New York: Great Art Cities Explained
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- Опубликовано: 1 июн 2024
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Abstract Expressionism would emerge from a post-war mood of anxiety and trauma. These were artists who, like the surrealists before them had a profound interest in the unconscious mind. They produced work that may have been abstract but was also emotional, expressive and universal. Despite their differences, the physical act of painting united them. The work they produced came straight from the gut.
It was an art form that was monumental in scale and an expression of the individual. It would run alongside (and be inspired) by that other great improvisational American art form: Jazz.
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I would like to thank all my Patreon supporters, in particular Alan Stewart, Alexander Velser, Christa Sawyer, Griffin Evans, Jennifer Barnaby, Julio Cardenas, Karim Hopper, Kibbi Shaw, Monte St. Johns, Nicholas Siebenlist, Paul Ark, Pawel Juszczyk, Theresa Garfink, Toni Ko, and Tyler Wittreich
"What a brilliant series this is" - Stephen Fry on Twitter 12 December 2020
CREDITS
By Joanne Shurvell and James Payne
SUBTITLES I input the English subtitles myself but I rely on volunteers to do subtitles for other languages and I really appreciate it - just contact me at jamespayne33@hotmail.com
French Subtitles by Ludivine Desriac
Chinese subtitles by Charles Xue
Title Sequence by Brian Adsit (instagram brian_vfx?... and Behance www.behance.com/badsit88)
Special thanks to Drone Footage - a brilliant RUclips channel (please subscribe) that allowed me to use some of their beautiful footage - / @dronefootage7263
THANKS TO
The Jewish Museum, 1109 5th Ave &, E 92nd St, New York, 10128, United States
Grey Art Gallery, 100 Washington Square E, New York, NY 10003, United States
Brooklyn Museum, 200 Eastern Pkwy, Brooklyn, NY 11238, United States
The Pollock-Krasner Foundation.
Elaine de Kooning Trust
Helen Frankenthaler Foundation
The Voice of Elaine de Kooning - Joanne Shurvell
All the videos, songs, images, and graphics used in the video belong to their respective owners and I or this channel do not claim any right over them.
VIDEOS
• Approaches to Abstract...
Salvador Dali - • Salvador Dali Intervie...
Lee Krasner - • Lee Krasner from the D...
Lee Krasner interview - • Lee Krasner, 1978
Helen Frankenthaler - • From 1984: Abstract ex...
JFK - • Listening In: JFK on G...
Old NYC footage - • Turn-Of-The-Century NY...
SCRIPT
Joanne Shurvell and James Payne
SUBTITLES
Spanish subtitles by Alma Perdomo
BOOKS
Ninth Street Women: Lee Krasner, Elaine de Kooning, Grace Hartigan, Joan Mitchell, and Helen Frankenthaler: Five Painters and the Movement That Changed Modern Art by Mary Gabriel
Women of Abstract Expressionism Hardcover by Irving Sandler
Abstract Expressionism by David Anfam
Three Women Artists: Expanding Abstract Expressionism in the American West by Amy Von Lintel, Bonnie Roos, et al.
Lee Krasner: A Biography by Gail Levin
Fierce Poise: Helen Frankenthaler and 1950s New York by Alexander Nemerov
A Generous Vision: The Creative Life of Elaine de Kooning by Cathy Curtis
Elaine de Kooning: Portraits by Brandon Brame Fortune
Music:
ONE FOR THE BASSMAN royalty free Music by Giorgio Di Campo for @FreeSound Music freesoundmusic.eu / freemusicfor. . / freesoundmusic original video: • One For The Bassman - ...
Lee Krasner's works © The Pollock-Krasner Foundation.
Elaine de Kooning works © 1963 Elaine de Kooning Trust
Helen Frankenthaler works © 2014 Helen Frankenthaler Foundation
Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. - Кино
Thanks!
Thank you - that is very generous and really helps the channel! 🙏
Man, you really do an exceptional job every single time. And giving a space for women who were overshadowed during their lifetime is a wonderful thing to do. ❤️
Thanks for such a great comment 🙏
The pandemic is over. It's been over. Free yourself
I'm Brazilian, I'm studying English and I use your videos to emerge in the language and learn about the culture. Thank you very much!
There’s a corner of a room on MoMA’s fourth floor where a small Krasner (that I rarely see people looking at) faces a large Pollock (which seemingly always has someone looking at it). It exemplifies this dynamic between these two specifically and the female and male abstract expressionists in general, because the Krasner is just as good! Thanks as always.
Krasner was killing it!
@@floccinaucinihilipilifications I just saw a really good exhibition of her work in a Chelsea gallery last weekend. I wonder how the dates line up with Pollock's death, ironically.
James, these just keep getting better and better
Thanks 🙏 I’m learning as I go along!
as a new yorker, understanding the rich art history of his city makes me appreciate it even more
Of the three my favorite one is Frankenthaler, I find her work very lyric, beautiful and highly delicate in its sophistication
The abstract expressionists are my absolute favourites in all of art history. I started painting that way myself which is funny since they are very much influenced by psychology (Freud and Jung, etc.) and that has always been a big interest to me. Such an interesting class of artists who made incredible works.
I saw a Rothko in Pompidou and it was such an amazing experience. Just got so emotional and just kept standing in front of it. Encompassed me with such a feeling of comfort. Incredible.
It's a shame that some of Jackson Pollock's paintings suffered from his choice of exterior house paint for some. When I first saw No. 31 at MoMA as a child in the early '60s, there were still visible reddish-pink streaks. They've faded to grey today. Other pigments survived a bit better.
He said "the painting has a life of its own". The artworks age, just like people.
orrrr maybe that is his excuse for using fugitive paint lol
An upper level college class on Abstract Expressionism transformed me from a passive admirer into an art lover. I grew up in Manhattan and *love* NYC, everything happening at the vanguard of art, music and literature after the war resonated deeply with my tastes, and my professor was one of the greatest teachers I’ve known. One of my favorite pieces is Vir Heroicus Sublimus by Barnett Newman. Newman, Ad Reinhardt and Jackson Pollock created pieces that moved me intensely by their scale. I wish I could rediscover Ab Ex all over again.
I used to love that painting, too, until I saw a black and white photo of it in a book. It looked like a napkin. I never saw the painting the same way again. And, I began to feel that Newman was pulling a fast one.
Wow, I’m so glad you mentioned this.. when I first saw Vir Heroicus Sublimus in MoMA I was completely stunned. I must have stayed in that room for at least 45-minutes looking at it.. from the bench placed in the room, from the opposite wall, and of course right up in front of it as close as I could get my nose in. It’s so overwhelming like that, like you’re drowning in crimson but like you’re being charged electrically, hovering nearly and all the air is being sucked out of you. I couldn’t understand it (and still don’t, really).. it’s just a lot of red paint and a few vertical lines. Back then I didn’t even like art all that much, in high school I thought art class was beneath me, MoMA was probably the 2nd art gallery I’d ever been to.
Anyway, they were closing so I had to leave and I wandered around the city for hours so overcome with everything. I cried and I felt sick. I went back another 4 times while I was in the city that summer, just to look at it.
I can only describe it as the painting must have triggered some kind of shift in my consciousness.. like my first major dalliance with psychedelics, I really wasn’t the same after it. Visiting art galleries is one of my favourite things to do now. I began writing and taking photos, then eventually painting and drawing. I know it sounds ridiculous, but I never saw things the same after that fucking painting. Nothing is ever as it is and there’s always something so much larger, vaster that you’re failing to, incapable of grasping.
@@ediesedgwick4462 It's so nonsensical to base your opinion on a random, shitty, small, unsaturated picture from a magazine instead of the painting itself.
It's like saying "I used to like touching flowers in the field but then this one time I put heavy duty mittens on and dirty glasses so both my touch and vision was impaired. I went out into the field and I no longer enjoyed picking flowers.
Like... What? How does that make any sense.
Expressionism is not my cup of tea, but I LOVE your videos! THANK YOU and greetings from Berlin Germany 👍🤗🇩🇪
Thanks for watching 🙏
Thank you for this. Please continue to bring attention to lesser known artists. Art history college courses largely ignore them despite their significant contributions.
"Her lover, the art critic" ;) It's hard to hold back the cynicism when it receives a serve like that. It's all about taking control of the narrative. Thanks for the history lesson.
i will wait for more new comments and discussions now; it will feel more fulfilling after watching this video.
I’m glad to see a new video from this channel!
Wonderful video-thanks for featuring us alongside our friends at Brooklyn Museum and The Jewish Museum!
You have a great collection! Thanks 🙏
Another Excellent Video. Thank you James & Joanne.
Thanks for watching
Thanks! We loved working on this one!
Excellent. A joy from beginning to too swift end.
Your work is a balm. Intelligent, thoughtful, informative. Thank you.
I just _adore_ NYC.
Only visited twice....for a combined total of 15 days, but that was enough for me to fall in love.
And the art!? My god....I remember in the Chelsea district alone there seemed to be a museum around every corner. You'd walk through some nondescript door, and enter a wonderland devoted to some highly specialized type of art. It was wonderful...
Thanks for this video. Neither abstract expressionism nor jazz speaks to me at all, but it’s always interesting to get more context and to see/hear what other people are into.
One tiny niggle: Mondri(a)an’s first name (‘Piet’, 4:10) is pronounced ‘Pete’.
It's a little saddening how women used to (and often still do) seem to disappear into their husbands, having to cater to their needs, their careers. Like Elaine de Kooning; even though she's a recognized artist, she still holds the name of her more famous husband. So when I hear "De Kooning", I will automatically think of Willem. I hope this video will stick in my mind, so the next time I hear the name, I will think of Elaine. Great essay, great video!
A little saddening? It's outragous in my opinion. Just think of all the great art we've missed out on, in all branches of art, due to this. Not to mention maths, science and many many other fields as well.
@GxV to avoid being judged for being a bad wife
The abstract expressionists are my favorite painters. Thank you for this video.
Thanks for watching 🙏
Wow! I have never heard of Helen Frankenthaler before this video and I blown away by how amazing her art style is. I would love to go see her paintings in person one day. Thank you for another amazing video!
Makes my day reading comments like yours - thank you 🙏
This is so interesting to learn about the story of these 3 wonderful artists! Thank you for your work!!
We're pleased you enjoyed it!
The content and production quality is just outstanding!
True
I’ve learned so much in 15 minutes! Amazing video, as always. Thank you! 🫶
I live out where Pollock and Krasner lived, there’s a park named after him, John Steinbeck also hid himself away out here cool stuff and has his own Park also
Nice area - I visited their house a while back
Another BRAVO from me!! The only downside is now I must wait impatiently for your next production! darn.
I’ll second our host’s brief endorsement of the book “Ninth Street Women.” It’s over 900 pages, but so, so worth it. Don’t be intimidated by the size. It’s fantastic.
Best channel on RUclips. This video was especially enlightening as I’d never heard of any of these amazing female artists. Thank you!
Ninth street women is such an an amazing book. I appreciate more their massive part in that time.Fantastic video as always
There should be an award like the Emmy's for YT videos. Almost every one of your fabulous pieces would win. This is no exception. You take a topic we all know well and in some cases love with a passion and teach us something new. Outstanding.
Agreed
Please do velasquez 🙏🏻
Wow this is one of my favorites and some of your best work! Elaine de Kooning has been one of my favorite artists for almost a decade and it has been so disheartening so see her excluded from art history lectures and exhibitions, especially those on the topic of abstract expressionism. Her portrait of JFK is truly larger than life and shines so brilliantly in the National Portrait Gallery. What an informative and well rounded video!
Elaine is the least known of the three so we were pleased to highlight her talents!
I totally agree.
That Kennedy portrait is amazingly beautiful and innovative.
Excellent. Please do more on these under appreciated artists.
Yes
thank you :')
exceptional as always
I'll get a copy of Ninth street women
It’s a brilliant book!
Such an excellent episode!
It’s refreshing to see these female artists get some recognition.
Their work is so innovative, and downright beautiful.
I've never been a fan of contemporary art but you've made it interesting. Great job and thank you
Who else fell in love with art after discovering GAE?
Another fantastic video. I appreciate all of your videos so much and have learned a tremendous amount. This one was especially interesting as I knew very little about these three amazing women. Thank you so much for the time and effort you put into these - the quality is incredible.
Seeing a new video from you after a hectic week has made my day! Please look into doing a video on Albert Namatjira, an Australian aboriginal painter. His work is wonderful and needs to be shared!
Love every video this man puts out!
Yet another incredible documentary by Great Art Explained. Thank you for covering my home city.
freaking love these women. Lee Krasner is a freaking hero who needs way more representation.
great job as always! everytime a friend or family member we asks me about art, I bring them to your channel.
Thanks for recommending - I appreciate it!
It's amazing how you manage to weave this brilliant narrative combining art, place, gender, politics, family, even jazz and the space race! And it all comes together beautifully to make us discover awesome and radical works and ideas, well done dude
What an eye opener,brilliant piece,as ever
I would so wish that if you'd do this for photography too.
Just found this amazing channel.
Could you do a video on Norwegian Odd Nerdrum? He's still alive and painting. I love his work, almost hyper realistic but very classic I think.
Had no clue about Krasner or De Kooning until I saw this video, thank you!
Loving everything about this channel. The narration, subject matter, the perspectives, the editing...everything
'Great art cities' is a very creative and interactive segment. Tells so much about the world that went past us. Could you also start the third segment where you explain some award-winning photography and about the photographers who took those photos?
Nice idea!
I always learn so much from your videos. I usually follow them with an internet search wanting to know more. Although I do find more, it rarely has the structure and insight of your content. I look forward to every video, no matter how much or how little I know about it's subject
Great research by the team. Very resourceful. Thanks for sharing.
thanks! the research is the fun bit!
Another wonderfully executed, informative video. I could listen to James for hours.
I know I say this on almost every video I get Real Into but you make such exceptional work given such a limited time frame, your script formatting is worthy of a master-class!
Your comments are always appreciated - thank you 🙏
Thank you for mentioning these three amazing artists, but also giving a mention of the beloved Brooklyn Museum, the sister of the more famous Metropolitan Museum. It truly has so many treasures in it.
Thank you for this excellent insight into abstract expressionism in New York!
As per usual a fantastic video. I always look forward to your videos, I learn something new every time.
Thanks 🙏
Hugely inspiring! Love NYC and abstract expressionism. Thanks for the video.
I'm just a casual, but I am literally freaking out that I haven't seen Lee Krasner before... I don't understand how this incredible artist has been so swept under the rug.
She’s really well known tbh.
Sooooo informative. Thank you!
I missed your work, thank you for coming back
Thank you so much for making these! Just when I thought your videos couldn't get any better! This is my favorite art channel on YT. Simply the best!!!
Please do 'like' and leave a comment. It really helps to promote the channel - Thank you, James
Do you have a favorite art gallery/museum (or give us your Top 3) in NYC? Mine is the Neue Galerie New York (with an authentic Viennese cafe in the lobby!!!).
Would you consider The Potato Eaters ...please....I enjoy your dialogue so much...would really luv to hear you talking about that piece....thank you
great video as always!, just a little pronunciation tip: piet (like mondriaan) in dutch, is pronounced peet, i noticed this in other videos as wel, and i thought you'd like to know:)
Please make a video about Art of tinteritto...compare last supper of tinteritto and Leonardo...! Please..
yes
Mate this is probably one of your best video essays. If you ever do a piece on graffiti or urban art, I would love to provide some music for you!
Thanks 🙏
Thank you for this illuminating piece on these often-overlooked pioneers of modern art. Well done!
As usual a master art movie!!
does anyone else think of abstract art as "high entropy"? as in, it's obviously expressing something but in a state of relative disorder. i'm not sure what the implications of this are but it's fun to think about!
No
I mean Pollock has made clear that he had control whilst splashing the paint on the canvas and knew what he was doing; it wasn’t just pure impulsiveness, so I wouldn’t say so
I'm afraid I don't. I see it as something unworthy of being called art.
I don't understand abstract arts. They feel like the painter wanted to some paints which he/she like and that's all. These paintings can only be understood by artists and no one else.
You can have full control and make abstract art. Abstract art is more creative than painting something from life cause you can be free to make things look any way you want them to without strict rules getting in the way.
applause :)
just great, intelligent, and fun to watch. thanks for showing me such great painters that i have never encountered before, -Despite having looked into this era before. Champion!
Great video as always, you never let us viewers down! And congratulations for the 1 million subs.... 👍
So happy to see you made a new video!
Thank you for talking about Polluck I requested him not long back! Fascinating!
Thank you for the great video, James.
Another superb, thrilling video! So well done. Thank you.
I love this channel so much! I've seen every video and am entranced by the beauty of all the works. I've recommended you to so many of my friends. Since my background in photography, I would love to eventually see an episode on photography, especially Cindy Sherman as you showed in the end there... However, I'm glad to watch absolutely anything you produce!
Cindy Sherman is planned but probably Man Ray first - thanks 🙏
The best
Thank you
I love the way this channel is able to highlight everything from classical to modern art, and painters that are not perhaps generally known - at least not in what they contributed to art movements. Life and art and culture intertwined - as it should be. ❤ Also happy to see how your channel has growned, that it is getting the audience it deserves.
Thanks! The aim with the Great Art Cities Explained series is to highlight lesser-known artworks and museums.
Fantastic James. Learned at lot from that. Some extra stops added for my next visit to NY! Well done.
Please like and leave a comment - thanks 🙏
If you want us to leave comments, then you can't delete what we post.
Abstract Expressionists: Great Art Cities: New York 2210pm 29.7.22 is this your real voice, has the audio been doctored to some degree? i am surprised you didnt mention the CIA and it's great modern art experiments ie: churning out any old crap masking as art and fine art as the audience lapped it up... as it wowed new york, london, paris, munich... the over turned car reminded me of mae wests' car crash images... erm... not much to day about this. modern art is pretty crap pretty tiresome and ghastly. still; if she sent me a pollock i'd take it. and hang it. and wax lyrical about it. it's all about the aura, maaaaaan. cheers.
ALWAYS!!
Loving this style of video!
Do Chicago please?
Are you able to make a video on Egon Schiele? I’ve always found his work fascinating
Another engaging installment. Thank you.
I love your videos!! Thanks for all your hard work ❤️
Another tour de force. I have nothing I can add other than to recommend Kurt Vonnegut's book 'Bluebeard'. That is about the trials and tribulations of a, fictional, New York abstract impressionist. It does though feature interactions with the real people of the scene. And it is a great commentary on art, and the art scene, in general.
Oh I’m a big fan of Vonnegut but don’t know that book - I’ll check it out - thanks 🙏
Thanks! We’ll check out the book,
wow! 1st time since my school art class that i see the name cindy sherman.
I really love your choice of music and background sound in these videos, it always very nicely complements the visuals and the information. Awesome video!
Thank you for putting these artists, their life and works together into one awesome video.
Your channel is amazing, I'm learning so much and never had a deeper education in art. Wonderful ❤ Thank you so much I'm devouring your videos as a cool down for the day :)
Another wonderful video!!! Worth the wait like all of your other videos. Thank you very much for this series…I learn so much.
The work you are doing on your channel is truly exceptional. Thank you!
Fantastic video as per usual James! Thank you!
Another marvelous video... thanks for this three stories!
Thank you for providing insight into the lives and work of these talented women!
Once again, you treat us with a great lesson. Thank you very much! I can't belive the time we live in and this kind of stuff is actually free!
Another awesome educational video! No fanfare, just the facts. So impressive! Thank you!
Thanks for showing how empowered female artists are. They deserve it! :)
thank you for your amazing work. very interesting and marvellous production!
I’m so happy I’ve found this channel. It’s so relaxing to listen to while also being educated.
Watching your series has really opened up visual art to myself and how to appreciate and understand the processes that the artists undertook within the movements, time and geographical locations. It is truly a highlight I look forward to when I see another notification that you have uploaded a video. Je vous souhaite beaucoup de succès.