A journey into the history of porcelain | Edmund de Waal | V&A

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 17

  • @icewillowfrost
    @icewillowfrost 2 года назад +21

    People going into detail about what they’re passionate is just so decadent… I don’t know how to describe it but for someone to go into length with this amount of eloquence and energy is incredible. I love this new series you’re doing with getting modern artists to do inspired art!

    • @felang-9363
      @felang-9363 Год назад

      It is decadent, but not in the way you mean it! Decadent means of moral decline. Need more high-res content, but skip the non-art of his contemporary pieces.

  • @joshuaharper372
    @joshuaharper372 Год назад +4

    It always fascinates me how individual and unique each person's taste in art is. I hear how carefully this artist has thought out and planned his collection of plates, and I can appreciate the aesthetic choices that make the 4 plates a set. And yet, I don't much care for them aesthetically, even if I can appreciate what the artist intends and how he communicates it. De gustibus non disputandem...
    Thank you for sharing this, though! It was great to hear about the inspiration for the new plates.

  • @staceyrickert9299
    @staceyrickert9299 2 года назад +10

    I am familiar with Mr. de Waal's passion for and works in porcelain clay and his excellent books on the history of his craft (The Hare With Amber Eyes and The White Road are fascinating) and call me a peasant if you must but I think he has missed the mark here. The inscriptions resemble children's scribbles in worn and dying Sharpies, then fired in an ashpit. If he was reaching for some kind of Impressionist passion, there should still be some beauty to them beyond the gold bits and makers marks on the base. If I had paid to see this exhibition, I'd want a refund.

    • @oltedders
      @oltedders Год назад

      His work is unbelievably dreary. His narration sounds like he's on something.

  • @laidman2007
    @laidman2007 2 года назад +1

    Plymouth mug...the color if this particular cobalt is uncommon and wonderful.

  • @RaggiBoy1
    @RaggiBoy1 2 года назад +5

    This is very interesting insight. But his designs do not work with the soulless iKea tier Wedgewood pattern; they do not speak to one another. It does not help make for an argument that these great ceramic houses are still full of life.

  • @anitchlikadze3451
    @anitchlikadze3451 2 года назад +1

    Thank you❤️

  • @anitchlikadze3451
    @anitchlikadze3451 2 года назад +2

    The journey in history with porcelain✨️👏👏👏

  • @nazimerkaya
    @nazimerkaya 2 года назад +7

    looks very cy twombly

  • @laidman2007
    @laidman2007 2 года назад

    Your plates are superb.

  • @Cssfiend
    @Cssfiend 2 года назад +3

    edmund de waal epitomises networking and sales patter as art, and even his patter isn't that good (fragmentary fragments?)

  • @themarquis336
    @themarquis336 Год назад +2

    Sorry to say it, but Edmund De Waal scribbling on plates is very far from his brightest moment.

  • @juliancoulden1753
    @juliancoulden1753 Год назад +3

    What a shame Edmunds plates are just blotches of look a like graffiti.

  • @countesscable
    @countesscable Год назад +2

    Don’t like them….no matter how he bigs them up 🙄

  • @DMTHOTH
    @DMTHOTH Год назад +1

    more like british history of porcelain.