I used this video and accompanying teacher resources for the first time last year, and it greatly enhanced the students' ideas of process, potential areas of inspiration, and overall ideas of what art can be/mean. Thanks again Art 21! I've been using your site for 10 years, and am so grateful for all the content your team provides!
So sad that this content has not achieved wider exposure. These works are very powerful when experienced in person and spreading the word and encouraging others to engage with them is of benefit to all.
@@Will-ge7ri Serra's work is not often seen in smaller art museums. This is especially true in regard to the large (and very heavy) steel pieces. Those require the backing of a well-funded institution. I would imagine that only a few museums are equipped to provide the means to exhibiting those.
Hi there. We will continue to publish new short episodes here on our RUclips channel at least every other week. New hour-long episodes are tentatively scheduled to return to PBS in 2014.
I would like to see how those small metal maquettes are converted into the final large-scale sculptures. Obviously those translations require experts who become the actual fabricators. What processes and machines produce those full-size forms? (How are the curves set?) This video completely ignores that important step in the process.
@@brochronicles And then there is the question of how these are installed in exhibition spaces. I assume they come on a truck (or maybe a zeppelin?) and then a crane lifts them into place. But through a side door? Or a roof that has been removed temporarily?
I used this video and accompanying teacher resources for the first time last year, and it greatly enhanced the students' ideas of process, potential areas of inspiration, and overall ideas of what art can be/mean. Thanks again Art 21! I've been using your site for 10 years, and am so grateful for all the content your team provides!
This is like a life saving thing for me as a graudated bfa student preping for mfa...Now I just have to figure out what and how and (internal scream)
Serra is amazing! RIP to a brilliant, inspiring artist.
So sad that this content has not achieved wider exposure. These works are very powerful when experienced in person and spreading the word and encouraging others to engage with them is of benefit to all.
What do you mean wider exposure? Serra is one of the worlds most famous and recognizable artists. Nothing sad about that.
@@Will-ge7ri Serra's work is not often seen in smaller art museums. This is especially true in regard to the large (and very heavy) steel pieces. Those require the backing of a well-funded institution. I would imagine that only a few museums are equipped to provide the means to exhibiting those.
Hi there. We will continue to publish new short episodes here on our RUclips channel at least every other week. New hour-long episodes are tentatively scheduled to return to PBS in 2014.
I love this video
Maybe someone knows what kind of pencil he used on 2:05?
Those go by the name 'lead holder'. Looks like 5-5.5 mm lead.
Thank you! I had the same question when I saw that!!
I would like to see how those small metal maquettes are converted into the final large-scale sculptures. Obviously those translations require experts who become the actual fabricators. What processes and machines produce those full-size forms? (How are the curves set?) This video completely ignores that important step in the process.
I agree
@@brochronicles And then there is the question of how these are installed in exhibition spaces. I assume they come on a truck (or maybe a zeppelin?) and then a crane lifts them into place. But through a side door? Or a roof that has been removed temporarily?
super art 1111
RIP…
oh lord