The skull is an anamorphosis, created with mathematics. I wrote my final essay in high school about maths in paintings, including anamorphosis. It is really interesting! This skull was probably made with a mathematical grid. You can find lots of literature about anamorphosis and the maths behind it in old books from the renessaince. Another kind of anamorphosis uses mirrors, which is even way more complicated. But so interesting!
WOW!! I'd never even heard of such a thing as anamorphosis/math before. Your comment is astounding. I'm going to look into this in the next few days while I'm on vacation. Thanks ever so much for the really interesting comment.
Thx, J-sope, from a bit of a math-nerd myself (allbeit way past his prime on that score!). But I also wonder if it might have been done with an actual visual rig? Paint a skull onto glass, then project slanting sunlight through it (perhaps via a few lenses) and then simply trace the resultant image onto a parchment laid on the floor. Not to suggest you are wrong, but just to widen the thought-experiment.
I was at an art gallery tonight and was constantly thinking about what you would say about the pieces, look at the details and stuff haha, really had an impact on me
@@catseatcookiessofiagacha5210 hahaha It's the typical BOT Spam comment, although, usually there is a barrage soon following, as in immediately. This is a one off from what I'm used to seeing. Perhaps this BOT has ticked off all the other Bot Spammers 🤣 They do get tiresome, don't they.
Yes! This is another aspect of this channel I'm starting to appreciate. Art Deco is slowly (me being slow on the uptake) teaching me how to approach paintings, how to think about context and presentation. Learning more here than a semester's worth of Art History.
I love how this channel went from less than 1000 views making background content to absolutely breaking the algorithm by tickling everyone’s lizard brain with the most interesting titles possible and ACTUALLY delivering on the content. You deserve all the success. More power to you
yup, you explained the viral videos nowadays. they tickled the lizard brain. but instead of making gross contents like those pimple popping videos, they actually delivered good content.
I want to say , i always find your presentations entertaining and highly informative. You dont make the puns , jokes , whatever too long or self absorbed as i find in other videos. I learn a lot from watching your videos and want to thank you for the hard work you put into them.
My father has a coffee table book of a bunch of masterpiece art that I grew up with and now getting to see your breakdowns of these gorgeous pieces I would fawn over in these books is just so amazing thank you!
How cool, now you have a completely new, IN DEPTH perspective of it!! Like getting a new present. Hope you thoroughly enjoy that book now, even more. EDIT ~ Now that I've re-read your comment I realise this book was part of your childhood. I hope the book is still in your family and you can enjoy it again.
We had a set of encyclopaedias on top of the piano (ah the old days!) in my mum and dad's house. One of them was devoted to great artists When I was young I must have spent hours fascinated by the pictures and the life stories of the artists. Along with visits to galleries it has given me a life long appreciation of painting and sculpture.
When I was ten, me and my family had a three day vacation to London. I didn't speak english yet at the time. We all visited the National Gallery there and when we came in front of the painting we didn't understand what the thing on the floor was. A nice old lady was on the side of the painting and noticed our concerned faces, looking really hard at the thing. She asked my parents if she could show me and my little brother the solution and then pulled gently me next to her. The little ten years old me was excided about the cool skull that appeared. I remember that day with a smile. I'm happy to see more about that painting again in this video. Also, really nice way to look at all the details!
Given the wealth of symbols and details in this magnificent painting, I have to smile at your suggestion that Holbein had to rush the portrait of the two men as an explanation for their bland expression. I am sure there must be some deeper meaning. Holbein was such a genius we could spend a full hour trying to decode all the hidden messages, including the skull’s so bizarre aspect. How do you think Holbein managed to paint it? It is really something unique.
It's so perfect that it would require some type of optics. He probably painted the skull normally and then used a camera obscura technique with mirrors angled to stretch and project it onto the canvas, giving it the warped perspective trick.
As French Catholics, I suspect that bland expressions were the Ambassadorial response to what the Church of England meant to the further division of Christendom.
The deeper meaning is that to see the skull and thus understand the metaphor it represented one had to first bow to the cross physically. That deeper meaning is lost to us today with all our technology. It would have been obvious to everyone in the past when viewing the painting in person.
Your voice sounds so young yet you're a wealth of knowledge regarding art and history. Much respect! I very much enjoy your analyses of these beautiful paintings.
one of the rare times I have actually seen the painting in person already and knew the history before seeing your video! your analysis makes me want to go back to the National Gallery and see it again...!
I never found any interest in paintings, until I found your channel. It's so great! Please go on and give us all more insight into this incredible stuff.
Hans Holbine was such an amazing artist. And through my interest in the Royal Tudor dynasty, I've become familiar with his portraits and sketches and they never cease to astonish me for how beautiful and detailed they are. And thank you for the wonderful videos you post and all of your attention to detail as well. You put a great deal of research into the subject at hand and it shows.
I am the furthest person you think would ever be interested in art, but you explore these paintings and interpret them incredibly that I have literally become obsessed and binged all your videos 😂❤ keep up the great work im absolutely loving it
Everything about this channel is top notch: the history, the art, the background, the depth, and of course, your lovely voice is just the cherry on top!
last week in class we were discussing visual representation of life and death in art, and one girl mentioned The Arnolfini Portrait and "the pregnant woman in the green dress symbolizing life." I whispered to my colleague that the woman's not pregnant and that I know this because I watched video analyses of that piece. The professor proceeded then to mention this particular painting, The Ambassadors and the skull, and then you posted the analysis of that just a few days later... I'm just slightly creeped out 😂😂
Waldemar Januszczak went deep on Hans Holbein in an art documentary I saw on UA-cam. The whole chapter in history, and where Holbein fits into it, is so juicy and dramatic! Cromwell, Catherine of Aragon, The Boleyns, The Tudor line, the bizarre ideas they had while religious persecution sculpted the facts... I finally think history is fun! Great Video... THANKS... These dark dives into art are FASCINATING!
And a Big THANK YOU to you too for sharing the info for those of us who thoroughly enjoy art and history. I'm going to mosey on over to that UA-cam channel and learn some new stuff. 💛
@@Julia-uh4li Hey, that's great! If anybody else is wondering exactly which video I was referring to, it's here ~~> ua-cam.com/video/cWGvPjNPo1U/v-deo.html
@@SaraRankins. That looked pretty cool. I had no clue it even existed. If it helps certain kids get into history, that's great! As a former Vocal Music major, you would think I'd DIE for that sort of thing haha Instead, I went so hard on musicals in high school, that I blew my taste buds out for them (so to speak). Now I stare confused and feel embarrassed haha Bizarre
How wild it must have been for Holbein to capture the images of all these people who passed through the court, many of them condemned to brutal deaths. Capturing someone’s likeness is a really intimate process and I imagine he must have felt some weight of knowing what happened to a lot of his sitters.
Your channel has become one of my favorites. You do a really good job of explaining the history, time period, biography, painting and symbolism in a way that people who know nothing about art can understand and appreciate. And I love your sense of humor!
@@Art_Deco I have a question. When you showed the cross hidden behind the curtain did you notice what looked like a half of a demonic face in the curtain pattern from the area right of it. It's probably just me. I often see something that resembles an animal or face in patterns or objects.
This is a really interesting painting. The details are very impressive. Also, I very much appreciate how even when religious symbolism and divisions are portrayed in a painting, you present it in a historical and informative way that feels unbiased and sticks to the facts of the matter. Thank you.
Ya know, I came for the illusion, I stayed for the History lesson, thank you for this! This is such an awesome way to present Art History and World History!
Another great video- thanks! I remember this piece (and the skull) very clearly from a discussion of it in John Berger's "Ways of Seeing" (one of the best books I read in college). He went into detail (sorry) about the ability of oil painting to richly capture all the "stuff" Europeans of this time suddenly had available. I don't remember him getting into all the small bits you uncovered here, and that's something I really appreciate in this video, and in your others. Thank you, and please keep it up!
I agree 100%. I saw the TV series "ways of seeing" when it was first broadcast,(1972) and I was so impressed I bought the book. Every chapter is gold. Berger's insights were groundbreaking for the time, and still hold true today. Till I saw that show, I had been brought up on Kenneth Clark's art history TV series "Civilization"(plus having the huge coffee table book of his series) so up till then I had only been exposed to the traditional conservative Academic interpretation of art. Berger's take on art was shockingly radical, and he ruffled many feathers in the Art Establishment. But he was the one who made it acceptable, even essential, to view the art of previous eras free of the lens of centuries-old doctrines and aesthetic correctness. He held those long-accepted interpretations up to scrutiny, tossed them aside and encouraged viewers to trust their instincts. His approach was raw, honest and filled with humanity. Anyone who is interested in art appreciation MUST watch the series ( it's on YT) where in the first few seconds he appears to be cutting a very famous painting out of its hung frame on a gallery wall with a Stanley knife! Gripping stuff -- and every episode is equally as good.
An excellent analysis, thanks! I have known about the skull since childhood but had no idea there were so many other fascinating, symbolic, and exquisitely rendered details.
Wow. Vietnam style flashbacks. My music teacher in middle school presented this piece to the class and asked if there was anything weird about it. No one noticed anything, but i raised my hand and asked what the "smudge" was. Never seen a teacher so happy in my life since lol
I discovered your channel quite recently. I find it quite jubilant and like the way you use your voice in such a typical manner to share your knowledge. Never boring. About this painting : Anamorphic technic was not unknown and actually lots of people could device what this "cuttlefish bone" was. There is another anamorphic portrait, King Edward VI, attributed to William Scrots in the National Portrait Library.
I love learning about the background items artists use (or did not use, in some cases). Once you laid out what they all were, it made sense, and made it even more interesting to look at.
This such an amazing painting. In my Art History class, it was presented & explained as a Vanitas painting. You definitely gave more detailed information on the backstory of this piece than my Art History teacher did. It was just another slide we had to memorize...
Everything about this piece is quite stunning, the intricate details of each trinket, the warped skull at the center, the tired yet friendly aura that Dinteville and Selve give off, and the random Stussy S on that rug's design that really makes me question the origins of that thing.
I was just checking your channel for more interesting art videos and low and behold, you uploaded one 15 minutes ago. Honestly, the way you explain these paintings make them so interesting to hear, keep going!
If i had seen this painting in a museum - or anywhere at all - i would have looked at it for a minute and then moved on. I would never have noticed all of those intricate details you have highlighted on this video post. This is truly an amazing painting and i thank you for enlightening me about it.!!
I saw this gorgeous painting on a trip to London, and had the great good fortune to have a Gallery guide explain it - thank you for adding to my appreciation and understanding of this work via your excellent video
Unbelievable. Wholly unbelievable.. What art and what an exceptional artistic capacity of the painter. Thank you for clarifying the entire story behind this art piece.
“The Ambassador’s” is one of my all time favorite paintings I learned about in Art History. Momento Mori and the geometrical concepts at that time were really thought provoking.
I still remember vividly the moment when our art teacher revealed to us the skull. She made us guess for a long 30 minutes and nobody could figure it out ! Excellent video 👏👏👏 I enjoy your sense of humor. 😂
Insane how these paintings have such fine detail..this era of paintings were described as realist paintings which were mysterious as to how the paintings could be so detailed to where they think the paintings could have been made in another way. Like a camera
The comment at this time signature surprised me because, knowing nothing about this painting, I knew that was a skull stretched out of shape the second I saw it. It was the very first thought on my mind (oh, weird skull!) I thought initially I was not looking at the original painting, suspecting that the skull was an image from a computer stretched in photoshop and imposed on an old painting. I have difficulty believing that for a long time no one’s brain saw that it was a “stretched” skull along a specific plane.
I thought the same thing! But I’m guessing it is because things like photoshop haven’t existed until very very recently. The only way to “stretch” a picture was with mathematics and taking a painstakingly long time, so people in the past wouldn’t be able to instantly recognize the skull perhaps. It’s kind of like when the first motion picture came out-everyone thought they were going to be hit by the train rushing towards them on screen!...even though it was black and white film, and super grainy, and not very convincing at all. They just weren’t used to it
i remember seeing this painting on a school trip a few years ago and our tour guide telling us all about it. i didn't realise how amazing it was until now. thank you sm for this video
As an old codger in my mid 70's I am always surprised how much there is to learn and never really took a detailed look into early paintings. This has also taught me that knowledge does not need to be associated with an older voice.
THANK-YOU! This painting blew my mind when I first saw (a reproduction of) it, 30 years ago - in class at Uni, from one of my English Lit. Professors (excellent teacher!) in one of our tutorials. He held it up, and just asked us what we saw .... my 1st guess was 'a paint brush' lol But after 5-10 minutes I saw it (about ½ of us spotted it.) I've never forgotten it, and always been mind blown by the sheer skill of it. I will NEVER understand how he pulled off that perspective, and distortion, 500 years ago! Thank-you so much for highlighting this painting!! 💜
The skull is the most obvious symbol in this painting, but when you look into it (literally) then you see many other fantastic details that have a wide variety of meanings. My favourite would probably be the crucifix that is being covered up by the curtain. For me it represents the Roman Catholic religion being slowly erased from England....
I remember seeing this painting in person in London some 20+ years ago and having an expert talk about it. I was so fascinated. So it was such a joy to hear about its story once again after all these years. Amazing channel, thank you. Keep up the wonderful work.
I’ve always seen the skull, and whenever I see this painting I love just how surreal it is and makes me feel. It looks like some old computer render. I love this painting.
2 роки тому+1
The painting was finished in a rush and yet it's so detailed and exquisite! I wonder how the men portrayed here, particularly the man who commissioned the painting felt about it.
this painting has the most hidden gem ever! the pop cultural meme S from 70's 80's is hidden on this painting and its probably the oldest painting that originated the S symbol
It's hard for me to believe how difficult it was for folk to realize it was a skull. It took me only a glance to immediately see it ; perhaps, people then hadn't the visual library of one who grew up in the age of media how we did. I think this is relationship is analogous to comparing the performances of neural networks ; one receiving much training, and the other receiving less.
@@Art_Deco Then my work here is done. 🙂 Btw, I really enjoy your channel. I am a scientist by my education and self-taught as a fiction writer -- but historical art is one of the gaps in my knowledge, something I wish I knew more about, but there are only so many hours in the day and in life. So I really enjoy and appreciate compressed educational videos like yours, that explain the details I wouldn't pick up on my own.
How could something with so much detail also be rushed? Everything that was mentioned actually added to the painting (as evident by how good the painting is) and many of the details on the painting would have probably been omitted if it had been rushed.
No wonder Holbein was in charge of all the royal paintings - he was pretty brilliant. Even if this painting was a rushed job, it's so intricate and detailed and that skull is pure brilliance.
The voice explaining this amazing piece did a wonderful job, the part she said "Take a second to see this detail" gives me satisfaction. 🙂 Interesting video, thanks for sharing.
The skull is an anamorphosis, created with mathematics. I wrote my final essay in high school about maths in paintings, including anamorphosis. It is really interesting! This skull was probably made with a mathematical grid. You can find lots of literature about anamorphosis and the maths behind it in old books from the renessaince. Another kind of anamorphosis uses mirrors, which is even way more complicated. But so interesting!
WOW!! I'd never even heard of such a thing as anamorphosis/math before. Your comment is astounding. I'm going to look into this in the next few days while I'm on vacation. Thanks ever so much for the really interesting comment.
Renaissance paintings were mathematical masterpieces; their precision in balance of perspective has always fascinated me.
You just blew my mind!!! That is so amazing, how art and math can marry in this technique!!
Super interesting!
Thx, J-sope, from a bit of a math-nerd myself (allbeit way past his prime on that score!). But I also wonder if it might have been done with an actual visual rig? Paint a skull onto glass, then project slanting sunlight through it (perhaps via a few lenses) and then simply trace the resultant image onto a parchment laid on the floor. Not to suggest you are wrong, but just to widen the thought-experiment.
I was at an art gallery tonight and was constantly thinking about what you would say about the pieces, look at the details and stuff haha, really had an impact on me
@Patrickkim WTF?
@@catseatcookiessofiagacha5210 hahaha It's the typical BOT Spam comment, although, usually there is a barrage soon following, as in immediately. This is a one off from what I'm used to seeing. Perhaps this BOT has ticked off all the other Bot Spammers 🤣 They do get tiresome, don't they.
Good for you
Man you got so many ups because you’re a bot and that pretty sad.
Yes! This is another aspect of this channel I'm starting to appreciate. Art Deco is slowly (me being slow on the uptake) teaching me how to approach paintings, how to think about context and presentation. Learning more here than a semester's worth of Art History.
The amount of details and symbolism in this painting is insane! And the skull, it’s incredible 😮 It's truly super skilled artist…
There's even the S symbol on the painting
I love how this channel went from less than 1000 views making background content to absolutely breaking the algorithm by tickling everyone’s lizard brain with the most interesting titles possible and ACTUALLY delivering on the content.
You deserve all the success. More power to you
condsider my lizard brain tickled
yup, you explained the viral videos nowadays. they tickled the lizard brain. but instead of making gross contents like those pimple popping videos, they actually delivered good content.
334√=}thlieker
Username checks out lol
Lizard brains would not be interested in Paradise, btw...🙏❤✨
I want to say , i always find your presentations entertaining and highly informative. You dont make the puns , jokes , whatever too long or self absorbed as i find in other videos. I learn a lot from watching your videos and want to thank you for the hard work you put into them.
This is the only art channel like this that I watch and honestly it's because of the way she talks about it.
My father has a coffee table book of a bunch of masterpiece art that I grew up with and now getting to see your breakdowns of these gorgeous pieces I would fawn over in these books is just so amazing thank you!
How cool, now you have a completely new, IN DEPTH perspective of it!! Like getting a new present. Hope you thoroughly enjoy that book now, even more.
EDIT ~ Now that I've re-read your comment I realise this book was part of your childhood. I hope the book is still in your family and you can enjoy it again.
We had a set of encyclopaedias on top of the piano (ah the old days!) in my mum and dad's house. One of them was devoted to great artists When I was young I must have spent hours fascinated by the pictures and the life stories of the artists. Along with visits to galleries it has given me a life long appreciation of painting and sculpture.
When I was ten, me and my family had a three day vacation to London. I didn't speak english yet at the time.
We all visited the National Gallery there and when we came in front of the painting we didn't understand what the thing on the floor was. A nice old lady was on the side of the painting and noticed our concerned faces, looking really hard at the thing. She asked my parents if she could show me and my little brother the solution and then pulled gently me next to her. The little ten years old me was excided about the cool skull that appeared. I remember that day with a smile.
I'm happy to see more about that painting again in this video. Also, really nice way to look at all the details!
Given the wealth of symbols and details in this magnificent painting, I have to smile at your suggestion that Holbein had to rush the portrait of the two men as an explanation for their bland expression. I am sure there must be some deeper meaning. Holbein was such a genius we could spend a full hour trying to decode all the hidden messages, including the skull’s so bizarre aspect. How do you think Holbein managed to paint it? It is really something unique.
It's so perfect that it would require some type of optics. He probably painted the skull normally and then used a camera obscura technique with mirrors angled to stretch and project it onto the canvas, giving it the warped perspective trick.
As French Catholics, I suspect that bland expressions were the Ambassadorial response to what the Church of England meant to the further division of Christendom.
"I am weary, melancholy, the most wearisome weary ambassador..." looks to me like they really DON'T wanna be there.🤷🏻♀️
The deeper meaning is that to see the skull and thus understand the metaphor it represented one had to first bow to the cross physically. That deeper meaning is lost to us today with all our technology. It would have been obvious to everyone in the past when viewing the painting in person.
Yes I agree. To say the painting is rushed at all shocked me
I find it so crazy how these old paintings are so realistic
Your voice sounds so young yet you're a wealth of knowledge regarding art and history. Much respect! I very much enjoy your analyses of these beautiful paintings.
I think it's a voiceover.
channels like these typically consist of a team that create and revise the script for each video
I love how you always have an understanding of the historical background before you analyze. Very nice video!
one of the rare times I have actually seen the painting in person already and knew the history before seeing your video! your analysis makes me want to go back to the National Gallery and see it again...!
I never found any interest in paintings, until I found your channel. It's so great! Please go on and give us all more insight into this incredible stuff.
Hans Holbine was such an amazing artist. And through my interest in the Royal Tudor dynasty, I've become familiar with his portraits and sketches and they never cease to astonish me for how beautiful and detailed they are. And thank you for the wonderful videos you post and all of your attention to detail as well. You put a great deal of research into the subject at hand and it shows.
Is that the guy that Six song was about? The guy who did a lot of portraits for royalty.
@@DeathnoteBByes, that's him xd
*Holbein
I am the furthest person you think would ever be interested in art, but you explore these paintings and interpret them incredibly that I have literally become obsessed and binged all your videos 😂❤ keep up the great work im absolutely loving it
Hi Sara I'm also Sara
@@SaraRankins. 😂😂 hello there Sara
Used to be obsessed with this painting when I was younger, thanks for covering it.
Everything about this channel is top notch: the history, the art, the background, the depth, and of course, your lovely voice is just the cherry on top!
The crucifix and the illusion skull the broken loom, the details are just spectacular.
last week in class we were discussing visual representation of life and death in art, and one girl mentioned The Arnolfini Portrait and "the pregnant woman in the green dress symbolizing life."
I whispered to my colleague that the woman's not pregnant and that I know this because I watched video analyses of that piece. The professor proceeded then to mention this particular painting, The Ambassadors and the skull, and then you posted the analysis of that just a few days later... I'm just slightly creeped out 😂😂
Both of these paintings are very famous and often analyzed, but it's indeed a strange coincidence
Waldemar Januszczak went deep on Hans Holbein in an art documentary I saw on UA-cam. The whole chapter in history, and where Holbein fits into it, is so juicy and dramatic!
Cromwell, Catherine of Aragon, The Boleyns, The Tudor line, the bizarre ideas they had while religious persecution sculpted the facts... I finally think history is fun!
Great Video... THANKS... These dark dives into art are FASCINATING!
And a Big THANK YOU to you too for sharing the info for those of us who thoroughly enjoy art and history. I'm going to mosey on over to that UA-cam channel and learn some new stuff. 💛
@@Julia-uh4li Hey, that's great! If anybody else is wondering exactly which video I was referring to, it's here ~~>
ua-cam.com/video/cWGvPjNPo1U/v-deo.html
You should watch six the musical
@@SaraRankins. That looked pretty cool. I had no clue it even existed. If it helps certain kids get into history, that's great!
As a former Vocal Music major, you would think I'd DIE for that sort of thing haha Instead, I went so hard on musicals in high school, that I blew my taste buds out for them (so to speak).
Now I stare confused and feel embarrassed haha Bizarre
How wild it must have been for Holbein to capture the images of all these people who passed through the court, many of them condemned to brutal deaths. Capturing someone’s likeness is a really intimate process and I imagine he must have felt some weight of knowing what happened to a lot of his sitters.
This is one of the coolest paintings ever with the beautiful meticulous detail and the awesome illusion.
The detail in the painting is bananas.
Your channel has become one of my favorites. You do a really good job of explaining the history, time period, biography, painting and symbolism in a way that people who know nothing about art can understand and appreciate. And I love your sense of humor!
As always, an amazing and intricate video! So much historical details. Love your job, love the edition, the information and the funny references.
You’re so kind, Ana! Thank you 🙏🏻
@@Art_Deco it's just the truth
@@Art_Deco I have a question. When you showed the cross hidden behind the curtain did you notice what looked like a half of a demonic face in the curtain pattern from the area right of it. It's probably just me. I often see something that resembles an animal or face in patterns or objects.
This is a really interesting painting. The details are very impressive.
Also, I very much appreciate how even when religious symbolism and divisions are portrayed in a painting, you present it in a historical and informative way that feels unbiased and sticks to the facts of the matter. Thank you.
Ya know, I came for the illusion, I stayed for the History lesson, thank you for this! This is such an awesome way to present Art History and World History!
Another great video- thanks! I remember this piece (and the skull) very clearly from a discussion of it in John Berger's "Ways of Seeing" (one of the best books I read in college). He went into detail (sorry) about the ability of oil painting to richly capture all the "stuff" Europeans of this time suddenly had available. I don't remember him getting into all the small bits you uncovered here, and that's something I really appreciate in this video, and in your others. Thank you, and please keep it up!
ways of seeing is one of my fav books
I agree 100%. I saw the TV series "ways of seeing" when it was first broadcast,(1972) and I was so impressed I bought the book. Every chapter is gold. Berger's insights were groundbreaking for the time, and still hold true today. Till I saw that show, I had been brought up on Kenneth Clark's art history TV series "Civilization"(plus having the huge coffee table book of his series) so up till then I had only been exposed to the traditional conservative Academic interpretation of art. Berger's take on art was shockingly radical, and he ruffled many feathers in the Art Establishment. But he was the one who made it acceptable, even essential, to view the art of previous eras free of the lens of centuries-old doctrines and aesthetic correctness. He held those long-accepted interpretations up to scrutiny, tossed them aside and encouraged viewers to trust their instincts. His approach was raw, honest and filled with humanity. Anyone who is interested in art appreciation MUST watch the series ( it's on YT) where in the first few seconds he appears to be cutting a very famous painting out of its hung frame on a gallery wall with a Stanley knife! Gripping stuff -- and every episode is equally as good.
An excellent analysis, thanks! I have known about the skull since childhood but had no idea there were so many other fascinating, symbolic, and exquisitely rendered details.
Wow. Vietnam style flashbacks. My music teacher in middle school presented this piece to the class and asked if there was anything weird about it.
No one noticed anything, but i raised my hand and asked what the "smudge" was.
Never seen a teacher so happy in my life since lol
I discovered your channel quite recently. I find it quite jubilant and like the way you use your voice in such a typical manner to share your knowledge. Never boring.
About this painting : Anamorphic technic was not unknown and actually lots of people could device what this "cuttlefish bone" was. There is another anamorphic portrait, King Edward VI, attributed to William Scrots in the National Portrait Library.
It’s so much fun to listen to someone who’s passionate about what they’re talking about
the details are amazing. the math and music pages, upside down writing on the globe, the floor and table cloth and so much more. wow
I had never been as interested in art until I discovered your channel. Thank you for your insight, history and beautiful voice- it’s marvelous!
A picture paints a thousand words. Artists are deep, really deep. Theyre communicating their soul.
Wow! If it was to flex his skill, then he succeeded, cuz the skull is so dope! This is easily one of my favorite paintings now!
Seriously? No one knew it was a skull for a long time? Even I can tell it’s a skull looking at it from the front.
I know right.
The first time I saw this piece I saw the skull immediately! I've always been surprised at how many people don't see it.
I love learning about the background items artists use (or did not use, in some cases). Once you laid out what they all were, it made sense, and made it even more interesting to look at.
This such an amazing painting. In my Art History class, it was presented & explained as a Vanitas painting. You definitely gave more detailed information on the backstory of this piece than my Art History teacher did. It was just another slide we had to memorize...
Everything about this piece is quite stunning, the intricate details of each trinket, the warped skull at the center, the tired yet friendly aura that Dinteville and Selve give off, and the random Stussy S on that rug's design that really makes me question the origins of that thing.
I used to take an AP art history class in highschool and I absolutely hated it. Yet here I am and actually interested in this.
I was just checking your channel for more interesting art videos and low and behold, you uploaded one 15 minutes ago. Honestly, the way you explain these paintings make them so interesting to hear, keep going!
We will never have art like this again . Pure talent
One reason I like watching these videos is that the narration is very pleasing to listen to.
If i had seen this painting in a museum - or anywhere at all - i would have looked at it for a minute and then moved on.
I would never have noticed all of those intricate details you have highlighted on this video post. This is truly an amazing painting and i thank you for enlightening me about it.!!
I love your hard work. Keep going.
The best breakdown of this painting I have even come across. Thank you.
Probably the best visual piece of art ever produced
This is the diamatetric opposite of clickbait titles. I was blown away! Subscribed! Thank you
Does this channel have an IG account?
This was a very talented artist. It's impressive to see the minute details.
I saw this gorgeous painting on a trip to London, and had the great good fortune to have a Gallery guide explain it - thank you for adding to my appreciation and understanding of this work via your excellent video
Paintings like this give me chills with all the symbolism, it's incredible!
Unbelievable. Wholly unbelievable.. What art and what an exceptional artistic capacity of the painter. Thank you for clarifying the entire story behind this art piece.
The details on this painting is ridiculous! How can he paint those notes, those perfect spheres, those details on the map. How 🤯
I’ve loved Holbein since I was a child…I spent hours studying the details in his work, each one a tiny masterpiece in itself.
“The Ambassador’s” is one of my all time favorite paintings I learned about in Art History. Momento Mori and the geometrical concepts at that time were really thought provoking.
It's amazing how much you can zoom and there're still meaningful details! The skull is nice too.
I still remember vividly the moment when our art teacher revealed to us the skull. She made us guess for a long 30 minutes and nobody could figure it out !
Excellent video 👏👏👏
I enjoy your sense of humor. 😂
What did you see originally? Because I can only see a skull - but surely my mind was already aware it was a skull…
I love the intricate detail, I could stand and look at this paintings for hours.
Insane how these paintings have such fine detail..this era of paintings were described as realist paintings which were mysterious as to how the paintings could be so detailed to where they think the paintings could have been made in another way. Like a camera
The comment at this time signature surprised me because, knowing nothing about this painting, I knew that was a skull stretched out of shape the second I saw it. It was the very first thought on my mind (oh, weird skull!)
I thought initially I was not looking at the original painting, suspecting that the skull was an image from a computer stretched in photoshop and imposed on an old painting.
I have difficulty believing that for a long time no one’s brain saw that it was a “stretched” skull along a specific plane.
I thought the same thing! But I’m guessing it is because things like photoshop haven’t existed until very very recently. The only way to “stretch” a picture was with mathematics and taking a painstakingly long time, so people in the past wouldn’t be able to instantly recognize the skull perhaps. It’s kind of like when the first motion picture came out-everyone thought they were going to be hit by the train rushing towards them on screen!...even though it was black and white film, and super grainy, and not very convincing at all. They just weren’t used to it
I love this you’ve made me so interested in art history and anyalysis
This man’s an absolute god with them painting skills
One of the greatest paintings ever done.
i remember seeing this painting on a school trip a few years ago and our tour guide telling us all about it. i didn't realise how amazing it was until now. thank you sm for this video
As an old codger in my mid 70's I am always surprised how much there is to learn and never really took a detailed look into early paintings. This has also taught me that knowledge does not need to be associated with an older voice.
it’s at that angle to show that death is always lurking just around the corner
The person presenting/writing this channel is genuinely so fucking hilarious they’ve made me care about art in a way I’ve never cared before
THANK-YOU!
This painting blew my mind when I first saw (a reproduction of) it, 30 years ago - in class at Uni, from one of my English Lit. Professors (excellent teacher!) in one of our tutorials. He held it up, and just asked us what we saw .... my 1st guess was 'a paint brush' lol But after 5-10 minutes I saw it (about ½ of us spotted it.)
I've never forgotten it, and always been mind blown by the sheer skill of it. I will NEVER understand how he pulled off that perspective, and distortion, 500 years ago!
Thank-you so much for highlighting this painting!!
💜
The skull is the most obvious symbol in this painting, but when you look into it (literally) then you see many other fantastic details that have a wide variety of meanings. My favourite would probably be the crucifix that is being covered up by the curtain. For me it represents the Roman Catholic religion being slowly erased from England....
I remember seeing this painting in person in London some 20+ years ago and having an expert talk about it. I was so fascinated. So it was such a joy to hear about its story once again after all these years. Amazing channel, thank you. Keep up the wonderful work.
Yes! I remember this painting and figuring out that distorted object was, amazing!
Until I started watching your vids ..I always thought old paintings were boring...I now look at them with a new light 😁
I’ve always seen the skull, and whenever I see this painting I love just how surreal it is and makes me feel. It looks like some old computer render. I love this painting.
The painting was finished in a rush and yet it's so detailed and exquisite! I wonder how the men portrayed here, particularly the man who commissioned the painting felt about it.
This painting is so amazing. Thanks for revealing all the details to us!
this painting has the most hidden gem ever! the pop cultural meme S from 70's 80's is hidden on this painting and its probably the oldest painting that originated the S symbol
It's hard for me to believe how difficult it was for folk to realize it was a skull. It took me only a glance to immediately see it ; perhaps, people then hadn't the visual library of one who grew up in the age of media how we did. I think this is relationship is analogous to comparing the performances of neural networks ; one receiving much training, and the other receiving less.
4:12 No you can't play them just by looking at the painting, you would need some sort of musical instrument.
True! Lol
@@Art_Deco Then my work here is done. 🙂 Btw, I really enjoy your channel. I am a scientist by my education and self-taught as a fiction writer -- but historical art is one of the gaps in my knowledge, something I wish I knew more about, but there are only so many hours in the day and in life. So I really enjoy and appreciate compressed educational videos like yours, that explain the details I wouldn't pick up on my own.
Brilliant video. I love this painting and have seen it twice. It is astounding.
A brilliant artist. I would be proud to have known this artist..❤
How could something with so much detail also be rushed? Everything that was mentioned actually added to the painting (as evident by how good the painting is) and many of the details on the painting would have probably been omitted if it had been rushed.
This is amazing! Thank you for making and sharing it!
One of the most fascinating paintings I've seen
I have never seen such beautifully detailed masterpiece
I find it hard to believe the skull was such a mystery for so long. I think it very clear to me when I first saw this painting years ago
I remember the first time I saw this painting in an art book. I might’ve been in middle school. I instantly fell in love with it.
i loved this painting as a kid
Your channel is soooo amazing
Thank you so much!!
This is my favourite painting of all time!
This is a great one. So much symbolism that we don’t even see now, but everyone knew then.
No wonder Holbein was in charge of all the royal paintings - he was pretty brilliant. Even if this painting was a rushed job, it's so intricate and detailed and that skull is pure brilliance.
The voice explaining this amazing piece did a wonderful job, the part she said "Take a second to see this detail" gives me satisfaction. 🙂
Interesting video, thanks for sharing.
Absolutely loving these videos. Art and history weren't interesting to me until your videos and now I'm hooked. Keep them coming!
OUTSTANDING ANALYSIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I am in awe at such genius.
Honestly, the best part about this painting is that it's one of the earliest uses of that one S. You know the one. It's right in the center
Wow, ive never been so captivated about painting until this.
I still remember when I was looking at the paintingfor the first time, not seeing the skull at all. Then suddenly it popped out to me, so crazy!
Maybe I am special or something but how can one not see the skull there?
I've always had the same thought. It is skillfully done but why wasn't it worked into the painting in some equally skillful way.