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OpenArtsArchive
Великобритания
Добавлен 16 май 2018
Open Arts Archive is hosted by the Art History Department at The Open University, and builds on our commitment to open access to the arts and widen participation. It’s a live and open archive providing free access to a wealth of artistic, cultural, and educational resources, including talks, seminars, study days, artists’ podcasts, artist interviews, curators’ talks and exhibitions. It’s also home to Open Arts Objects, a project which offers free films and teaching materials that support the teaching of Art History in schools, particularly at A-level: www.openartsarchive.org/open-arts-objects
Come and discover films on a wide range of works from paintings, sculpture, prints, ceramics, architecture and design, to film, installation and performance art, covering ancient times to the present!
Come and discover films on a wide range of works from paintings, sculpture, prints, ceramics, architecture and design, to film, installation and performance art, covering ancient times to the present!
Critical Term: Mobility
Leah Clark and Kathleen Christian discussing the term mobility, and how it has changed the way we approach Renaissance works of art. Includes Holbein’s Ambassadors; Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel and its circulation in print; a devotional diptych with a portrait of Joos van der Burch.
Просмотров: 132
Видео
Renaissance Travelling Objects
Просмотров 1933 года назад
For centuries, people have decorated their homes with objects that have travelled across the globe and which tell fascinating and sometimes troubling stories. We asked you to send in images of objects in your homes, now Leah Clark discusses how Renaissance objects from porcelain to glass featured in European interiors and how they reveal complex exchanges of motifs and technology! #mytravelling...
What Is Art?
Просмотров 743 года назад
What is art? Is it an elitist thing separated from everyday life? Does it only belong in museums? Or auction houses? Or is it art part of everyday life? Watch this short film from the #arthistory department at the #openuniversity to find out!
Open Arts Object: Jan van Kessel, Decorative Still-Life with a Porcelain Bowl, 17th c, Ashmolean
Просмотров 3714 года назад
An Van Camp (Curator of Northern European Art) discussing Jan van Kessel, Decorative Still-Life Composition with a Porcelain Bowl, Fruit and Insects, 17th century, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. For more resources visit our site: www.openartsarchive.org/resource/open-arts-object-jan-van-kessel-decorative-still-life-composition-porcelain-bowl-fruit-and
My Travelling Object
Просмотров 1794 года назад
Every object has a story to tell. From the rugs under your feet, the plates you eat from, and the incense burners that fill your rooms with the aromas of other worlds. What stories can these objects tell us about global connections? We might live in a globalised world today, but for centuries our ancestors decorated their homes with objects from around the globe. And artists too have long been ...
Why Art History Matters_Lindsay Crisp (OU)
Просмотров 874 года назад
Part of the #whyarthistorymatters campaign, brought to you by the Art History department at the Open University.
Critical Term: Essentialism
Просмотров 6954 года назад
In this short film, Renate Dohmen and Kathleen Christian consider the impact of essentialism, a concept which gained prominence in the nineteenth century and which declared art as the expression of national cultures. Examining the watercolour An Assemblage of Works of Art in Sculpture and Painting to the earliest Period to the Time of Phydias by James Stephanoff (1845) they explore how the phil...
Critical Term: Iconography
Просмотров 9974 года назад
In this short film, Angeliki Lymberopoulou and Rembrandt Duits discuss a very important term in the study of art history-iconography- a word rooted in Greek language, which literally means ‘writing in images.’ They address the duality in understanding and applying this term: on the one hand there is the historical approach, which sees images as a main source of information for people who cannot...
Critical Term: Globalisation
Просмотров 1364 года назад
The term globalisation has come to be hotly debated in the Humanities as a way of understanding some of the more dynamic and complex changes taking place in social and cultural life today. In the field of art history, globalising processes can be identified over a wide historical span, from the age of exploration and encounter that began in earnest in the fifteenth century, through colonisation...
Critical Term: Commemoration
Просмотров 2694 года назад
Susie West and Leah Clark discussing commemoration and how it can be applied to works of art and architecture. Includes war memorials; tomb sculpture; Paul Cummins and Tom Piper, Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red, Tower of London. Learn more about the term with our additional resources: www.openartsarchive.org/resource/open-arts-object-critical-term-commemoration
Open Arts Objects in Schools: What students say
Просмотров 2744 года назад
Open Arts Objects (OAO) films have been bringing Art History into the classroom, so we went too, and asked students about the project. Open Arts Objects is a project from the Art History department at the Open University which provides over 50 free films to support the teaching of Art History. Underpinned by the research of members of the Art History department at the Open University, OAO promo...
My OAO film: Renaissance Gifts
Просмотров 1714 года назад
We visited schools to help them make their own Open Arts Objets (OAO) film. This film features Renaissance Gifts: a print by Albrecht Dürer of The Rhinoceros and an Ottoman textile (both in the Metropolitan Museum, NY). Why not make your own film? Once you are done, you can share it on youtube (if you're a minor, only if you have permission from your parents). Mention OpenArtsArchive in a comme...
My OAO film: Aromatic Vessels
Просмотров 1914 года назад
We visited schools to help them make their own Open Arts Objets (OAO) film. This film features Aromatic Vessels: a drug jar (albarello) and an incense burner (both in the Victoria & Albert Museum, London). Why not make your own film? Once you are done, you can share it on youtube (if you're a minor, only if you have permission from your parents). Mention OpenArtsArchive in a comment and use the...
My OAO film: Porcelain Dish
Просмотров 1534 года назад
We visited schools to help them make their own Open Arts Objets (OAO) film. This film features a porcelain dish in the Victoria & Albert Museum, London. Why not make your own film? Once you are done, you can share it on youtube (if you're a minor, only if you have permission from your parents). Mention OpenArtsArchive in a comment and use the hashtag #myOAOfilm and we will add it to our playlis...
Open Arts Object: Bridget Riley, Kashan, 1984, National Museum Wales, Cardiff
Просмотров 3765 лет назад
Bryony White (Senior Curator of Modern & Contemporary Art) discussing Bridget Riley, Kashan, 1984, National Museum Wales, Cardiff.
Critical Term Modernism III - Modernism and contemporary art
Просмотров 3345 лет назад
Critical Term Modernism III - Modernism and contemporary art
Critical Term Modernism 1: What is Modernism?
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.5 лет назад
Critical Term Modernism 1: What is Modernism?
Critical Term Modernism II: Modernism and the avant-garde
Просмотров 3 тыс.5 лет назад
Critical Term Modernism II: Modernism and the avant-garde
why art history matters_Antonio David Fiore
Просмотров 976 лет назад
why art history matters_Antonio David Fiore
Bijin, or beautiful woman with a skull by Watanabe Nangaku
Просмотров 3976 лет назад
Bijin, or beautiful woman with a skull by Watanabe Nangaku
Evening shower at Ōhashi Bridge by Utagawa Hiroshige I
Просмотров 9 тыс.6 лет назад
Evening shower at Ōhashi Bridge by Utagawa Hiroshige I
Willie Lott’s House from the Stour by Constable
Просмотров 4036 лет назад
Willie Lott’s House from the Stour by Constable
Why art history matters_Leon Wainwright (OU)
Просмотров 706 лет назад
Why art history matters_Leon Wainwright (OU)
Why art history matters_Mark Fearbunce (OU alumnus)
Просмотров 1066 лет назад
Why art history matters_Mark Fearbunce (OU alumnus)
Why art history matters_Matt Wolferstan (artist)
Просмотров 616 лет назад
Why art history matters_Matt Wolferstan (artist)
Brilliant session. Very clear, informative and description of historical setting and influences.
Wordy as ever Woody :---)
Imagine how much he hated Britishers / Fatherless army.
Give it back to us you Brit Bastards
The shallow and colonial mindset of Europeans
Obviously illegal immigration has become a problem to us citizens. Your bias has aged well
Please don't say collection but say loot among the other things that the British stole from India!
Lovely!!
Excellent enlightenment!!! ❤❤❤ 🌷 Thank you Angeliki…
how bastardly she is glorifying the colonialists
One of my favourite paintings..it moves me so much..almost to tears..Bellini captures the mother-child bond so beautifully.❤❤
utterly disgusted at this video!
THORN IN THE SIDE OF BRITISH INTEREST- are you kidding me? these English men came to India for their own selfish reasons and then they be like the Indians are thorns in their path?
"QUITE A BRITISH PRESENCE'?! seriously?
6:53 Excuse me, Tipu Sultan was known as the Tiger of Mysore because he killed a tiger with his bare hands.
very carefully talked around the fact that Britain deliberately precipitated the downfall of that Indian stability.
It belongs to Indians and what she is saying is fake. They are taking the credits. The Britishers took it from tipu sultan after his death
5:05 A complex technological musical instrument can be made in India and is also she thinks technology is made there. She is just assuming things😂😂
This words and picture magazine article has no place on a video platform.
❤
This video is so British based in so many levels that it revived the old memory of colonialism 😂
Dear Respected teachers. Its good to see you both discussing things that interests me alot.
Stunning buildings - albeit I can see why it could be annoying for the Indian peoples to have these buildings imposed on them without having being asked - and for very different repressive reasons. But I look to the Berlin parliament building in germany - the rebuild of the richestag was designed by fosters and partners. British architecture is still recognised the world over as amongst the finest. Whilst it wasn’t originally intended to be so - I hope our Indian cousins can now look at the new deli development as a project designed for them by their British servants Much in the same way Fosters and partners were in berlin when they rebuilt the reichstag.
honestly, the arm does not seem like a perfect fit. why so much overhang at the base?
What a condescending person this woman is.
This was excellent. India preserves all their buildings lovingly so. To this day they still have bagpipe parades for high occasions. Victoria Monument at Calcutta is maintained like a well kept grave, and a tourist destination for the India Citizenry. It’s here on RUclips to see for yourself. The is a magnificent bridge very similar to the bridge at Sydney Harbor somewhere in India. It was constructed in 1934. India does have a rust issue due to the climate. Victorian Station in Bombay is a Cathedral of Transport. It’s a wee bit shabby and the tightness of once trimmed and manicured lawns and parterre aren’t up to snuff, but it’s all still used and the railroads are all still there……even many train cars are original and still running. The British proved themselves in the investments they made in India that are a blessing to this day. …..the liberal communists would of course poo poo me, but then what really have they ever created….other than giving everyone a hard time. Look at Europe today with its comical Fourth Reich,,the WEF. I’d take the British Empire any day of the week over the WEF and the EU. Feb 1,2024 T24
Distorted name badshahnama
No. In Farsi it is called padshah only. The term 'Badshah' originated due to the absence of the word 'p' in Arabic.
Let them keep it so they will be reminded everytime how Europeans were treated by the tiger of mysore. 😂😂😂 poor lads
lovely!
We killed tippo like muslim beggar on indian streets 😂😂, beggar begging for tippo properties 😭😂🤣 England will again rise and invade pakistan india etc
Thanks for the video prentation.
Crazy
it should be taken back to india IT BELONGS IN INDIA BRITISHERS ARE AND WERE DAMN LOOTERS!!
TIGER OF MYSORE , TIGER OF INDIA - TIPU
Chors , looteras
First of all, it's NOT Loacoon, it's Laocoon. Please learn to say the name of the artwork you are discussing. Secondly, it was not discovered by a farmer ploughing a field. It was discovered in an underground cavern in a vineyard - presumably a buried Roman building - together with other finds. There was no slow excavation from the earth; instead, they found the statues almost perfectly preserved, just sitting there waiting to be discovered. Here is what the architect Giuliano Sangallo's son Federico had to say about the discovery (she misquotes it somewhat, therefore here the correct text): 1506 Discovery of the Laocoon Letter written in 1566, 60 years later, by Francesco da Sangallo, son of the famous architect Giuliano Sangallo, describing this event. Both father and son were present at the scene of discovery, along with Michelangelo. “The first time I was in Rome when I was very young, the Pope [Julius II] was told about the discovery of some very beautiful statues in a vineyard near Santa Maria Maggiore [on the Esquiline Hill]. The pope ordered one of his officers to run and tell Giuliano da Sangallo to go and see them. He set off immediately. Since Michelangelo Buonarroti was always to be found at our house, my father having summoned him and having assigned him the commission of the Pope's tomb, my father wanted him to come along too. I joined up with my father and off we went. I had climbed down to where the statues were, when immediately my father said, 'That is the Laocoon, which Pliny mentions.' Then they dug the hole wider so that that they could pull the statue out. As soon as it was visible everyone started to draw, all the while discoursing on ancient things, chatting about the ones [ancient statues owned by the Medici] in Florence." Letter of Francesco da Sangallo, quoted in Leonard Barkan, Unearthing the Past: Archaeology and Aesthetics in the Making of Renaissance Culture (1999), p. 3
ye log apne aap ko sabhy khte hn pr inohne to hmare khilone b ni chode proud to be indian 🙏🙏
<3
My name is Catholic Christian 😇
It’s crazy how individuals with Indian heritage believe the possession of this artifact is justified. Yes, it is a war trophy it’s been over 200 years give that shxt back to the people of Southern India!
Very interesting. Thank you for the information.
Interesting and beauiful place!
Tippu the childish played with this toy, and he got fake title Tiger of Mysore 😂😂
This woman's accent is so obnoxiously refined that I can hardly understand or stand it.
The "British Museum" is really a depot for storing and gloat over the plunder, in the form of priceless historical, cultural, and art treasures (and a lot of junk, too), which the UK pillaged, pilfered, or swindled from the nations they conquered through brutality and chicanery. They have absolutely no right or just claim to 80 percent of the spoils they marauded from those places like common thugs.
The British had arrived in the early 17th century as “traders”. Yeah, way to gloss over what the British were really doing meanwhile being completely condescending of other cultures for the entire rest of the video about ‘quaint’ other cultures. Typical British attitude, fawning over ‘quaint’ art that they looted, sacked and stole from other advanced cultures while refusing to give them back because they are aware that their museums would be completely void of anything interesting to see because all of what was genuinely considered having artistic merit and beautiful would be gone.. imperialism lives on! Look what savages can make, awww... meanwhile the British empire was so civilized murdering millions upon millions.. but drinking tea.. that they also stole.
Very nice descritpion. Thank you for sharing and also sharing your personal view on the poppy!
I have an early facsimile of the Tokaido Road series purchased in Japan in the 1920s that is intact in the original fan fold binding that shows the prints in their proper sequence. I always wondered if a museum or collector would value the book as it shows how the series was first presented to the buyer of that series.
Wow. Bravo Well said!
I was gonna address the arm but she brought it to light, respect 🙏