoom in so many directions.
I always considered _e.e. cummings_ to be a cubist poet as he discarded grammar and syntax and instead put words together like a collage. Another brilliant art lesson! Well done!
My extension span has gotten so short. Love these short videos. Love the education for me to learn more about arts. My husband always talks lots about the master artist 🙌🏻❤️
Thank you, it is great, I am really good at reading and listening of TOEFL test of all topics but art history and styles. Your videos excessively added to my knowledge of art in an abstract and prompt way.
Wonderful video! Thanks so much for making it. I like how you made the Cubist paintings pop out at the beginning of the video - it shows you get it, totally in the spirit of the Cubist philosophy.
I can't avoid celebrating your work on every video, you guys are doing a terrific work! this summer I was lucky enough to visit the Basque Country, and enjoying history as much as I do I couldn't miss the opportunity to visit Guernika (by the way, the U is silent), the town has a copy of the painting in real size, for everyone to enjoy. It was a very powerful experience looking at the painting in the place that inspired it, although I had visited many times the Reina Sofia Museum previously it was a memorable moment. I'd really love if you did a video on Picasso's early work, outshadowed by his cubist phase. Cheers!
Thanks for sharing your story about Guernica, this is a great example of how powerful art can be. We love to hear stories like this one ❤️. Although our favorite museum in Spain is Thyssen-Bornemisza, the room 205 with Guernica in Reina Sofia is definitely one of the most powerful museum rooms in the world 🤗. Picasso’s early works - do you mean his Blue, Pink and African periods?
@@CuriousMuse then let me tell you another story... I was lucky enough to go visit Thyssen-Bornemisza's Magritte exhibit yesterday. I really loved his work, that guy was something else. I tried to have a quick jump to their impressionist collection (who isn't spellbound to Derain's Waterloo Bridge?), but there was no time left so I'll just have to go and visit another time (poor me... ;P). Both Blue and Pink periods, in my opinion, are overpowerded by the strength of cubism by the big audience, and it's a shame... the esthesis they channel from the author to the spectator, simply magnificent. The african perios is great, but too close to Cubism... many people would recognize Picasso in that period, I'm not sure how many would recognize him both in the blue and pink period. Cheers!
Thank you for the video. It's just a pity that text appears on an animation of a smartphone. Smartphones are repulsive. The less we see of them the better.
Cubism IMO, is one of the most humanizing styles with it's incorporation of multiple perspectives; invented in a time when collective communication was rapidly growing in the world.
00:05 Cubism is a radical art movement by Pablo Picasso and George Braque in response to a rapidly changing world. 01:07 Cubism had a radical impact on art 02:12 Cubism revolutionized traditional European painting. 03:14 Cubists used multiple viewpoints to depict objects in basic geometric forms 04:18 Cubism arrived in stages, first being analytical cubism. 05:29 Synthetic cubism introduced collage and challenged traditional art notions 06:37 Cubism influenced various forms of artistic expression. 07:43 Cubism influenced 20th century art significantly Crafted by Merlin AI.
Please do in-depth videos on Fauvism and German Expressionism, which were contemporaneous satellite movements of Cubism. It's important to remember that Georges Braque was a Fauvist before joining Picasso and Juan Grís. And do not forget to underscore the indelible influence of primitive art on these movements, both Oceanic and especially African.
Thank you - we have a few overview videos of Fauvism, Expressionism and Non-Western Art on our channel, hopefully you checked them out. A great idea to make in-depth versions!
Thank you so much for all these videos about art! I didn't know much before that and they made me search for them by myself to learn more! If it's ok I would like to ask you guys to make a video about some Asian art style. I love the works of Katsushika Hokusai. And the Superflat style made by Takashi murakami and other artists too is very cool. Thank you for everything!
That's me! I'm a cubist artist. :D I had to read a lot of books and loot at a lot of artworks from Picasso in order to get my style. I also combine expressionism with my cubist works. It's always awesome whenever I see an artist from today that still uses one of the many genres of the past, as its very disappointing that most artists now a'days only want to simply 'make art' but have no clue or could care less about the different genres, and refuse to work off of a prior template. Doing this forsakes the memory of the great influential artist's of the past, and constructs artwork without true meaning.
I think a great deal of what the Cubists tried to accomplish had been already accomplished, though differently and for different reasons, by the Iconographers. Iconography is also one of the longest lasting movements starting, with the early Christians and continuing in the Orthodox Church right up to today.
I did enjoy this video .. Very helpful .. Thanks.. You know what? I even wrote down all your work explanation today, although it took me about 3 hours to do that.. 😆 "Picasso learned what painting was really about after seeing African masks at the Ethnographic Museum in Paris." No Africa, no Picasso.. I guess.. Watching your videos full of art works and and listening to your clear descriptions accompanying them every Saturday brings me a very great joy.. I'm so happy to have found this channel..!😉
Sii fue Cezanne quien sin querer lo invento..porque no se veia bien...y sus ultimos cuadros eran todos con montañas y cosas mas cuadradas. .. ..yo lo lei en un libro de Bellas Artes hace muchos años
thank you so much for this amazing, educational video. I would even consider it a work of art itself, haha! loved every little, tiny bit of it. greetings to my meesterwerken uit de westerse wereld friends + swenne and rien. now i will ace this test.
Personally, I think cubism and abstract art in general should be RECLASSIFIED as PRIMARILY a political or social tool of expression and communication. It does not have intrinsic value as visual art per se, but it gains its value and sense and depth from its societal elements and climate and historical context. It does not elicit appreciation for its visual qualities alone, but the viewer has to have a whole world of information in the back of his mind to actually make sense of it and give it value.
The Puteaux group was formed by a loose grouping of various European artists who were closely related to Cubism. While the development of the first wave of Cubist painting was deeply indebted to Cézanne, the Puteaux group strove to distinguish themselves from the narrower style of Cubism developed by Picasso and Braque, and used the colour prism inherited from the Neo-Impressionists.
Just marvelous how art movements tackle a specific "problem". The Cubist, one of my favorites. It's been written that Cezanne and Cubism signaled the modern age in art. Agreed! But how it developed is so fascinating! Picasso's "Demoiselles"...ravissante! The depiction of movement in Futurism, so much more interesting than traditional perspective, full face gazes or invisible brush strokes. Great video!
One interesting thing about Cubism is how it presages what we know today as Abstract Painting. But Cubism was still largely preoccupied with an object, therefore it is not a full break from the conventions of painting, which remained figurative. I, for one, recognize Picasso's contribution, but I do not find his work universally appealing. The landmark painting "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon" (which is hailed by critics as a grand masterpiece) is for me mostly 5 progressively ugly faces. The two faces on the right seem to be deliberate attempts to create a shocking impact. "Guernica" is another matter, a heroic narrative with great compositional beauty. And I will always love the giant outdoor sculpture in Chicago's Daley Plaza.
Why so many cell phone images or computer screen images, with typing and searching of what’s being said? Super weird and distracting. Otherwise, thanks for the video!
Thank you for the feedback. One of the things we are trying to do is to make culture more accessible and engaging to the younger audiences incl. gen z which are used to these digital things
Hey! How come Beatrice Wood's name was not labeled in that photo? Only Duchamp and Picabia! She was a significant artist of the movement too, and a core member of the original NYC Dada crew. Come on guys, throw a girl a bone.
@@CuriousMuse like, I understand a shocking subject matter, but I don’t know if, like the art critic seeing Picasso cubism for the first time, that art can make such a stylistic leap in our times. Has “everything under the Sun” been done?
I like your content and thank you for creating these videos! This one got me thinking...it's quite bitter to say the least, isn't it? Because what came to be Cubism, this entire movement in art that brought people fame and recognition, inspiration, growth etc. is actually rooted in cultural appropriation, isn't it? And the only reason Europeans got to be inspired by the objects in the museum was because they were all violently stolen from the people who created them.
Enjoyable and informative. BUT - if you're going to make an educational art video, you should BLOODY WELL make sure that your narrator knows how to pronounce "chiaroscuro". If it's going to be about 20th century art, they should also know how to pronounce "Dadaists", and if it's about Cubism, they should know how to pronounce "Guernica". This stuff ain't hard to get right.
No son L'as señoritas de aviñon, son L'as señoritas de Avinyó. !os franceses se hicieron suyo el nombre y la gente.inculturalmente asi lo aceptaron, però no és cierto. Este cuadro està pintado rememorando una casa de prostitucion de la cual Picaso era cliente y que estaba situada en la calle de Avinyó en Barcelona muy cerca L'as Ramblas. Por lo tanto debiera de saber todo el mundo el afrancesamiento tan estúpido con el cual se les menciona.
I thought the graphics and unnecessary music on this video were very distracting and took away from what could have been a good video on Cubism. Don't try so hard!
I don't think I've ever heard a narrator mispronounce so many historical art terms in one 9 minute video as I have here - practically EVERY single name and movement is awfully mispronounced. Is this a joke!? It had me laughing out loud!
Hi! Now we are working on our exams with your videos. First of all, thank you for your informative and well visualized video.🥳 We would want to see dadaism too with your way of narrative style.
As others have said, the video offers a good look at Cubism, but the narrator should consider going back to school for his pronunciation of non-English words, proper names and such.
So interesting that not a single woman shows up in so many aspects of the art history movement. I wonder why that is? Is it just laziness people just repeating what they’ve heard and not bothering to do a deeper dive? It’s really hard to believe that there were no women artists, or is it just too many art historians parrot what they’ve been taught, and once ignoring the contribution of women artists. 🤔
@garyallen8824 or that historically women where never promoted or allowed. Money went to male artist while great women artists were ignored because it’s a gender.
Great overview of Cubism. I like how you explain the sub movements...which really helps people fully understand Cubism. Glad I found this channel!
It’s mutual! We’re glad you found us! 🥳
Those are all very good points! Thanks for pointing that out.
@@supremereader7614 c. S
this is really helpful for my school's art project, thank u a lot
So happy to hear, thank you!
Same
Cubist composition, movement, line, shape, and so much more.. it's highly immersive and wonderful to engage. I think the one element that stands out to me (and I can see why the Futurists were so inspired by this) is movement. Cubism paintings slide, shift, fluctuate, bend, scale, zoom in so many directions.
So much movement indeed 💪🏻
Picasso did not invent or start cubism. Paul Cezanne started off the style and is the father of it. Picasso was a student of cubism.
@songfantasy670 Very true. There was also the Cézanne fase before the analytical, and 'Houses at L'estague' is a part of the Cézanne fase.
I always considered _e.e. cummings_ to be a cubist poet
as he discarded grammar and syntax and instead put
words together like a collage.
Another brilliant art lesson! Well done!
Thank you!
My extension span has gotten so short. Love these short videos. Love the education for me to learn more about arts. My husband always talks lots about the master artist 🙌🏻❤️
Very well explained. I toured Africa and saw the basic cubism and bright colours. Picasso brought it to a very sophisticated level.Thank you!
Thank you! Did you like your Africa tour? 👌🏻
Thank you, it is great, I am really good at reading and listening of TOEFL test of all topics but art history and styles. Your videos excessively added to my knowledge of art in an abstract and prompt way.
Glad to hear we’ve been helpful 👌🏻
Do bring in more content like these. This is super helpful.
Absolutely, we will! And thank you for such a nice feedback 😚
This helped me with my mind map
Wonderful video! Thanks so much for making it. I like how you made the Cubist paintings pop out at the beginning of the video - it shows you get it, totally in the spirit of the Cubist philosophy.
Thank you so much for watching the video and lovey feedback! 🥰
Thanks for making videos like this. I always want to learn about art theory and history, and this really helps me understand more!
😍🙏🏻
Very helpful and well presented. Thanks for taking time to make this video.
Thank you for watching! 😊
I can't avoid celebrating your work on every video, you guys are doing a terrific work!
this summer I was lucky enough to visit the Basque Country, and enjoying history as much as I do I couldn't miss the opportunity to visit Guernika (by the way, the U is silent), the town has a copy of the painting in real size, for everyone to enjoy. It was a very powerful experience looking at the painting in the place that inspired it, although I had visited many times the Reina Sofia Museum previously it was a memorable moment.
I'd really love if you did a video on Picasso's early work, outshadowed by his cubist phase.
Cheers!
Thanks for sharing your story about Guernica, this is a great example of how powerful art can be. We love to hear stories like this one ❤️. Although our favorite museum in Spain is Thyssen-Bornemisza, the room 205 with Guernica in Reina Sofia is definitely one of the most powerful museum rooms in the world 🤗. Picasso’s early works - do you mean his Blue, Pink and African periods?
@@CuriousMuse then let me tell you another story... I was lucky enough to go visit Thyssen-Bornemisza's Magritte exhibit yesterday. I really loved his work, that guy was something else. I tried to have a quick jump to their impressionist collection (who isn't spellbound to Derain's Waterloo Bridge?), but there was no time left so I'll just have to go and visit another time (poor me... ;P). Both Blue and Pink periods, in my opinion, are overpowerded by the strength of cubism by the big audience, and it's a shame... the esthesis they channel from the author to the spectator, simply magnificent. The african perios is great, but too close to Cubism... many people would recognize Picasso in that period, I'm not sure how many would recognize him both in the blue and pink period.
Cheers!
Thank you for the video. It's just a pity that text appears on an animation of a smartphone. Smartphones are repulsive. The less we see of them the better.
@garyallen8824 Quite happily. People read books then instead of wasted their lives staring into a phone and becoming socially inept.
I enjoyed this video so much. That deep house in the background was so fitting. 👍
Finally! A clear explanation of cubism thanks!
Great! By the way, we have a playlist about major art movements in case you may want to learn more 👩🏻🎓
Your video's are so good! Thankyou!!!
Thank you so much! Really makes us happy to hear it 😍 and motivated to keep going :)
Cubism IMO, is one of the most humanizing styles with it's incorporation of multiple perspectives; invented in a time when collective communication was rapidly growing in the world.
My class really liked the editing and the unique perspective of showing the depths/ layers if the paintings
So wonderful to hear! Thank you for showing our video to your class 😍
00:05 Cubism is a radical art movement by Pablo Picasso and George Braque in response to a rapidly changing world.
01:07 Cubism had a radical impact on art
02:12 Cubism revolutionized traditional European painting.
03:14 Cubists used multiple viewpoints to depict objects in basic geometric forms
04:18 Cubism arrived in stages, first being analytical cubism.
05:29 Synthetic cubism introduced collage and challenged traditional art notions
06:37 Cubism influenced various forms of artistic expression.
07:43 Cubism influenced 20th century art significantly
Crafted by Merlin AI.
Please do in-depth videos on Fauvism and German Expressionism, which were contemporaneous satellite movements of Cubism. It's important to remember that Georges Braque was a Fauvist before joining Picasso and Juan Grís. And do not forget to underscore the indelible influence of primitive art on these movements, both Oceanic and especially African.
Thank you - we have a few overview videos of Fauvism, Expressionism and Non-Western Art on our channel, hopefully you checked them out. A great idea to make in-depth versions!
Thank you so much for all these videos about art! I didn't know much before that and they made me search for them by myself to learn more!
If it's ok I would like to ask you guys to make a video about some Asian art style. I love the works of Katsushika Hokusai.
And the Superflat style made by Takashi murakami and other artists too is very cool.
Thank you for everything!
Thank you for watching and your great suggestions! 💪🏻 we’d love to make a video about Asian art style incl Hokusai 🙏🏻
Used you in an Art Final thanks!
Glad to hear our content was helpful!
Great approach and very helpful ❤
😍
We want to know more about literary impressionism.
Absolutely, we have a big content plan and will see how we can add this topic 🙏🏻
@@CuriousMuse ❤️
That's me! I'm a cubist artist. :D
I had to read a lot of books and loot at a lot of artworks from Picasso in order to get my style. I also combine expressionism with my cubist works. It's always awesome whenever I see an artist from today that still uses one of the many genres of the past, as its very disappointing that most artists now a'days only want to simply 'make art' but have no clue or could care less about the different genres, and refuse to work off of a prior template. Doing this forsakes the memory of the great influential artist's of the past, and constructs artwork without true meaning.
Would you please make a video about the Renaissance, Baroque and Rococo movement
Great ideas! 👍🏻 they are in our plans 😍
Great videos! Do you also plan to make some videos about the history of performance art and intervention art? That would be fantastic!
Such a great idea - thank you, we’ll see what we can do ☺️🙏🏻
I think a great deal of what the Cubists tried to accomplish had been already accomplished, though differently and for different reasons, by the Iconographers. Iconography is also one of the longest lasting movements starting, with the early Christians and continuing in the Orthodox Church right up to today.
1:38 is this sound effect you use part of a song? if so, which one? it's so satisfying to listen to.
Antidote X by Van Sandano, the soundtrack 🎶 is on UA-cam 😇🙏🏻
Thank you for information's.
Can you please tell me where was edited that cool effect on beginning? That ripple - triangle wave effect.
We use Adobe products (premier, illustrator, etc)
Love the background music, can i get a link / name of the song please?
Used this to help me better understand cubism. Thank you :)
So good to hear this was helpful - thank you for letting us know! 🙏🏻
Great video. Exactly what I was looking for.
I did enjoy this video .. Very helpful .. Thanks.. You know what?
I even wrote down all your work explanation today, although it took me about 3 hours to do that.. 😆
"Picasso learned what painting was really about after seeing African masks at the Ethnographic Museum in Paris." No Africa, no Picasso.. I guess..
Watching your videos full of art works and and listening to your clear descriptions accompanying them every Saturday brings me a very great joy.. I'm so happy to have found this channel..!😉
So happy to hear you found our explanations useful! 😍👍🏻
Beautiful, informative and a creative video.
Glad you liked it! 🙏🏻
Super helpful, thank you! This will help me to eventually become an arts teacher. :)
Good luck with this! 😍 Whenever this happens please be sure to let us know! 😚
Thankk youuuu soooooooooooooooooooooo muchhhhhhhhhh ♥️♥️ I’ll score moree just bcoz of your video
Great video.
Would like to see more content form around the globe.
😍👍🏻
The great Pablo Picasso. I have tried to draw some of his works 😀
Very nice
Sii fue Cezanne quien sin querer lo invento..porque no se veia bien...y sus ultimos cuadros eran todos con montañas y cosas mas cuadradas. ..
..yo lo lei en un libro de Bellas Artes hace muchos años
0:21 what museum is that??
Oh, can’t remember now! 🫢
thank you so much for this amazing, educational video. I would even consider it a work of art itself, haha! loved every little, tiny bit of it. greetings to my meesterwerken uit de westerse wereld friends + swenne and rien. now i will ace this test.
I like Picasso!🙂
Can you explain opp art?
please leave out those social media gimmicky things, they're distracting and pointless and lame. Otherwise, i think this was a great video
Thanks for the feedback! 👍🏻
@@denisl9661 Disagree. They're immersive, novel, and fun.
amazing amazing amazing amazing
😍🙏🏻
É uma arte de criança
Awesome,very nice😃👍.......
🙏🏻
It's emotionally scary, I don't understand it. But it fascinates me.
اعتقد ان السريالية أعطت بعدا جديد في صناعة الحلم وهية أكثر رسوخا في حداثة التجربة الفنية
Hmmmmm )
Makes me think of that kids song from way back... "Dada wouldn't buy me a Bauhaus"....
Is Guernica Cubist or Surrealistic?
It’s a late example of Cubism.
Personally, I think cubism and abstract art in general should be RECLASSIFIED as PRIMARILY a political or social tool of expression and communication. It does not have intrinsic value as visual art per se, but it gains its value and sense and depth from its societal elements and climate and historical context. It does not elicit appreciation for its visual qualities alone, but the viewer has to have a whole world of information in the back of his mind to actually make sense of it and give it value.
SALVADOR DALI was one of the greatest and most influential cubist of all time. It’s a shame that he was never mentioned in this video.
Perhaps an opportunity to make a video about him
@garyallen8824 His self portrait in 1923 was one of most stunning cubist paintings that I’ve ever seen.
was the Puteaux Group not part of Cubism?
The Puteaux group was formed by a loose grouping of various European artists who were closely related to Cubism. While the development of the first wave of Cubist painting was deeply indebted to Cézanne, the Puteaux group strove to distinguish themselves from the narrower style of Cubism developed by Picasso and Braque, and used the colour prism inherited from the Neo-Impressionists.
Just marvelous how art movements tackle a specific "problem". The Cubist, one of my favorites. It's been written that Cezanne and Cubism signaled the modern age in art. Agreed! But how it developed is so fascinating! Picasso's "Demoiselles"...ravissante! The depiction of movement in Futurism, so much more interesting than traditional perspective, full face gazes or invisible brush strokes. Great video!
I'll ace my exams now, thank you!!!
You’ll get straight A’s with us! 🙋🏼♂️
@@CuriousMuse omg! That was my final exam in art history and cubism came up! Thank youuu!
Aww, what a coincidence! 😍
shocked you didn't mention Apollinaire
thank you - besides this, anything you perhaps liked in this story? 🤔
Great video but I'm a little disappointed you didn't mention my fav - Marcel Duchamp.
We luckily did in our Dadaism video 😅
That is so coooooooool
Thank you
No problem
it also helps people who are a bit crap at painting paint :p
🤣
One interesting thing about Cubism is how it presages what we know today as Abstract Painting. But Cubism was still largely preoccupied with an object, therefore it is not a full break from the conventions of painting, which remained figurative. I, for one, recognize Picasso's contribution, but I do not find his work universally appealing. The landmark painting "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon" (which is hailed by critics as a grand masterpiece) is for me mostly 5 progressively ugly faces. The two faces on the right seem to be deliberate attempts to create a shocking impact. "Guernica" is another matter, a heroic narrative with great compositional beauty. And I will always love the giant outdoor sculpture in Chicago's Daley Plaza.
Cubism is an example of the "Emperor's Clothes." Just because some say it is great does not make it great. It just makes it group think.
nice
🙏
Why so many cell phone images or computer screen images, with typing and searching of what’s being said? Super weird and distracting. Otherwise, thanks for the video!
Thank you for the feedback. One of the things we are trying to do is to make culture more accessible and engaging to the younger audiences incl. gen z which are used to these digital things
Cubism may have changed the course of Western Art but not the course of World Art (e.g. oriental art, africa art etc.).
Why adding music
🤔
Hey! How come Beatrice Wood's name was not labeled in that photo? Only Duchamp and Picabia! She was a significant artist of the movement too, and a core member of the original NYC Dada crew. Come on guys, throw a girl a bone.
Perhaps we should make a video about her! 😍
Could you imagine being shocked by an art piece now adays?
Yes, why not?
@@CuriousMuse like, I understand a shocking subject matter, but I don’t know if, like the art critic seeing Picasso cubism for the first time, that art can make such a stylistic leap in our times. Has “everything under the Sun” been done?
I want a cubism jigsaw puzzle
FROM DENIS ILSAFOVICH SOURCE
🧐🤨🤪
I like your content and thank you for creating these videos! This one got me thinking...it's quite bitter to say the least, isn't it? Because what came to be Cubism, this entire movement in art that brought people fame and recognition, inspiration, growth etc. is actually rooted in cultural appropriation, isn't it? And the only reason Europeans got to be inspired by the objects in the museum was because they were all violently stolen from the people who created them.
When the video is interrupted by advertising, it makes me HATE the product.
1:57 goodbye chiaròscru
☺️
❤
😍🙏🏻
Noice 👍👌
noice noice ))
5:34 wtf
Sorry, but using random content on social media as an illustration of an modern art moovenment is such a terrible idea...
Okaaaay, we won’t do it again! 😅
Enjoyable and informative. BUT - if you're going to make an educational art video, you should BLOODY WELL make sure that your narrator knows how to pronounce "chiaroscuro". If it's going to be about 20th century art, they should also know how to pronounce "Dadaists", and if it's about Cubism, they should know how to pronounce "Guernica". This stuff ain't hard to get right.
Thank you for your feedback!
I'm trying, but I don't like it ತ_ʖತ
What do you not like?
@@CuriousMuse the art
You go to fast with your videos. And you could be a little bit more descriptive showing visual and vocal references of the examples.
Thank you for the feedback!
@@CuriousMuse Other than that we enjoy your videos :-)
❤🎉🎉🎉
😚🙏🏻
Oh man but this add for iPad no no no...
Hmmm 🤔
Hi guys, I love your videos but PLEASE double check on the pronunciation of foreign words, most of them were not even close.
İkinci yorum
güncel yorum
👍
No son L'as señoritas de aviñon, son L'as señoritas de Avinyó. !os franceses se hicieron suyo el nombre y la gente.inculturalmente asi lo aceptaron, però no és cierto. Este cuadro està pintado rememorando una casa de prostitucion de la cual Picaso era cliente y que estaba situada en la calle de Avinyó en Barcelona muy cerca L'as Ramblas. Por lo tanto debiera de saber todo el mundo el afrancesamiento tan estúpido con el cual se les menciona.
I thought the graphics and unnecessary music on this video were very distracting and took away from what could have been a good video on Cubism. Don't try so hard!
Thanks for watching!
I wish the narrator could properly pronounce foreign words, names and phrases.
Thank you for the feedback!
It does annoy me when Picasso gets the credit when Braque did as much innovation. But Picasso was much better at self publicity.
I don't think I've ever heard a narrator mispronounce so many historical art terms in one 9 minute video as I have here - practically EVERY single name and movement is awfully mispronounced. Is this a joke!? It had me laughing out loud!
Thanks for your feedback.
@@CuriousMuse Not to take anything away from the information of the piece - it is well written and produced. It's just that mispronunciation...
the special effects and camera work are very distracting and unnecessary, for looking at the original art
Thank you for the feedback!
ilk yorum
#1 indeed 👍🏻
Hi! Now we are working on our exams with your videos. First of all, thank you for your informative and well visualized video.🥳 We would want to see dadaism too with your way of narrative style.
So amazing to hear, thank you! 😚 we are actually working on Dadaism and the video will come soon! 🙏🏻
We’ve actually just published our story about Dadaism - hope you like it and please let us know if you have any feedback 🙏🏻
Its like I don't know dancing. So I popularize that March past is a form of Dance!!! Weird. That's why its referred as degenerative art
Oh okay 🤔
As others have said, the video offers a good look at Cubism, but the narrator should consider going back to school for his pronunciation of non-English words, proper names and such.
They will consider your kind advice 😅
Good overview, but zero women represented in this video
🙁
Jojo reference?
Hm?
Many people believe Picasso didn't like women because he depicted them in such an unattractive way
🤷🏻♂️
So interesting that not a single woman shows up in so many aspects of the art history movement. I wonder why that is? Is it just laziness people just repeating what they’ve heard and not bothering to do a deeper dive? It’s really hard to believe that there were no women artists, or is it just too many art historians parrot what they’ve been taught, and once ignoring the contribution of women artists. 🤔
There were a lot of great female artists over the art movement history - it’s sad indeed that they don’t get enough attention
@garyallen8824 or that historically women where never promoted or allowed. Money went to male artist while great women artists were ignored because it’s a gender.