I so wished they all could have known.. all that they gave to the world... you can't help but love them all.. this show was done so well.. thank you ever so much..
I had this on like a 5 VHS set when I was a little kid! I'm in my 30s now and sought it out to watch again. So glad to see it accessible and available here.
Watching both parts of this gem of a documentary was like watching the lives of a bunch of very near and dear friends, feeling happy for their joys and feeling sad for their sorrows. A simple thank you wont suffice for what you have given us, dear Bruce Alfred.
I watched both parts. For sure, one of the best documentary I ever seen on Impressionist painting with its leading artists and their respective lives; .. thanks for sharing !
I loved learning what was going on in these artists' lives that corresponded to their paintings and changes in painting styles. The Impressionists are so deeply ingrained in our consciousness, that this experience was like hearing stories about one's own family and friends. For those who find it depressing, that is life. You get old, experience infirmity and death. And within this cycle, the poverty, successes, loss and loneliness are part and parcel of each story. All the painters are so heroic, and here their flaws are exposed. Thank you for the honesty of the presentation. I just wish Mary Cassatt were included more.
@@njmccormackgmail True. She was, in fact, an American, but to me, one of the greatest Impressionists. I read that Degas admired her. They were friends. I'm watching Part 1. Maybe it will touch more on that.
I find all impressionist art fresh and genuine.With the exception of some early works of Cezanne,it rejoices the true beauty of life and nature ..of the human spirit and of the glorious expressions around us through their eyes..
I just retired and now I'm finding time to dig a little bit in the education that I missed growing up, I was just wondering where all the women artists were and you mentioned one I am fixing to look it up, are there more lady artists that I need to check out .thanks for the info
It opens a new perspective and approach to life after I get more and more about the life of impressionists and their struggles, work and success. Thank you for posting❤
I have enjoyed watching this documentary & getting to see the magnificent art works. Very insightful approach to the group of painters who would be brave enough to change our outlook & appreciation of art, despite the immense obsticles they faced.
Era errato et e 5,000 ⅘errato re errore 5,000 errato 5,000 erre 4th errato 5,000 e re e tre⁴⅘eevee⁴4th 5,000 4 e r 5,000 4 5,000 4th eevee 5,000 5,000 errore 5,000 e e 5,000 e 5,000 errore 5,000 erre erre e r r e 5,000 e 4th 5,000 ⅘errori e 5,000 e 5,000 e aaae e5 5,000 erre ⁴⅘⅘erre 5,000 e errori 5,000 e errori errori ⅘5,000 a errore e 5,000 5,000 e errato⁴5ae tree 5,000 4th 5,000 e erre 5 4th e r re 5,000 errore re 5a5aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaare aaaaaaaa aaa0⁵⁵55555⁵⁵⁵r 55⁵4⁵5⁵⁵⁵555 5,000 55⁵⁵55r5⁵⁵55⁵5⁵5 troppo 555 try 5e 55⁵5 r 55⁵⁵5 ⁵5 5,000 55 5,000 ⁵⁵r⁵e55e⁵55⁵ry r r⁵r a55 5 r 55⁵5 et 5⁵6a ry 5a⁵55 r r 5545a55 r r 5 et ry 5 5555 ry 55⁵5⁵e 5,000 r r r e r ar55a4⁵⁵55 tra⁵5,000 55⁵55 5 e 55⁵⁵55 ry r 5 55⁵555⁵try5⁵5555⁵r 555 5,000 4⁵⁵5 5a⁵⁵5 ⁵55 r⁵5 r 5 4th⁵5 5,000 a⁵a ⁵a555 5 r ⁵a5 e!5a!ry 5 t t⁵⁵5e5 5a55 r⁵6a5r e5⁵5a55e⁵⁵et e r t 5ae 5,000 et 4th! 5e 5,000 r e5a r t ⁵e tre e5 5,000 5 r⁵5,000 r tra 5 r t⁵5⁵try e t et⁵5,000 5,000 5 ry⁵e 5,000 et 5!e 5,000 55r ttry5555⁵⁵5,000 5 et 5,000 tra⁵⁵55 et 5 e⁵erre rr5 r et e r t et e tre ry⁵t er5e⁵r 5ee⁵try e⁵⁵5 et 5a⁵e⁵r 5,000 5ee r⁵⁵5e⁵et errori erto 5 et e r t r e r⁵5 tra 5 5,000⁵e 55e⁵5e r 5,000 5a errori 5 ry 5 r 55 try r 45 5,000⁵r r e 5,000 5,000 e⁵5a e 5!!5e errori 5e5et r e r e a!!! 5 5,000 r5 r! E t try et e 5,000 55⁵a⁵! ⁵5 5,000 et e 5 e et e r⁵erre⁵e e r 5 r⁵e 5,000⁵e 5,000 e⁵ry e r e et 5,000 et a5 ⁵ry 5⁵5a e e ⁵e55 5,000 e⁵r et e 5,000 r e !e 5 5e ry⁵5a⁵e55 ⁵5ae⁵⁵e5e⁵6ae 5,000 ee⁵e ry⁵e etruschi e 5 e⁵e reti e ⁵e5e⁵e r e5⁵e5e e5 e! Et e e 5,000 e5⁵e55a 5,000 e⁵e⁵r 5 e! Errori e e ⁵et 5a5e ⁵⁵e r e⁵5,000 5a⁵⁵5 ⁵e⁵⁵e5e⁵a⁵⁵e55 tre 5,000 55 e e6ae r e455 r 5 5,000 e⁵⁵e5⁵5,000 5 re⁵⁵t 5,000 e e⁵e⁵e⁵5e5⁵e 5,000⁵5 ⁵e e! T 5e55aaaa5aerrore et e r e r et! E ea era e e5!!!!!!! E e5a5aa5a e e 5,000 e 5⁵e rerum e⁵ae e⁵t errori t e5e5a e 5e⁵55 te et 5a5!! E⁵et 5 5!!!5ea ry a5a! E et et re e55 t t r et!! E et a5ae!a te 5 et et 5aet e 5e!aaaaaa!e5aa⁵e e5e5a! Errori⁵et⁵te! Aa! Et⁵et ar⁵tre !!!a a t aaa4 !! Errori! 5aa !!e!ea r5ae5e⁵a!a te e 5r ry errore e!!aa re e⁵e⁵e 5a ry ! Et 5aa5errori 5ae e⁵!e⁵!ae 5a ry errore e 5ae55 5a e 5a et ⁵errato try 5a r r 55aa! Ry 5e55ae5e5a 5 r 5e 5a r 5aaaeet⁵e !! A5er5 retta e 5a 5 et 5e 5,000 e 5a e te e r5 e55e r 5 !! T et e! Et errori 5a errori ry 5e5a! T ry e55 5a e t e⁵et!!e⁵e e et 5 ry e 5a e 5aee 5a 5!e e5e e⁵et et! Errori e4!55 e 5 e r e et 5a e re e r r 5 !5 5a e!a⁵⁵5a5a et 5a 5 et⁵5!r errato et et 5 ry e5a⁵5a a!55e5 et e5 t r 5 5,000 r 5a r5r!a ry t a5 re e5 5a!!a⁵e5a et! A!! Ry e! A5ae 4th 4th eyes! Te! E! Errori e5 4th e5ea errori errori te e errori et t e r5! E t et e errori e e t 5 erre!! Etruschi ry e5e55 et e5aaae e eevee erre r55 errori eaa et r e e tre e errori r a erre a! Et e a r ! R e 5a !!!a!5ae e e!5e e 5aet 5ae55 ry ry!!!a e e5ae ! ⁵tra e⁵5 55 et 5 ! Ry try 4th ry et et! A r 5a et 55 r e r 54 5,000 t t r et 5 et 5,000 erano 5 et et r a5a55aa! E 5 5a e5e5!e e⁵e e! Et et t e!!aae⁵r tra t ere 55a5a erre e a5 errori 5a56at 5,000 a5e55 re e5 !!a et 5e r 5 ⁵5 et 5 5,000 et 5 et⁵er5 r 4 r r 5a 5a5a! Et re e! E 5 e 4th et! T aa5 5,000 a5 5 re e t et 5 r 5,000 e55 5a aaa r ra r 555a et r et r r rr5a r r r t ar r t r r try r 5reevee r r et r rr et et r were 5a r rr r aar r r t t rrrr et r rr t 5rrr et 55aar rr ere 4r tre 5arr55ret rrrrrrraa e r et r 5a r r r r5a r tre 4a erre rr re r e erto y r et re rrrrr tre 5a re raa5rr5a6a5 5 5 5
A wonderfully captured review of impressionist art , I am firmly attached to these artist , and found my home with Van Gogh, without the Degas, Monet and others, Van Gogh would not have found his way ,
What a great pair of doc's, thanks a lot for putting it up. Like others have said this is the best one I've seen on the impressionists and doesn't just repeat the same old stuff. Somehow it's comforting to know they were so human. I'm really glad they gave Cassat her due instead of just an honorable mention.
By the time photography was invented, artists should have moved away from doing photo realistic paintings towards a more flowing expression of mood, color and texture. The Impressionists did that and made paintings that looked like images from out of a dream.
@Ronald Redface Then you may not be seeing it clearly. It is never about the painting. It is about how you feel that matters. Great art is only great because of the energies the artist put into his work. That is why so much modern art is shit, because the artist literally put shit in it. We consume the feelings the artist put into his work. Good or bad.
@@ArtHistorywithAlder Can anyone please help me in identifying a particular artist? I saw a painting (of an original) on the wall of a home on an episode of "COLUMBO" (of all places) and I am sure it is painted by a noted impressionist artist but for all my scrolling through hundreds of great works of art, I cannot find this painting for the life of me and it's driving me crazy! The painting depicts white (square) homes and trees. It looks like an oil painting. If anyone thinks they might be able to help me, you can see this painting on (YT) "Watch it for Days" channel. It is featured in the episode listed in her menu "Suitable for Framing (1971) Columbo - Deep Dive Review" @ timestamp 4:14. Thank you very much for your time if you're up to this challenge and think you might be able to shed some light on who this artist might be.💓🖼🖌
This was excellent. Most of what I know about the Impressionists I have learned from Waldemar and having the access to the Chicago, which has some of the most monumental works. This was he first time I have happened on this, and with a favorite voice.
Thank you so much for this. I just discovered today that my painting style is impressionism. Everytime I search for reference in pinterest, monet paintings are suggested and I didnt mind it for months. Ive been questioning my art style. These painters persisted and didnt give up on their passion until they die. 💛
Thank you so much for sharing this wonderful documentary about the Impressionists. I have read a lot of books on them but the way the documentary is set out is so interesting and educational. Clear and concise..it should be a tool in the classroom. Sheila
This is the most extraordinary documentary about these painters which I have ever seen. I first discovered art through the Impressionist painters. Our Art Institute in Chicago has one of the largest collections of Impressionist Art anywhere in the world (I am told). I have seen some of these very paintings in person, and consider that experience among the most moving in my life. Thank you for this jewel!
Excellent. The most detailed, most incisive, most interesting of the many documentaries about these ground-breaking artists. Certainly the most professionally produced film as well as the most beautiful to look at.
I'm so glad I took my mother's + GOD rest her soul + advice when I told her I wanted to become an artist. She told me to go to university and get my 'bread and butter' degrees of which I did (Education/Engineering Design) to earn a good living but go back to school and pick up my AFA and journalism degrees which I also did. Mom was RIGHT!!!
Simply and totally SUBLIME beyond excellent!!! Artists love the insights into the lives of their idols!!! Even more if on technical insights and their ideas!!
Brilliant programme, fascinating- I was so engrossed I could not move to switch on the heating or make a coffee ! Great artists, respectfully remembered in a great film. Merci beaucoup.
Wonderful, moving, rich and informative completely new approach to Impressionism. Two additions only: Renoir was also anti Semitic all along despite the fact that his most important patrons when he was starting out were Jewish-the Effrussi and the Rothschild family. Another. Fact concerning Dega’s last years: he took up photography and photographed a great many photos while walking the streets of Paris.
Excellent. The most detailed, most incisive, most interesting of the many documentaries about these ground-breaking artists. Certainly the most professionally produced film as well as the most beautiful to look at.
A superb exposition of Impressionism embedded with the personal life stories of the key artist figures of the time .Great research and excellent presentation.
Thank you. This and part 1, are a great contribution to the art making/loving community. This is the kind of thing I wish I could have seen in high school (45 years ago).
Side note: Some of the talking heads commentary shots are really nicely lit, almost like paintings. Especially Anne Higonnett. Well-done in all departments.
You probably dont give a damn but does any of you know a tool to log back into an Instagram account?? I was dumb forgot the account password. I love any help you can give me.
@Kolton Jeffrey Thanks so much for your reply. I found the site on google and im in the hacking process now. I see it takes a while so I will reply here later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
The thought of a group of youthful men (and a woman) to strike against the establishment, filled with vigour and vision. Having the odds stacked against them, they would face years of rejection and destitution Decades would have passed to achieve fame and riches only in the twilight of their lives. Growing old together means to see each other go. One after another. Memories of youthful laughter would have gone through Monet’s mind, only for him to realise he lives in the 1920s and no longer in the 1860s. His time had passed My god what a life to have lived
Unfortunately, they got their, financial breakthroughs, in their latter years, and that was kinda sad, to see, I think that is me as well, I am getting older, and have struggled to overcome the financial breakthrough, that I would have liked to see, come to pass, maybe I can succeed in the very near future! This inspires me greatly though!!!!!
Its always somewhat surprising when the age is mentioned when someone died, in that era, especially in the case of Berthe Morrissot. 54, I thought she was múch older. In another docu it was said that young peoples did everything they cóuld to look older so they would be accepted more / sooner in the establishment. The fashion of that era certainly also helped.
Reached heights of excellence in documentation.Very intense.They gave their lives to art,& art repaid them by proffering immortality .Thanks from India.
Bravo! Excellent documentary. I feel so full of life seeing such beautiful works and knowing the painters a little more than I did. ".. how brave they were, how original they were.." ; "....what they did was extraordinarily brave." indeed, we should be walking around with the likeness of these individuals on our t-shirts not of some commie guerrilla war monger. They were the real revolutionaries, the brave, the ones who changed the world for the better, with beauty. Bravo!
I have enjoyed this very much. I cannot see why there is no mention of Alfred Sisley who studied at The Gleyre Attelier with Monet Bazille and Renoir and exhibiting in al the Impresionist group exhibitions. So why no Sislet?
...and here I thought I was the only artist who thought about quitting this craziness of art and throwing everything away...ha! Pretty damn inspiring to know that the masters went through the same emotional diseases that practically all artists suffer from...frustration, anger and hopelessness. Well I've got news for all artists who dare to think this way...shut the hell up, muster up the courage and get your brushes in hand and do not fkn stop being an artist!
Part off my 8 years Study off Master Artist, from Rembrandt to Impressionist. Master Thesis. Via NYU. They allowed me this inordinate time, for which I am forever Grateful. Thank You. Best School of Diversity.🇩🇰🇺🇸🦅🗽🎆 We cannot allow political Lock Down steal our Culture through the world. Artist , Music , Visual and Science , presevere. " They did!!"🇺🇸🇩🇰🦅🗽🎆🎨 Pissarro one off my favorites. So much in his work was is even today overlooked.🌝🎨Surperior documentry. Thank You.🎆 Mary Cassatt, took Impressionism to America. Most impressivise her Pastels in Philadelphia Art Museum. Not enough press has been forwarded to her support off French Impressionist moment , hence transferred to America, and future painters there.🇩🇰🇺🇸🎨🌡️Their , eventually setting out separately, gave each an avenue off individual experimentation. Produced immence works off originality. My mentor, William Stanley Hayter, in Paris , 1983, declared, no one in my Atelier 17 copies, but explore their inner visions. That produces Art.🎨 So true.👀 Thanks Bruce Alfred.🌷
I remember time in school where I would be touring one museum after the next. All kinds of art, but mainly painting of one kind or another. Impressionism was yet another artistic departure. I always liked realism. Filling in the gaps is OK with music, but not with canvas and brush.
This documentary is so beautiful, so great 😊 I searched part 1 of " The Impresionists Volume 1 " as i only found this " volume 2 " I searched allot but can't find it. Does someone have a link please ? Thank you 😊
This documentary while superb makes me glad to be alive in 2021 sans Covid-19. While so many things in the 19th century were nice medical science was barely out of the Middle Ages; people died like flies. Death and disease was everywhere. In my opinion, and I'm quite sure you will disagree, but in light of all we 'moderns' understand we should be about the business of making our world much better for everyone than we are doing now. Life could be so beautiful if we all realize that we're all in the same 'boat.'
Especially when you think that Vincent Van Gogh painted nearly 900 works of art and some 2,100 other pieces of artwork, all in the short time span of 10 yrs.💓🖼💓
All through this I kept wondering: WHO produced this magnificent documentary? Smithsonian, perhaps? PBS? NO, it was A & E, now the purveyor of idiotic "reality TV" claptrap. What the hell happened?
The reason for this explosion of the movement of 'Impressionism" was due to the revolutionary development of tube paint. Before, artists had to make their own colors by crushing and grinding pigments and oils in their homes or studios to get the desired colors; often they did this in the field to get the more exact colors in nature; and it was labor-intensive; and since impressionists used the technique of impasto, involving mounds of paint to create the illusions they sought, meaning more paint, and more labor to create enough paint to have at their disposal while the day's light was available. However, with the development of tube paint in 1841; particular, with the paint manufacturer, Windsor & Newton, in their development tubed oil paint in 1842, the ability for impressionists to paint outdoors to capture the light that was the distinctive factor of 'Impressionism', was a revolutionary product that was advantageous for the 'movement' to grow. The metal paint tube was first invented by American oil painter John Goffe Rand as a way of transporting paints to use outside. Once his patent was secured, Winsor added one essential improvement to this design: the all-important screw cap. Thus the paint tube we know and love was born. Thus, the Impressionist movement exploded.
Amazing he lived so long. Working all day and sleeping close to your materials when you work in oils is very bad for you. Not to mention the partying they all seemed to do. 😏
My Starry Night Yarn Painting Time Lapse so far...🙂🧶🎨👍🏻 1. The Moon, Stars, & Venus ruclips.net/video/ccnOlrB9rJk/видео.html 2. The Swirling Wind ruclips.net/video/-tRYCg2nnms/видео.html 3. The Cypress Tree ruclips.net/video/yRy8Io64ZoE/видео.html 4. The Church & Village ruclips.net/video/9lKLekxhJGE/видео.html
Hello, hope all is well with everyone, I have an early work from Monet, the year of 1891 number 281, from the Chicago Art institute 1891, haystacks setting sun, is this of any value? Please let me know,
I so wished they all could have known.. all that they gave to the world... you can't help but love them all.. this show was done so well.. thank you ever so much..
I had this on like a 5 VHS set when I was a little kid!
I'm in my 30s now and sought it out to watch again. So glad to see it accessible and available here.
Watching both parts of this gem of a documentary was like watching the lives of a bunch of very near and dear friends, feeling happy for their joys and feeling sad for their sorrows. A simple thank you wont suffice for what you have given us, dear Bruce Alfred.
I watched both parts. For sure, one of the best documentary I ever seen on Impressionist painting with its leading artists and their respective lives; .. thanks for sharing !
I loved learning what was going on in these artists' lives that corresponded to their paintings and changes in painting styles. The Impressionists are so deeply ingrained in our consciousness, that this experience was like hearing stories about one's own family and friends. For those who find it depressing, that is life. You get old, experience infirmity and death. And within this cycle, the poverty, successes, loss and loneliness are part and parcel of each story. All the painters are so heroic, and here their flaws are exposed. Thank you for the honesty of the presentation. I just wish Mary Cassatt were included more.
She was not a founder of Impressionism so she has less screen time. She could have a separate documentary about her.
@@njmccormackgmail True. She was, in fact, an American, but to me, one of the greatest Impressionists. I read that Degas admired her. They were friends. I'm watching Part 1. Maybe it will touch more on that.
I find all impressionist art fresh and genuine.With the exception of some early works of Cezanne,it rejoices the true beauty of life and nature ..of the human spirit and of the glorious expressions around us through their eyes..
I just retired and now I'm finding time to dig a little bit in the education that I missed growing up, I was just wondering where all the women artists were and you mentioned one I am fixing to look it up, are there more lady artists that I need to check out .thanks for the info
Wow I had no idea they all hung out together and started painting impressionism at my age. It makes them a little more relatable.
It opens a new perspective and approach to life after I get more and more about the life of impressionists and their struggles, work and success. Thank you for posting❤
What a WONDERFUL documentary sires - i listened to every word - I’ll be 81, this coming January - Painting/Art has been my mistress -
Happy birthday!
I have enjoyed watching this documentary & getting to see the magnificent art works. Very insightful approach to the group of painters who would be brave enough to change our outlook & appreciation of art, despite the immense obsticles they faced.
I feel as though I am IN the paintings. The music and the voice do honor to these artists.
Thank you.. Extremely interesting, enlightening, educational and inspiring. Where would we have been without these amazing art revolutionaries?
Words cannot express the joy you have given me in this incredible documentary. Merci!
Yeah that’s I’m pretty
Era errato et e 5,000 ⅘errato re errore 5,000 errato 5,000 erre 4th errato 5,000 e re e tre⁴⅘eevee⁴4th 5,000 4 e r 5,000 4 5,000 4th eevee 5,000 5,000 errore 5,000 e e 5,000 e 5,000 errore 5,000 erre erre e r r e 5,000 e 4th 5,000 ⅘errori e 5,000 e 5,000 e aaae e5 5,000 erre ⁴⅘⅘erre 5,000 e errori 5,000 e errori errori ⅘5,000 a errore e 5,000 5,000 e errato⁴5ae tree 5,000 4th 5,000 e erre 5 4th e r re 5,000 errore re 5a5aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaare aaaaaaaa aaa0⁵⁵55555⁵⁵⁵r 55⁵4⁵5⁵⁵⁵555 5,000 55⁵⁵55r5⁵⁵55⁵5⁵5 troppo 555 try 5e 55⁵5 r 55⁵⁵5 ⁵5 5,000 55 5,000 ⁵⁵r⁵e55e⁵55⁵ry r r⁵r a55 5 r 55⁵5 et 5⁵6a ry 5a⁵55 r r 5545a55 r r 5 et ry 5 5555 ry 55⁵5⁵e 5,000 r r r e r ar55a4⁵⁵55 tra⁵5,000 55⁵55 5 e 55⁵⁵55 ry r 5 55⁵555⁵try5⁵5555⁵r 555 5,000 4⁵⁵5 5a⁵⁵5 ⁵55 r⁵5 r 5 4th⁵5 5,000 a⁵a ⁵a555 5 r ⁵a5 e!5a!ry 5 t t⁵⁵5e5 5a55 r⁵6a5r e5⁵5a55e⁵⁵et e r t 5ae 5,000 et 4th! 5e 5,000 r e5a r t ⁵e tre e5 5,000 5 r⁵5,000 r tra 5 r t⁵5⁵try e t et⁵5,000 5,000 5 ry⁵e 5,000 et 5!e 5,000 55r ttry5555⁵⁵5,000 5 et 5,000 tra⁵⁵55 et 5 e⁵erre rr5 r et e r t et e tre ry⁵t er5e⁵r 5ee⁵try e⁵⁵5 et 5a⁵e⁵r 5,000 5ee r⁵⁵5e⁵et errori erto 5 et e r t r e r⁵5 tra 5 5,000⁵e 55e⁵5e r 5,000 5a errori 5 ry 5 r 55 try r 45 5,000⁵r r e 5,000 5,000 e⁵5a e 5!!5e errori 5e5et r e r e a!!! 5 5,000 r5 r! E t try et e 5,000 55⁵a⁵! ⁵5 5,000 et e 5 e et e r⁵erre⁵e e r 5 r⁵e 5,000⁵e 5,000 e⁵ry e r e et 5,000 et a5 ⁵ry 5⁵5a e e ⁵e55 5,000 e⁵r et e 5,000 r e !e 5 5e ry⁵5a⁵e55 ⁵5ae⁵⁵e5e⁵6ae 5,000 ee⁵e ry⁵e etruschi e 5 e⁵e reti e ⁵e5e⁵e r e5⁵e5e e5 e! Et e e 5,000 e5⁵e55a 5,000 e⁵e⁵r 5 e! Errori e e ⁵et 5a5e ⁵⁵e r e⁵5,000 5a⁵⁵5 ⁵e⁵⁵e5e⁵a⁵⁵e55 tre 5,000 55 e e6ae r e455 r 5 5,000 e⁵⁵e5⁵5,000 5 re⁵⁵t 5,000 e e⁵e⁵e⁵5e5⁵e 5,000⁵5 ⁵e e! T 5e55aaaa5aerrore et e r e r et! E ea era e e5!!!!!!! E e5a5aa5a e e 5,000 e 5⁵e rerum e⁵ae e⁵t errori t e5e5a e 5e⁵55 te et 5a5!! E⁵et 5 5!!!5ea ry a5a! E et et re e55 t t r et!! E et a5ae!a te 5 et et 5aet e 5e!aaaaaa!e5aa⁵e e5e5a! Errori⁵et⁵te! Aa! Et⁵et ar⁵tre !!!a a t aaa4 !! Errori! 5aa !!e!ea r5ae5e⁵a!a te e 5r ry errore e!!aa re e⁵e⁵e 5a ry ! Et 5aa5errori 5ae e⁵!e⁵!ae 5a ry errore e 5ae55 5a e 5a et ⁵errato try 5a r r 55aa! Ry 5e55ae5e5a 5 r 5e 5a r 5aaaeet⁵e !! A5er5 retta e 5a 5 et 5e 5,000 e 5a e te e r5 e55e r 5 !! T et e! Et errori 5a errori ry 5e5a! T ry e55 5a e t e⁵et!!e⁵e e et 5 ry e 5a e 5aee 5a 5!e e5e e⁵et et! Errori e4!55 e 5 e r e et 5a e re e r r 5 !5 5a e!a⁵⁵5a5a et 5a 5 et⁵5!r errato et et 5 ry e5a⁵5a a!55e5 et e5 t r 5 5,000 r 5a r5r!a ry t a5 re e5 5a!!a⁵e5a et! A!! Ry e! A5ae 4th 4th eyes! Te! E! Errori e5 4th e5ea errori errori te e errori et t e r5! E t et e errori e e t 5 erre!! Etruschi ry e5e55 et e5aaae e eevee erre r55 errori eaa et r e e tre e errori r a erre a! Et e a r ! R e 5a !!!a!5ae e e!5e e 5aet 5ae55 ry ry!!!a e e5ae ! ⁵tra e⁵5 55 et 5 ! Ry try 4th ry et et! A r 5a et 55 r e r 54 5,000 t t r et 5 et 5,000 erano 5 et et r a5a55aa! E 5 5a e5e5!e e⁵e e! Et et t e!!aae⁵r tra t ere 55a5a erre e a5 errori 5a56at 5,000 a5e55 re e5 !!a et 5e r 5 ⁵5 et 5 5,000 et 5 et⁵er5 r 4 r r 5a 5a5a! Et re e! E 5 e 4th et! T aa5 5,000 a5 5 re e t et 5 r 5,000 e55 5a aaa r ra r 555a et r et r r rr5a r r r t ar r t r r try r 5reevee r r et r rr et et r were 5a r rr r aar r r t t rrrr et r rr t 5rrr et 55aar rr ere 4r tre 5arr55ret rrrrrrraa e r et r 5a r r r r5a r tre 4a erre rr re r e erto y r et re rrrrr tre 5a re raa5rr5a6a5 5 5 5
@@Sarah-zo6ly who's willing to code crack this?
A wonderfully captured review of impressionist art , I am firmly attached to these artist , and found my home with Van Gogh, without the Degas, Monet and others, Van Gogh would not have found his way ,
What a great pair of doc's, thanks a lot for putting it up. Like others have said this is the best one I've seen on the impressionists and doesn't just repeat the same old stuff. Somehow it's comforting to know they were so human. I'm really glad they gave Cassat her due instead of just an honorable mention.
Impressionism is the greatest and most honest period of art that has ever existed...
Part 2 of this fascinating history of the impressionists. Well worth watching especially these days .
Whenever I go to an art museum, I always make a beeline for the section on impressionist paintings. They are so very beautiful and moving.
By the time photography was invented, artists should have moved away from doing photo realistic paintings towards a more flowing expression of mood, color and texture. The Impressionists did that and made paintings that looked like images from out of a dream.
Have you seen the paintings at the Musee d Orsay?
@Ronald Redface Then you may not be seeing it clearly. It is never about the painting. It is about how you feel that matters. Great art is only great because of the energies the artist put into his work. That is why so much modern art is shit, because the artist literally put shit in it. We consume the feelings the artist put into his work. Good or bad.
Nothing like stepping foot into an Impressionist art gallery. The mood and feeling just immediately changes!
@@ArtHistorywithAlder Can anyone please help me in identifying a particular artist? I saw a painting (of an original) on the wall of a home on an episode of "COLUMBO" (of all places) and I am sure it is painted by a noted impressionist artist but for all my scrolling through hundreds of great works of art, I cannot find this painting for the life of me and it's driving me crazy!
The painting depicts white (square) homes and trees. It looks like an oil painting.
If anyone thinks they might be able to help me, you can see this painting on (YT) "Watch it for Days" channel. It is featured in the episode listed in her menu "Suitable for Framing (1971) Columbo - Deep Dive Review" @ timestamp 4:14.
Thank you very much for your time if you're up to this challenge and think you might be able to shed some light on who this artist might be.💓🖼🖌
This was excellent. Most of what I know about the Impressionists I have learned from Waldemar and having the access to the Chicago, which has some of the most monumental works. This was he first time I have happened on this, and with a favorite voice.
Excellent Documentary! Made me feel like I was living in that era amongst all these wonderful impressionist artists.
Thank you so much for this. I just discovered today that my painting style is impressionism. Everytime I search for reference in pinterest, monet paintings are suggested and I didnt mind it for months. Ive been questioning my art style. These painters persisted and didnt give up on their passion until they die. 💛
This documentary is just Amazing!!
Thank you so much for posting this.
Thank you so much for sharing this wonderful documentary about the Impressionists. I have read a lot of books on them but the way the documentary is set out is so interesting and educational. Clear and concise..it should be a tool in the classroom. Sheila
This is the most extraordinary documentary about these painters which I have ever seen. I first discovered art through the Impressionist painters. Our Art Institute in Chicago has one of the largest collections of Impressionist Art anywhere in the world (I am told). I have seen some of these very paintings in person, and consider that experience among the most moving in my life. Thank you for this jewel!
I paint with little income from but of passion
You must also visit paris, amsterdam, brussels. a lot of those painters you can see
Excellent. The most detailed, most incisive, most interesting of the many documentaries about these ground-breaking artists. Certainly the most professionally produced film as well as the most beautiful to look at.
L
Thank you I love these Impressions art painting history. So glad that I clicked on this.
Great video. So much detail all of the artists, I always marvel at how brave and persistent they were.
thank you for creating these 2 series, they are very interesting and touching
Just one of the best video on Impressionism.
Perfect.
I'm so glad I took my mother's + GOD rest her soul + advice when I told her I wanted to become an artist. She told me to go to university and get my 'bread and butter' degrees of which I did (Education/Engineering Design) to earn a good living but go back to school and pick up my AFA and journalism degrees which I also did. Mom was RIGHT!!!
I absolutely love Monet's
Work ! Thankyou for this
Superbe documentaire 💗 Merci de partager avec nous 🌈🍒🦚
Simply and totally SUBLIME beyond excellent!!! Artists love the insights into the lives of their idols!!! Even more if on technical insights and their ideas!!
Watching this just makes me very very very happy
Only the French could come about with such novel ideas of capturing the moment and doing it in a complete new style of painting.
Brilliant programme, fascinating- I was so engrossed I could not move to switch on the heating or make a coffee ! Great artists, respectfully remembered in a great film. Merci beaucoup.
That was great. Awesome to have so much art history at our finger tips here on RUclips!
Agreed!
Love to see into the history of their lives.
Thanyou very much .
Wonderful, moving, rich and informative completely new approach to Impressionism.
Two additions only: Renoir was also anti Semitic all along despite the fact that his most important patrons when he was starting out were Jewish-the Effrussi and the Rothschild family.
Another. Fact concerning Dega’s last years: he took up photography and photographed a great many photos while walking the streets of Paris.
I absolutely love this documentary and all the beautiful paintings
As do I..
Excellent. The most detailed, most incisive, most interesting of the many documentaries about these ground-breaking artists. Certainly the most professionally produced film as well as the most beautiful to look at.
Please,not " Poing- ti-lism " but "Pwahn-ti-lism ". Thx.
The BEST Documentary I Receive So Far While IT'S BEAUTY !!
A superb exposition of Impressionism embedded with the personal life stories of the key artist figures of the time .Great research and excellent presentation.
Amazing documentary.The best I 've ever seen.Very emotional and inspiring.Thanks.
Exquisite and fantastic! Thanks for sharing.
Simply superb. Thought provoking. What a great life story, what a journey.
An excellent program, thank you for posting.
Thank you.
This and part 1, are a great contribution to the art making/loving community.
This is the kind of thing I wish I could have seen in high school (45 years ago).
Side note: Some of the talking heads commentary shots are really nicely lit, almost like paintings. Especially Anne Higonnett. Well-done in all departments.
The footage you have on the artist is just so wonderful
You probably dont give a damn but does any of you know a tool to log back into an Instagram account??
I was dumb forgot the account password. I love any help you can give me.
@@reidtommy7352 Oh No :(
@@reidtommy7352 if you have an
IPhone go to settings and then to
Passwords & Accounts
@Reid Tommy Instablaster =)
@Kolton Jeffrey Thanks so much for your reply. I found the site on google and im in the hacking process now.
I see it takes a while so I will reply here later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
I am overwhelmed… just wonderful… thank you 🙏🏻♥️
Absolutely love this guy's voice he's done other narrations of videos I don't know his name but I always enjoyed listening to him
marsha woods The voice is that the late great Edward Herrmann.
Thank you, it was an impressive historical description of Impressionism arts to the present day.🙏
Anne Higonnet is unbelievable! Smart & beautiful!
Thank yous so much for share this excellente video about the Master of Impressiom.
The thought of a group of youthful men (and a woman) to strike against the establishment, filled with vigour and vision. Having the odds stacked against them, they would face years of rejection and destitution
Decades would have passed to achieve fame and riches only in the twilight of their lives. Growing old together means to see each other go. One after another. Memories of youthful laughter would have gone through Monet’s mind, only for him to realise he lives in the 1920s and no longer in the 1860s. His time had passed
My god what a life to have lived
Yes I agree the overall presentation, historical information and beauty are uniqueLy mixed throughout with the colors of all artist
Unfortunately, they got their, financial breakthroughs, in their latter years, and that was kinda sad, to see, I think that is me as well, I am getting older, and have struggled to overcome the financial breakthrough, that I would have liked to see, come to pass, maybe I can succeed in the very near future! This inspires me greatly though!!!!!
what a wonderful history of the great impressionists presentation, thank you!!!
The past is an idea held in the present.
The future is an idea held in the present.
There is only the eternal present which continually changes.
Great documentary, thank you British friends for having worked so hard at it
A delicious documentary . Thank you.
Its always somewhat surprising when the age is mentioned when someone died, in that era, especially in the case of Berthe Morrissot. 54, I thought she was múch older. In another docu it was said that young peoples did everything they cóuld to look older so they would be accepted more / sooner in the establishment. The fashion of that era certainly also helped.
Ah, When ART was ART.
Reached heights of excellence in documentation.Very intense.They gave their lives to art,& art repaid them by proffering immortality .Thanks from India.
Thoroughly enjoyed this.Thankyou so much.
Bravo! Excellent documentary. I feel so full of life seeing such beautiful works and knowing the painters a little more than I did. ".. how brave they were, how original they were.." ; "....what they did was extraordinarily brave." indeed, we should be walking around with the likeness of these individuals on our t-shirts not of some commie guerrilla war monger. They were the real revolutionaries, the brave, the ones who changed the world for the better, with beauty. Bravo!
I have enjoyed this very much. I cannot see why there is no mention of Alfred Sisley who studied at The Gleyre Attelier with Monet Bazille and Renoir and exhibiting in al the Impresionist group exhibitions. So why no Sislet?
A cream bun over a Pisarro painting! 🤣🤣🤣 A wonderful story I will definitely be sharing!
Very informative and most enjoyable.
...and here I thought I was the only artist who thought about quitting this craziness of art and throwing everything away...ha! Pretty damn inspiring to know that the masters went through the same emotional diseases that practically all artists suffer from...frustration, anger and hopelessness. Well I've got news for all artists who dare to think this way...shut the hell up, muster up the courage and get your brushes in hand and do not fkn stop being an artist!
I loved this documentary! The best ever! Thank you for sharing. I learnt so much
an absolutely heart wrenching and heart warming documentary. Excellence.
What a moving and accomplished presentation that I followed with deep gratitude
Amazing Courage & Integrity!!!
Part off my 8 years Study off Master Artist, from Rembrandt to Impressionist. Master Thesis. Via NYU. They allowed me this inordinate time, for which I am forever Grateful. Thank You. Best School of Diversity.🇩🇰🇺🇸🦅🗽🎆 We cannot allow political Lock Down steal our Culture through the world. Artist , Music , Visual and Science , presevere. " They did!!"🇺🇸🇩🇰🦅🗽🎆🎨 Pissarro one off my favorites. So much in his work was is even today overlooked.🌝🎨Surperior documentry. Thank You.🎆 Mary Cassatt, took Impressionism to America. Most impressivise her Pastels in Philadelphia Art Museum. Not enough press has been forwarded to her support off French Impressionist moment , hence transferred to America, and future painters there.🇩🇰🇺🇸🎨🌡️Their , eventually setting out separately, gave each an avenue off individual experimentation. Produced immence works off originality. My mentor, William Stanley Hayter, in Paris , 1983, declared, no one in my Atelier 17 copies, but explore their inner visions. That produces Art.🎨 So true.👀 Thanks Bruce Alfred.🌷
so thoroughly enjoyed this beautiful & interesting documentary, thank you 🍀
Extremely illuminating documentary.Also the first part
I remember time in school where I would be touring one museum after the next.
All kinds of art, but mainly painting of one kind or another. Impressionism
was yet another artistic departure. I always liked realism. Filling in the gaps
is OK with music, but not
with canvas and brush.
Are you contrasting line describing form to mark making? Not sure what you mean about filling in the gaps.
Grey Edgerton Imagination is a gift with which those who understand and experience the joy of Impressionism are blessed.
What an excellent documentary I learnt so much really opened up my eyes to such beautiful paintings thank you!
i can tell you that working your art is a help with troubles
Very true.
Damn real!
Amazing documentary! Thanks.
Art is STYLE and style is ART
what a magnificent documentary
This documentary is so beautiful, so great 😊 I searched part 1 of " The Impresionists Volume 1 " as i only found this " volume 2 " I searched allot but can't find it. Does someone have a link please ? Thank you 😊
Thank you for this second part of Impressionism.
Wonderful
Great documentary love the music.
This documentary while superb makes me glad to be alive in 2021 sans Covid-19. While so many things in the 19th century were nice medical science was barely out of the Middle Ages; people died like flies. Death and disease was everywhere. In my opinion, and I'm quite sure you will disagree, but in light of all we 'moderns' understand we should be about the business of making our world much better for everyone than we are doing now. Life could be so beautiful if we all realize that we're all in the same 'boat.'
How cruel these masters were poor throughout their lives only to have their works valued into billions collectively
Especially when you think that Vincent Van Gogh painted nearly 900 works of art and some 2,100 other pieces of artwork, all in the short time span of 10 yrs.💓🖼💓
All through this I kept wondering: WHO produced this magnificent documentary? Smithsonian, perhaps? PBS? NO, it was A & E, now the purveyor of idiotic "reality TV" claptrap. What the hell happened?
The reason for this explosion of the movement of 'Impressionism" was due to the revolutionary development of tube paint. Before, artists had to make their own colors by crushing and grinding pigments and oils in their homes or studios to get the desired colors; often they did this in the field to get the more exact colors in nature; and it was labor-intensive; and since impressionists used the technique of impasto, involving mounds of paint to create the illusions they sought, meaning more paint, and more labor to create enough paint to have at their disposal while the day's light was available. However, with the development of tube paint in 1841; particular, with the paint manufacturer, Windsor & Newton, in their development tubed oil paint in 1842, the ability for impressionists to paint outdoors to capture the light that was the distinctive factor of 'Impressionism', was a revolutionary product that was advantageous for the 'movement' to grow. The metal paint tube was first invented by American oil painter John Goffe Rand as a way of transporting paints to use outside. Once his patent was secured, Winsor added one essential improvement to this design: the all-important screw cap. Thus the paint tube we know and love was born. Thus, the Impressionist movement exploded.
Ah, an Impression is yours. A painting is theirs.
Absolutely fantastic!!!
"He was 86 and only managed a few hours of work a day"
Well I'm 30 and barely manage a few hours a week y'know
Whaaaa
Amazing he lived so long. Working all day and sleeping close to your materials when you work in oils is very bad for you. Not to mention the partying they all seemed to do. 😏
Am crying, Thanks
thank you so very much.
I enjoyed this in-depth documentary tremendously.
My Starry Night Yarn Painting Time Lapse so far...🙂🧶🎨👍🏻
1. The Moon, Stars, & Venus
ruclips.net/video/ccnOlrB9rJk/видео.html
2. The Swirling Wind
ruclips.net/video/-tRYCg2nnms/видео.html
3. The Cypress Tree
ruclips.net/video/yRy8Io64ZoE/видео.html
4. The Church & Village
ruclips.net/video/9lKLekxhJGE/видео.html
Wonderful documentary about the Impressionists. Thank you!!
Hello, hope all is well with everyone, I have an early work from Monet, the year of 1891 number 281, from the Chicago Art institute 1891, haystacks setting sun, is this of any value? Please let me know,
Magnificent stories. Thank you for shearing.