- Видео 59
- Просмотров 63 162
Andrew Graham-Dixon
Добавлен 28 апр 2023
Award-winning Art Historian, Author, Broadcaster and Lecturer Andrew Graham-Dixon is here to tell you all you need to know about art. This channel will feature short videos exploring art and sculpture, as well as clips from Andrew's extensive archive of broadcasts, gallery tours, interviews and and recorded lectures.
To see more of Andrew's work, you can join his website - membership is £25 per year (£17.50 for students) and the benefits include access to over a thousand articles written during the course of his career, an ever-changing monthly rotation of archive broadcasts, an exclusive monthly members' video and newsletter on the first of every month, and and access to all previous monthly videos and gallery tours.
To see more of Andrew's work, you can join his website - membership is £25 per year (£17.50 for students) and the benefits include access to over a thousand articles written during the course of his career, an ever-changing monthly rotation of archive broadcasts, an exclusive monthly members' video and newsletter on the first of every month, and and access to all previous monthly videos and gallery tours.
Giotto - The Kiss of Judas
In 'All You Need to Know About Art' - art historian, author and presenter Andrew Graham-Dixon discusses a variety of iconic works of art, and explores the story behind them, and their meaning.
For more information and resources, go to www.andrewgrahamdixon.com
For more information and resources, go to www.andrewgrahamdixon.com
Просмотров: 263
Видео
Pisano - The Nativity
Просмотров 3507 часов назад
In 'All You Need to Know About Art' - art historian, author and presenter Andrew Graham-Dixon discusses a variety of iconic works of art, and explores the story behind them, and their meaning.
BOMBERG AUERBACH
Просмотров 3,6 тыс.14 дней назад
Andrew visits the Daniel Katz Gallery in London to see the first ever exhibition featuring the work of David Bomberg and his past student Frank Auerbach. The exhibition is open until the 18th October 2024 - so do go and see it if you can! See more exclusive gallery tours by becoming a member at www.andrewgrahamdixon.com
BOMBERG AUERBACH at the Daniel Katz Gallery
Просмотров 71928 дней назад
Andrew visits the Daniel Katz Gallery in London to see the first ever exhibition featuring the work of David Bomberg and his past student Frank Auerbach. The exhibition is open until the 18th October 2024 - so do go and see it if you can! This is just a short taster of a longer video tour, which will be available to view soon at www.andrewgrahamdixon.com
AGD Q&A 31 - How important is a frame to a painting?
Просмотров 434Месяц назад
Andrew answers questions sent in by curious members of the public.. on everything from frescoes to fantasy dinner parties! So, how important is a frame to a painting? Andrew considers how different works of art meet the outside world.
AGD Q&A 30 - What is the vase in the background of your videos and zoom talks?
Просмотров 244Месяц назад
Andrew answers questions sent in by curious members of the public.. on everything from frescoes to fantasy dinner parties! But what is that vase on the chart table behind him?
AGD Q&A 29 - Which work would you choose to represent the threshold between classical and modern?
Просмотров 337Месяц назад
Andrew Graham-Dixon answers questions sent in by curious members of the public.. on everything from frescoes to fantasy dinner parties! But which work of art would Andrew choose to reflect on the point of change in art from classical to modern?
AGD Q&A 28 - Should the viewer be told if a work of art is a digital replica, and does it matter?
Просмотров 3492 месяца назад
Andrew Graham-Dixon answers questions sent in by curious members of the public.. on everything from frescoes to fantasy dinner parties! Jenny asked whether viewers should be informed if they are looking at a digital replica, and whether it matters - especially if it is being viewed in context?
AGD Q&A 27 - How should one appreciate religious art, without being religious?
Просмотров 3532 месяца назад
Andrew Graham-Dixon answers questions sent in by curious members of the public.. on everything from frescoes to fantasy dinner parties! This one is about how to appreciate religious art, if you are not religious..
Blake Cottage
Просмотров 8782 месяца назад
Andrew visits Blake Cottage in Felpham to discuss the Blake Trust conservation project with Chairperson Doug Nicholls. This is a short taster of a longer video, which is available to view on www.andrewgrahamdixon.com for members of Andrew's website. Membership costs just £25 per year (with a discount for students), and includes a monthly video from Andrew, exclusive video tours, access to all p...
Roger Mayne: Youth, at The Courtauld Gallery
Просмотров 7743 месяца назад
Andrew takes a look at The Courtauld's first ever photography exhibition - Roger Mayne: Youth; with images of childhood full of hope and love, in a bombed out 1950's and 1960's London. This is a short taster of a longer video, which is one of many available to view on www.andrewgrahamdixon.com for members of Andrew's website. Membership costs just £25 per year (with a discount for students), an...
The Courtauld
Просмотров 3,8 тыс.3 месяца назад
Andrew gives a flying tour of the top floor of The Courtauld galleries, and their new display of late nineteenth and early twentieth century French masterpieces. This is a short taster of a longer video, which is one of many available to view on www.andrewgrahamdixon.com for members of Andrew's website. Membership costs just £25 per year (with a discount for students), and the benefits include ...
Grayson Perry - Essex House Tapestries: The Life of Julie Cope, at The Arc, Winchester
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.4 месяца назад
Andrew visits a beautiful and thought-provoking Grayson Perry exhibition at The Arc in Winchester. This is a short taster of the whole exclusive video tour, which is available to view on www.andrewgrahamdixon.com for members of Andrew's website. Membership costs just £25 per year (with a discount for students), and includes a monthly video from Andrew, many exclusive video tours, access to a mo...
Michelangelo at The British Museum
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Andrew visits the press event for 'Michelangelo; The Last Decades' at The British Museum. This video was created as a members' monthly video for Andrew's website, for May 2024. This is a short taster of a longer video, which is available to view on www.andrewgrahamdixon.com for members of Andrew's website. Membership costs just £25 per year (with a discount for students), and includes a monthly...
Imperial War Museum, London
Просмотров 9966 месяцев назад
Andrew explores the new galleries at the Imperial War Museum in London, home to their extraordinary collection of art, video and photography. This is a short taster of a much longer video, which is available to view on www.andrewgrahamdixon.com for members of Andrew's website. Membership costs just £25 per year (with a discount for students), and the benefits include a monthly video from Andrew...
Frans Hals at the National Gallery
Просмотров 11 тыс.9 месяцев назад
Frans Hals at the National Gallery
Piero della Francesca - Diptych of Federico da Montefeltro and Battista Sforza
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.Год назад
Piero della Francesca - Diptych of Federico da Montefeltro and Battista Sforza
Constable, the Dark Side - at The Arc, Winchester
Просмотров 809Год назад
Constable, the Dark Side - at The Arc, Winchester
Glorious Goodwood - a tour of the collection at Goodwood House
Просмотров 4,6 тыс.Год назад
Glorious Goodwood - a tour of the collection at Goodwood House
AGD Q&A 26 - How Scripted are your Documentaries?
Просмотров 972Год назад
AGD Q&A 26 - How Scripted are your Documentaries?
AGD Q&A 25 - What don't you like about Munch?
Просмотров 478Год назад
AGD Q&A 25 - What don't you like about Munch?
Thank you!
They weren't on the same page bro
English accent mf ucker...
No no van gogh is ur fiend
Nobody bro....
Great video. Loved it. Next time, use a radio microphone.
I would go but is in London
And everything changes...hummm..!
Sickert, Bomberg, Auerbach and Kossof - a great lineage.
Won't be in UK, but really did enjoy the overview. Thank you.
If only I was there, in London. I hope next year and definitely ❤ see those famous impressionist paintings on display!
Thanks Andrew for all your work. You have taken me on many journeys and I really appreciate it.
For me it has to be Turner's Fighting Temeraire both in subject matter and technique. It is the epitome of 'out with the old, in with the new'.
Auerbach is still alive to this day I believe 🤔 living in London in his 90’s I think?
He is indeed (93 years young), and there's a brilliant little exhibition of some of his fantastic London paintings currently at Offer Waterman Gallery in St George St, off Regents St, (until early Dec) which I have seen already and will be visiting again several more times before it ends!
I think the main issue here is both authenticity and transparency. We live in a world where important art is increasingly held as a commodity for the obscenly rich, often held in the likes of freeports. The idea of queuing to see a copy is almost laughable. For example, imagine how it could impact on the 'pilgrims' travelling to the Louvre to see the Mona Lisa (regardless of how interested they are in the painting and its history) if they found they had been duped into seeing a reproduction. Then you have the question of whether the experience of going to the gallery/museum is more important than the opportunity to connect with the actual object. We live in a digital world already; surely these places should be a sanctuary from it.
Bomberg was born in Birmingham not the east end of London!
Fantastic! Thanks, Andrew!
Wonderful, thank you
Yes i could happily live with all those paintings and sketches..fantastic.. best nugget.
Very inspiring!
Excellent work as always. You’re almost too good at what you do.
Been a fan of your work since watching your series on the Renaissance as a kid. Your enthusiasm really is infectious!
love his enthusiasm and great art!
Interesting... Russian painter Vasily Vereshchagin (the author of "The Apotheosis of War" (1871) considered frames to be the parts of the paintings, as if it's one inseparable thing 🤔
Auerbach is the greatest living British painter in my humble opinion
I just found your video on my homepage and love the style. Please continue!
Superb, I will have to call by and take a look. Daniel Katz Gallery own one of my favourite Frank Auerbach early drawings, I saw it close up at the Tate a few years ago. A self portrait from about 1958 on paper in chalk and charcoal. The reworking of the drawing and resulting texture, where he patches on new pieces of paper are extraordinary. It gives the portrait an almost three dimensional appearance.
❤
Sometimes, no frame is not a bad idea, especially for modern art. That is how Morandi used to hang his own paintings in his studio. Also Modigliani
I would choose Courbet's Burial at Ornans. Jericho's Raft of the Medusa is still a history painting
Andrew ive seen images of paintings online without a frame and I wasnt impressed with them. Then I see the same painting with a frame and I absolutely love it.
A man surrounded by good taste indeed!💫
When did we first start framing pictures and why?
Hello there, "I've checked out your RUclips channel and loved your video-it's really well-made, and the thumbnail is eye-catching! However, I've noticed a few issues that might be affecting your views and subscriber growth. Would you like to discuss how we can improve your channel's performance?" Thank you
Hello there, "I've checked out your RUclips channel and loved your video-it's really well-made, and the thumbnail is eye-catching! However, I've noticed a few issues that might be affecting your views and subscriber growth. Would you like to discuss how we can improve your channel's performance?" Thank you
Inspired choice. I thought of the Black Paintings by Goya around the same time and for approximately the same sense of alienation and insignificance which were then completely new. Both of these conceptual choices would be wiser than the more typical critical response centered on the shift in technique away from realism and toward abstraction after the invention of photography. Certainly by the time we get to Slave Ship in 1840 we have a fully modern painting well before French impressionism.
"a fishbone stuck in the throat of art" - great phrase
Hi Andrew ....love your works, your personality....
Good Christian art may even open that door for you into the spiritual world. Perhaps this is the 'way in' you have been missing?
I was wondering: When the Romans made copies of Greek staues, did they ask themselves the same question?
A superb answer to an excellent question.
I can deny my own religiosity but that hasn’t stopped me enjoying your output of the last 30 odd years
I suppose that if an artwork is made for religious art, then it will be made in love, something readily appreciated - there should be an extra high degree of quality about the work - such as masons who carved designs which only God could see. If it is made for contemplation and to last a long time, there should be something rich to hold the interest. As with all art, the viewer can be asking themselves what is their personal visceral reaction and what it reminds them of. Usually, religions will be tied to great works of literature such as the Bible, which are worth appreciating in themselves as artworks, and then looking to see how the words become expressed in pictures is always fascinating as a viewer.
Surely the non religious can appreciate the beauty of religious art and feel the weight of the devotion that created it?
The Sistine Chapel is a classic example of what the power of art can do to enhance religion.
Saw hals exhibition at rijksmuseum and fell in love with his work. Like you say its like meeting people from the past. So much expression in the paintings you can feel their personalities
How far a culture has fallen when someone like Guston is exalted and emblematic of presumably that culture’s soul. Holy crap.
That look at about 5:58. When one recognizes of true lover of art for another.
Amazing love thx for sharing. These arts are really inspiring and beautiful.
Go to Musée d’Orsay, Paris in Paris …😊