Journey Through Pablo Picasso's Turbulent Life | Perspective

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 28 май 2024
  • You think you know him, but do you really? Take an in-depth look at his art, his turbulent life, and the lasting impact he made on the art of the 20th Century.
    A collection of portraits of some of the greatest artists including painters, architects, sculptors and photographers, along with their masterpieces as you’ve never seen them before. Le Corbusier, Andy Warhol, Picasso. Everyone knows their names, they are among the most inventive artists of their generation. But behind the legends, who are they?
    Ambiguous personalities, each with their own controversial style, they broke all the codes. Famous the world over for their works, they each reflect their respective era. Through experts’ interviews, each episode takes us behind the scenes of a major exhibition to discover how, for example, Le Corbusier became a lasting influence on successive generations of architects.
    A fascinating documentary series which takes us inside the world of the artist to understand his work, revealing the secrets of the creative process.
    Subscribe and click the bell icon to get more arts content every week:
    / perspectivearts
    Perspective is RUclips's home for the arts. Come here to get your fill of great music, theatre, art and much, much more!
    From "Behind The Artist"
    Content licensed from ZED Media to Little Dot Studios.
    Any queries, please contact us at:
    perspective@littledotstudios.com

Комментарии • 507

  • @PerspectiveArts
    @PerspectiveArts  Год назад +10

    📺 It's like Netflix for history! Sign up to History Hit, the world's best history documentary service, and enjoy a discount on us: bit.ly/3uQ15zU

    • @AudioPervert1
      @AudioPervert1 Год назад +1

      what a bogus lecture. Which artist (very famous) did not have Turbulent Life? Name one please?
      (they create all such content deliberately to create new and false perspectives most of the time)
      And F**K Netflix. As if there was nothing else in this world to watch.

  • @alexcarter2542
    @alexcarter2542 2 года назад +104

    ...so where's part 2? This should be called, "the turbulent YOUTH of pablo picasso." It's not finished. He's like, 25, where this documentary ends. No word of his best works yet.

    • @KingDayDayDay00
      @KingDayDayDay00 2 года назад +18

      The way it ended so suddenly made it feel that way too

    • @alexcarter2542
      @alexcarter2542 2 года назад +18

      @@KingDayDayDay00 lol I'm glad I'm not the only one. I was honestly really irritated lol. They do such a good job with their doc's and to just leave it there seems... Well, evil

    • @alteredcatscyprus
      @alteredcatscyprus 2 года назад +11

      Indeed it rather trailed off and wrapped up abruptly!

    • @alexcarter2542
      @alexcarter2542 2 года назад +9

      @@alteredcatscyprus we need to start a petition

    • @whoisharo4689
      @whoisharo4689 2 года назад

      🙂

  • @StephiSensei26
    @StephiSensei26 2 года назад +52

    When you're a sponge, what else can you do but "absorb" everything around you. "If you're going to steal, steal from the best!" He took what he saw, ran with it and brought it to new heights. Terrific Documentary. Thank you.

    • @sakabula1285
      @sakabula1285 2 года назад +2

      Well if you're a Sponge you can get a deal with a major children tv network and have a hit show and be loved by millions of kids worldwide...I know a sponge named Bob that did that

    • @StephiSensei26
      @StephiSensei26 2 года назад +1

      @@sakabula1285 Good one!😀

    • @susanmercurio1060
      @susanmercurio1060 2 года назад +1

      I read that "Good writers borrowed from others, great writers stole." I guess painters did the same.

    • @StephiSensei26
      @StephiSensei26 2 года назад +1

      @@susanmercurio1060 BINGO!

    • @xpez9694
      @xpez9694 2 года назад +2

      stealing is not the right word but it sounds mischievious and dubious in this context.. all it means is to find inspiration from varied sources and use them in new unexpected ways..make new connections between these inspirations to create something that is your own..

  • @Sodhivine
    @Sodhivine Год назад +19

    WE NEED A PART 2!!!

  • @michaelburgess9707
    @michaelburgess9707 2 года назад +40

    I hope there will be a part 2 and part 3, after all he lived another 65 years after "Les Desmoiselles d'Avignon". Thanks for all you do, really enjoy the Perspective channel.

    • @WhitneyDahlin
      @WhitneyDahlin 7 месяцев назад

      Was there ever a part two or three?

  • @LOVERGEIST777
    @LOVERGEIST777 10 месяцев назад +2

    painting while listening to this....
    its gonna be a good day!

  • @suziperret468
    @suziperret468 2 года назад +3

    Love,love, love, Perspective ! Thank you.

  • @mannymoseley4005
    @mannymoseley4005 Год назад +3

    Thank you so much for posting one of my favorite artists along with Michael Angelo, Leonardo de Vinci, Vincent Van Gogh, Paul Gauguin, Monet, Manet and others. Thank you for reminding me that their is acceptional beauty in the world. Art lifts us transports us inspires us and informs us. It is eternally our Muse.

  • @claudettedelphis6476
    @claudettedelphis6476 2 года назад +4

    Thank you W for yet another superbly interesting and totally enjoyable day in history 🌷
    You are the Best 🍃
    Life is Art 🖼

  • @frannieswannie6046
    @frannieswannie6046 2 года назад +5

    absolute brilliant doccie. many thanks

  • @hannawagenknecht6378
    @hannawagenknecht6378 Год назад

    Thank you so much 😌 for this Perspektive!

  • @StefanMedici
    @StefanMedici 2 года назад +5

    Can't wait for part 2.

  • @dianag.1997
    @dianag.1997 Год назад

    Fabulous movie! Thank you for a great work!

  • @alanlawrence2954
    @alanlawrence2954 Год назад +3

    Epic documentary. Was transfixed from the first frame to the last.

  • @CliftonBowers-pc2xu
    @CliftonBowers-pc2xu 2 года назад

    I can remember as a child looking at his paintings and seeing the optical allusions ..it always surprises 😮 you...I enjoyed them now many do...

  • @Schlei602
    @Schlei602 Год назад +1

    Great docu. Thx!!!

  • @sakabula1285
    @sakabula1285 2 года назад

    Great doccie..Thank you.

  • @andrewbellavie795
    @andrewbellavie795 Год назад +2

    the close up shots of the paintings are excellent

  • @studiosandi
    @studiosandi Год назад +1

    Thank you for this video! It was so interesting.

  • @TheKyleCoyle
    @TheKyleCoyle 2 года назад +7

    This narrator is no substitute for Waldemar. Honestly, she sounds like one of those robot voiceovers on tiktok.

    • @kathydent2116
      @kathydent2116 2 года назад +2

      If you look at the end credits, it's clear that this is a French documentary, so the voice over is not part of the original. Waldemar writes his own stuff, so we aren't going to get him reading a translation of someone else's work for us (sadly). But I agree with you about the bland way she reads the script.

    • @BrianSalazar-kn5ng
      @BrianSalazar-kn5ng Месяц назад

      Who cares? It works for me.

  • @irenealomar5240
    @irenealomar5240 2 года назад

    Fascinating video🌹🌷🔆

  • @CodCats
    @CodCats 24 дня назад

    the best ever! Picasso! I saw les demoiselles d'avignon in person during december 2022, and got a picture with it! you could go right up to it, it was insane!

    • @CodCats
      @CodCats 24 дня назад

      Picasso is a combination of time, love and passion for creativity. I'm not sure if I believe in natural talent, but maybe someone who can achieve such mastery has some kind of genetic set of predispositions which make them more capable. His first word was pencil, he drew and painted since birth, all day everyday, with intense love and obsession and not out of force, and up until the hour of his death. That much time and passion makes it seem impossible for another human to catch up to him. So especially when i see his later paintings, ones that critics call bad paintings or that he'd lost it, i just think of the absolute master of painting and art made that so it has to be respected and that we can't comprehend it for how deep he's gone to get there lol!

  • @kaymarieperera4778
    @kaymarieperera4778 Год назад

    Breathtaking.

  • @grokeffer6226
    @grokeffer6226 2 года назад

    Excellent!!!👏

  • @danielboard9510
    @danielboard9510 Год назад

    mAKING STUFF UP!!

  • @terrywbreedlove
    @terrywbreedlove 2 года назад +7

    Pablo Picasso and Vincent Van Gogh are my two favorite Artist. Wish we could have video of Vincent working in the studio as we have of Pablo.

    • @sakabula1285
      @sakabula1285 2 года назад +3

      I would have loved to see van Gogh paint..I reckon it was pretty messy...lol.Ive also always wondered what became of van Gogh's easel and brushes?

  • @silva7493
    @silva7493 2 года назад

    Those illustrative colored drawings are great!

  • @janschetters7720
    @janschetters7720 Год назад +8

    The makers of this masterpiece of documentary are also masters of Culture Art.

  • @Ken-rm6ew
    @Ken-rm6ew 2 года назад +4

    Interesting explanation of early Picasso. A lot of comments remark on his proclivity for ‘stealing’ ideas but seem not to understand that language is endlessly evolving and recycling and we cannot escape the influence of it as we grow in our usage of it. Art Is an expressive language which spans human experience and we make our contribution to it for future generations.

    • @charlesberrian
      @charlesberrian 2 года назад

      Then why frame this style as originating with Picasso, insteading of crediting the inspirations of his "genius"?
      The world is born out of the minds of ingenious people, but there are people who would steal the very breathes from the original creators.
      More and more people are waking up to the lengths people have gone to pervert history.

    • @adaptercrash
      @adaptercrash Год назад

      Really cool abstract surreal realism then he just offed himself

  • @JoseEduardoNZ
    @JoseEduardoNZ 2 года назад

    Brilliant!!!

  • @tigerscott2966
    @tigerscott2966 2 года назад +3

    Great video...the painting world is filled with secrets...only the affluent really like and buy art. There is so much fraud, abuse and contraversy there, it really takes away from the real beauty. It is magical when a person connects with a painting .

  • @keremgoldagi2830
    @keremgoldagi2830 2 года назад

    thank you!

  • @SJawaher
    @SJawaher Год назад +1

    PART II is a must 😵

  • @angelajsacaartistaffiliatedwpl

    Awesome very beautiful

  • @darylcumming7119
    @darylcumming7119 2 года назад

    I think the name of the documentary explains itself. Congratulations.

  • @isaacbrickman4341
    @isaacbrickman4341 2 года назад +12

    Really wish we could’ve had Waldemar on this, been waiting for him to talk about Picasso

    • @franlamb409
      @franlamb409 2 года назад +4

      he's very captivating as host indeed!

    • @alteredcatscyprus
      @alteredcatscyprus 2 года назад +3

      I know! 😭 They know that, so they got him to introduce it, lol.

    • @palomaalhambra2453
      @palomaalhambra2453 2 года назад

      Couldv'e? So who is this if its not Waldemar?

  • @vicentepineda1860
    @vicentepineda1860 2 года назад +20

    Thanks for a very interesting documentary. I believe that there is "art" in all of us, but, sadly, it is not all who have the ambition and the perseverance to unlock its secrets. Thanks again.

    • @curtcoller3632
      @curtcoller3632 Год назад

      Unfortunately there was no "art" in fellow Picasso.

    • @vicentepineda1860
      @vicentepineda1860 Год назад +1

      @@curtcoller3632 The ability to justly interpret the expressions of another's imagination is beyond me. But is is within my domain to express justly the workings of my own imagination for good or ill. Thanks.

    • @vicentepineda1860
      @vicentepineda1860 Год назад

      Thanks.

    • @kensyskye8965
      @kensyskye8965 Год назад

      Nor desire….

    • @vicentepineda1860
      @vicentepineda1860 Год назад

      @@kensyskye8965 I agree.

  • @tabuena.fineart
    @tabuena.fineart Год назад

    cool stuff👍👍👍

  • @melissafinley6704
    @melissafinley6704 3 месяца назад

    Oh my gosh why did this end so abruptly?! A great documentary of his youth. Where is the rest?!

  • @shirleyvelazquez1604
    @shirleyvelazquez1604 2 года назад +1

    just recently visit, His hometown Museum. It was my honor 🎖

  • @lindsayhengehold5341
    @lindsayhengehold5341 Год назад +1

    Love both Picasso and cubism in art!

  • @reginaargentin2864
    @reginaargentin2864 Год назад +2

    love this channel but please showcase more women artists! There were many that are not household names but worthy to show and as a woman artist I enjoy seeing other women artists from the past

  • @stevenjbeto
    @stevenjbeto 2 года назад +25

    While serving as a medic in Vietnam, I suppressed all emotion not knowing how to understand what went on around me.
    Three years later, I saw for the first time Picasso’s work in an Art History course at the University of Minnesota. I felt fixated and word dumb to reason it through.
    Picasso’s work reintroduced me to feelings not remembering what they were or where they came from like the building of predawn light in the Eastern Horizon.

    • @kenmurphy6792
      @kenmurphy6792 2 года назад +1

      That .. was an extremely difficult position to be in. So many soldiers have returned from that war with severe crippling PTSD as a result of the things that they saw and did in Vietnam .. and THEY - were the "lucky" ones. Had they known the actual politics that led up to that terrible conflict .. I would imagine that many more young men would have either refused to serve, or fled to Canada or Mexico in order to avoid the draft. The truth is .. the Vietnam War (1955-1975) .. which was a military conflict between North Vietnam (supported by China and the Soviet Union) and South Vietnam (supported by the United States, South Korea, Australia, and several other US allies during the Cold War (1947-1991). - The U.S. and Russia avoided nuclear annihilation by waging "proxy wars," supporting opposing sides in regional conflicts. Vietnam is a classic proxy war, with the Viet Cong substituting for the Soviet bloc, and the U.S. providing aid and air support (bombing) to a puppet regime. ~
      The Vietnam War was described as a civil war within South Vietnam, although it became a proxy war between Cold War powers. As a result, the Vietnamese suffered the highest casualties in the conflict.
      Fortunately .. I was too young to be drafted into the military having been born in 1956. ~~ Thank you GOD .. Thank you Lord .. Thank you Dear Jesus .. and thank YOU Stephen James Beto for you service and commitment to this great country. - God bless YOU !!! ~~

    • @TalibanSymphonyOrchestra
      @TalibanSymphonyOrchestra 2 года назад

      I was a medic in the 82nd but never saw combat and glad for it. My sister's husband's father was a skin doctor and treated Picasso. He was given a few drawings (sketches) which my brother-in-law still has. His mom tried to sell them at one point, but no buyers.

    • @sophiamarquis
      @sophiamarquis Год назад

      @@kenmurphy6792 What soldiers did in Vietnam were awful crimes of War. Despicable things. The World should never forget nor forgive.

  • @artlifealways...
    @artlifealways... Год назад

    R.I.P to one of the greatest...artlife always i2f the artist...one love...blessings

  • @doreekaplan2589
    @doreekaplan2589 2 года назад

    This man is fun and listentoable................

  • @43painter
    @43painter 2 года назад +3

    Fascinating docu.
    I am an artist in Amsterdam , soon to become an idiot 'smart city', for idiots . . .by idiots, but my Gertrude Stein hasn't appeared on my doorstep . . yet. 😅

    • @simonestreeter1518
      @simonestreeter1518 2 года назад

      Hey, over here New York City is fast becoming a Smart City for idiots too! I had to leave.

  • @vicentesegarra8101
    @vicentesegarra8101 Год назад +1

    as a Spaniard I can say I liked your approach to Picasso but I find it uncomplete however accurate it may be....please go ahead & enthrall us all with a continuate saga about him...thanks

  • @derekwfrazier
    @derekwfrazier 8 месяцев назад

    Excepcional

  • @franziskazach7912
    @franziskazach7912 Год назад +1

    A good Artist!

  • @dvjai
    @dvjai Год назад

    Vary nice

  • @crystalthompson3424
    @crystalthompson3424 2 года назад

    😊 thanks 😊

  • @phelan5387
    @phelan5387 Год назад

    There are only a small number of Picasso's works that I really like. One of my favorites is the steel sculpture called woman that stands at the entrance of the city of Chicago's civic center.

  • @MrMonoyo
    @MrMonoyo 2 года назад +1

    The mistery and greatness of Cubism: One Cube has 6 sides {six blank canvas}; Picasso paints his abstraction of reality or the particular focus or component of it on each side of his cube. The cube is his whole canvas and artistic composition.

  • @grandcrowdadforde6127
    @grandcrowdadforde6127 Год назад

    One of the best put downs && assessments of P. casso ever made>>. "" P. casso "" said S. Dali "" paints too much ""

  • @angelajsacaartistaffiliatedwpl
    @angelajsacaartistaffiliatedwpl Год назад +1

    Always love Picasso

  • @chidozieunanka4265
    @chidozieunanka4265 5 месяцев назад

    nice one. it seems they were in a hurry to end the documentary. pls make another for us.

  • @calvingrondahl1011
    @calvingrondahl1011 2 года назад +4

    I have enjoyed Michael Colling’s interpretations of art through the decades. I respect all of art’s tour guides especially the Brits.

    • @palomaalhambra2453
      @palomaalhambra2453 2 года назад

      But this isn't Matthew Collings eh? Its Wally Janusczak. With ridiculous hairdo.

  • @raffinee_3763
    @raffinee_3763 2 года назад +3

    Please play part 2...........you'all never played part 2 for Toulouse Lautrec..........

  • @rasclotify
    @rasclotify 2 года назад +15

    He is the quintessential artist's artist we learn in Art School. He was like the Beatles of the art world exploring each style movement & medium breaking ground before there was ground to break. Innovator! A true literal protege from the jump. He was also a romantic, a ladies man as well as a notorious womanizer, who drove several women to attempt suicide! Isn't life grand? Full of contradictions & grays. Some of our greatest heroes were jerks, alcoholics, abusive husbands, nazi sympathizers, etc, etc. his story for me is yet another artist who invokes the debate: Appreciating the art & separating it from the artist when the artist's actions are morally questionable. Woody Allen, Leni Riefenstahl, Charles Bukowski, cancel culture, etc....but the art, good gawd the art. Most known for his cubism period, it is his sculpture & blue period that blows my mind. Check his entire catalog. When you see his work in person ? Mouth ajar. Thats a bucket lister.

    • @user-wl1uz5sb9f
      @user-wl1uz5sb9f Год назад +3

      I think that you should separate the art from the artist. To produce great, frequently it is require to go through extreme experiences, and that means, doing some morally objectable mistakes. It goes hand in hand, no good art ever came from a puritanist.

    • @rasclotify
      @rasclotify Год назад +1

      @@user-wl1uz5sb9f I love the convo on this topic, & appreciate both sides of the argument & I have had this same convo with many artists throughout the years on this specific topic many times. I tend to air on the side that you stated in your comment. I can appreciate the art still, but think the artist is rotten to the core ethically as a person outside of their art at the same time. They can coexist in my opinion. I can make that distinction. Whether or not I support them $ is a diff matter, but I can still appreciate the art & recognize it’s strengths.

    • @sophiamarquis
      @sophiamarquis Год назад

      Do not even compare, the ladies fell in love for him...Woody Allen just does not have any artist skills and is a ped. Not comparable at all.

    • @sophiamarquis
      @sophiamarquis Год назад +1

      @@user-wl1uz5sb9fEveryone should do as they feel. Picasso is far from the worse, talking about indecency. If i feel i cannot separate the art from the artist, because in fact, the art becomes from the artist the person, no One Will tell me not to do it. It's my choice.

    • @AthalieM
      @AthalieM Год назад +2

      @@user-wl1uz5sb9f I agree art should be separate from the artist; however, i do not agree with this idea that people have to be 'morally objectionable', suffer, or cause suffering to make great art. that's such a tired, harmful trope. there is a LOT of space between puritan and extremist.

  • @kalilavalezina
    @kalilavalezina 2 года назад +3

    It ends just as it's getting juicy! Is there a part two?

  • @CoolRay.
    @CoolRay. 8 месяцев назад +1

    Good information on Picasso, but please let us know once you decide to clearly title the second and third parts of Picasso's story because they're very difficult to find. I have yet to find either of them.

  • @AmyC8889.Art.Studio
    @AmyC8889.Art.Studio 2 года назад

    Special road🤩

  • @jamesgarcia9123
    @jamesgarcia9123 Год назад

    thanks perspective', a boy genuis of the art world', peace😎

  • @patrickcharles7190
    @patrickcharles7190 2 года назад +2

    Was that the introduction? When does the turbulence come in? Part 2?

  • @hawthorne1504
    @hawthorne1504 2 года назад

    How do you unlearn? Great concept.

  • @aquelpibe
    @aquelpibe Год назад +3

    Reading some of the comments here, a saying comes to mind: "ignorance is bold".

  • @mn4169
    @mn4169 2 года назад +2

    This was your best documentary ever, Waldemar. The symbolism of art is important for the past, present and future of the Ukraine and the understanding of the culture of the region. Symbols seek our souls and bore deep into our brains. The Ukraine will prevail.

  • @morningstar9233
    @morningstar9233 2 года назад +3

    Fun fact: Pablo Picasso never got called an asshole.

    • @cameraman5449
      @cameraman5449 2 года назад +2

      Also: he was smooth af and drove an Eldorado

    • @morningstar9233
      @morningstar9233 2 года назад

      @@cameraman5449 Some people try to pick up girls and get called asshole - this never happened to Pablo Picasso

  • @markwood3389
    @markwood3389 Год назад

    Perspective biographies reminds me of one time I was sitting on the toilet, and I got interrupted, and it kinda got cut off in the middle.

  • @clkvlk
    @clkvlk 2 года назад +2

    I had read that back in the day Picasso and his contemporaries thought Cézanne was the forefather of Cubism.

    • @kathydent2116
      @kathydent2116 2 года назад +1

      Not just back in the day. This is standard art history. Art is like a river - it flows and evolves, it doesn't suddenly jerk to something that hasn't been foreshadowed.

    • @clkvlk
      @clkvlk 2 года назад

      @@kathydent2116 in other words, calling Picasso the forefather of Cubism as the thumbnail suggests is possibly wrong.

    • @kathydent2116
      @kathydent2116 2 года назад +2

      @@clkvlk Yes. Picasso and Braque are viewed as the direct founders of the Cubist movement, so they could be described as the fathers. Cezanne paved the way but did not articulate Cubism as a specific artistic movement in the way that Braque and Picasso did. Cezanne's relationship with Cubism is more indirect. It is more accurate to regard him as a forefather. You could say that Cezanne sparked many of the ideas that led to Cubism, but that Cubism only emerged in its full form with Braque and Picasso's work. Braque and Picasso were practitioners of Cubism, not forefathers. Picasso called Cezanne 'the father of us all'.

  • @Anthony-gq7dk
    @Anthony-gq7dk 2 года назад +3

    Brilliant documentary, so many experts giving exact and precise accounts of his life with all related works and superb narration .

  • @sarahtaylor8886
    @sarahtaylor8886 Год назад +1

    I do not have the time to watch the full video; can someone verify whether or not this is suitable for a secondary classroom? Thank you

  • @no59do56
    @no59do56 2 года назад

    I think of Bob Dylan when thinking of a I Containe Multitudes . The song .

  • @gzeusakey
    @gzeusakey 8 месяцев назад

    Learning and unlearning

  • @stephanebelizaire3627
    @stephanebelizaire3627 Год назад +1

    VIVA PICASSO !

  • @seafoodseafoodseafoodseafood
    @seafoodseafoodseafoodseafood Год назад

    What is the background music please?

  • @susanmercurio1060
    @susanmercurio1060 2 года назад

    Waldemar, I love ❤ you.

  • @topgameworld2323
    @topgameworld2323 3 месяца назад

    🙏❤️

  • @rodjomanelle
    @rodjomanelle 2 года назад +12

    In other words, the only good thing about him is his art.

    • @kathydent2116
      @kathydent2116 2 года назад +5

      That could be said about many artists. There's nothing as disappointing as meeting someone whose art you revere.

    • @johncastle8254
      @johncastle8254 2 года назад

      Your ignorance is enormous.

    • @martitinkovich4489
      @martitinkovich4489 2 года назад +6

      And that's not enough?

    • @MrDelvoye
      @MrDelvoye 2 года назад

      Debatable

    • @kirbo-prime6181
      @kirbo-prime6181 2 года назад

      His "art” is trash

  • @danielboard9510
    @danielboard9510 Год назад

    mAKING STUFF UP, CAUSE WE CAN!!!!!

  • @elizabethhurtado2829
    @elizabethhurtado2829 2 года назад

  • @DizzyCsango
    @DizzyCsango 2 года назад +4

    Is it just me or is the video not playing at normal speed?

  • @Makonen442
    @Makonen442 2 года назад +4

    Why do they not speak about Picasso’s work as Afrikan . After all.. Henry Matisse introduced Picasso to Afrikan art. It was Matisse who coined the word “Cubism”. Not Picasso. Because Matisse said Picasso was painting like the Afrikans… in little cubes. Hence… Picasso painted the “ brothels in Avignon “ after seeing the Afrikan mask Matisse showed him.

    • @mab7175
      @mab7175 2 года назад

      Very well and truthfully said. Cubism, impressivism, and expressionism are replications (stolen artforms) from North African and Northwestern African artforms. The North African Moors occupied and dominated Southwestern Europe, mainly Spain and Portugal, for 700 years. Of course African art, architecture, technologies were brought from Africa to Europe by the Moors. There are exact copies of Picasso's paintings from remnants of African art remained in Spain and other regions throughout Southwestern Europe. The failure attributing Modern European Art to the introduction of African art forms is a reprehensible stain on the history of art.

    • @gavinreid2741
      @gavinreid2741 Год назад +1

      The term cubism was coined by an art critic; not matisse. The main influence on Picassos cubism was Cezanne.

    • @Makonen442
      @Makonen442 Год назад

      @@gavinreid2741 yes it was coined by Henry Matisse. Matisse was the artiste that introduced Picasso to African Art. Upon seeing the African Art.. Picasso locked himself away and painted within the same concept. When Picasso showed Matisse the painting. Matisse said to him. "Why are you painting like the Afrikans in little cubes" . Quoted unquote.
      The French art critic you claimed coined the word was late in doing so. There was no Cubism in Europe until Matisse showed Picasso Afrikan Art. George's Braque came after with the landscapes.

  • @paulsfam
    @paulsfam 2 года назад +3

    I own the etching on paper called 2 people by Matisse that was exhibited in 1915 NY . I know what Matisse thought of him

    • @cameronkrause4712
      @cameronkrause4712 2 года назад

      who cares?

    • @paulsfam
      @paulsfam 2 года назад +1

      @@cameronkrause4712 Who cares What you think..lol

    • @margkropf5541
      @margkropf5541 2 года назад

      So what DIDMatisse think of Picasso??!!!

    • @paulsfam
      @paulsfam 2 года назад

      @@margkropf5541 read up you will find out

  • @abeautifulmindispoetrydefi5323
    @abeautifulmindispoetrydefi5323 Год назад +2

    I've just looked at Pablo Picasso "Head of a Woman" painting for the very first time. It struck me like a bolt of lightening that it isn't actually a head of a woman. I'm not sure if you'll see it straight away but its a woman on the left with a man face on the right. It's tricky because its subjective and abstract but also definitive in the sense that there are two people in this picture and not one. What gave it away for me is the "Desperate Dan" chin of the man on the right and when you then put it into context it's as clear as day... Please if you just take one look you'll see exactly what I mean.

    • @mendozabensouzan744
      @mendozabensouzan744 Год назад +1

      Much of Picasso's art is loaded with occult images but you won't hear about it from the art historians because they have been trained not to look

    • @ThatgirlFriday
      @ThatgirlFriday 11 месяцев назад

      I thought the same!!!! " He's on her mind" or she's starting to think and act like him!!!!

  • @djcrackademiks1191
    @djcrackademiks1191 2 года назад +1

    Where are the music credits for the intro… I need that 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Bhodisatvas
    @Bhodisatvas 2 года назад +30

    I would say George Brague was the forefather of Cubism and Picasso rode off his coat tails.
    There is no denying Picasso was a fantastic artist but he was also fantastic at, shall we say 'absorbing' other artist's ideas and styles to make his own.

    • @davidwahrheit6143
      @davidwahrheit6143 2 года назад +10

      And, actually, the term "cubism" was used by Matisse and writer Louis Vauxcelle to describe the work by Braque in an exhibition. I have seen this documentary before and am still astounded how it repeatedly shows a "family photo" and dwells on a boy in it who, in fact, is NOT Picasso.

    • @johnmorgan5495
      @johnmorgan5495 2 года назад +4

      You have been reading the wrong books.

    • @azurelad236
      @azurelad236 2 года назад +7

      ...and Kandinsky was the father of modern art.......

    • @a.agusart
      @a.agusart 2 года назад +3

      bad artist copy good artist steal

    • @grandcrowdadforde6127
      @grandcrowdadforde6127 2 года назад +1

      @@azurelad236 >>> V K was just too!! abstract for Pablo! noat that with all his virtuosity P casso never! attempted to explore that phenomenal early ****** of Kandinsky! odd.......! Maybe it was beyond him? I appreciate those wild no image paintings of K as much as i do P casso s early Cubism

  • @jerrybaba2
    @jerrybaba2 Год назад +1

    Georges Braque was the forefather of cubism, Picasso was inspired by him and wanted to find out where it would lead him in his own endeavors.

  • @guldenaydin9918
    @guldenaydin9918 2 года назад

    💝

  • @dannistor7294
    @dannistor7294 2 года назад +1

    ... I heard this many times, in various artistic and non-artistic circles, in reference to Picasso and to others: "he steals (or did steal, if already dead) other artists' ideas...When hearing this, I always ask the interlocutor if (s)he can give ma an example of an artist's "idea" that can be stolen... So far, no answer, people are just annoyed and might not invite me around anymore.
    ...Moreover, as far as a know, there are no cases in which a historian was able to point out a specific "theft", also naming Picasso's "victim"...
    ...Picasso talks about "stealing" in the sense of the influence that NO artist could ever avoid. That's why he recommends "the best".
    The amount of talking by the ear about art (and politics) is simply perplexing...

    • @sg639
      @sg639 Год назад

      Maybe this language of theft does not accurately/precisely convey the circumstance. If we instead say that he appropriated a tradition and set of conventions, then the argument crystallizes.

    • @sophiamarquis
      @sophiamarquis Год назад +1

      He did not steal from anyone. Those snobs that say that are just ignorant.

  • @williamwoody7607
    @williamwoody7607 Год назад

    Who did that mash up of Que Sara Sara?

  • @celestialteapot309
    @celestialteapot309 2 года назад +1

    the posh bird doing the narration could be talking about washing powder.

  • @silva7493
    @silva7493 2 года назад

    Oo, this should be good.

  • @mikehoran3842
    @mikehoran3842 11 месяцев назад

    at 1:23 mark, they begin playing a song by Wax Tailor/

  • @43painter
    @43painter 2 года назад +1

    Is there a part 2 ?!

  • @lourak613
    @lourak613 2 года назад +1

    The key problem with this documentary is that we scarcely get a glimpse of any of Picasso's paintings.

    • @rottendrestantje
      @rottendrestantje 2 года назад +1

      good. less eyesores

    • @ThatgirlFriday
      @ThatgirlFriday 11 месяцев назад

      @rottendrestantje But, yet your here on this site, 🤔 learning about this " eye sore" creator ( as you put it ).
      Why are you here????

  • @DivergentDroid
    @DivergentDroid 2 года назад

    Hey. remember.. " Pablo Picasso was never called an ass hole" - not like You" - The Modern Lovers (Iconic band from the 80's)

    • @cameronkrause4712
      @cameronkrause4712 2 года назад

      actually, John Cale and not Modern Lovers

    • @DivergentDroid
      @DivergentDroid 2 года назад

      @@cameronkrause4712 Actually.. Jonathan Richman wrote and recorded the song for his band The Modern Lovers. The song appeared in 1976 on their self titled album. The Modern Lovers did work with John Cale who produced some of their albums and he played the piano on the song. Most people are more familiar with the Burning Sensations version made popular in the 80's by the Repo Man soundtrack.

  • @kathydent2116
    @kathydent2116 2 года назад +3

    "The Young Ladies of Avignon"? 😂 Originally entitled "The Avignon Brothel".

  • @christophermorgan3261
    @christophermorgan3261 2 года назад +1

    These critics, they only agree with each other, what's the interest in that? His work was avant garde, now it's middle class taste, how did that happen and why? And why in these art docs does no one ever talk about materials, pencils, mixed media, brushstrokes, color, erasures, that's not boring, it's essential. These details might interest artists, rather than how messy his studio was (as all artist studios are) or prurient speculation on his love life like this is Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous, even if he was..

  • @enzorocha2977
    @enzorocha2977 Год назад +1

    PSA: Watch the video at 0.75x playback speed. The VO will be a bit more natural, less robotic. Must've been some snafu in the edit/upload to get that chipmunk voice effect in the final cut.