This Painting Is Tastier Than It Looks

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  • Опубликовано: 5 июл 2022
  • Guiseppe Arcimboldo was an Italian painter born in 1526 in Milan, Italy. He was the court painter for the Habsburg Court, specifically Maximilian II and Rudolf II. He is most known for his portraits paintings made with a combination of inanimate objects (fruits, vegetables, books, animals, fish). Some of his works featured in this video are Vertumnus, Four Seasons in One Head, The Librarian, and more! But why would an Emperor want to be remembered as a pile of fruit?
    #arthistory #art #classicart #fineart
    Credits:
    "Minstrel Guild" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 Licensecreativecommons.org/licenses/b...

Комментарии • 307

  • @sharonkaczorowski8690
    @sharonkaczorowski8690 2 года назад +825

    I found his work very scary as a child. Now I love them…first, his ability to paint food items, foliage and other objects from nature is extraordinary. Second, the way he creates people from these objects is wondrous…like someone threw Bosch, Alice in Wonderland and Fantastic Beasts into a big old bowl and tossed them together into an magical anthropomorphic salad. Ok that was strained, but trying to describe his work is not that easy! Finally, the contrast between his work and everything else from the time is so unexpected and delightful.

    • @randibass7558
      @randibass7558 Год назад +5

      Yes, SCARY!!

    • @amyyoung2804
      @amyyoung2804 Год назад +3

      Me as well..

    • @Zimzum93
      @Zimzum93 Год назад +3

      Loved everything about this except the fantastic beasts mention because y’all jk transphobe Rowling stans just HAVE to reference her turds I mean works whenever possible even if it’s a massive reach.

    • @jvseventeen
      @jvseventeen Год назад +7

      ​@@Zimzum93as a member of the trans community, that's a bit aggressive. I also don't support JK or her works *anymore* but I also don't berate those who do. Also, you don't have to support, or even have consumed a piece of media to use it as a reference point.
      Just my opinion, but you may as well be nice about it, if you're actually trying to be supportive. Being passive aggressive just furthers the opinion many share that "all trans people are gonna scream and pitch a fit if you say anything even a tiny bit wrong, even mistakenly" and that doesn't help anyone.

    • @theeasianwarrior
      @theeasianwarrior 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@Zimzum93what is wrong with harry potter and I really hate how jk rowling got all these backlash for an opinion so wth 💀

  • @parrotjunglecolada8270
    @parrotjunglecolada8270 Год назад +138

    He was way ahead of his time, his work looks so modern

    • @PlanetIscandar
      @PlanetIscandar Год назад +4

      And most important: his work has nothing to do with "modern art" craps.

    • @Thomas-nz4si
      @Thomas-nz4si Год назад +1

      @@PlanetIscandar Nothing wrong with modern art. A lot of it helped inspire basically everything you see in modern life.

    • @simog994
      @simog994 6 месяцев назад +1

      It almost looks as it was AI generated!

  • @cosmic-creepers9207
    @cosmic-creepers9207 2 года назад +595

    My A level piece was inspired by Acrimboldo. I remember seeing Autumn in an Italian cook book when I was young, the fascination I had with the art made me fall in love with cooking too

    • @Art_Deco
      @Art_Deco  2 года назад +35

      That's amazing! Thank you for sharing!

  • @shelso1300
    @shelso1300 2 года назад +90

    This got me thinking how bizarre this must have seemed when there was no bombardment of images like today - no movies, no memes, no animations, fewer books, etc. When I imagine it this way, his quote makes more sense to me. Like what a "feast" for the eyes and the brain!

  • @zinzolin14
    @zinzolin14 Год назад +43

    His painting takes an incredible amount of skill and knowledge of textures, shape and anatomy. To be able to paint all those different plants, animals, food and object in such detail is something to admire.

  • @FalandraAoC
    @FalandraAoC 2 года назад +232

    When looking at these paintings I always had this "uncanny valley" feeling that you get when looking at certain robots or 3D animated characters. I think it's because the artist was able to effectively use certain fruits, vegetables, plants and animals (like the round pinkish colored apples for puffy full cheeks or the pear for a big nose or those little fruits right below the eyes to resemble these saggy skin parts older people get there) that almost resemble the real body parts in their shape and arranged those to make the face appear for humans. And that's exactly what evokes this uncanny feeling for me, because it looks kinda similar to a real human but is still different. I find it hard to explain but in 3D design it's similar, you have these 3D parts of the character that resemble human features but they are off by some amount to make it look weird because they are correctly arranged together and Form a complete image of a human being.

  • @Foolish188
    @Foolish188 2 года назад +263

    It isn't a random thing to see faces in cars, these days most cars are designed that way. Someone did a study on car sales and discovered the cars that had faces like animals sold better. So car designers began to deliberately make faces. Take a look at some of the most expensive cars, many look like snakes and other predators. Big macho pickup trucks look like Bulldogs and Rams.

    • @silvercandra4275
      @silvercandra4275 2 года назад +43

      Some of them have smiles and some frown.
      And yes, that too, is intentional.

    • @ms.krueger2660
      @ms.krueger2660 2 года назад +31

      I have noticed that. I thought it was just me seeing faces. Damaged cars, I see as monsters. Lol.

    • @dayangmarikit6860
      @dayangmarikit6860 Год назад +5

      Oh, that makes so much sense now.

    • @pixiebubbles2628
      @pixiebubbles2628 Год назад +9

      Maybe it's human nature to ride fearsome beasts into battle

    • @usernotfound6475
      @usernotfound6475 Год назад +2

      Do cheaper (less expensive) cars, intentionally have worse, less appealing designs, to make them look worse compared to the more expensive models?

  • @pinkdolly
    @pinkdolly Год назад +36

    I think these paintings are definitely crazy and weird. But they’re also wonderful masterpieces. I can’t believe how old they are.

  • @thisbee66
    @thisbee66 2 года назад +375

    I love your videos. Archimboldo is a favorite. As a child of the 50s, the pharmacy my family used had posters in the archimboldo style but consisting of sugary candies, starchy vegetables, bread, doughnuts and unhealthy foods. I loved gazing and analyzing these ‘ugly’ portraits and making the connection between bad food and ugly faces. You are much more entertaining than the art history professors I had at the U.W.

    • @Art_Deco
      @Art_Deco  2 года назад +35

      That's funny. I love that story! Thank you so much for watching and subscribing. 😊

  • @ms.krueger2660
    @ms.krueger2660 2 года назад +68

    I love these crazy paintings. They are actually amazing and full of beauty. All the different animals and produce, Looks so real. As a kid I would lay in bed and stare at the popcorn ceiling and see all kinds of faces and objects.

    • @alphagt62
      @alphagt62 2 года назад

      The rock band Kansas has the fish faced lady on one of their album covers. I’ve never known who pointed it, but as a kid collecting records, I marveled at the intricacy and detail. I think it has something to do with the part of your brain that looks from a distance, and the part that looks close up, it’s as if it’s two different pictures.

    • @tiffanymichaels2429
      @tiffanymichaels2429 Год назад

      I did the same thing with the textured wall in my bedroom as a teenager.

  • @BRBMrSoul
    @BRBMrSoul 2 года назад +200

    All I can imagine is Maximillian scanning through the paintings, nodding to himself, chuckling here and there and then “haha! A MONKEY! BRILLIANT!”
    Those are fun paintings.
    And this is perhaps plebeian of me, but, this legitamtly reminds of the art design of the Dark Souls games and especially Elden Ring. On one level simple shock body horror but it peer into (with editing tools) faces of some of the game’s bosses, you’ll see this happen where can recognize human features etc in what is other wise a visual nightmare. K, plebeian nerd moment over lol

    • @Art_Deco
      @Art_Deco  2 года назад +24

      That's the best compliment ever! I think they look like video game characters too. My husband said the same thing when he first saw the video!

  • @andrewc.2952
    @andrewc.2952 2 года назад +31

    I love those fruit portrait paintings. The lighting, the elegance. I love it.

  • @purplealice
    @purplealice 2 года назад +17

    It appears that making recognizable paintings of human faces composed of fruits, vegetables, and other items became a popular way for painters to show off their artistic abilities.

  • @yeahno9380
    @yeahno9380 Год назад +8

    Remember having an art assignment when I was in school to use food to create a portrait. Found his work really fascinating and quirky at the time.

  • @amirhaayers2736
    @amirhaayers2736 2 года назад +44

    My art class in elementary had us make self portraits made of fruits and vegetables.

    • @gabs1224
      @gabs1224 2 года назад +2

      Oh lord, lol. How did that go?

    • @cozycarry
      @cozycarry Год назад +1

      Yeah, we had to draw the mona lisa atom-perfect too. If didnt do it correct we couldnt graduate and stay in elementary school forever...

  • @lotfibouhedjeur
    @lotfibouhedjeur 2 года назад +14

    The commentary and editing on this one are really next level. More of this style please. It's makes art a lot more fun.

  • @valeria_sue777
    @valeria_sue777 Год назад +6

    I've loved his works since I was small, not until now that I've learned his name! While I was growing up watching and reading the fantasy genre, Arcimboldo's art is the perfect pairing for my imagination of talking tree people and faeries!

  • @KombuchaBuzzed
    @KombuchaBuzzed Год назад +2

    The detail when zoomed in.. 🤯 The skill 👏👏👏👏

  • @em84c
    @em84c 2 года назад +18

    I love The Four Seasons in One Head. It's so scary but beautiful.

  • @bambitopaz
    @bambitopaz Год назад +10

    I used to go to a restaurant which had paintings of figures that were also hiding another picture within it. One had women with bread that made a skull (I think) and another of a couple which made another picture inside that I cannot remember. I wish I could recall the artist's name, however they were really fascinating. I enjoyed staring at them immensely.

  • @iwannabemeee
    @iwannabemeee Год назад +6

    Wow!This is actually beautiful.His style is unique and he's such a skilled artist.I agree "There is a certain ugliness more beautiful than beauty" wonderful quote btw.His bizzare style is what makes it beautiful,also i love the details in his artworks..

  • @kellysouter4381
    @kellysouter4381 Год назад +6

    It's cleverly done. I've always found this sort of picture unsettling. I recall one of the Green Man that frightened me.

  • @dinaguenther9453
    @dinaguenther9453 Год назад +2

    6 years of Art history in the 90s. Travelled the world and experienced art. Bringing your content to alot of creative under privilege youth. Thank you for bringing the back story of art! Anger, passion, injustice, sexism, violence, motivation, survival. Art is the visual documentation of history, outrage and change. Brovo!!

  • @marianparoo1544
    @marianparoo1544 2 года назад +6

    I’ve seen these many times, but until now did not know the story of the artist. Thank you very much.

    • @Art_Deco
      @Art_Deco  2 года назад +1

      My pleasure! Thank you so much!

  • @JessyingAround
    @JessyingAround 2 года назад +11

    they're genius imo

  • @kerrypitt9789
    @kerrypitt9789 Год назад +3

    Most comments come from people who are very art familiar, I am not, but I enjoy it very much. The Four Seasons is very much my kind of Art. Artists (a collective including Jesters) also pointed out weaknesses in society, most often focused on government or mass stupidity. I appreciate this and I am learning slowly, how to look at paintings with different eyes.

  • @pugedaairagaylea.5352
    @pugedaairagaylea.5352 Год назад +8

    Love this channel so much! ✨ I hope you keep making videos like this one 😭I like the way you explain things, very entertaining and informative. Great analysis, as always! 💗

  • @oakeemiel3080
    @oakeemiel3080 2 года назад +4

    The personality of the artist along with the combination of both seen and unseen powers of the world, make plant life so humanized.

  • @HobartsLibrary
    @HobartsLibrary 4 месяца назад

    Honestly, so incredibly talented. How hard is it to make something look like two things at once? A tree, and a face. A bowl of meat, and a head. How incredible.

  • @DanilaTranquila
    @DanilaTranquila Год назад +2

    I'm so glad I found your channel. Your videos are lovely, educational and informative 💗🙏🏼

  • @preciousgoje2193
    @preciousgoje2193 2 года назад +3

    Saw his paintings at the louvre, very intriguing :)

  • @maryjuanadelizias
    @maryjuanadelizias Год назад +2

    That’s what I call being “down to earth”

  • @vgn5804
    @vgn5804 Год назад +3

    I absolutely adored this - thank you so much! Arcimboldo's works have fascinated me since I discovered them as a child. I learned of pareidolia (sp?) through them and have been delighting in this brain trick ever since. Your elucidations and gentle humour are a really satisfying experience to have - thank you so much!

  • @977400Dana
    @977400Dana Год назад +1

    Your posts are always fascinating!! I’ve learned so much!👍👍👍

  • @sumiresputnik6059
    @sumiresputnik6059 2 года назад +30

    I have never been able to fully understand the repulsion I feel for Arcimboldo’s paintings despite my great admiration for his artistry and innovation. Whenever I visit the KHM in Wien, I avoid his paintings at all costs. They make me feel uneasy, almost disgusted. Due to this, I could never bring myself to look at the paintings in detail, so having your video guide me through them was very helpful. I find Spring quite bearable, but the others confusingly unsettling and definitely not aesthetically pleasing. I think it is because his portraits convey features that are not usually associated with a healthy or “beautiful” human face: highly textured, bumpy, gnarled, and intensely shaded. Also, the inorganic, purely functional combination of very organic elements makes me feel conflicted. The elements the heads are made out of are not by themselves “ugly” (quite the contrary, actually; I especially love the plump peach in Summer), but their re-contextualization in the portraits undermines their individual beauty/aesthetic. What I gather from Arcimboldo’s paintings is a (bad) sense of “too much”: too much disturbance, too much effort for resemblance (i.e. inorganic) - very much unlike Bosch or Bruegel, for example, though. My sentiments for Arcimboldo’s paintings could probably also be explained by the concept of the “uncanny valley.” Even though I (still) do not appreciate Arcimboldo’s paintings aesthetically, I very much enjoy the impulse for reflecting on how and why art can make us feel a certain way.

    • @lillian8951
      @lillian8951 2 года назад +4

      My theory is that the almost-human-but-not-quite quality of them puts them right into the uncanny valley and that’s why I find them repulsive too. The paintings are amusing and creative, if I saw a man made of vegetables walk towards me I would either run or fight. Maybe if the paintings were less detailed and more graphic/flat it would be less weird?

    • @RadenWA
      @RadenWA Год назад +1

      The fact that the art gives you such a repulsion without objectively repulsive subjects speaks a lot about the power of his art. “Artists” these days uses literal shit or piss to achieve the same reaction as what he did with healthy fruits and vegetables.

  • @kathyastrom1315
    @kathyastrom1315 2 года назад +8

    I recently started a new cross stitch project, of Arcimboldo’s The Librarian. It’ll take me a year or more to finish, but I can put it above one of my bookshelves.

  • @jupiter0jupiter
    @jupiter0jupiter Год назад

    your video made me appreciate these paintings and find them beautiful, i remember seeing prints of these portraits in classrooms and doctor offices growing up, and at the time I did think they were "ugly" but really looking at them they are so skillyfull constructed, and the elements that make up the portrait are beuaitful

  • @MarcColten-us2pl
    @MarcColten-us2pl Год назад

    I'm jealous of such talent, I have none although I've tried. The paintings are amazing.

  • @tiredluka392
    @tiredluka392 2 года назад +9

    damn talk about speedy getting into my reccomended this deserves a lot more recognition

    • @Art_Deco
      @Art_Deco  2 года назад

      Thank you so much!!

  • @tamaratomtom8066
    @tamaratomtom8066 Год назад

    thank you so much!

  • @lynettevillaroel8341
    @lynettevillaroel8341 Год назад

    I love the creativity. Awesome.

  • @lightningstrikelures2393
    @lightningstrikelures2393 Год назад +1

    After watching and listening to many of your vids, I find myself now wanting these prints in my home.
    You are costing me a lot of money!!!!

  • @u2sandrah
    @u2sandrah Год назад

    Sassy editing! Love it!😊

  • @ishanaratti7237
    @ishanaratti7237 2 года назад +4

    Dear Art Deco, your videos are sooooo entertaining and thoughtfully made (I could watch them all day), but that jump scare at 6:49 scared the heck out of me 😅

  • @fintan9218
    @fintan9218 Год назад

    Ive never seen these paintings before they’re very unique and interesting to look at. Also enjoyed your editing

  • @anaditullio
    @anaditullio Год назад

    I've been an Arts teacher for the last 10 years, and the set of Four Seasons paintings is one I always use in my Earl Childhood classes. Toddlers love it, and the older kids always say they find "these people" "very ugly". And they are amazed by the intrincate puzzles created by Arcimboldo.

  • @Kat-yq6vw
    @Kat-yq6vw Год назад +1

    Your videos are such quality content. I’ve been binging them.

    • @xr6lad
      @xr6lad Год назад

      Not when she doesn’t know much. He wasn’t an Italian painter and he wasn’t born in Italy. Italy didn’t exist until the 19th century. At that time what we know as Italy was a collection of other countries ruled by their own individual kings or parliaments (Venice was a republic).

  • @CeresMike
    @CeresMike Год назад +1

    I found your channel recently and love the content! It’s the perfect balance of humor and education lol

  • @lunastar7599
    @lunastar7599 Год назад

    Thank you!

  • @chriserony
    @chriserony Год назад +1

    I think the last ones says "I'm old in face but fruitful in mind."

  • @andreiacosta1895
    @andreiacosta1895 2 года назад

    I really like your videos , so much nice information!! Thanks!

  • @lemon-nu7xp
    @lemon-nu7xp 2 года назад

    I love your videos they’re so interesting ty for making me learn and have a new interest

  • @ospididious
    @ospididious Год назад

    Thank you! I think I just found my favorite classical painter.

  • @neillgj
    @neillgj 2 года назад +2

    Another SUPERB video, Art Deco. Thank you.
    European Royal Courts now promote sobriety. Formerly that was very much not the case - you rightly show a jester.
    Laughter was sought and promoted as in the so-called Macaronic poetry of Arcimboldo's linguistic predecessor of the previous century.
    Arcimboldo's food portraits were praised highly by his contemporaries as attested in letters and inventories of palace collections. How we view them now bears little if no relation to how they were originally received. You wisely provide the context and correct perspective and are to be congratulated. Thank you.

  • @thetndixie
    @thetndixie 2 года назад +4

    Discovered his work in the Louvre! 😍

  • @lindenpeters2601
    @lindenpeters2601 Год назад

    Honestly your videos could be three times as long and I'd still watch them!

  • @nullnull9347
    @nullnull9347 2 года назад +1

    I THOUGHT I WAS THE ONLY ONE THAT SAW SCARY GHOST PEOPLE IN MY BATHROOM TILE, and when its like the middle of the night its even scarier😭

  • @Kalikat-uk5ve
    @Kalikat-uk5ve 2 года назад +6

    I'm new to your channel. I love it. And personally I love these pictures. I've always loved pictures and paintings that drew me in, into pictures that have so much detail and so much to see, so much more than you see at first glance. And I also love art that's a little dark. Such as Hieronymus Bosch. They are totally different in what they are trying to express and yet I like them both for the all that detail and other artists like them. It's not for everyone. But I like it. Thank you

  • @quietlily34
    @quietlily34 2 года назад

    These are like my favorite vids right now LOL the laser eyes was one of the best things ever HAHAHAHA

  • @QuestionableLifeChoices
    @QuestionableLifeChoices Год назад

    winter looks like something out of scary stories to tell in the dark

  • @Bonuandfriends33
    @Bonuandfriends33 Год назад

    I love your videos.way of explanation is amazing.

  • @MCA_Lives
    @MCA_Lives Год назад

    My mom being the foodie she was decided to get a replica of this painting back in 2006, proudly hung in our dining room, very fascinating painting. Rip mom ❤️

  • @h4rrykelly209
    @h4rrykelly209 2 года назад

    I realy appreciate this videos

  • @archeewaters
    @archeewaters Год назад

    he's certainly a master of composition!

  • @DragonsAndDragons777
    @DragonsAndDragons777 2 года назад +3

    Will you listen! I am not the fruit face master!
    Everyone: He is the fruit face master!

  • @IRosamelia
    @IRosamelia Год назад

    Bravo! Another great video! 💙💚🤎💛❤💜🧡💗💚

  • @superpear64
    @superpear64 Месяц назад

    Arcimboldo was the start of legitimate creativity in art.

  • @annanimity2034
    @annanimity2034 2 года назад

    Thanks for this I actually forgot this completely that these paintings existed

  • @musicfuelourlife2910
    @musicfuelourlife2910 Год назад

    I love love your videos!! Please do more of these!❤️ Its amazing! It's informative! it's funny👍😁 it's not boring! OMG! Please do more! Just keep doing it!!

  • @katjosephperez8772
    @katjosephperez8772 Год назад

    WOOOO I’ve seen the Four Seasons in person! My dad was/is enamored with them. Certainly one of the most memorable pieces I saw at The Louvre

  • @ackec-umsekkruch-ekucki952
    @ackec-umsekkruch-ekucki952 Год назад

    You're so frivolously discussing """_ART_""". It's great!

  • @Rockgamen
    @Rockgamen 11 месяцев назад

    The museeum i work at is going to have a activity for kids next weekend where they can create their own heads from vegetables and fruits, I think I have gotten some of the curators to watch your videos and we have talked about some of the paintings in your videos. I really like your style of art videos. Got me interested in art again and made me visit the national gallery in stockholm twice. Huge thanks and respect from sweden.

  • @user-vm5ud4xw6n
    @user-vm5ud4xw6n Год назад

    I’ve never seen any of them but I can promise it would only take looking at one to cure me of ever desiring to see more!

  • @pedrourbano501
    @pedrourbano501 Год назад

    This is the type of abstract or alternate art I like.

  • @sunshineroth9605
    @sunshineroth9605 Год назад +1

    Newer sub. I REALLY enjoy your videos very much!!!

  • @LuckyBird551
    @LuckyBird551 Год назад

    An artist I really like, but that is virtually unknown outside of his country of Argentina, is Candido Lopez. He was a 19th century painter from Argentina, the first years of his career as a painter he would make Still Life paintings, and some portraits of political figures. But that changed during the second half of his life after the Paraguay War, the bloddiest war in the history of South America, began. Candido Lopez decided to join the army, and fought in the war, where an explosion would damage his right hand forever. After the war, he spent some time re-teaching himself to paint using only his left hand, and began a series of paintings portraying the war he had witnessed himself at the front lines. The paintings all show either a battle or the aftermath of one, but all from afar, as if we are looking at a postcard of the war itself, we can't see any of the soldiers faces clearly since they are so far away and tiny, the protagonist of the paintings is the war itself. And it is not portrayed in a glorious or epic way, rather is more like a documentary. My favorite of all of his war painings, of which he managed to complete 52, must be "Después de la Batalla de Curupaytí" (Aftermath of the Battle of Curupayti). In there we see a battlefield right after a battle has been fought. We see dead bodies spread all over the landscape, both of men and of horses, patches of smoke from the ground here and there, soldiers dragging off dead bodies from the battlefield while piling up rifles and swords collected from the dead. Some soldiers are forcing POWs to walk away to be taken to a war prison, while others, the ones that are too injured to get up and walk, are being depicted as being unceremoniously shot right on the spot. It is a very powerful painting even if its so serene, at a time where paintings of war were all about heroism and great men fighting againts all odds, Candido Lopez's painting instead shows us that war is neither noble nor heroic. It is an ugly spectacle where men die left and right, with no honor or heroism to be seen anywhere. Something that we wouldn't see in European art until after the end of World War 1, decades later.

  • @Laocoon283
    @Laocoon283 Год назад

    The edits on this channel are primo

  • @SNARFOLA
    @SNARFOLA 3 месяца назад

    In the winter, the geography of citrus cultivation plays a crucial role in the availability and diversity of citrus. While citrus trees are hardy and can thrive in various climates, certain regions become citrus havens during the winter months.

  • @harlancarraher3526
    @harlancarraher3526 3 месяца назад +1

    Thanks!

    • @Art_Deco
      @Art_Deco  3 месяца назад

      Thank you for supporting the channel!

  • @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072
    @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 Год назад +1

    0:47 Oh my God those ruffles will only get bigger into the 17th century they are so expensive to maintain and pay someone to keep them clean and dry off

  • @adirtyswarlos
    @adirtyswarlos Год назад

    I saw some of these when I lived in Vienna. They definitely stood out 😁

  • @Steampunkfox143
    @Steampunkfox143 Год назад +1

    I would love the entire "4 seasons" set as diamond dot canvases!

  • @tdgtwo850
    @tdgtwo850 Год назад

    I've seen the "Spring" painting in my school cafeteria while I'm walking past it or eating in the cafeteria. Mad respect for this guy for his paintings to be featured in a school

  • @lylek8933
    @lylek8933 Год назад

    Big fan of Arcimboldo. Way ahead of his time. :)

  • @agneskirsch8335
    @agneskirsch8335 3 месяца назад

    The Vienna Kunsthistorische Museum has a large collection of his works. I loved them, when I was a kid.

  • @rickradix7464
    @rickradix7464 Год назад +1

    I started to become familiar with this dude back in 1976. I bought an album by Kansas called Masque. Which features one of his works on the cover. You have exceptional content and narration.

    • @BLMacab
      @BLMacab Год назад

      my hips hurt rick and i wasnt born til 98

    • @gerstelb
      @gerstelb 10 месяцев назад

      There are only two pop culture references that I’ve ever seen to Arcimbaldo. One is the cover of Masque, and the other is a shopper looking for prints of his work in the movie “84 Charing Cross Road.”

  • @WobblesandBean
    @WobblesandBean 2 года назад

    3:13 This is why I love your channel 😂

  • @yaxofossiad
    @yaxofossiad Год назад +1

    I agree with the contents saying he was ahead of his time. I was always so intrigued by these, I would love to know why he thought of doing this

  • @jacky3580
    @jacky3580 Год назад

    Babies who recognize and respond to their mother’s and other faces, gets more attention. Everyone is thrilled when their baby beams at them. Seeing faces means better health, survival.

  • @maryelizabeth3055
    @maryelizabeth3055 2 года назад

    Cool!

  • @TerezatheTeacher
    @TerezatheTeacher Год назад +1

    To summarize Arcimboldo: wtf.

  • @emmaeriksson7155
    @emmaeriksson7155 Год назад +2

    I was at a castle (skokloster) just outside Stockholm last week and there it was, that fruit portrait!? In Sweden??? In a random castle??? I didn’t know?!? Was shocked. I just sent there to look at the cute surroundings and didn’t expect to see one of the worlds most iconic paintings 😅

  • @lawnmowerver.ofvindiesel5639
    @lawnmowerver.ofvindiesel5639 Год назад

    Me seeing this video at first:
    My mind: “well their stories are filled with the JUICY details so…”

  • @imsunoklemtur545
    @imsunoklemtur545 Год назад

    1:06 That is art on its own

  • @stealthhumor
    @stealthhumor Год назад

    Yeah, skill. I am reminded of something from long ago: Beauty is only skin deep but ugly goes through to the core.

  • @Nonsequitoria2010
    @Nonsequitoria2010 7 месяцев назад

    Exploiting the uncanny valley like an absolute boss.

  • @ozymandias9797
    @ozymandias9797 5 месяцев назад

    Big fan of the band Kansas. They used the water element portrait on their album, Masque. Always wondered where it came from.

  • @ChorizoCentauri
    @ChorizoCentauri 7 месяцев назад

    (8:36) The Four Seasons in One Head (aka The Knight That Says Nee) is also my favorite

  • @Foolish188
    @Foolish188 2 года назад +4

    Ever see the image of the Death Head Moth from The Silence of the Lambs? It is a painting by Salvador Dali of naked people!

  • @jeanettemarkley7299
    @jeanettemarkley7299 9 месяцев назад

    I really liked the last one.