Step inside Magdalena Abakanowicz's forest of woven sculptures | Tate

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 219

  • @rosalindthomas6376
    @rosalindthomas6376 Год назад +16

    This is the real thing. The artist and the commentary are serious and modest, allowing the works to speak for themselves. Thank you for making it possible for those unable to travel to the exhibit to share in this profound imagery.

  • @clancykeegan748
    @clancykeegan748 Год назад +219

    How blessed is someone to be born with all of these ideas and be recognised for them. To be believed enough for your inner life to be displayed and for your work to be powerful enough to be admired.

    • @nensi1972
      @nensi1972 Год назад +9

      ... ❤️🙏🏻🌹true, especially when one Is highly sensitive as An artist...

    • @clancykeegan748
      @clancykeegan748 Год назад +4

      @@nensi1972 ❤️🙏

    • @Weirdkauz
      @Weirdkauz Год назад

      Came down here to talk about just that. Interesting, this association should habe hit you, too.

    • @MsLoila
      @MsLoila Год назад +4

      That's definitely the catch, being recognised for your inner life is really something.

    • @ma-burke
      @ma-burke Год назад +2

      Agreed! In her case, she most definitely deserved to be.

  • @rozesherwood2223
    @rozesherwood2223 Год назад +171

    Thank you for making such a beautiful film for those of us who might not be able to make it to the exhibition.

  • @retrovelcro
    @retrovelcro Год назад +3

    I never studied art, and I don't live near museums that showcase this type of work. So, I'm able to explore these ideas and works through finding videos from the Tate Modern and other established museums and galleries online. Thanks.

  • @criar1111
    @criar1111 Год назад +3

    So strong, so alive, so beautiful!

  • @VasilikiProkopi
    @VasilikiProkopi Год назад +1

    Sublime work, first time I encounter Magdalena's work! Mesmerized!

  • @KingGosia
    @KingGosia Год назад +2

    I saw her works when I was 6y.old.
    That you don't forget 🌱

  • @elizawilson5981
    @elizawilson5981 Год назад +36

    I happened across her work at university doing A visual arts degree and then honours. I did painting and printmaking, textiles and sculpture. Her name and work has stayed with me for over 20 years. I still vividly remember her pieces. I love using textiles and thread in my paintings. Wish I could be there.

  • @magicknight13
    @magicknight13 Год назад +11

    WOW!! I've never seen these before or heard of her before, embarrassingly. But wow. She is truly impressive and in tune. I love the way the curator spoke of these artworks as "cocoons" or "coats", and the experimental film in a desert-like space! I love art that envelopes, that is soft and comforting but also incredibly layered and speaks on humanity. What a wonderful upload, thank you!

  • @michelebriere9569
    @michelebriere9569 Год назад +5

    "Art is a state of being." Love it.

  • @awalk8291
    @awalk8291 Год назад +51

    Visited this exhibition yesterday. It was beautifully curated and I felt some sort spiritual energy through out the space.

  • @majamasztalerz
    @majamasztalerz Год назад +40

    I had a pleasure to see her art in Wrocław, Poland. Instead of abakans she also did sculptures which are quite magnificent especially sourended by nature.

  • @jsully8076
    @jsully8076 Год назад +8

    Interesting. Such soft and strong materials. Looking at them makes you think of so many different things and feel so many different ways. And I think that's what art is all about. So glad I came across this and was introduced to her work.

  • @nancypricestudio1236
    @nancypricestudio1236 Год назад +1

    Love this. It is nice to see an artist get recognized who should be recognized. The work is powerful.

  • @M15Guys
    @M15Guys Месяц назад

    Amazing beautiful works xx

  • @katharineatkins1347
    @katharineatkins1347 Год назад +25

    Thank you for this film. I was unable to make it to the opening in Nov ‘22 but will get there before the end of the exhibition in mid May. I studied under her for two years at the Fine Arts in Poznan in the mid ‘70’s. An experience like no other, on multiple levels.

    • @Talentedtadpole
      @Talentedtadpole Год назад +3

      It would be wonderful to hear more accounts of this underappreciated artist. I am so glad you had this opportunity and hope that you go well.
      Of course everyone who needs should have such an experience. We are in culturally deprived times.

  • @oldreprobate2748
    @oldreprobate2748 Год назад +4

    Magdalena has never ceased to amaze me with her art creations.

  • @antoniocarlosrodriguescamp1497
    @antoniocarlosrodriguescamp1497 2 месяца назад +1

    Is all this what we call ART? Gosh, who can still stand these conceptual works?

  • @sandrafisherhayes3219
    @sandrafisherhayes3219 6 месяцев назад

    Stumbled upon this post only today. Turned up on my RUclips feed. Sad to say I am not familiar with Magdelena's artworks so I feel blessed to see this short documentary! Such beautiful structures! ❤ without all the bells and whistles! Thank you for sharing this artist's textile pieces

  • @maryclaremayo6157
    @maryclaremayo6157 Год назад +17

    Thank you. I did not know Magdalena Abakanowicz before this. Her work really moves me.

  • @wildlifegardenssydney7492
    @wildlifegardenssydney7492 Год назад +7

    Thank you so much for showing and explains her work. Nearly 40 years ago I found a book with her work. I was instantly smitten. She did many fibre figures……like fibre “stone warriors”……I loved the incredible free forms in this exhibition…..stunning.

  • @allenzaruba852
    @allenzaruba852 Год назад +39

    An authentic original who still commands a uniquely powerful perspective on the human condition. Her work straddles contemporary art history and yet evokes aspects of pre-history that intersects aspects of various global cultures very few other artists even dream of. A deep gravity of grace...and so much more.

    • @magicknight13
      @magicknight13 Год назад

      Very eloquently put! You are so right, I had not thought of that prehistorical aspect of her work

  • @sharminkaniz5086
    @sharminkaniz5086 Год назад +8

    💖 Wonderful Exhibition 🙌🏼 Thank you ALL, for your work ✨

  • @Fledhyris
    @Fledhyris Год назад +7

    Fascinating work! She has today's Google doodle commemoration. I think one of the sculptures looks like a pair of lungs, the black one against the wall. I wish I could have visited this exhibition, I didn't know about it until now although the Tate is a little far for a day trip.

    • @mollycampbell8609
      @mollycampbell8609 Год назад

      Yes, it occurred to me that had Google featured her a month or two ago, more people could have seen the exhibit! Doh!

  • @lindam9618
    @lindam9618 Год назад +6

    I'm a fiber artist who had the fortune to study under Dr. Mahboob Shahzaman @ Northern Illinois University back in the mid - late 70's. Dr. S. always expressed a deep reverence for Magdalena's work. Magdalena's Abakans were a major influence on fiber artists and students at that time...and to this day. I wish I could see the exhibit at the Tate, but I won't be able to at this time. Kudos to The Tate for curating this important exhibit of a very important artist.

  • @andreabammybartlet8754
    @andreabammybartlet8754 Год назад +1

    YES Tate so good thankyou

  • @MrJohnblaine
    @MrJohnblaine Год назад

    There's so much feelings looking at her works

  • @mS-iz9np
    @mS-iz9np Год назад +4

    Thank you so much for this amazing documentary

  • @Hedgehogsinthemist123
    @Hedgehogsinthemist123 Год назад

    What amazing works of art.

  • @Давид-у5щ6т
    @Давид-у5щ6т Год назад

    I really liked it.Thank you.

  • @sandradonofrio413
    @sandradonofrio413 Год назад +3

    Mesmerizing works. Very affective.

  • @cyndeehorn7079
    @cyndeehorn7079 Год назад

    WOW! WOW! WOW!

  • @robert66186
    @robert66186 Год назад

    Incredible

  • @gnarbeljo8980
    @gnarbeljo8980 Год назад +1

    It's always interesting to read comments with strong personal interpretations of an artists works. Any artist would love that. But I think these interpretations really say sonething about the viewer more than the artist. Her works are like giant sculptural Rorshacks in that way. Be very careful passing judgement on the artists intention, what she's expressing, etc. How you read her work reflects on yourself, your story and need for narrative; hers is not disclosed by your own experience of the work. This is in itself a sign of great art. She's a legend and her work totally unique and very important.

  • @Trth1707
    @Trth1707 Год назад

    Art can be divisive,nice film of the subject.

  • @Weirdkauz
    @Weirdkauz Год назад

    I've gotten to the point where I genuinely don't care anymore by people being uninterested in my work. But I still fold like a freak if someone does. So I greet that greatness in her.

  • @hnttakata713
    @hnttakata713 Год назад +3

    Incredible, emotional….beauty and inspires thoughts about the vulnerability of human existence.

  • @WW-bd5yh
    @WW-bd5yh Год назад

    Thank you!

  • @omni_naomi
    @omni_naomi Год назад

    Thanks! Will be visiting soon to see it.

  • @mikeince2929
    @mikeince2929 Год назад

    Gorgeous....

  • @carolmarsden1207
    @carolmarsden1207 Год назад +2

    I cannot even imagine how emotionally moving these pieces are in person! Now to do some homework to find out where there are any art exhibitions with them. Fascinating!

  • @saraswatisky3119
    @saraswatisky3119 Год назад

    Wow. How incredible.

  • @kimgapjin-art
    @kimgapjin-art Год назад +1

    gapjin art
    thank you so much
    좋은 예술작품 감상 잘했습니다

  • @redpandamoon5539
    @redpandamoon5539 Год назад +13

    The Abakan sculptural giants remind me so much of the fibre-based spirit like creations of Mrinalini Mukherjee. Artists from such different contexts but with works that resonate profoundly.

  • @kirsten7072
    @kirsten7072 Год назад +3

    Beautiful ❤️

  • @moxistrawberries5510
    @moxistrawberries5510 Год назад

    Bless you for posting this video and sharing the love

  • @Mindyzzzzz
    @Mindyzzzzz Год назад +4

    This is amazing 💖 I am in complete awe, I need to go see the exhibit in person.

  • @Beakerzor
    @Beakerzor Год назад

    wow, thank you

  • @caroledrury1411
    @caroledrury1411 Год назад +16

    I literally feel like throwing up. But I think that’s good. I think that art should evoke a very strong emotion. And this really does evoke a horrible feeling for me. That is really what I love about art. I’ve seen enough that has made me sore in extasy why not see some that does the opposite

    • @treasure2behold282
      @treasure2behold282 Год назад +9

      I sense some trauma and abuse in her work. Some of them resemble the organs of a woman but mutilated.

  • @leslovesart
    @leslovesart Год назад +2

    Incredible work

  • @valeriehitier9026
    @valeriehitier9026 Год назад

    Très beau

  • @rohankshirsagar433
    @rohankshirsagar433 Год назад +5

    Mrinalini Mukharjee from India had also done stunning sculpture with her weaving techniques.

  • @faragraf9380
    @faragraf9380 Год назад +1

    in the 70th it was extraordinary to create vulva art, but it was common. its massive big and it hits you.

  • @jasonb.7609
    @jasonb.7609 8 месяцев назад

    to me, pretty obvious what the artist is going for here,but then, thats whats great about art, we can all say that and be correct. Interesting video, thank you.

  • @jayoopatwardhan4040
    @jayoopatwardhan4040 Год назад +5

    Amazing ! I had seen earlier sone such beauties by Mrinalini Mukherjee from India in 1992 I think . She is no more . Her father was also a huge painter at Tagores Shantiniketan in Bengal last century ! She macramayed all kinds of textures and lines !
    Yours is amazing too !

  • @renzo6490
    @renzo6490 Год назад +9

    Her medium is organic and subject to attack by mold,fungus,insects etc.
    How are her works protected?

    • @fjuvo
      @fjuvo Год назад +3

      They are like giant carpets, so they don’t have to worry too much. As long as they are stored in a dry and controlled environment there will be ok

  • @patriciaacevedo4429
    @patriciaacevedo4429 Год назад +2

    This is mind blowing.

  • @scribe712
    @scribe712 Год назад +1

    I won't pretend to like or understand it. Still, I'd love to see it in person.

  • @Tf03
    @Tf03 Год назад +2

    Love this!

  • @leadbelly1495
    @leadbelly1495 Год назад

    Thanks…brilliant

  • @GG77PAX
    @GG77PAX Год назад

    Impressive and wonderful

  • @zondors
    @zondors Год назад

    This is Art ❤😊😮

  • @raytavares2256
    @raytavares2256 Год назад +1

    I don't know why but for some other reason I felt pulled to this lady and her arr work including the thoughts in it. The earthly colours are so heart warming as I watch. Do they smell like Musk or mushroom her work or like cinnamon?

  • @RRENSKY
    @RRENSKY Год назад +2

    She is well known in Poland, thank you for this video.

  • @darylcumming7119
    @darylcumming7119 Год назад

    Thank you breathtaking.

  • @EripaDesign
    @EripaDesign Год назад +4

    Will this exhibition come to the US?

  • @mahanly
    @mahanly Год назад

    Wow.

  • @CorkBouldering
    @CorkBouldering Год назад

    Thanks for promoting polish art you should display Leon Tarasiewicz to.

  • @franciskodankandath210
    @franciskodankandath210 Месяц назад

    From that aristocratic background her journey has to be so painful to reach this level of complicated tapestry ❤Artist Francis Antony Kodankandath from Kerala, India ❤❤❤

  • @Koldatt
    @Koldatt Год назад

    She immediately reminds me of Harry Partch!

  • @ll-pn8ck
    @ll-pn8ck Год назад

    wonderful artist

  • @marylenemoulinlecheviller9558
    @marylenemoulinlecheviller9558 Год назад

    Magnifique !

  • @abrahamgarza537
    @abrahamgarza537 Год назад +2

    It's pretty unique

  • @keithdennis1462
    @keithdennis1462 Год назад +5

    This was great. Why have I never heard of this artist?

    • @1hayes1
      @1hayes1 Год назад +7

      Maybe you are just not generally aware of textile artists. Abakanowicz is very famous and widely acclaimed.

    • @user-yk1cw8im4h
      @user-yk1cw8im4h Год назад

      polish names arent exactly easy to remember

  • @hitbox_91
    @hitbox_91 Год назад +3

    It's not like I was prejudice about what I would see in those statues but... from the first moment I cannot unsee what I see in them........... btw yes, I'm male.

  • @derrickmcadoo3804
    @derrickmcadoo3804 Год назад +1

    A lot of potential here.
    Perhaps it's a yearning for gentle giant beasts of the past that have long-been extinct. Something like Bison or Mammoths that we vaguely remember in our DNA ?

  • @uapoznan
    @uapoznan 6 месяцев назад

    🖤🖤💙💙

  • @Vexxet
    @Vexxet Год назад

    nice

  • @lakshmanankomathmanalath
    @lakshmanankomathmanalath Год назад +1

    💙💙💙

  • @laurieburns8469
    @laurieburns8469 Год назад

    Have anybody seen the exhibition of Barbara Chase-Riboud at Serpentine and saw the similarities to Abakanowicz's Abakans, especially to those seen at Min 6:02 ? For me it felt as if the fabric "beasts" were relatives. Like siblings, but raised on an other continent.

  • @雷娃娃
    @雷娃娃 Год назад +1

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @goricamaletic2895
    @goricamaletic2895 3 месяца назад +1

    Jagoda Bujic

  • @vdeath100
    @vdeath100 Год назад

    Where is this exhibition 😍

    • @Tate
      @Tate  Год назад

      The exhibition is on at Tate Modern in London until May 2023 :) www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/magdalena-abakanowicz

  • @thekikster11
    @thekikster11 Год назад

  • @Shinethelightonme
    @Shinethelightonme Год назад +2

    Yall know damn well this looks like a giant Labia

  • @diegoinestrillas
    @diegoinestrillas Год назад +1

    Tate, do happen to have the full video from the Abakans that were installed in the desert? I need to see it

  • @albertosantosramirez
    @albertosantosramirez Год назад +2

    One day , you will have me.

  • @mariagrekova7210
    @mariagrekova7210 Год назад +3

    Why didn't they say the name of the film director?

    • @samwhiite2822
      @samwhiite2822 Год назад +2

      The film director is called Jarosław Brzozowski (1911-69) and the composer is Bogusław Schäffer (1929-2019). The name of the movie is Abakany.

  • @rosaniribeirosoares1605
    @rosaniribeirosoares1605 Год назад

    Amei👏👏👏👏

  • @sherrylotfy1948
    @sherrylotfy1948 Год назад

    They are so beautiful,I would love to wear them with my silver ethnic jewellery,

  • @todorkovacevic
    @todorkovacevic Год назад +5

    Free Tate!

  • @boboloko
    @boboloko Год назад +5

    Until I saw this video I hated everything about Andrew Tate, but I see now that he appreciates and supports genre defying art.

  • @MusyaGriboedova
    @MusyaGriboedova Год назад

    В текстиле Абаканович удалось добиться живописного эффекта; ни она, ни ее работы не нуждаются в этом, но в связи с этим она стоит в одном ряду с Кифером или Пеноне

  • @piotr.leniec-lincow5209
    @piotr.leniec-lincow5209 Год назад +2

    If you look at that work on a certain level you will see common textural
    elements with the paintings of BEKSINSKI .

  • @Cornermouse1
    @Cornermouse1 Год назад

    Nice. Tough to smuggle a kid in one of those.

  • @arifsulaiman300
    @arifsulaiman300 Год назад

    👍😁♥️🇮🇩

  • @mariacalderon1960
    @mariacalderon1960 Год назад +7

    SON vulvas??!!!!!

    • @dawnriddler
      @dawnriddler Год назад +4

      that's what I thought! 😂

  • @justagirlsd3000
    @justagirlsd3000 Год назад

    10% of the world is related to Ghengis Khan. Really interesting sculptures

  • @AM-bm9rs
    @AM-bm9rs Год назад +3

    why us noone talking about the thumbnail?

  • @thanhtikezaw.318
    @thanhtikezaw.318 Год назад

    Her art experiment is too early... Unusual medium usage on her artwork as well.