Why is this painting so shocking? - Iseult Gillespie

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024

Комментарии • 710

  • @3112arianna
    @3112arianna 5 лет назад +3132

    I had the luck of seeing it in real life - it is MASSIVE and it hits you so hard, it's incredible

    • @chimeraproject9481
      @chimeraproject9481 5 лет назад +23

      Where is it

    • @mariadinizcosta7098
      @mariadinizcosta7098 5 лет назад +99

      @@chimeraproject9481 Museo Reína Sofia, in Madrid

    • @chair6180
      @chair6180 5 лет назад +29

      They had brought his work to my town but I was busy and forgot about it 😩

    • @payamabbasi3555
      @payamabbasi3555 5 лет назад +20

      Whenever i see a photo of it my blood pressure rises

    • @batman_2004
      @batman_2004 5 лет назад +4

      Can I buy it?

  • @rachelb3941
    @rachelb3941 5 лет назад +2637

    I heard a story about Guernica once - I’m not sure if it’s true, but it gave me the chills.
    When Guernica was first exhibited in Paris, an Officer of the German forces attended the opening. He gestured at the canvas and asked Picasso, “Did you do this”? Picasso replied, “No. You did”.

    • @butteredbananas1394
      @butteredbananas1394 5 лет назад +106

      ... Thank you for sharing that

    • @kbs1212
      @kbs1212 5 лет назад +46

      Source? Please include citation.

    • @rachelb3941
      @rachelb3941 5 лет назад +225

      dicetaro I don’t have a source! That’s why I said it may not be true... I heard the story years ago on CBC radio and I’ve never forgotten it.

    • @coffeeyaaa4011
      @coffeeyaaa4011 5 лет назад +16

      Whoaaaaaa

    • @DoomedDiceThrower
      @DoomedDiceThrower 5 лет назад +147

      My arts teacher in school told us the same story in class when we were discussing this picture.
      Some differences though, in his version, two German officers came by his atelier. Something about they were attracted by the smell of oil paint, except that certain artists like him were forbidden to paint at the time, so they looked into it. They found the impossible to hide painting once picasso let them in, and supposedly then the famous exchange occurred. Picasso not running into problems was explained with him already enjoying a pretty high status and respect as an artist, and he could get away with it.
      Hearing multiple versions of this story makes me think it might be an urban legend, but it's still a nice anecdote. Would be nice to find some sources on this.

  • @stiltzkinvanserine5164
    @stiltzkinvanserine5164 5 лет назад +963

    Picasso's paintings are like car crashes ... if you experience one, you cannot forget it.

  • @milliesanders6800
    @milliesanders6800 5 лет назад +2508

    Ted coming through with the most interesting videos again

    • @herodotus945
      @herodotus945 5 лет назад +3

      To bad they once again tried to depict communists as heroes.

    • @thetntsheep4075
      @thetntsheep4075 5 лет назад +8

      @@herodotus945 Please explain how you believe this

    • @herodotus945
      @herodotus945 5 лет назад +1

      @@thetntsheep4075 When they mentioned how democratic forces fought against Franco's oppression, he was hardl ya saint but those democratic forces were communists and marxists who themselves committed atrocities.

    • @geenpool
      @geenpool 5 лет назад

      Brace yourselves!

    • @bubbly7137
      @bubbly7137 5 лет назад

      Thanks Ted, wonder what your last name is

  • @diosadelrawk
    @diosadelrawk 5 лет назад +744

    When I first saw this painting in a book, I remember thinking what is this jumbled mess and how can it be called art? Now that I've experienced death in my family, I now know grief and this painting makes perfect sense. It's no longer a jumbled mess and it depicts horror, grief and be ripped apart, emotionally and physically

    • @sarangtamirisa5090
      @sarangtamirisa5090 4 года назад +13

      It seems like a mess to me....

    • @cygnuscraft9544
      @cygnuscraft9544 4 года назад +4

      Feeling like a mess made by a guy who had some mental issues.

    • @nikolakolchakov5691
      @nikolakolchakov5691 4 года назад +10

      We tend to search and make sense of everything. Other of his paintings don't depict horror and grief, but look the same.

    • @robertwood3413
      @robertwood3413 4 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/pHHly2QKwJY/видео.html

    • @alexie832
      @alexie832 3 года назад +13

      I think that's the whole point. It is a painting of a jumbled mess. A mess of carnage and chaos.

  • @carlajts3692
    @carlajts3692 5 лет назад +960

    we literally discussed this painting TODAY in art class. what a coincindence lol

    • @justadog8011
      @justadog8011 5 лет назад +5

      Nice.

    • @lostpockets2227
      @lostpockets2227 5 лет назад +1

      Awesome.

    • @alainischileno
      @alainischileno 5 лет назад +2

      It was also on yesterday's Jeopardy!

    • @acetate909
      @acetate909 5 лет назад +7

      Not a coincidence at all. This is the most over analyzed painting of the last 100 years.

    • @nadian848
      @nadian848 5 лет назад +1

      dad70007 animal jam it was on jeopardy too

  • @TinyMedicine
    @TinyMedicine 5 лет назад +647

    Ted ED! your animation style is revolutionary! Really appreciate how you use animations to educate the masses! I follow your path hoping to be as good as you one day!

    • @itsblitz4437
      @itsblitz4437 5 лет назад +9

      Don't forget the music. The music is always key!

  • @Paplefication
    @Paplefication 5 лет назад +470

    I did a several thousand piece puzzel of Guernica that took me over three years (on and off). It gave me a really deep appreciation for the painting that I otherwise wouldn't have.
    Remains my favourite painting, and one of my favourite pieces of art to this day.

    • @elsaritchie7949
      @elsaritchie7949 4 года назад +7

      How cool! Must have emphasised the fragmentation of the Cubist style.

    • @robertwood3413
      @robertwood3413 4 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/pHHly2QKwJY/видео.html

  • @hellohellolcy
    @hellohellolcy 5 лет назад +118

    the bg music is so unsettling, which matches the theme of this video so well!

    • @robertwood3413
      @robertwood3413 4 года назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/pHHly2QKwJY/видео.html

  • @ruchikarao9643
    @ruchikarao9643 2 года назад +19

    okay i just HAD to comment about it because the tear running from the child to the father's face at 04:35 was so beautiful, I replayed it thrice.

  • @raghavbhatia3892
    @raghavbhatia3892 5 лет назад +343

    If I've said it once, I've said it a hundred times.
    Ted-Ed is the best channel on You-Tube, hands down.

    • @dantdma932
      @dantdma932 5 лет назад +8

      pewdiepie is

    • @Mayhamsdead
      @Mayhamsdead 5 лет назад

      They do goof it more than once in a while with their Ted-talks. Some of their guests are more than questionable.

    • @blahbleh5671
      @blahbleh5671 5 лет назад

      @@dantdma932 ye poodeepie ye weeeyeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeEEEEEEEEEEEEEEH

    • @NietzscheanMan
      @NietzscheanMan 5 лет назад

      @Whydotheyallownameslonglikethis? Pakkinutaq if you're into communist propaganda.

    • @bingbonghafu
      @bingbonghafu 5 лет назад

      Hey! >:(

  • @CaptTerrific
    @CaptTerrific 5 лет назад +45

    Seeing Guernica in person is such a powerful experience - worth a trip to Spain in and of itself

    • @ineslapastora3308
      @ineslapastora3308 4 года назад +3

      I mean we have more things ya know, but it is very captivating

    • @fearghalmurelagaosullivan5296
      @fearghalmurelagaosullivan5296 3 года назад +3

      Gernika and the surrounding areas. The Basque Country is the most beautiful part of the Iberian Peninsula from my very biased basque opinion

    • @skymaster4743
      @skymaster4743 Год назад +2

      @@fearghalmurelagaosullivan5296 Basques are the most based people of Western Europe. Oldest isolated language, skilled whalers, defeated Charlemagne, blew Franco's designated successor 20 meters into the air and gave us Xabi Alonso as a footballing talent.

  • @somebox2959
    @somebox2959 5 лет назад +68

    This Painting truly captures the horrors of war: Chaos and Despair

    • @robertwood3413
      @robertwood3413 4 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/pHHly2QKwJY/видео.html

    • @wscamel226
      @wscamel226 Год назад +2

      No it does not

  • @-4subscriberswithahammerad521
    @-4subscriberswithahammerad521 5 лет назад +489

    Not gonna lie, if I saw the painting as a kid I would go crying to my mom

    • @joppefrans8393
      @joppefrans8393 5 лет назад +2

      -4 Subscribers with a hammer addiction yeah about that

    • @miaakalifa1348
      @miaakalifa1348 5 лет назад +2

      You wouldnt understand anything though.

    • @zabtesler
      @zabtesler 5 лет назад +30

      @@miaakalifa1348 Wouldn't need to. Just the visual is horrifying enough. But the added layer of understanding that comes with growing up and learning the context behind it does change the perception of it, though.

    • @Didagg
      @Didagg 2 года назад

      I remember having a copy of this painting in my parents room when I was very little, it scared me but I has curiosity about it

  • @PILOSOPAUL
    @PILOSOPAUL 5 лет назад +39

    How about the flower growing on the soldier's hand holding the broken sword which lies close to the viewer's eye level? I think that somehow sparks hope

    • @user-mb9fs5gf5o
      @user-mb9fs5gf5o 3 года назад +11

      I think it refers more to a phrase that we have in Spain "Al pueblo y a la flor no los mata el fusil" which means "The town and the flower can't be killed by the rifle" The town referring to the Spaniards and the flower referring to the youth.
      The soldier is dead, but the flower it's not. The fascists won, but they did not convince. As a typical saying goes "You will win but you won't convince" (Ganarán pero no convencerán)

  • @poweroffriendship2.0
    @poweroffriendship2.0 5 лет назад +383

    *Spanish Civil War:* [exists]
    *Pablo Picasso:* Aw crap, here we go again.

  • @sorelsuareztube
    @sorelsuareztube 4 года назад +14

    Picasso'a Guernica is like an old friend.
    I must pay a visit whenever in Madrid.
    Upon seen it I feel debastated and cheerful.
    Such emotional moment every time.

  • @dharun5407
    @dharun5407 5 лет назад +322

    I can Watch this just for the animation!!! ❤

    • @kbs1212
      @kbs1212 5 лет назад +1

      Dharun I hope you learned something though. That is the focus. If you only watched the animation, you’re completely missing the point of the video. 🤦🏻‍♀️

    • @dharun5407
      @dharun5407 5 лет назад +2

      @@kbs1212 the animation is ONE OF THE REASONS I WATCH THIS..... OF COURSE I LOVE THE USEFULL CONTENT THEY ARE PROVIDING !!!....i was just appriciating the animation!!!!!!

    • @palm0607
      @palm0607 5 лет назад

      I loved the introduction......

    • @robertwood3413
      @robertwood3413 4 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/pHHly2QKwJY/видео.html

  • @PLuMUK54
    @PLuMUK54 3 года назад +7

    I had the great fortune to see this amazing work with only one other person in the gallery. My friend, who lived in Madrid, must have planned the time, very shortly before the museum closed, and also the route as we approached it not by the signed route, but one that brought me to a point where the painting was framed by an opening into the room. I had long wanted to see it, but nothing prepared me for the effect of walking towards it and seeing it seemingly grow until I felt no longer a simple onlooker, but part of the horror. The effect was overwhelming and I was close to tears as I was not just looking at the events but experiencing them. The lack of colour heightened the horror and I would not have been surprised to have heard screaming, though it might have been my own voice
    I slept badly that night as I could not escape from the horror. Everytime I closed my eyes I was back in the painting. I remained unnerved for weeks after my experience.
    I had never been affected like this before, nor have I since. I now understand what it means to pour your heart and soul into something. Picasso poured so much emotion into this painting that I think it would be hard not to be affected.
    I am not one for bucket lists, but Guernica should be on every bucket list.

  • @thecommentdoggo9271
    @thecommentdoggo9271 5 лет назад +171

    *I literally never understood art.*
    But today Ted-ed changed that too.

    • @lucianacaserta9563
      @lucianacaserta9563 5 лет назад +2

      Its about what makes you feel not understanding

    • @robertwood3413
      @robertwood3413 4 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/pHHly2QKwJY/видео.html

  • @franziska9260
    @franziska9260 5 лет назад +14

    This video alone gives me chills, I can't imagine seeing the actual painting.

  • @ilovecakeeee
    @ilovecakeeee 5 лет назад +17

    not only is the animation phenomenal, the sound design is incredible. keep up the great work Ted!

  • @carmencorp2167
    @carmencorp2167 4 года назад +4

    saw this paiting in person when i was in madrid a few months ago, it sticks with you forever

  • @alana2998
    @alana2998 5 лет назад +36

    Thank you for making this video and making it easier for non-Spanish speakers to understand what Spanish art and especially this piece mean and convey, as they are so powerful and important not only for Spanish history but for the horrors that human beings and all nations are capable of causing.

  • @leireagirre1175
    @leireagirre1175 5 лет назад +10

    I’m basque, and I really appreciate this video, now I can really understand all the elements of the painting and how much did my predecessors suffer looking the painting, thank you😘

  • @contraomnes
    @contraomnes 5 лет назад +59

    i dont like picassos persona that much, but this is a true conveying painting, thanks for the video!

    • @honk6752
      @honk6752 5 лет назад +9

      Pablo Benítez
      He wasn't a really good person.... did and said some pretty messed up things, you know?

    • @ErickIsBeowulf
      @ErickIsBeowulf 5 лет назад

      @@honk6752 like?

    • @timstarkey3692
      @timstarkey3692 4 года назад +6

      @@ErickIsBeowulf he was a womaniser, there's a quote of him saying "women are either goddesses or doormats." There were other things I think.

  • @osse1n
    @osse1n 5 лет назад +40

    *Art is LOVE, art is LIFE.*

    • @2k7Bertram
      @2k7Bertram 5 лет назад +5

      Art is... Shut your mouth!

    • @kbs1212
      @kbs1212 5 лет назад +3

      Have you picked up any girls with that absolutely mind blowing line? Let me guess... No. Bye.

    • @drcommondrate12
      @drcommondrate12 4 года назад +3

      Love is art, Life is art.

    • @asadattayyem2637
      @asadattayyem2637 4 года назад

      👍👍💚💚💚👍👍

    • @themadfootballfan1816
      @themadfootballfan1816 4 года назад

      @@2k7Bertram I agree with u m8

  • @Anna-nw1ge
    @Anna-nw1ge 5 лет назад +28

    The picture really looks disturbing...
    I don't know how ..he got such imagination... Such a strong painting..
    Such disturbing yet so beautiful ♥️

    • @Solqueen86
      @Solqueen86 5 лет назад +1

      I can, it's called war

    • @ISuperI
      @ISuperI 3 года назад

      It's because disturbing can be a form of art

  • @lamcb.9476
    @lamcb.9476 5 лет назад +25

    At an art history college, my teacher also dissected the work. We were in a big college hall, big screen and beamer, but when he said it, the actual work was even bigger it made me gasp ik awe. He said he wished he could just show us the real painting, like he had in his youth, to demonstrate the magnificance and scale of it

  • @AncientAccounts
    @AncientAccounts 5 лет назад +26

    What a cruel thing war is... to fill our hearts with hatred instead of love for our neighbors. - Robert E. Lee

    • @williamnjagi2388
      @williamnjagi2388 4 года назад +1

      Was he the guy who was the Confederate general? Seems like he was violent to some people, like SLAVES!!

  • @macharstein4329
    @macharstein4329 5 лет назад +6

    Just started studying wars in history.Piccasso helped me imagine everything.
    Thanks for the video!!!

  • @patmullarkey7659
    @patmullarkey7659 3 года назад +2

    I have seen 3x. Each time I cry.

  • @pont1695
    @pont1695 5 лет назад +5

    Gernika is very close to where I live (Bermeo), and sometimes I go there shopping and I see lots and lots of shops and shops with pictures of it.
    We also had some other awful things such as «the galerna», and the francist executions because of our language.

  • @zuko1569
    @zuko1569 5 лет назад +100

    The painting reminds me of devil possessions from Devilman

    • @zerotwo_.002
      @zerotwo_.002 5 лет назад +5

      Yeah so true it also reminded me of grave of the Firefly

    • @kyokyoniizukyo7171
      @kyokyoniizukyo7171 5 лет назад +1

      Zuzu
      Aye, the wispy uncontrolable messes the errupt in the sabbath speak consistantly to what Gernica shows...

    • @justastix
      @justastix 5 лет назад +1

      It reminds me of cartoon network's adventure time

  • @palm0607
    @palm0607 5 лет назад +2

    The sound effects paired with the sketchy drawings makes this so surreal.......I get teary eyed every time someone talks about the lady holding her dead child.......heartbreaking

  • @whyaminotsleepyet8377
    @whyaminotsleepyet8377 5 лет назад +6

    I’ve never thought this deeply into the painting, the narration brings this whole video together as well as the sound mixing. Well done, and deeply moving

  • @allisonyoung1498
    @allisonyoung1498 2 года назад +1

    the analysis paired the haunting sound effects and visuals nearly moved me to tears … I’d love to be able to experience this work in person

  • @31yashchaurasia16
    @31yashchaurasia16 2 года назад +4

    The video style, it's just *PHENOMENAL.*

  • @Solqueen86
    @Solqueen86 5 лет назад +48

    Those that crave war so badly for their own egotistical agendas, for unknown fears that are not even there or even just for the thrill and bloodlust.
    Never remember who actually suffers for it.

  • @Inevitable.Change
    @Inevitable.Change 5 лет назад +5

    What I wrote in 30 pages years ago this video does so vividly in just a few engaging minutes.

  • @naveenraj2008eee
    @naveenraj2008eee 5 лет назад +41

    Another amazing video today ted-ed... Thank you so much..🙏

  • @Osmomorfismo
    @Osmomorfismo 5 лет назад +79

    Some people want fascism back in Spain, this artwork is an important masterpiece of what it supposes

    • @herodotus945
      @herodotus945 5 лет назад +15

      Do by fascism you mean the logical opposition to uncontrolled immigration and flow of Muslim refugees ? Those Muslims whom Merkel accepted in Germany last year desecrated over 200 churches, more than 1000 churches in France last year were desecrated by them and by Antifa. Do you want in Spain the same kind of tragedy like what happened in Sri Lanka ?

    • @isabeau9852
      @isabeau9852 5 лет назад +5

      Do by fascism you mean the logical opposition to "okupas" that have the "right" to take over the home of it's legal owner who actually lives in it and just went on vacation to come back and find it full of squatters who have more legal protection than the actual owner? And, if managed to "retrieve" the property still loose on court when the owner is sued by the squatters?

    • @isabeau9852
      @isabeau9852 5 лет назад +6

      Do by fascism you mean that illegals, or so called refugees, receive more financial aid than national pensioners that have worked a lifetime receiving a miserable pension?

    • @isabeau9852
      @isabeau9852 5 лет назад +6

      Do by fascism you mean the logical opposition to illegal street vendors "manteros" camping along city streets selling counterfeit products made by people working on underground warehouses under severe labor conditions and ultimately causing legal stores to close and people loosing jobs????

    • @Osmomorfismo
      @Osmomorfismo 5 лет назад +11

      @@isabeau9852 the second thing you said is false so that's an enough reading to understand your real knowledge about this topic, see ya an stop bothering

  • @fearghalmurelagaosullivan5296
    @fearghalmurelagaosullivan5296 3 года назад +4

    This hits close to home for me. I'm basque and my great grandmother used to always attend the market in Gernika every week (I'm from a neighbouring village), yet miraculously the market was cancelled on the day of the bombing so she narrowly escaped death. What's also so bleak was that after the bombing of Gernika (by the Nazis ordered by Franco), all that was left was one single oak tree which was later dubbed the tree of Gernika. It still stands to this day but is now only a stump that is on display in the same spot protected by concrete columns. Thankfully a clone was taken before it died and is growing healthily close by,

  • @Jsc.bone019
    @Jsc.bone019 4 года назад +11

    Mmm yeah, i remember when i was like 2-4 years old and i saw for first time the painting; it scared me, now i see it and it gives me anxiety

  • @user-ko9sw6gx4i
    @user-ko9sw6gx4i 5 лет назад +5

    The painting gave me real chills...

  • @jayclawwit6489
    @jayclawwit6489 5 лет назад +16

    Sometimes, we may not understand the meaning of a word, but we can always understand the message of an art

    • @pastiche9
      @pastiche9 5 лет назад

      So true!

    • @me-df9re
      @me-df9re 5 лет назад +1

      No we don't. Only a painting needs explanation for common people and that's why most people are not fond of these abstract arts. Those explanation are even far fetched and made up.

  • @lauraking728
    @lauraking728 5 лет назад +2

    My abuela (Spanish for granny) took me to see the guernica when I was 10 I remember just feeling an overwhelming sense sadness I was truly unsettled. It’s a most beautiful peace I think of it often.

  • @thespectre2012
    @thespectre2012 5 лет назад +1

    Even I don't know anything about art, TED makes me want to learn about it more and more. Thank you very much.

  • @dimtrimezzawi8986
    @dimtrimezzawi8986 5 лет назад

    Guernica is my cover photo on fb for a long time i believed that i understand the painting, still find something new from time to time thanks ted you are the best.

  • @MC_lupin
    @MC_lupin 5 лет назад +163

    Before watching: oh god it’s *that* painting by a man on coke
    After watching: *oh*
    That’s why art needs to be explained lol
    Thanks for showing us its beauty 👍

    • @robertwood3413
      @robertwood3413 4 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/pHHly2QKwJY/видео.html

  • @mominrafiqui2538
    @mominrafiqui2538 5 лет назад +2

    The narrator shocked me to the core to be honest. I could actually feel the people in the painting.

  • @dollmonn3641
    @dollmonn3641 5 лет назад +1

    These are the videos for which I have subscribed TED-Ed and looking back there I think I have done something very good. I feel contented.

  • @nicobambino191
    @nicobambino191 5 лет назад +33

    "German soldiers would come to my studio and ask me 'Did you do this?, and I would say, 'No, you did.'" - Picasso

  • @gabriele9455
    @gabriele9455 5 лет назад +5

    One of my favorite scenes in the movie Children Of Men is of this painting.

    • @angelab2906
      @angelab2906 3 года назад

      Me too! Awesome movie, Clive Owen's best acting! Have you watched all the special features? Very interesting and informative.

  • @user-dm5qi4nb6l
    @user-dm5qi4nb6l 5 лет назад +30

    The animation is really good but the amount of research and the way it's narrated and unfolded through the animation is also pretty mind-blowing, also the sound in the background OMG, OMG...

  • @shreyanshmishra3278
    @shreyanshmishra3278 5 лет назад +8

    A new TED-Ed video is always waiting for me when I reach home. Love from India! ☺️

  • @shreyashsoni8431
    @shreyashsoni8431 5 лет назад +3

    I have seen and even heard a lot about this painting but never understood it. Ted ed has made me look through it again and understand the real meaning of this wounderful art. Now i can appreciate this work .😊😊 Also the line by picasso in starting is amazing..

  • @MRR-mw4rv
    @MRR-mw4rv 5 лет назад +3

    This was always my favoritepainting as a little girl. I remember seeing it often in Reina Sofia

  • @gohamorgohome
    @gohamorgohome 6 месяцев назад

    I've had a copy of this on my living room wall for years, thank you TED for explaining it to me in more detail, I don't think I'll ever look at it quite the same.

  • @belle2515
    @belle2515 5 лет назад +11

    0:13 bird P O O P

  • @Clayton0301
    @Clayton0301 5 лет назад +1

    This is probably my favorite narrator. Thank you for another fantastic video, and it really does make you take a second and think about your life, and mortality as a whole.

  • @hamzajp7
    @hamzajp7 4 года назад +3

    This is insane thinking
    How a human mind is made to think and create such a complex art

  • @mindakahn9964
    @mindakahn9964 5 лет назад +10

    If you’re one of the 271 that gave a thumbs down shame on you. This is what art is. It is the artist’s voice and no painting is more powerful this Picasso’s Guernica. I feel lucky to have been able to view it in person. It is riveting, disturbing, and heartbreaking.
    Your reaction speaks volumes about your humanity.

  • @chelicchio1168
    @chelicchio1168 5 лет назад +4

    When a video on Francisco Goya?

  • @duk2k
    @duk2k 5 лет назад +33

    Have a nice day guys!

    • @pastiche9
      @pastiche9 5 лет назад +1

      Thank you ❤❤❤❤🌻🌻🌻 same to you !

    • @HiAdrian
      @HiAdrian 5 лет назад +2

      Nice, appealing fruit too. 👌

    • @LucaB733
      @LucaB733 Год назад

      no

  • @siddharthchavan1224
    @siddharthchavan1224 5 лет назад +2

    And a melodramatic music at End made my nerves relax

  • @hopevang7966
    @hopevang7966 5 лет назад +1

    When I was in second grade, we studied Picasso for an art unit. This painting gave me nightmares for a long time bc of the orientation, but now that I’m older, it truly is amazing

  • @buhingkalbaryo
    @buhingkalbaryo Год назад +1

    battles are often fought in blood but oftenly forgotten 2022😔

  • @benatalbizbeaskoetxea479
    @benatalbizbeaskoetxea479 5 лет назад +7

    Being from the town of Gernika itself, I deeply appreciate that the memory of the massacre leaves on in Picasso's masterpiece. Let us never forget.

  • @allanbani
    @allanbani 5 лет назад +1

    When I as a child we had a copy of it hanging! I moved me even back then. An absolute haunting masterpiece!

  • @chileanhussar2659
    @chileanhussar2659 8 месяцев назад +1

    I used to watch this pic when I was in Spain as a child. It's still deeply haunting though.

  • @zulthyr1852
    @zulthyr1852 5 лет назад +15

    How dire is the situation in the Spanish Civil War?
    Picasso: Yes

  • @raffyandaindrajaya5171
    @raffyandaindrajaya5171 5 лет назад +1

    What a soothing voice, a voice full of dignity with a gentle soul.

  • @kytexgd1463
    @kytexgd1463 3 года назад +5

    Had to hand in a 16 page essay about this. This could’ve helped a lot actually xD

  • @amalia2390
    @amalia2390 5 лет назад +2

    This work is now viewed in a new light. Shocking. Devastating, and terrifying. I love it! It is so beautiful. Almost modern, this is what creativity could be represented by, its amazing how controversial this one painting is💖

  • @GM-zy3xj
    @GM-zy3xj 2 года назад +1

    Love the lesson and narration of Iseult. Also, the voice and cadence of the voice narrator is amazing

  • @ailish3012
    @ailish3012 5 лет назад +4

    I remember looking at this in class when I was about 8? But I don’t think my teacher ever exposed us to the message behind it loool

  • @davidbowie5023
    @davidbowie5023 8 месяцев назад +1

    I used to watch a German movie in 2008, The Red Baron, a romantic biographical war film. It honoured Manfred von Richthofen, the legendary WWI ace (and was widely respected and feared by the Entente pilots). The film, also included Wolfram, Manfred's brother... and was also the one who directed the bombing of Guernica later on. So Manfred and Wolfram were both feared... but differently; Manfred was feared and respected... while Wolfram was feared and hated later on. Pablo Picasso could not find such an inspiration had it not been for the Red Baron's cousin.

  • @rustygribbler1380
    @rustygribbler1380 5 лет назад +3

    Picasso's painting is a reflection to me is warfare in general . Seeing this painting really does hit home throughout the world.

  • @anderlopez6699
    @anderlopez6699 5 лет назад +1

    I'm from the Basque country (the place were Gernika is located), and thanks to this video the meaning of the Gernika and the feelings of our community will be more known, thanks TED-Ed

  • @pranjalshilkar8329
    @pranjalshilkar8329 4 года назад +1

    I'm noticing that Iseult always brings such great lessons. Hey, if you see this, you're awesome!!

  • @LanieMae
    @LanieMae 5 лет назад +1

    The painting really reminds me of when I took a screenshot of the concept art for the quantarine enforment platform/ the Mountain Island from subnautica then drew all over it and the final result was a bunch of eeveelutions in a war with a blob

  • @ebitoro4590
    @ebitoro4590 5 лет назад

    We had a copy of this painting (apparently a souvenir from Spain) hung just behind the front door, so I would see it every day coming home from school. I think my parents were in an experimental phase of parenting.

  • @bazartejamilito3488
    @bazartejamilito3488 3 года назад +4

    Art isn't suppose to look beautiful.. it's suppose to make you feel something

    • @wscamel226
      @wscamel226 Год назад +1

      Well it makes me hate it

    • @luukienquoc1251
      @luukienquoc1251 7 месяцев назад

      Art is something you make that’s art. And I prefer artistic and creavity more than them looking pretty and cool tho.

    • @luukienquoc1251
      @luukienquoc1251 7 месяцев назад

      @@wscamel226because it isn’t supposed to be pretty you hate art.

  • @user-uv1bt1hg4t
    @user-uv1bt1hg4t 5 лет назад +1

    My mom cried a lot when she saw this painting but i was a child so i didn't know why

  • @perryestrera4151
    @perryestrera4151 5 лет назад +1

    THE PAINTING CAME TO LIFE AND IS STAR AT PICCASSO. AHHHHHHHHH

  • @keren.icehand
    @keren.icehand 5 лет назад +1

    This painting allways bring me up to tears😭

  • @haiyingwang8661
    @haiyingwang8661 5 лет назад +1

    You posted this during my recess... WHY DIDN’T I STAY IN TODAY?!?!

  • @mayanksha
    @mayanksha 5 лет назад +1

    I am an Engineering undergrad and I had a humanities course in which we're taught symbolism and cubism. This painting is so apt.

  • @wearelegion1163
    @wearelegion1163 5 лет назад +1

    One of my all-time favorite paintings.

  • @iswaryav3202
    @iswaryav3202 4 года назад +3

    Please fix the subtitle where it says "causalities" instead of "casualties."

  • @vn8161
    @vn8161 5 лет назад

    i remember in my art classes i used to take as an extra enrichment thing on the weekends, one of the lessons covered the guernica painting. it was quite a few years back, maybe when i was in my early to mid teens? and i remember it being a depiction of the suffering caused by war etc. i’ve always liked picasso’s work but this one in particular stood out to me. thanks TedEd for creating a video on this art piece, it’s amazing to go through and analyze such a mesmerizing piece of art again, especially now that i’m older and it’s easier for me to understand its meaning♥️🤗

  • @kevingillespie5242
    @kevingillespie5242 5 лет назад +1

    Discussed this in ap euro a few weeks ago, this was a great quick review of 20th century culture for upcoming ap exams! Thanks

  • @gosoloph
    @gosoloph 5 лет назад +1

    What a coincidence, I am actually reading a history book and the last time I stopped was on this painting

  • @Nobody-ie6pn
    @Nobody-ie6pn 3 года назад

    If I saw this painting as a kid, I'd run and cry.. it's scary, it's size adds to it too..

  • @CipherSerpico
    @CipherSerpico 2 года назад +1

    Imho, this is not only the Greatest Painting ever created; It’s one of the Greatest works of Art in the history of Civilization.
    Kubrick’s ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’, Dostoevsky’s ‘The Brothers Karamazov’, The Beatles’ _Revolver, Sgt. Pepper, White Album, & Abbey Road,_ Greek Mythology, The Giza Pyramid Complex, and Picasso’s ‘Guernica’.

  • @sadtan.
    @sadtan. 5 лет назад +3

    Recuerdo tener 3 años y llorar a mares cada vez que veía el poster del Guernica en la casa de mi tía. Años después supe lo que significa y mi llanto tuvo sentido

  • @esklhrria
    @esklhrria 3 года назад +3

    And people still wonder why we Basques won't accept anything else than independence

  • @imadedmans
    @imadedmans Год назад

    I'm currently learning about the Spanish Civil War in my history class and the Guernica tragedy, alongside the painting in this video. This is more than perfect timing and while I already know about the historical significance and context of it, I never actually sat down and studied the painting itself, what it actually was trying to convey
    This video really helped furthering my understanding of it, and made me realise how disturbingly effective it truly is in symbolising the sheer tragedy war is. Nothing more than two idiots fighting, yet who still retains the ability to patronise or force other to do the bloody job instead
    Amazing video as always TED!

  • @BrawnyFanta
    @BrawnyFanta 5 лет назад +1

    Wow, great video. Good choice of subject, well written, perfect choice of voiceover and great animation.