The Painter Who Revolutionized Landscapes
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- Опубликовано: 19 июн 2024
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SOURCES
Haladyn, Julian Jason. “Friedrich’s ‘Wanderer’: Paradox of the Modern Subject.” RACAR: Revue d’art Canadienne / Canadian Art Review, vol. 41, no. 1, AAUC/UAAC (Association des universités d’art du Canada / Universities Art Association of Canada), 2016, pp. 47-61, www.jstor.org/stable/43855855.
Mitchell, Timothy. “Caspar David Friedrich’s Der Watzmann: German Romantic Landscape Painting and Historical Geology.” The Art Bulletin, vol. 66, no. 3, [Taylor & Francis, Ltd., College Art Association], 1984, pp. 452-64, doi.org/10.2307/3050447.
Anoka Faruqee, "The Kantian Sublime: Why Care?"
anokafaruqee.com/the-kantian-s...
Kant, The Critique of Judgement, Section 23
"From this it may be seen at once that we express ourselves on the whole inaccurately if we term any object of nature sublime, although we may with perfect propriety call many such objects beautiful. For how can that which is apprehended as inherently contra-final be noted with an expression of approval? All that we can say is that the object lends itself to the presentation of a sublimity discoverable in the mind."
Siegel, Linda. “Synaesthesia and the Paintings of Caspar David Friedrich.” Art Journal, vol. 33, no. 3, [Taylor & Francis, Ltd., College Art Association], 1974, pp. 196-204, doi.org/10.2307/775782.
Paulo Pinto, "The experience of the sublime in the work of Caspar David Friedrich"
/ the-experience-of-the-...
Matthew Fitzgerald, "The Sublime: An Aesthetic Concept in Change
www.thecollector.com/the-subl...
MUSIC (via Epidemic Sound)
Martin Gauffin, "The Lowest"
August Wilhelmsson, "Now Is The Time To Leave"
David Celeste, "A Song Of Lament"
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The Nerdwriter is a series of video essays about art, culture, politics, philosophy and more. - Развлечения
I live in nothern Germany. Caspar David Friedrich's paintings are somehow special to me. Even though they're 150 years old, I feel like I know these landscapes, I know the fog, I know the woods, I know the seas Friedrich is depicting. It's like I'm living in the world he painted, not the other way around. Even though I'm not that into art, I'll always pause whenever I see a picture of Friedrich.
If you like the tone Friedrich is depicting in his art, I highly recommend reading The Rider on the White Horse (Der Schimmelreiter) by Theodor Storm.
@Emilio J Wieso? Das war gutes und lesbares Englisch. Oder meintest du den Schimmelreiter?
Denmark and Poland look alike in terms of the landscapes
@@koraptd6085 Especially the Danish islands Lolland and Falster just north of Rügen. Incidentally, Caspar David Friedrich studied in Copenhagen.
Vielen Dank für die Empfehlung. Hatte den Schimmelreiter nicht auf dem Schirm gehabt, ihn mir aber direkt nachdem ich deinen Kommentar gelesen hatte besorgt. Sehr gutes Buch und wie du sagst, passt es zu den Werken von CDF.
The thing I appreciate about Nerdwriter's content is that it never feels like a cookie cutter copy and paste of his previous videos. Each video stands on its own, with its own aesthetic, tone, etc.
Bro he’s literally copied a bunch of peoples videos before lmao 💀🤦♂️
Me too. Beautiful yet precise and appllicable.
@@Leon-ub8pe copied or drew inspiration from?? There's a big difference.
@@fariskhan7884 both
@@Leon-ub8pe can you name which? Not tryna start something, just genuinely curious.
What a start to the new year, a nerdwriter video
I would say this is THE nerdwriyer video. Honey, he has improved greatly improved and ditched the hyper analytical style for a nuanced realism
for real dude. completely accurate
Ikr? His videos are just... sublime!
Nerdwriter videos have the quality of the Sublime.
I had to pause at 1:45 to wrap my mind around how perfectly the lighting is done. Incredible.
The Nerd has risen to bring us content for the new year..
2022 is starting off great 👍🏻
I am being humble when I am telling you that I am the most powerful strongest coolest smartest most famous greatest funniest Y*uTub3r of all time! That's the reason I have multiple girlfriends and I show them off all the time! Bye bye vb
@@AxxLAfriku WTF???
your comment is _100%_ true!!
Wow. I’m not into fine art but I love watching your breakdowns. Thanks, and happy holidays.
Perhaps now you get more curious …
I really love this.
agreed dude. absolutely correct dude
His videos sparked an interest in paintings in me. Since then, it's been a wonderful discovery, analysis, and exploration.
"Wanderer above the Sea of Fog" has always been amongst my very favorite paintings, and I had the pleasure of seeing it person on display in Hamburg. I'm not a super sophisticated fine art guy, yet found myself staring at this masterpiece for nearly an hour. Van Gogh's "Wheatfield with Crows" is the only other work of art to have this profound impression upon me. Thanks for bringing the brilliance of Caspar David Friedrich to light. Excellent work: subscribed.
omg samee. i feel like the "Wanderer" painting encapsulates a sense of freedom.
i highly recommend you to check out the "Elbsandstein Gebirge", its the landschape the painting was inspired by.
A quote about Friedreich's work I think about often, "here is a man who has discovered the tragedy of landscape"
I love Caspar's work so very, very much, nice to hear you talk about it. Something about his work always feels like it promises something just out of reach of what is depicted, the landscapes are desolate but they feel like they're calling you. Especially how often he uses frames within his composition, a ruined window or a circle of tree limbs, they feel like a portal that wants you to get closer! To stand next to the figures in the image.
wanderer over the sea fog is also deeply overrated, give me one of his cathedral ruins any day
Oddly, I think there’s a comfort in his paintings. There’s a quiet, eternal sleep quality to them, I think.
What a great way to kick off the year. And what perfect subject matter to set the tone. Much love, Evan. Always an honor to see a notification from you.
you're unequivocally true!!
Thank you for this one! I'm a german literature student with the goal to become a teacher and my final exam will include the German Romanticism as a focus. Friedrich captures this movement and this perspective on life better than anybody else and through his paintings he draws you into longing of some transcenden and greater, something deeper. This feeling of longing which is portraied by sunsets and also the Rückenfigur gazing into the distance is one of the most central motivs in the German Romanticism. Great Work Nerdwriter!
Your works helped me open my eyes and heart back into art. I cannot thank you enough for these uploads.
I remember looking at an art book as a young child. I stumbled upon the CDF "Wonderer" and the image and the feeling it gave me stayed with me my entire life... Thank you for this beautiful breakdown.
Had a similar experience. So
Something about that painting stands out within the art book luckily I’ve now been able to see it in person and it is beautiful
A 6 minute video from nerdwriter is like a whole semester class.The Way you define and deliver your Ideas are Always amazing. Thank You For Enlightenment.
Ur trippin
Absolutely!!
CDF is my favorite painter. The ending of this episode gave me goosebumps.
This couldn't have come at a better time! Currently writing an essay focusing on nature and the sublime :D
Make sure to read the darkest Italy… the sublime is actually not as noble a concept as it appears…
@@ramosbarajas cheers! Sounds like an interesting read
There is something almost slightly-Sci-Fi in his painting, it could be very well a painting of another planet
I get this feeling of being unwelcome since many of the Casper's work shows only ruins or man-made objects in disrepair. I think the sci-fi feeling might be because it's like humanity's presence is almost getting pushed out, as if we don't belong or that we are the aliens among nature.
it's almost apocalyptic
Check out Michael Whelan. He's an illustrator best known for his sci-fi book covers, and he was obviously influenced by Caspar.
or lets say theres something Carl David Friedrich in Sci-Fi
When the world needs him the most, he returns.
Yeah, nerdwriter is like that.
I always loved Friedrich, but I never was able to put it into words. His works defy standard comprehension
The sublime is inexplicable.
"Two Men Contemplating the Moon" is probably one of my favorite paintings of all time. This is such a great video on Friedrich's work
I was captivated by these paintings in Art History class. It is so “sublime” to revisit them after all this time in adult life, post-pandemic
Wonderful video essay. Casper's artwork is amazing. What I get from this video is that there are two approaches to the truth about our place in the cosmos. One approach is the sublime and the the other approach is the absurd (as in the philosophy of Absurdism).
The sublime is like the siren's song. But the absurd, though not a swan song, can be sublime it it's own way too. However to me, they are two sides of the same coin pointing to what I call the unknowable and the nameless; two things that cannot be talked about directly but can only be pointed to and must be experienced for oneself to understand and comprehend.
Like: meaning versus meaninglessness?
@@sgttomas That's one way to look at it bearing in mind the conundrum as to whether the concept of meaning makes any sense without someone ascribing said meaning in the first place. Both interpretations are essentially anthropomorphic, possibly even somewhat sollipsistic.
Ah the mystic experience!
Isn't it fascinating how one is spending years to encode the most difficult languages of philosophy only to see, that what they searched for was what cannot be talked about directly? In one way those years were lost as the direct experience was available to you all this time! On the other hand: Who is lucky enough to discover it without searching? Even if its right in front of you; Its so close, you might disregard it your entire life.
@@crispian67 but then it wouldn't be sublime meaning?
*the "Wanderer Above The Sea Of Fog" is honestly the most breathtakingly beautiful painting i've ever seen. the way the man was standing at the edge of the cliff, along with his cane looking out in the distance, at the haze-filled mountains just feels so liberating.* 🌫
This is so amazing, it's exactly the type of nuances and feelings I admire in paintings I'm so glad you made me discover this artist!
Same here, Mate😄
Having just finished a semester in which separate classes discussed both romantic painters and romantic literature I’ve been trying to explain the emotion of the sublime to my friends and family for… a while. This is beautifully and deliciously well articulated. Thanks!
This video was a masterpiece! I always love your videos but as an artist currently painting sublime landscapes, this video really spoke to me. Keep doing what you do Evan!
ruclips.net/video/_Q4Ra0UT-2U/видео.html
Neuroscience of beauty and aesthetics
I live in Dresden now and I like how I always discover new and beautiful things about the city.
Could honestly make an entire video essay about every single one of Freidrick's paintings
One of my favorite artists ever and also the only artist whose artbook I own even though I'm not at all a large fanatic of art.
Same but I need a art book , how can I get hold of that ?
@@mubasshiraal I got mine from a art show with his work in a museum in Berlin. I'd suggest looking for a display of his art in your nearest museum and visiting it when it happens!
@@naivety Thanks bro but I live in a third world country. There's no museum like that near me and I'm pretty damn sure directors of them also never heard about Casper David
Thank you for this great video. I've admired a number of Friedrich's paintings over the years without connecting that they were by the same master.
this is not an analyses or a breakdown, this is a freakinf piece of art, pls never stop making these nerdwriter1
Caspar David Friedrich is also exceptional at painting the moon. It doesn't really come across in prints or in pictures on the internet, but in person, they're stunning. His moon is always really vibrant, and it looks like it's glowing, as if he captured actual moonlight.
I was introduced to Casper in college and I’ve loved his work for 20 years. Really happy you circled around him and reflected upon his work in our times. Well done
This video is absolutely groundbreaking for me. I could never quite pinpoint why so much of landscape photography has no meaning to me, and yet some just hit you in the stomach. It’s exactly this - the sublime. Your quote “the landscapes are not the subject of these canvases. The subject is the feeling he has in the presence of them” is beyond-words resonant with me. Brb i’m just going to make a print of it to stick on my desk. Thank you
I just wanted to say that I find myself constantly returning to this video. I have watched all of your videos but for some reason this one stands out, the background music and sound mixed with the snow overlayed create a beautiful mood which makes this feel more like an experience than an essay. I find the paintings to be beautiful and i love the way you gave meaning to them without going into too much detail whilst also linking it to our current times. A timeless video, thank you
Thankyou for this presentation of the subject. I've always been intrigued by 'Wanderer'. Learning more about it and the artist was much appreciated.
Maybe it's because I've always lived in the subtropics and have had a surfeit of garish, even lurid colour, and the aggressive sun, but something about these gelid landscapes beckons me with such a restful welcome, like the filling of a loss. Although it would without question have its own harshness and ferocity.
I genuinely appreciated the video and the research and time you put into it. Not least because it also introduced me to three new tracks to add to my library. Beautiful backtrack selection. In all, it was, well, sublime. Thankyou.
I am so happy to finally see nerd writer again, there’s no way I’m not gonna read this book
I am in love with your ability to convey the message of art in every form so well... I think it's rare that especially youtubers use filmmaking so effectively as a fo of expression. I really felt like I was there with the snow and wind effects, especially in the end 😊
It's a funny coincidence you uploaded this today because I talked about Casper David Friedrich on a hike today with a friend. We were on a cliff overlooking the shore and sea with fog below and ahead of us. It reminded the both of us of "Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog", a painting that we were introduced to in our school years. I remember when I was shown that painting. We were shown many paintings but not all had any real influence on me, but this one did. I still remember how my teacher taught us the concept of dualism, and how you could see it in the sky and the fog. It's no surprise that it's Friedrich's most famous. I'm not familiar with the rest of his works, but every single painting you showed in this video was beautiful and really exemplifies the feeling that I sometimes get when I'm in nature. I love that humbling and silencing feeling.
I keep coming back to this video since I first saw it because it's so beautifully explained. It teleports you to a different imaginary yet believable world, FC David's world and Nerdwriter perfectly carries out his role as a guide. Thanks Nerdwriter for this beautiful video!
Thank you for introducing me to his work. I love getting lost in the enormity of nature, and his work feels like a way to do that from home.
I think that might've been my favorite breakdowns you've done thus far. You described this artist and his works so sublimely if I might say so myself.
I got to see Friedrich and a lot of other German Romantics at an exhibit in Berlin called "wanderlust". Been captivated ever since!
One of my favorite painters. Thank you covering his work with such a sense of grace.
I've been a fan of Nerdwriter for many years, but just this last term I took a 4th year uni course called Visual Theory which covers a lot of what he speaks about in depth, and it was probably my favourite class I've ever taken. I have a newfound appreciation for these videos. In a sea of wikipedia researched video essays, Evan really makes profound content and its just incredible to me that this kind of essay is available for free for anyone interested. Thank you for the content!
ruclips.net/video/_Q4Ra0UT-2U/видео.html
Thank you for this. The first time I saw “Winter Landscape with Church, 1811” in the National Gallery, I became overcome with emotion. Even now I’m not sure I could articulate what I experienced in that moment. Perhaps it was a brief communion with the sublime. Related, I have always loved “Cloister Cemetery in the Snow.” If Arvo Pärt’s Te Deum could be painted, it would be Cloister. I hold out hope that it isn’t lost forever.
4:43 this painting immediately made me think of the Land of the Lustrous anime and it’s Lunarians. His subsequent discussion of the definition of the Sublime including the idea of being in terror of something more vast than ourselves and being incapable or wrapping our minds around something, reminded me a lot of the mood and atmosphere that the show imparts and the lunarians themselves.
My favourite painter!! As my friend once said: «If Hegel, Leibniz, Kant or Schelling were artists, their work would necessarily look like the paintings of Caspar David Friedrich»
Dude, you just speak to my soul and I'm crying of joyment. This day was the first snowfall in virginia and also my first snowfall of my life, i was having those thoughts because I'm from Perú, i just moved cuz of work and it was so mesmerazing. Nature it's incredible and i can't wrap my mind of everything it does, just like you said. Thank you for my making this a humbling experience
After watching this, I saw more of Friedrich's work and he is now my favourite painter.
As a German studies major I suggest diving into 'the uncanny', also a very prevalent idea stemming from German Romanticism and popularized by Sigumund Freud, as it has informed so much of Lovecraftian horror and acts like the other side of the coin to the sublime. It has a huge role in understanding the eerieness of films like THE SHINING or Japanese Kwaidan.
The subject matter speaks of humbling experiences. Sometimes we all need a humbling experience so as not to take for granted the blissfulness of every given moment. For each one is gift, and this one is my favorite. The next one will be my next favorite moment.
Never have I heard someone describe the feeling of what it's like to be outside and witness the sublime so beautifully. I feel it too, sometimes even on just a simple walk. I try to share it doesn't always connect with everyone because it's a perspective, either you feel it or you dont. But when it can be shared with another it is a wonderful thing to behold and a memory you never forget together.
I lived in Dresden for a long time. You can visit Saxon Switzerland and walk the painters way. It's over 100km long and after that you definitely understand the true genius of these painters. It's a really breathtaking experience and takes you to beautiful places.
Excellent video. I discovered his work as a teenage beginner painter and am still in awe of his images and strive to create things in that spirit.
Ugh I LOVE this video and these paintings. Your videos about painters and art history are some of my very favorite videos of yours.
You’re a very talented person, Evan. Thank you for this.
Wonderful essay! My favorite painting ever is “The Abbey in the Oakwood,” I think it draws a fine line between a somewhat unsettling yet somber atmosphere
What a beautiful gift to wake up to! Thank you, Evan, happy new year!
Favorite essayist makes a video about my favorite painter :') a great start to the year, danke
I went on vacation in Iceland and honestly it felt like being in his universe.
For years, we had a reproduction of Friedrich's work "On a Sailing Ship" in our living room, a poster from a National Gallery of Canada exhibit. Thanks for this beautiful and accessible exploration of his work!
Friedrich's works give me literal heartache.
What a beautiful video! Friedrich is one of my favourite artists and this video made his art more amazing than before! The video gives such a unique experience that the video does not feel like 6 mins at all, it felt longer lol
As someone from the city where Friedrich was born and where he spent a lot of time I appreciate how important an artist he is considered internationally. Thank you for this small essay :)
As usual, brilliant work, and, as usual, I have another artist to research further, take notes from, and adore.
Never stop, Nerdwriter.
woww, excellent!!! Thank you and I hope you'll continue creating essays about paintings because they are very educational
As always, both beautifully and concisely put. I’ll have to look into some more of his work.
That final painting, of the woman contemplating the darkening skies, is my favorite Friedrich painting.
Back in the 90s before the internet really found its' footing, for years I looked for any book of Friedrich's paintings, and could not find it in any store. Until a visit to Munich. Going to a bookstore there specifically to check out the art books... is that unusual for a tourist to do?... I finally found it! The last copy they had, even. So I left the store a happy man, bag in hand with two books: the Friedrich book and one on early works by Joseph Beuys, mostly watercolors and gouache.
ruclips.net/video/_Q4Ra0UT-2U/видео.html
Neuroscience of aesthetics!
Thanks for this video - I know it’s a popular image but ‘Wanderer Above the Mists’ is why I love art works and Nature scenes. Now I wonder about René Magritte’s Apple man figure and Casper David Freiderich’s depiction of people from behind (both are figures with obscured identities)
yours videos are like dynamic poems, thank you. Really inspiring
such a beautiful story. thank you for putting this together and sharing for those who find solace in art ❤️
My favorite painter!
Thank you!
I just recently hanged a replica of Wanderer above the Sea on my wall and now Nerdwriter releases this breakdown.
Whenever I recognize or love the subject of a Nerdwritter video before seeing it, it fills me with so much joy
I'm so glad I stumbled upon you! This video is so well-done. I cannot wait to show my kids as Friedrich is the artist we're studying this term. Thank you so much!!
An awesome way to celebrate the New Year - with Art and Knowledge! Thank you very much indeed, Evan - I wish you a spetacular 2022!🌟
You have revived the most relevant depiction and discussion of Sublime in online painting discussions AND provided gems of insight into one of my heroes. Many thanks.
This was absolutely lovely. Thank you, and happy new year.
One of my favorite painters and my favorite Era of art. The ability to sweep a viewer of the art into a feeling is indescribable
I don’t think I’ve heard about Friedrich before this video, sadly; but his style reminds me a bit of the norwegian painter Theodor Kittelsen’s work, which I absolutely love. Great video, as always
Wonderful treatment of one of my favorite painters. Thanks so much!
The painting at 1:06 definitely inspired a famous set piece in a beloved film featuring dinosaurs
Woah! You just introduced me to an artist whose art I'm now absolutely dying to see more of. Beautiful art and excellent video as always :)
That opening shot of the snow :') same one used in the Holocene - bon Iver video essay that introduced me to this channel all those years ago and had me instantly fall in love
I'm pretty sure his mountainous paintings were also inspired by the Elbsandsteingebirge, since it is much easier to reach from Dresden than the Harz is and the paintings remind me more of it.
Thank you for so thick and gorgeous atmosphere. Its beautiful!
I keep having a reccuring nightmare of me running through huge empty cities. This video helped me make sense of this nightmare finally.
His work seems quite ethereal..and yes sublime. Some of his images also feel apocalyptic and desolate. Yet eerily, oddly beautiful.
I love watching every one of your videos, especially the ones with painting and art!
Loved this video. Friedrich has always been my favorite artist. Thanks!
A new video from you is always ... sublime. Happy and prosperous new year.
It's always a delight to see a nerdwriter video come out. These videos never disappoint. Thank you.
What an excellent video! I am amazed by the way you describe art, it is absolutely fascinating
Healthy new year wishes to you and the company you keep, Evan!
Your weather overlays add so much
This video inspired a whole new series of artworks for me. Thank you for being a spark of creativity!
I think its fair to say each video Nerwriter releases is a metaphor for the sublime, or at least a very sublime way of video producing. Congratulations, cant wait to read your book!
This is a great beginning to a New Year. Thank you and all the best with your book release.