The Dark World of Odilon Redon

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 1 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 209

  • @rudebega1494
    @rudebega1494 10 місяців тому +233

    Redon was my favorite artist for a totally arbitrary reason-I’d been given a bunch of posters of his work and spent hours of my childhood staring at them. The twist was they were all his colorful pastels and paintings. (Imagine my surprise when I discovered that he was much better known for the Noirs, when to me he was a painter of bright suns and butterflies!)

    • @nidhishshivashankar4885
      @nidhishshivashankar4885 10 місяців тому +18

      I saw the title and was befuddled at anybody calling him “dark” lol but I guess I’m in for it now!

    • @animula6908
      @animula6908 10 місяців тому +10

      I love those too. I just found out this second that he’s better known for anything else

    • @rudebega1494
      @rudebega1494 10 місяців тому +14

      @@animula6908 I was lucky enough to be at the Musee d’Orsay when they had a special exhibition of his work; I hyped my friends about how beautifully colorful and full of subtle hidden details his paintings were-then I walked in and it was all charcoals! Totally shocking to me. But I got to see the smiling spider and the eye like a strange balloon in person, and they had a powerful effect on me. Gotta say, I love his work even more now-though I think his painting of Apollo’s chariot with the green serpent slithering beneath will always be my favorite of his works.

    • @DæmonV86
      @DæmonV86 10 місяців тому +3

      A lot of my favourite artists were first introduced to me through art books my father owned. And a few framed pictures around the house. Childhood is the best time to discover art.

    • @scottblack7182
      @scottblack7182 9 місяців тому +3

      Here's something I have learned throughout my life.
      Happy seeming smiling people tend to be the saddest.
      Those who tend to seem the saddest or unapproachable and scorned, would surprise you with the love and passion they endure .
      Artists , specifically painters aren't usually telling us a story of anything but are in fact putting these hidden realities out into the world so that they themselves can finally resolve their place in it through the hidden realities..of other people.
      The art is not a guideline to philosophy or an opinion being spat at you most of the time. It's a bridge. We wait to see who will come to meet us in the center. If anybody comes to meet us ..at all.

  • @salome.artist
    @salome.artist 10 місяців тому +83

    I've been awaiting this episode about my favorite artist eagerly!

    • @BlindDweller
      @BlindDweller  10 місяців тому +7

      Hope it doesn't disappoint!

    • @weaklybeating
      @weaklybeating 10 місяців тому +5

      You may also like contemporary artist, Julia Soboleva

    • @ashleys9397
      @ashleys9397 10 місяців тому +2

      Mr. Dweller: Nothing you do ever disappoints.@@BlindDweller

    • @richdarvis1051
      @richdarvis1051 10 місяців тому

      Is that a girl oh gosh can you see my boobs

    • @DavidAndersen84
      @DavidAndersen84 10 місяців тому

      Me too.

  • @Xsksnssjccxghb
    @Xsksnssjccxghb 10 місяців тому +37

    Been fascinated with him since high school. I remember having a PDF which elaborately talks about the types of charcoal and paper he uses. And I’d try to imitate that

  • @davelanciani-dimaensionx
    @davelanciani-dimaensionx 9 місяців тому +31

    Here's a suggestion for an obscure artist that might fit the channel. John Hinklenton - a British comic book artist who suffered from multiple sclerosis (he died in 2010). His final work is his masterpiece, a graphic novel called "100 Months." It is a story comprised of a series of paintings that seem to display his suffering from MS, portrayed as a demon woman who fights back against the abuse of Nature. I think you will really "get" his work.

    • @juleslund1515
      @juleslund1515 8 місяців тому +3

      Fights back against the abuse of Nature...absolutely breath taking. Thank You. I'm going to research him

  • @Molech996
    @Molech996 10 місяців тому +22

    I couldn’t wait for this video to come out.This artist is just so inspiring.I’d also love a video about the art of Theodor Kittelsen.

  • @sophiaisabelle027
    @sophiaisabelle027 10 місяців тому +12

    We appreciate how well you've articulated your insights on this matter. You'll always have our support no matter what happens.

  • @fortunatomartino8549
    @fortunatomartino8549 10 місяців тому +17

    I felt that Symbolism art movement is what art is about
    Art from within an artist's soul

  • @BehappyBhairava
    @BehappyBhairava 7 місяців тому +2

    Such an endlessly addictive and satisfying channel.. always love when I find myself binging through some missed releases!

  • @monkiflip992
    @monkiflip992 10 місяців тому +3

    One of my top 3 video essay makers. There’s always something that’s so soothing listening to someone yap about something I know nothing about.

  • @chegeny
    @chegeny 10 місяців тому +6

    Excellent critique of Redon's dark visions. I once attempted to paint some of my dreams. It's difficult to capture that fleeting mood and mysterious gravity of a dream. Odilon Redon along with René Magritte were extraordinary. I was fortunate to view The Buddha in the Musée d'Orsay. It had an unexpected impact when I finally saw the actual piece and not a reproduction.

    • @justkiddin84
      @justkiddin84 5 місяців тому

      I am jealous! I really like that Buddha.

  • @Vanitasmortedigital
    @Vanitasmortedigital 10 місяців тому +6

    Another gift of an insightful video,I love how you mix well known and lesser known pieces by Redon,I sense because he is an influence on you as an artist yourself,this was a really personal video for you.Redon's work is timeless because of it's enigmatic otherworldliness(Matt)P.s I have a print of "cactus man" in my studio space and it still moves me each time I look at it,I always felt Redon transcend the symbolists into his own visual style

  • @roterbarbarossa4497
    @roterbarbarossa4497 6 місяців тому +1

    Seeing books about Odilon Redon in my fathers bookshelfs throughout my childhood I've always wondered who this mysterious person might be.
    Having since forgot about it, made this video a trip down nostalgia lane and opened the opportunity for a great deeptalk with my dad. Thank you very much!

  • @frankarouet
    @frankarouet 9 місяців тому +5

    Very nice. I learned so much, here. Your docs are always so well researched and well-made. Thank you.

  • @PinchyTheKittyGirl
    @PinchyTheKittyGirl 10 місяців тому +10

    Unsettling and beautiful. I appreciate this channel so much for opening my eyes to a lot of artists I had no idea about prior. Great work.

  • @helenvanpatterson-patton
    @helenvanpatterson-patton 8 місяців тому +2

    It has been a while since I truly enjoyed a video. I was drawn in and kept in until the end. Thank you! Love your content.

  • @maureenbright5432
    @maureenbright5432 10 місяців тому +15

    The Apparition is probably John the Baptist, likely in homage or response to his important teacher, Gustave Moreau, who did two great paintings also called The Apparition.

    • @justkiddin84
      @justkiddin84 5 місяців тому

      That makes sense, there is a vague feeling of and arm and hand. He may have done the sketch from Moreau’s painting?

  • @DeidreL9
    @DeidreL9 10 місяців тому +2

    Seriously, this is one of your best ever videos. So well done. Just incredible. Sharing this far and wide!❤️

  • @かいぶつおくらみ
    @かいぶつおくらみ 9 місяців тому +1

    As always, this was the best documentary I could watch while working, it's s inspirational! Although, I do have an advice, coming from someone who is Hard Of Hearing... it'll be great to have captions original to the video, bc youtube's audio description is just awful. But since you speak slowly and clearly, it does make it easy to understand. Thank for your job, love and praises from a Brazillian fan! Also, the fact you show art at the end is just amazing, thanks to you I now know Hope's job and it's simply amazing.

  • @cynthiamarston2208
    @cynthiamarston2208 10 місяців тому +7

    He made wonderful color florals. My interest was the somewhat faceless figures in a dreamlike kind of setting. He did b and w for long time before doing color. He was outstanding at everything he tried. My favorite by a slim margin from those days. I draw and paint and never do what or how he did it but I love it. I love his contributions.

  • @brentmartin1981
    @brentmartin1981 10 місяців тому +2

    Please don't stop making these videos, I absolutely click on them immediately when I see a new episode.

    • @paulwoodford1984
      @paulwoodford1984 10 місяців тому +2

      He will keep making them as long as there are artists worth mentioning.

    • @brentmartin1981
      @brentmartin1981 10 місяців тому +1

      @@paulwoodford1984 Thank God right??? lol.

  • @TheDreadfulCurtain
    @TheDreadfulCurtain 9 місяців тому +3

    Despite being dark, I think his black works have strong introspective quietness as well as a sense of isolation. His figures are so uncanny both familiar yet strange. I love the smiling spider both eerie yet playful as if he is a being that Redon is familiar with, maybe his smile reminding Redon of his old fears. Looking at the cyclops watching the sea nymph, I think you are right about the shame felt by cyclops. Redon was so brilliant at emanation, making light shine out from dark through his use of materials and values. Also there is a kind of suffocation or lack of externality, as they are closed worlds that emanate feelings and sensations that remain very mysterious and unanswerable that sort of hold onto you by being inconclusive and enigmatic, by keeping the viewer from resolving the mystery. So then the mystery must be the point .So many unanswered questions. Loved this thank you.

  • @rljpdx
    @rljpdx 9 місяців тому +1

    I love when I hear nature and culture used properly. I usually use it in my writing but properly applied to pieces of art I find it poignant and telling. Great video.

  • @Wulfcastle82
    @Wulfcastle82 8 місяців тому

    Just by the exposure and information about some at least to me unknown artists you helped me greatly in developing my own style. So thank you! Seriously! I love your work and dedication, your approach on art and the mostly neutral presentation! Big love from germany and may the light or darkness of inspiration shine upon you many many times!

  • @maggs131
    @maggs131 10 місяців тому +3

    You are easily the finest curator of dark art here on UA-cam. ❤ You speak so clearly and fluid i coud listen to you explain anything. Dismal art is my favorite but i could see you doing voice over work
    Also wondering if you've ever considered covering the darkish art of Theodore Geisel aka Dr Suess that he never meant for the public to see?

  • @TheSunship777
    @TheSunship777 10 місяців тому +15

    your background music is as enchanting as the artworks .

  • @emyizumita6594
    @emyizumita6594 8 місяців тому

    Simply wonderful!! Thank you for posting this video, and awaiting for the Rendon 2.

  • @johnlynch-kv8mz
    @johnlynch-kv8mz 8 місяців тому +1

    10:15 when art is shown with the subject having light coming from behind , in front and within, this denotes Divinity. I actually ( having just seen it) like this piece very much. Thank you.

  • @travisheldreth5021
    @travisheldreth5021 10 місяців тому +10

    I have a Poe paperback with the 'The Eye,..' as the cover. A treasure.

    • @ashleys9397
      @ashleys9397 10 місяців тому +2

      I have the exact same Penguin paperback: "The Science Fiction of Edgar Allan Poe".

  • @kjcs_1896
    @kjcs_1896 10 місяців тому

    Thank you for making a video on one of my top 5 artist. This means a lot!

  • @piotr844
    @piotr844 10 місяців тому +8

    Your channel is a Gem!
    Chapeau bas

  • @jmpsthrufyre
    @jmpsthrufyre 3 місяці тому +1

    I love these. Reminds me of a doc i saw about an older fella who wasn't an artist but after a head injury ( aneurism ?) , he started painting obsessively. Then started on the walls eventually covering every square inch of his flat. His wife had patience and grace.

    • @Leo-bk5vf
      @Leo-bk5vf 2 місяці тому

      I'd love to watch this if you remember the name?

    • @jmpsthrufyre
      @jmpsthrufyre 2 місяці тому

      @Leo-bk5vf no. And it drives me crazy. Can't find it on ye ole tube either.

  • @rougesunset
    @rougesunset 9 місяців тому +26

    I wonder how many of his works were simply birthed from the thought “bro this is gonna look metal af” (in more time appropriate terms of course”

    • @paulwoodford1984
      @paulwoodford1984 9 місяців тому +1

      Probably all of them lol. seriously sometimes these youtubers, pretentious AF yputubers make crap up

    • @palchristianandersen9086
      @palchristianandersen9086 6 місяців тому

      I can't count the number of times I've drawn something weird without putting any thought into it other than it looks cool.

  • @SkelletonJelly
    @SkelletonJelly 10 місяців тому +17

    the spider paintings are often used as covers for editions of Franz Kafka's Metamorphosis, my edition has that painting so I always relate them to the main character of the story

    • @juleslund1515
      @juleslund1515 8 місяців тому +2

      oh wow that's beautiful. Thank You truly, I didn't know that

  • @mazinali3021
    @mazinali3021 10 місяців тому

    fantastic! nice artist feature too! Hopeton's mix media works are so introspective and intriguing. total vibe!

  • @dwdei8815
    @dwdei8815 9 місяців тому +2

    I saw the Cyclops painting in the Kröller-Muller museum near Nijmegen (NL) as a child and its impact on me was instant and lasting. Everything about it is unsettling. The eye, obviously. The weird mouth. The ears. The neck. The bewildering colour-mush of a landscape rendered unreadable by heat haze. The naked human draped at a 45º tilt over a sleeping-rock.
    It gives me instant chills.

    • @justkiddin84
      @justkiddin84 5 місяців тому

      I have always thought it was a very sexual and yes threatening picture.

  • @duanegrantham266
    @duanegrantham266 10 місяців тому +6

    Thank you for this one, I really like the titles of his work. Any stone carvers out there? I am and would love to see a sculptors view of the strange, dark and mysterious 🌙

  • @firerainchild
    @firerainchild 9 місяців тому

    This one has to be my favorite you have done. And a new favorite artist.

  • @nasibars4575
    @nasibars4575 10 місяців тому +2

    Yes....... somehow this side of the psyche, this abyss remains largely unexplored. Your work on this channel is outstanding 👍💯🌌🎇

  • @themysteriousdomainmoviepalace
    @themysteriousdomainmoviepalace 10 місяців тому

    Redon is one of my favorites! Thank you for this,

  • @ContrastNY
    @ContrastNY 9 місяців тому +3

    Another great doc by you!

  • @surrealSorceress
    @surrealSorceress 10 місяців тому +16

    Blind Dweller, if it's something you're comfortable doing, please share with us your own art and it's meanings!

    • @WolfBitesAndSleepyGraves
      @WolfBitesAndSleepyGraves 4 місяці тому +2

      If he does one of us should make a video imitating his style to talk about it.

    • @annagirlieee5290
      @annagirlieee5290 4 місяці тому +2

      Omg I would love to see the narrator’s art! Yes!!

  • @fiddlesticks-ur5pf
    @fiddlesticks-ur5pf 9 місяців тому

    love your focusing on past and current artists xo!

  • @-zorkaz-5493
    @-zorkaz-5493 10 місяців тому +9

    Knowing you, you may well already be working on such a video, but have you ever considered showcasing Jung's Red Book?

  • @stevenshaw7779
    @stevenshaw7779 10 місяців тому +2

    I love your videos. They are hauntingly therapeutic.

  • @DragonNo1
    @DragonNo1 10 місяців тому +2

    Love Odilon Redon's work. Along a similar mystic path, the works of American artist Hyman Bloom is worth noting. I've had the chance of seeing a retrospective of his work in NYC in the 90s. Please, have a look on his work. I'm sure you'll love it.

  • @hArtyTruffle
    @hArtyTruffle 10 місяців тому +2

    Smiling Spider was the one that meant so much to me. It was spiders like this that haunted my imagination and carried my birth family away… in a dream… which became a reality of sorts in later years.

  • @gelya42
    @gelya42 10 місяців тому +2

    12:00 to me the idea that comes into view is of a mind embraced by emptiness expressed by this quote from the heart sutra "...equally empty, and with this realization he overcame all Ill-being"

  • @giangbloom291
    @giangbloom291 5 місяців тому

    When I was in primary school, my mom bought me a bunch of artist books including Redon. I’m forever terrified by his Cyclops paintings and his haunting color palette. Looking back, I realized his art has a big influence on my own art right now

  • @systemreset9824
    @systemreset9824 10 місяців тому +3

    11:21 Not sure if anyone else feels this way, but the face of the figure in 'Apparition' kind of reminds me of an ornate mask from some ancient civilisation (Rome, Greece, Egypt, etc.) I'm not sure how much chance there is that inspiration was taken from there but I still think it's cool.

  • @okaysavage2564
    @okaysavage2564 9 місяців тому

    This is so interesting! Made me think though, I would love to see a video done about the difference between symbolist art and surrealist art

    • @BlindDweller
      @BlindDweller  9 місяців тому

      That's a video idea I'm sure I can try and work on!

  • @Janika-xj2bv
    @Janika-xj2bv 8 місяців тому

    What a rich, inner life Redon must have had. This is what draws me to Blind Dweller. The Art shown here is a window into the artists' souls, and it only scratches the surface.

  • @hArtyTruffle
    @hArtyTruffle 10 місяців тому

    A couple of friends surprised me once and took me to an exhibition of his. I was so disappointed it was comprised of his colourful pieces. I didn’t tell them that though. And, to be fair, I hadn’t realised he produced anything other than his dark work. It was an education of sorts and it was kind of them to do that, but it’s his dark work that originally caught my eye and resonated with something deep inside me.

  • @MarzannaMorana
    @MarzannaMorana 9 місяців тому

    What an awesome, beautiful, interesting, inspiring video. 😢 i love it. Thank you.

  • @nasibars4575
    @nasibars4575 10 місяців тому +2

    Kindly do an in-depth assessment of the works of Franz Von Stuck............look at Sin
    .

  • @tarnahammond2774
    @tarnahammond2774 10 місяців тому

    Thankyou so much I’m developing a story and wondered why I love Matisse after finding a book once upon a time. Thankyou for unlimiting my vision

  • @tinorodriguez3473
    @tinorodriguez3473 10 місяців тому

    I love Redon's poetic n mysterious paintings. I have seen many of his paintings in person and they are even better. Love all: the Noirs and the colorful pastels n paintings as well as watercolors. He was very inspired by Gustave Moreau and explored so many of the same Myths. I hope you can do one of Fernand Khnopff in the future✌🏼🦉🖤🤎💛😊🎨

  • @roserivera3003
    @roserivera3003 8 місяців тому

    You are wonderful at describing his art

  • @clc3897
    @clc3897 10 місяців тому +2

    I’ve been intrigued by Redon for ages. Glad to see he’s admired by others as well. If you are looking for more artists to showcase you have to look at Zdzislaw Beksinski, a Polish artist who died in 2005. His work will blow your mind.

    • @devonstrunk7419
      @devonstrunk7419 10 місяців тому +1

      He already has a video out of Beksinski, check it out lol

    • @clc3897
      @clc3897 10 місяців тому

      @@devonstrunk7419 OMG he does! Great minds… right?!

  • @johnlynch-kv8mz
    @johnlynch-kv8mz 8 місяців тому

    9:10 it is argued ( by some) that every piece of artwork is essentially a self portrait. I see this here. He has a peaceful and benevolent presence. Definitely there, yet apart.

  • @middleofnowhere1313
    @middleofnowhere1313 10 місяців тому +6

    Do you post your art anywhere?

  • @shadowl.dragmire8531
    @shadowl.dragmire8531 10 місяців тому +3

    In his color work and what he describes of music, I might be going on a limb here he sounds as if he had Synetheisa, my mother and sister have it and that's exactly how they describe it too.

  • @geneduran4509
    @geneduran4509 10 місяців тому +1

    What is the first background music? It sets the tone of the video so well, I need to know!!!

  • @ShadowMantis702
    @ShadowMantis702 10 місяців тому

    Would love to see a video about Alfred Kubin. Very underrated artist and I don’t see much other videos on him

  • @christyalmartin7400
    @christyalmartin7400 10 місяців тому

    What a treat! Thanks you!

  • @RehabDodger
    @RehabDodger 10 місяців тому +2

    I like your videos and would love to see you cover Ivan Albright :D

    • @ashleys9397
      @ashleys9397 10 місяців тому +1

      O Yes Blind Dweller Man: Aside from the brief post from quite a while ago, there are more than a few of US who would love to hear your more detailed take on Ivan Albright and his self-termed "Maggot Realism". He's an idiosyncratic ---i.e., highly individualistic---20th century painter unfairly dissed by the syphilitically-imbedded calcified art taste establishment.

  • @LaurieValdez-zk3dy
    @LaurieValdez-zk3dy 9 місяців тому +1

    Unique and wicked cool❤

  • @Reanreanss
    @Reanreanss 10 місяців тому +1

    I'm so excited to watch this 😭

  • @MadisonBaker-l5k
    @MadisonBaker-l5k 10 місяців тому

    Could you do a video on Layla Al-Attar? You’re my favorite UA-cam channel! Great work ❤

  • @torgo_
    @torgo_ 10 місяців тому +1

    I've seen those eye drawings before from the anime/manga "The Flowers of Evil." I always wondered about the origin of those haunting upward-gazing eyes.

  • @hatecraft6669
    @hatecraft6669 9 місяців тому

    great channel!

  • @sillypinkewe
    @sillypinkewe 10 місяців тому +1

    Jean-Léon Gérôme was at the school of arts he went to - and Odilion studied under this master. Probably a huge influence in Odilion's life. Gérôme also studied many other cultures and was against Impressionism. He used art as exploration of beauty, archeology, cultures, morality and emotions etc. I can't find the architect Jean-Léon however, I am curious about him!

  • @JerryListener
    @JerryListener 9 місяців тому

    On the eye balloon piece : Ballooning was in vogue and then could be seen as defying the laws of the world. The eye, to me, is the search for knowledge despite the limitations of our frail human forms. Ones eye cannot help looking to the heavens for truth.
    Thank you for this.

  • @BoneViolyn
    @BoneViolyn 7 місяців тому +1

    I would like to respectfully disagree with the point you made at 40:05, because art is and will always be a skill first and a talent second such talent and creativity must be earned by the skill and training you put in. and the creativity that you apply to the medium in question is still a form of training because that "gift" comes from how you formulate information of the natural world around you and how you take that information and form it into a story. It is a form of mental training wether you trained for that creativity intentially or unitentially is one thing but you still had to train your mind in it somehow it isnt really a gift at all its natural if we are being bluntfuly honest. Because humans created art for hundreds of thousands of years in all forms of different mediums so therefore it isnt a gift because its in our DNA ,our primal instinct but it just so happens that some people tap into it eariler than most.

  • @johnlynch-kv8mz
    @johnlynch-kv8mz 8 місяців тому

    37:10 I think it’s significant that he has a right eye. The eye ( of the cyclops) is a right ( as opposed to a left side of the face.) eye.

  • @Agpicklefeet
    @Agpicklefeet 10 місяців тому +1

    SUPER WEIRD TIMING BECAUSE I JUST GOT A BOOK OF HIS?? Love this weird guy.

  • @fun-with-purpose1436
    @fun-with-purpose1436 9 місяців тому

    Appreciate this video. I see how this could have influenced Japanese artist like Hayo Miyazaki, Takashi Murakami and even the anime Attack on Titan.

  • @pianomanhere
    @pianomanhere 9 місяців тому

    What is the music throughout the entire video and who wrote it? I love it.

  • @paulwoodford1984
    @paulwoodford1984 10 місяців тому +1

    My second favourite artist after Edvard Munch. These two were very unique and special. I lose myself into other worlds and escape this boring cesspit of a reality

  • @katiamanaganuwu
    @katiamanaganuwu 10 місяців тому +2

    I see this artist's influence in other works, like flowers of evil and possum

    • @DeidreL9
      @DeidreL9 10 місяців тому

      Baudelaire? I can see it too❤️

  • @musicinthewildwood
    @musicinthewildwood 10 місяців тому

    Nice you took the suggestion! Actually, a lot of these are lithographs (I got cheated out of a post-mortem run edition of "The Veil", long story but I DO own an original pastel, just a little portrait of his son Ari, a favorite subject, but it's what I long ago told myself would mean I'd made it! I know a lot of his work upside-down and backwards, lol l! I have like 4 books on him. Have a Tarot deck that someone did with his noirs, thinking about my own ideas for something! Oh and yeah, Cactus Man is a black slave

  • @dorianhorton6805
    @dorianhorton6805 10 місяців тому

    The goal of redon's dark works here acknowledge's his arc towards the morbid and the mystery inherent within it, and should be read as nothing further. He was obviously an unsettled soul!

  • @dc56789
    @dc56789 10 місяців тому +2

    Some of his work reminds me of the works of William Blake.

  • @mygreatbigfoot1679
    @mygreatbigfoot1679 9 місяців тому

    Thanks, i’d never heard of them.
    Sizes of the pieces would be nice.

  • @mijiyoon5575
    @mijiyoon5575 10 місяців тому +1

    Idea: Born from & of the sea... I can see that in his work & cacti are characteristically untouchable & even poisonous. Those black empty eye sockets do imply loneliness I suppose ... haunting. *Poe* had sad, stressed eyes in his photographs

  • @MarzannaMorana
    @MarzannaMorana 9 місяців тому

    You speak the truth so eloquently. 👍

  • @ashleys9397
    @ashleys9397 10 місяців тому +1

    I own a 25 x 25 inch full color repro of M. Redon's "The Cyclops". Along with "The Smiling Spider" and perhaps "The Eye Like a Strange Balloon, etc.", I'm guessing it stands as this artist's most recognizable piece. It adorns a prominent wall of my modest domicile/hovel, and it's proven itself time & again a source of endless delight whenever my eyes fondly alight upon it. Though it's often been described with off-handed glibness as "hideous" or "comically grotesque", Redon's Cyclops is really neither; his smile communicates the disarming gentleness and dreamy melancholy that came to represent one of the signature traits of Symbolist imagery.
    And why so wistfully melancholic this Cyclops? His single orb gazes fixedly down upon a languidly nude female form lazing just below eye level on the lower right. So what is his intention, should he harbor one? Covetous? Carnal? I think neither; rather I see him pining for a love object, or maybe some elusive ideal of beauty, he can never possess---especially considering the obvious and awkward size differential. Or to frame it perhaps a bit more broadly, the artist has imbued an image of the singularly strange and mythologically fantastic with a sympathetic human yearning for the unattainable. But more amazingly still, the striking brilliance of the colorism in "The Cyclops"---deep glowing hues that spread like translucent veils or crystallize in jewel-toned clusters---belies the fact that for the initial twenty-some years of his artistic life Redon worked exclusively in black & gray, using charcoal or graphite, etching or lithography to realize values and velvety textures of exceptional depth & richness.

  • @cryptraney5870
    @cryptraney5870 2 місяці тому

    This art reminds me loosely of Stephen Gammell's art he was the illustrator for 'Scary Stories To Tell In The Dark'

  • @ecisme10
    @ecisme10 6 місяців тому

    "Slightly off center?" That's one way to put it...the sun is also slightly warm.

  • @cosmotoggle1514
    @cosmotoggle1514 10 місяців тому +4

    Love you Dweller!

  • @hughiedavies6069
    @hughiedavies6069 8 місяців тому

    What's the music when you discussed, apparition. It sounds a bit like harold budd, could you please let me know who it is ?

  • @thebutcher1996
    @thebutcher1996 10 місяців тому

    Can you do a video about Julio Ruelas? He's a really talented mexican artists with very interesting pieces

  • @bryangraham7926
    @bryangraham7926 10 місяців тому +12

    Cactus Man says a lot in just one drawing about the mutation of the culturally disfranchised groups of people and the results from it and surprisingly was begotten by a slave trader's son it says a lot more than the last artists you viewed works, in my opinion.

    • @patavinity1262
      @patavinity1262 9 місяців тому +2

      It doesn't "say" anything of the sort, you're simply projecting your own ideas onto it. What does "culturally disenfranchised" even mean?

  • @davidjohnhull
    @davidjohnhull 3 місяці тому

    Yes as you said that you maybe lack the imagination of Redon made me think, that being an artist is 50 percent technique and 50 imagination, or a kind of freedom, that cannot be taught.

  • @ScarletMacLove
    @ScarletMacLove 10 місяців тому +1

    I need the name of this magical music. I listened to the first three minutes of the video 8 times

    • @redtsunami5893
      @redtsunami5893 10 місяців тому

      Me too, I've been stalking the comments trying to find it

  • @thoughtfuldevil6069
    @thoughtfuldevil6069 9 місяців тому

    24:07 moreso than any other image, this evokes The Metamorphosis to me.

  • @cartero9526
    @cartero9526 10 місяців тому +1

    Please do hyman bloom. Who’s with me guys 😀

  • @learlawliet6197
    @learlawliet6197 3 місяці тому

    Rest In Peace To Everyone Who Passed 💔💔💔💔

  • @Neuro_spicy98
    @Neuro_spicy98 10 місяців тому

    I deeply look forward to your videos🫶

  • @donotbelive-te7zz
    @donotbelive-te7zz 10 місяців тому +1

    nice episode again, tip mark ryden ...

  • @WhitneyDahlin
    @WhitneyDahlin 6 місяців тому

    Would you ever consider covering surrealist literature as well?