The screaming pope was (and I believe still is) on display at my local museum. I used to obsessively look at it as a kid, I blame it for turning me into a goth
You were that person all along. We don't become something during our lives it's like we are own archeologists slowly excavating who we are the the bare bones of ourselves dude
@@Ahrone1586 Fake intellectualism that lets stupid people feel smart. Using complex scenarios to explain simple concepts is the literal opposite of what actual smart people do. But, if you can make dump people feel like they're smart/know something other people don't then you can rule the world.
I went to see his art in London, and staring into his bigger paintings in a dimly lit room in silence with many others was one of the most surreal moment of my life.
Makes me think of Dante's Inferno, when he came across Boniface VIII in the bottom circle of hell, despite Boniface still being alive. As it turned out, Boniface had done something so heinous his soul was sent to hell before he died, and a demon took over his body.
@@colbyboucher6391 We still study Dante because he was a rather radical poet for his day, and his works weren't afraid to address what he believed were serious issues plaguing religious and social life.
when i read inferno i spent half my time flipping to the back of the book to figure out which italian politician he was dunking on, and somehow missed the "pope fucked up so bad he went to hell before he died" part. damn it now i have to read it again
@@colbyboucher6391 that was the entire reason dante went into exile. He was expecting severe criticism and was fearful for his life after he published the divine comedy
@@AquaticDot I mean this isn't the full story - Dante was banished from Florence, for life, at the time he wrote the Inferno. Him shitting on political rivals was his way of getting revenge for this exile, it was a large part of the purpose of him writing it in the first place
My sister is studying art history, she’s extremely passionate about it, and I always admired her for her ability to read paintings and make a coherent story out of it. She’s living far away from me, so we don’t get to go to museums and talk about art often nowadays. These videos do not only feed my interests and curiosity, but they also remind me of my sister and make me feel closer to her. If she doesn’t know your channel yet, I’ll recommend it to her, she’ll love it! Thank you for your great work!
This is the sweetest thing. Living far away from your siblings is difficult. My siblings live 5 hours away so I try to remind myself of them when I can. I hope you two get together and go to a museum some day soon.
Something I’d like to mention (specifically referring to three studies for figures) bacon was fascinated with the connection between man, and animal. How animalistic man can be at times, and how we are just animals. this painting is a display of that; The figures have human features that are distinctly recognisable, ears, gnarling teeth, an ear, but the rest isn’t human, and is almost chimaera like For anyone interested, this is also what made him paint his bull fighting series of paintings
This is what I've always thought as well. I just figured that even mentioning a pope might deserve to be executed like a common criminal was way over the line at the time. I mean, Sinéad O'Connor tore up a picture of a pope on live TV and that was a total clusterfuck, and that was in the 90's.
Even though it’s not Bacon’s intention, this portrait feels like a representation of either deep religious trauma or a fear or hatred of the Catholic Church. It’s certainly unnerving!
During WW2 Bacon was in the Civil Defence in London until 1943. He spent a lot of time recovering the dead from destroyed buildings and this had a profound effect on him. He painted during and after the war about the pain, anguish and anger about the sights he had seen. It had a profound effect on him and that is why many of his paintings have a form of animal violence about them.
This is the first I’ve ever heard of Francis Bacon in my 40 years of life… and I feel like I have been missing out. Thank you for breathing air into my life!
Wow! Welcome to a world of discovery of one of the true masters in the art of painting in art history, Francis Bacon can never be ignored he's part of the essential cannon. I'm so exited for you! An example of when social media actuslly does what was once the intention of the internet! 😊
With plans to create artwork with similar themes, an art teacher directed me to this piece. Thanks for the really informative video, I had no clue how the screaming pope looked and wasn't let down by the pacing - cheers!
Fun fact if you aren't aware, Francis Bacon and the screaming pope were huge inspirations for the creators of the Silent Hill video game series. If you're a fan of Bacon's work I highly recommend you play (or view) at least the second game. It's artistic merit is right up there with bacon's paintings.
OMG now that you mentioned it it really does remind me of Silent Hill, mainly those line going through the painting remind me of those red rust-like lines all over the city landscape in some areas.
I've only been watching your videos since yesterday, and you have made me more interested in art history than I'd ever thought I'd be. My art teacher in high school was only accredited to teach art history, and was the kind of teacher who can't ever accept that a student wasn't intellectually inferior to him in every way, and he said I was seeing things that weren't there when I pointed out a triangle in a painting's composition when it wasn't in his lesson plan about how lines of action (and *only* lines of action) lead the eye from one side of the painting to the other. No triangles allowed. I've never taken an art history course, and after being treated like an idiot for knowing more about color theory than he did, I didn't want to. Even just the first three and a half minutes of this video has more emotional and technical engagement with the subject matter than that entire semester did. Thank you.
saw this painting at the Des Moines art center in person and each time I go it's the one that speaks to me the most, im glad i could finally learn a little more about the artist and the piece.
Fantastic video, love Francis Bacon. If ever you're in Dublin I recommend a visit to the Hugh Lane Gallery, they moved his entire studio there (literally) after he died. Also there is Figure with Carpet, a work that was only discovered when they were moving the studio and is one of my favourites by Bacon.
One of life's great ironies is that, even though it's nearly impossible to describe what constitutes great art, when we see, it is instantly recognisable. Much gratitude to you, and to Mrs. Bacon and Velasquez.
Ive seen a very amazing artists copy of this work, with their own spin on it and it is just out of this world! cannot imagine the original in the flesh wow!
To me, it looks like those black lines are either smoke, or some sort of demonic aura, covering him, rushing up and down around him. As if he's being sucked down into another world. It's scary because I can't make out the entire face, like he's slowly vanishing. I can see blurry parts of glasses and his hat, but the most prominent feature is the wide screaming mouth. If I look long enough, I can imagine him screaming. ...Disturbing, isn't it?
I remember my Art teacher using these two paintings as an example of "paraphrasing" (that's the term in swedish, idk if it is in english) art and I remember how haunting that Bacon painting was to young me.. still is, too. It's one of those pieces of arts that makes you unable to look away, just because how unsettling and haunting it is. I love it.
Francis Bacon was a fascinating man. His work is challenging, violent, sometimes disgusting-- but it has a deep allure to it. A lot of his paintings are both violent and sensual at the same time. Whenever I see one of his paintings for the first time, I kind of want to hate it on instinct, but I end up drawn back to it over and over. It's really a tragedy he destroyed so much of his own work. He's my favorite painter.
Another fascinating aspect of Bacon's pope is its esoteric connection to the Joker in Batman. The white face and purple clothing are carried over, and the screaming is transfigured into maniacal laughter. This connection was explicitly referenced in Tim Burton's Batman when the one painting spared defacement by the Joker in Gotham Museum is 'Figure with Meat' (Pope Innocent X again). He says "I kinda like this one, Bob. Leave it." Christopher Nolan took inspiration for Heath Ledger's Joker from Bacon's work as well
Another reference for his series of popes, although not specifically this one, was Eichmann in a glass cage at his trial. The influence of film (Battleship Potemkin) actually went full circle because David Lynch was heavily influenced by Bacon and continues to be. You can't look at Twin Peaks Season 3 without seeing the influence of Bacon on Lynch's visual imagination throughout.
my favourite painter of all time. his work is so unbelievably surreal, uncanny and ahead of it's time. it creates a feeling in me that has only ever been matched by recent developments in AI image generation. mirrors into a warped version of the world we see every day
There is no way you can prepare for the ways his painting affect you in person. Seeing the 3 figures at the base of the crucifixion is absolutely terrifying in real life, it made my blood run cold
I've not seen this one in the flesh, but many other of his paintings including one of the pope (not this one though) and besides the sheer size of them, it's so interesting to see how they altogether seem to alter the actual room they're hung in. In the scenarios I've seen one of his paintings hung in the same room as other artists work, it's Bacon's painting that's been the only one in the room, everything else fades and I can never remember the others. It's quite an astounding quality. I've been a huge admirer ever since I first was introduced to his paintings at 19 yo. His work is definately worth seeing irl when you get the chance, even if an exibition only has one of his paintings--go! They are physical and energetic and magnetic in a way very few paintings really are, more like an immersive installation although they're simply paint on canvas as every other painting you ever saw. Any need for comprehensive narrative ceases to exist. He never worked that way, wasn't interested in storytelling or politics and its totally clear the mastery is paint on canvas like never before experienced when you actually see the work. Absolute genius. You're doing the public a great service with this channel, so many channels peddling personal interpretations of art that have nothing to do with the work at all and only perpetuate the misconceptions of what art is, and what artists do and why. It's one of the most misunderstood diciplines I can think of today.
I have a print of the album cover art for Ghost's "Prequelle" hanging up next to my desk, which is another variation on Pope Innocent X done by the Polish artist Zbigniew M. Bielak. His piece is much more Hieronymus Bosch meets AI dreamscape done in painfully minute detail. Comparing both of these pieces to Velázquez’s original realism reminds me of a short essay I wrote years ago when I was an undergrad taking Aesthetic Theory in which I argued that surrealism is actually a form of hyper-realism. Velázquez’s shows Pope Innocent X in a single shinning moment of material splendor in all the sumptuousness of papal and by extension Vatican finery, while Bacon and Bielak's art can be seen as a vomiting out, a lancing of a purulent wound caused by the influence of The Church.
I just saw this painting in a book back when i was in high school a few years ago, but i never got to know the true context and details of the painting until recently because of this YT video.
My first thought of those black lines was that they were prison bars. Suffering and contained within an inescapable cage that due to his transparency also pierces his form. Confinement adding to the pain. I also think that art tended to shift from an expression of marvelous technique to what could best paint emotion on canvas. Despite how people complain that art has "degenerated," I have different feelings about the paintings. I have an admiration for Velasquez' ability to put reality itself on canvas. Meanwhile, this painting fucking transfixes me. It evokes more in me than the normal portrait of Pope Innocent X. If people want to yell about how art has somehow become "lesser" (while ignoring all the technically impressive and almost mystical art being posted on the internet all the time by talented digital artists), I don't think they've ever really taken the time to understand the powerful emotions these paintings can cause. The lack of "artistic substance" is overshadowed greatly by the "artistic spectacle." I feel real snobbish after writing that ngl
Honestly, despite the intentions, I can’t help to connect the painting to the absolute scary open secrets of the Catholic Church, and not just that, groups of people that caused pain and anguish throughout generations characterized in one person, who is now in indescribable pain for what he caused. It is no surprise that he painted the man purple, meaning high standing and royalty, not to mention with a pale white man.
i always thought that the lines went upwards and the image takes place about 0.001 seconds before pope innocent x gets disintegrated by a rocket engine below him.
one of my absolute favourite documentaries is "Francis Bacon: A Brush with Violence" which attempts to shed some light on why Bacon's art nails the horror/disgust response from gallery members. it's actually free to watch on youtube, too - i highly recommend people check it out if they want to see more of this kind of thing :)
This paint was revered by my professor. It was high on his office's wall as if he adored it. Nothing came good out of it, in fact the most cruel event I have ever seen. There is something wrong with him and him paints. If are attracted by it, better to watch out.
The Canaanites/Phoenicians (both meaning Purple People) took their name from their prestigious dye, adopted by many cultures as a status symbol. The Pope's status may be inverted (from the 'awesome' to the 'awful') but the love of the purple still informs the artist's brush [4:34].
I’ve always interpreted the pope as screaming… orders. I took away anger, hostility and domination in addition to pain. An another note, Francis had a FANTASTIC head of hair.
Are his feelings not also reality? Bacon's work is just as realistic as Velazquez. They simply represent different aspects of reality. One of surfaces. One of depths.
Zooming out you suddenly become aware that all of this is happening on a TV screen - an epic space opera playing out for someone’s entertainment. But the actors don’t know they’re actors. To them, this galactic bacon is as real as real gets.
The screaming pope was (and I believe still is) on display at my local museum. I used to obsessively look at it as a kid, I blame it for turning me into a goth
🤣🤣🤣
You were that person all along. We don't become something during our lives it's like we are own archeologists slowly excavating who we are the the bare bones of ourselves dude
@@rikinhouston that might be the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard
@@noahleach7690 hahaha why
@@Ahrone1586
Fake intellectualism that lets stupid people feel smart.
Using complex scenarios to explain simple concepts is the literal opposite of what actual smart people do.
But, if you can make dump people feel like they're smart/know something other people don't then you can rule the world.
I went to see his art in London, and staring into his bigger paintings in a dimly lit room in silence with many others was one of the most surreal moment of my life.
I want to go back, experience this again, because it was definitely a very intense experience
which gallery was it? i live in london, i would love to go.
Makes me think of Dante's Inferno, when he came across Boniface VIII in the bottom circle of hell, despite Boniface still being alive. As it turned out, Boniface had done something so heinous his soul was sent to hell before he died, and a demon took over his body.
Jesus, seriously? I would have thought that even criticizing a mostly disgraced pope like Boniface VIII would have been a seriously dangerous move.
@@colbyboucher6391 We still study Dante because he was a rather radical poet for his day, and his works weren't afraid to address what he believed were serious issues plaguing religious and social life.
when i read inferno i spent half my time flipping to the back of the book to figure out which italian politician he was dunking on, and somehow missed the "pope fucked up so bad he went to hell before he died" part. damn it now i have to read it again
@@colbyboucher6391 that was the entire reason dante went into exile. He was expecting severe criticism and was fearful for his life after he published the divine comedy
@@AquaticDot I mean this isn't the full story - Dante was banished from Florence, for life, at the time he wrote the Inferno. Him shitting on political rivals was his way of getting revenge for this exile, it was a large part of the purpose of him writing it in the first place
please don't stop what you're doing - this channel is gold
You're gold!!
Strawberry elephant 🐘 🍓
صباح الفرولة
@@Shawn.Grenier so glad you're finally blowing up. congratulations! 🥰
@@prawdziwamiloscistnieje strawberry elephant 🐘 🍓
My sister is studying art history, she’s extremely passionate about it, and I always admired her for her ability to read paintings and make a coherent story out of it.
She’s living far away from me, so we don’t get to go to museums and talk about art often nowadays. These videos do not only feed my interests and curiosity, but they also remind me of my sister and make me feel closer to her. If she doesn’t know your channel yet, I’ll recommend it to her, she’ll love it!
Thank you for your great work!
This is the sweetest thing. Living far away from your siblings is difficult. My siblings live 5 hours away so I try to remind myself of them when I can. I hope you two get together and go to a museum some day soon.
@@Alexwhywest thank you so much, this is so kind!! i wish the same for you, hope you’ll see your siblings more often in the future! :)
Something I’d like to mention (specifically referring to three studies for figures) bacon was fascinated with the connection between man, and animal. How animalistic man can be at times, and how we are just animals. this painting is a display of that; The figures have human features that are distinctly recognisable, ears, gnarling teeth, an ear, but the rest isn’t human, and is almost chimaera like
For anyone interested, this is also what made him paint his bull fighting series of paintings
Thank you for this information Majima, I never took you as a connoisseur of the fine arts.
I see a pope on an electric chair.
This is what I've always thought as well. I just figured that even mentioning a pope might deserve to be executed like a common criminal was way over the line at the time. I mean, Sinéad O'Connor tore up a picture of a pope on live TV and that was a total clusterfuck, and that was in the 90's.
I was going to say that. You said it for me.
@@violetninja sinead o'connor is a degenerate.
Even though it’s not Bacon’s intention, this portrait feels like a representation of either deep religious trauma or a fear or hatred of the Catholic Church. It’s certainly unnerving!
Not that either would be unjustified, given what we know that horrible institution has done.
He was a militant atheist.
@Makuta S-V you have a commie pfp shut up protestant
@Makuta S-V insult based on pure assumption=weak
yes bro the pope is actually traumatized you mindless frog cause that makes sense
During WW2 Bacon was in the Civil Defence in London until 1943. He spent a lot of time recovering the dead from destroyed buildings and this had a profound effect on him. He painted during and after the war about the pain, anguish and anger about the sights he had seen. It had a profound effect on him and that is why many of his paintings have a form of animal violence about them.
This is my shit right here, more of this haunting twisted stuff PLEASE!!!!!
MORE
more
This is the first I’ve ever heard of Francis Bacon in my 40 years of life… and I feel like I have been missing out. Thank you for breathing air into my life!
Wow! Welcome to a world of discovery of one of the true masters in the art of painting in art history, Francis Bacon can never be ignored he's part of the essential cannon. I'm so exited for you! An example of when social media actuslly does what was once the intention of the internet! 😊
With plans to create artwork with similar themes, an art teacher directed me to this piece. Thanks for the really informative video, I had no clue how the screaming pope looked and wasn't let down by the pacing - cheers!
I also recommend dissecting Francis Goya 's "black paintings" if you're looking for more material at this stage. Good luck on your art journey !!
Fun fact if you aren't aware, Francis Bacon and the screaming pope were huge inspirations for the creators of the Silent Hill video game series. If you're a fan of Bacon's work I highly recommend you play (or view) at least the second game. It's artistic merit is right up there with bacon's paintings.
OMG now that you mentioned it it really does remind me of Silent Hill, mainly those line going through the painting remind me of those red rust-like lines all over the city landscape in some areas.
Playing Silent Hill with every light in the house on. Memories.
I love this painting so much! It's so visceral I can quite literally *feel* its angst.
Bro your pfp 😭
@@man4437 i hope you like it
I've only been watching your videos since yesterday, and you have made me more interested in art history than I'd ever thought I'd be. My art teacher in high school was only accredited to teach art history, and was the kind of teacher who can't ever accept that a student wasn't intellectually inferior to him in every way, and he said I was seeing things that weren't there when I pointed out a triangle in a painting's composition when it wasn't in his lesson plan about how lines of action (and *only* lines of action) lead the eye from one side of the painting to the other. No triangles allowed. I've never taken an art history course, and after being treated like an idiot for knowing more about color theory than he did, I didn't want to. Even just the first three and a half minutes of this video has more emotional and technical engagement with the subject matter than that entire semester did. Thank you.
Are ya winnin son.
C r i s p 9 0 s
Thanks!
Thanks
Purple colour in catholic liturgy symbolises grieving and is used for example during lent or funerals.
saw this painting at the Des Moines art center in person and each time I go it's the one that speaks to me the most, im glad i could finally learn a little more about the artist and the piece.
I saw it there too! One of the highlights of going back to visit family in the area.
Fantastic video, love Francis Bacon. If ever you're in Dublin I recommend a visit to the Hugh Lane Gallery, they moved his entire studio there (literally) after he died. Also there is Figure with Carpet, a work that was only discovered when they were moving the studio and is one of my favourites by Bacon.
I could spend my entire day on this channel and not regret a second
One of life's great ironies is that, even though it's nearly impossible to describe what constitutes great art, when we see, it is instantly recognisable.
Much gratitude to you, and to Mrs. Bacon and Velasquez.
Ive seen a very amazing artists copy of this work, with their own spin on it and it is just out of this world! cannot imagine the original in the flesh wow!
Love how your pfp is like that of those cable channels nobody watched, which is ironic because your videos are much better
To me, it looks like those black lines are either smoke, or some sort of demonic aura, covering him, rushing up and down around him. As if he's being sucked down into another world.
It's scary because I can't make out the entire face, like he's slowly vanishing. I can see blurry parts of glasses and his hat, but the most prominent feature is the wide screaming mouth. If I look long enough, I can imagine him screaming.
...Disturbing, isn't it?
Just wanted to say that this channel has gotten me interested in art & art history. Keep up the good work, these videos are great!
This is such a gem! Thanks for putting this up!
Went to the Des Moines museum for school and ended up writing my whole paper on it. It's so captivating
I can not believe you are not more famous. This is a gem
Thank you!! It's very kind of you
And that is what is beautiful about art, expression of oneself in the most original way making it historical and history.
In love with this kind of content, honestly I thought that this would have millions of views but makes me sad is not the thing.
Perhaps that will come one day! Your comment is definitely pushing this channel in the right direction!
Thank you!
The Francis Bacon documentary has 3.6 million views pal
I think Spielberg during the time of filming 'Raiders Of The Lost Ark' must have had this painting in mind.
Thanks for these videos, I've never looked into paintings much but this channel (today and yesterday) has shown me multiple ones that I now love.
I remember my Art teacher using these two paintings as an example of "paraphrasing" (that's the term in swedish, idk if it is in english) art and I remember how haunting that Bacon painting was to young me.. still is, too.
It's one of those pieces of arts that makes you unable to look away, just because how unsettling and haunting it is. I love it.
Paraphrasing is also an English word
Bacon inspired my own personal paintings. I love his religious criticism, and the violent, disturbing imagery. Really suits my emo style
Francis Bacon was a fascinating man. His work is challenging, violent, sometimes disgusting-- but it has a deep allure to it. A lot of his paintings are both violent and sensual at the same time. Whenever I see one of his paintings for the first time, I kind of want to hate it on instinct, but I end up drawn back to it over and over. It's really a tragedy he destroyed so much of his own work. He's my favorite painter.
Seek help.
I'm in IB visual art and used this piece in my comparative study- loved this video. It realy helped me in anazlysing the painting. EXCELLENTE
That's great to hear! I'm very happy I was able to help you with your assignment! Keep up the great work!
i m also in ib visual arts HLand i m using this painting for my comparative study
@@talibanheroin sameeee
I grew up in desmoines iowa where this painting resides to this day. It has always been my favorite one.
Another fascinating aspect of Bacon's pope is its esoteric connection to the Joker in Batman. The white face and purple clothing are carried over, and the screaming is transfigured into maniacal laughter. This connection was explicitly referenced in Tim Burton's Batman when the one painting spared defacement by the Joker in Gotham Museum is 'Figure with Meat' (Pope Innocent X again). He says "I kinda like this one, Bob. Leave it." Christopher Nolan took inspiration for Heath Ledger's Joker from Bacon's work as well
I was looking in the comments for someone to reference the Joker
Another reference for his series of popes, although not specifically this one, was Eichmann in a glass cage at his trial. The influence of film (Battleship Potemkin) actually went full circle because David Lynch was heavily influenced by Bacon and continues to be. You can't look at Twin Peaks Season 3 without seeing the influence of Bacon on Lynch's visual imagination throughout.
I feel like the lines are an addiction to the pope screaming. It's adding to pain and darkness the painting has
its amazing how no matter when i look at the screaming pope i can instanly hear and feel his pain and screams inside my head
my favourite painter of all time. his work is so unbelievably surreal, uncanny and ahead of it's time. it creates a feeling in me that has only ever been matched by recent developments in AI image generation. mirrors into a warped version of the world we see every day
Bacon was but one of many brilliant artists with an aching soul. Torturous realms yield amazing works.
There is no way you can prepare for the ways his painting affect you in person. Seeing the 3 figures at the base of the crucifixion is absolutely terrifying in real life, it made my blood run cold
I've not seen this one in the flesh, but many other of his paintings including one of the pope (not this one though) and besides the sheer size of them, it's so interesting to see how they altogether seem to alter the actual room they're hung in.
In the scenarios I've seen one of his paintings hung in the same room as other artists work, it's Bacon's painting that's been the only one in the room, everything else fades and I can never remember the others. It's quite an astounding quality. I've been a huge admirer ever since I first was introduced to his paintings at 19 yo.
His work is definately worth seeing irl when you get the chance, even if an exibition only has one of his paintings--go!
They are physical and energetic and magnetic in a way very few paintings really are, more like an immersive installation although they're simply paint on canvas as every other painting you ever saw.
Any need for comprehensive narrative ceases to exist. He never worked that way, wasn't interested in storytelling or politics and its totally clear the mastery is paint on canvas like never before experienced when you actually see the work.
Absolute genius.
You're doing the public a great service with this channel, so many channels peddling personal interpretations of art that have nothing to do with the work at all and only perpetuate the misconceptions of what art is, and what artists do and why.
It's one of the most misunderstood diciplines I can think of today.
This video helped me a ton while preparing for my final exams. Thanks a lot!
I have a print of the album cover art for Ghost's "Prequelle" hanging up next to my desk, which is another variation on Pope Innocent X done by the Polish artist Zbigniew M. Bielak. His piece is much more Hieronymus Bosch meets AI dreamscape done in painfully minute detail. Comparing both of these pieces to Velázquez’s original realism reminds me of a short essay I wrote years ago when I was an undergrad taking Aesthetic Theory in which I argued that surrealism is actually a form of hyper-realism. Velázquez’s shows Pope Innocent X in a single shinning moment of material splendor in all the sumptuousness of papal and by extension Vatican finery, while Bacon and Bielak's art can be seen as a vomiting out, a lancing of a purulent wound caused by the influence of The Church.
Can't unsee Darth Vader in the Head IV painting at 2:04
Same. I saw it and immediately thought: “was that Darth Vader?”
Brilliant. Thank you. Encapsulates the value of hindsight: metaphysics versus materialism. Timely, AI could never come up with this.
Looking at this artwork while listening to Rezz - Edge, is an experience in itself.
I was looking at this painting today in Rome and have always wondered what the fascination was
I love disturbing paintings I’m glad I found this channel
Thank YOU! i just got back into art and felt bad about using reference material
I just found out about your channel and I can't stop watching now-
I just saw this painting in a book back when i was in high school a few years ago, but i never got to know the true context and details of the painting until recently because of this YT video.
what is the name of the song that starts at 0:47 ?
Bacon is one of my all time favorite artists!
Wtf this is quality content
Keep up the good work!
Wow! Thank you so much! Your comment is super encouraging!
The vertical lines make me think of lines you would use in manga or comics to show emotions
The lines combined with the screaming make it look like the pope is going super saiyan
My first thought of those black lines was that they were prison bars. Suffering and contained within an inescapable cage that due to his transparency also pierces his form. Confinement adding to the pain.
I also think that art tended to shift from an expression of marvelous technique to what could best paint emotion on canvas. Despite how people complain that art has "degenerated," I have different feelings about the paintings. I have an admiration for Velasquez' ability to put reality itself on canvas. Meanwhile, this painting fucking transfixes me. It evokes more in me than the normal portrait of Pope Innocent X. If people want to yell about how art has somehow become "lesser" (while ignoring all the technically impressive and almost mystical art being posted on the internet all the time by talented digital artists), I don't think they've ever really taken the time to understand the powerful emotions these paintings can cause. The lack of "artistic substance" is overshadowed greatly by the "artistic spectacle."
I feel real snobbish after writing that ngl
Honestly, despite the intentions, I can’t help to connect the painting to the absolute scary open secrets of the Catholic Church, and not just that, groups of people that caused pain and anguish throughout generations characterized in one person, who is now in indescribable pain for what he caused. It is no surprise that he painted the man purple, meaning high standing and royalty, not to mention with a pale white man.
Mark-Anthony Turnage made a piece of music based on this paintings. It is called "three screaming popes", it is terrifying, you can hear them scream
i always thought that the lines went upwards and the image takes place about 0.001 seconds before pope innocent x gets disintegrated by a rocket engine below him.
one of my absolute favourite documentaries is "Francis Bacon: A Brush with Violence" which attempts to shed some light on why Bacon's art nails the horror/disgust response from gallery members. it's actually free to watch on youtube, too - i highly recommend people check it out if they want to see more of this kind of thing :)
That's the video that introduced me to Bacon's work! I really appreciate that Blind Dweller made it free to watch, and it was really well made too.
Art history is great because when I was walking the Louvre you could see the evolution and start to anticipate what was coming and why
This paint was revered by my professor. It was high on his office's wall as if he adored it. Nothing came good out of it, in fact the most cruel event I have ever seen. There is something wrong with him and him paints. If are attracted by it, better to watch out.
Great video! Please more Francis Bacon and maybe some Damien Hirst!
The Canaanites/Phoenicians (both meaning Purple People) took their name from their prestigious dye, adopted by many cultures as a status symbol. The Pope's status may be inverted (from the 'awesome' to the 'awful') but the love of the purple still informs the artist's brush [4:34].
The Canvas: TERRYFYING!
what is the background music used in this video?
Wonderful video, thank you!
I've got to ask: what is the music piece you used for this video?
I feel so uncomfortable looking at the painting…that’s how you know you did a good job
I’ve always interpreted the pope as screaming… orders. I took away anger, hostility and domination in addition to pain.
An another note, Francis had a FANTASTIC head of hair.
This painting was used as the artwork for the album "Sic Transit Gloria Mundi" by Ulver. Great music and overall artist.
MAGNIFICENT.
The man was a fugging genius...
Are his feelings not also reality? Bacon's work is just as realistic as Velazquez. They simply represent different aspects of reality. One of surfaces. One of depths.
Zooming out you suddenly become aware that all of this is happening on a TV screen - an epic space opera playing out for someone’s entertainment. But the actors don’t know they’re actors. To them, this galactic bacon is as real as real gets.
Clearly Bacon's interpretation of the Black Lodge; probably came to him in a dream.
Hail to wunderbar Francis Bacon ! Hope he will be resurrected soon. Ever since been a GREAT fan of him !!!
Amazing channel, thank you.
Thank YOU! Your comments are very appreciated as always
The screaming pope was actually used as inspiration for the Deacons of the deep in Dark Souls 3
What the guy under me said
This channel is gold
Awww thanks!
Knowledge is power, France is bacon
This image could be presented in a horror manga and it would feel right at home.
'' doesn't have to do with the artist themselves ... '' artist themselves is all that matters in that case
0:46 what's the music here?
So powerful .
The enormously power of HUGE testicles - for sure ! ! !
Please tell me the ost in the background? Much appreciated and thank you.
1:00 whats the song ?
Does someone know the name of the song playing in the background?
Metal as fuck
This metaphorically screams at my soul.
francis needed a hug i think
Head IV looks like Darth Vader
This guy had such great hair, wow!
I can' unsee the fact that it looks like a Yu-Gi-Oh spell card.