Picasso, Les Demoiselles d'Avignon

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024

Комментарии • 42

  • @joygasmatron
    @joygasmatron 7 лет назад +57

    i'm so happy to hear this video touch on colonialism. i feel like it is often left out of modern art classes and it's such an important element of the progression of this type of art. another amazing video!

  • @edoardotesta7068
    @edoardotesta7068 2 года назад +7

    Watching this while sat in front of the original at MoMA - what a dramatic, thrilling experience!
    Great video, thanks for uploading.

  • @susannorton3278
    @susannorton3278 4 года назад +3

    One of my favourite works, I find it hard to look away from it.

  • @KCarver
    @KCarver 7 лет назад +15

    While I can appreciate Picasso's skill and even admire it, I've never taken pleasure in his work. But with that said, another wonderful video.

  • @TheBenchPressMan
    @TheBenchPressMan 7 лет назад +17

    The greatest ever, i think so. I really do, seeing it at MoMa was just everything i imagined and more. He was a genius, and everything about this work explains to its audience why he was. I cannot imagine seeing this in 1907 (obviously publicly you couldn't for many years till he decided to actually show it), but it must have just opened people's minds to a new way of depiction, it must have been beyond imaginable for people. Now we look at this work through the lens of today, knowing full well how far art has come both conceptually and perceptionally, but back then this would have meant so much more to onlookers. I can only wish maybe today we again have such a genius to create a work that changes the way we create and interpret in the same manner. Bravo Picasso

  • @thewatcher6834
    @thewatcher6834 4 года назад +15

    In 5 hours i have a presentation about this. You guys saved will probably saving my ass with this video thanks

  • @Tsumami__
    @Tsumami__ 3 года назад +10

    I don’t think either the medical student nor Picasso himself were looking at the women analytically. In my experience, there is no difference between how the painter, the doctor, or the sailor look at women.

    • @AvsFan32
      @AvsFan32 Год назад

      Super interesting perspective

  • @Sasha0927
    @Sasha0927 Год назад

    Picasso was Spanish?! 🤯 My whole life this man was French, lolol.
    I've never seen "Woman Ironing," but then I remembered how unfamiliar with his work in general. It's so exciting to finally see what all the fuss is about from a trusted source with ever-amazing commentary. ❤
    The pleasures of life are short [and may be shorter if we don't partake in them wisely - thus, the skull and book(?)].
    Demoiselles was good vocab for me to pick up today - right on time for my French lessons.

  • @AnthonyLeNguyen
    @AnthonyLeNguyen 7 лет назад +3

    I really enjoyed the presentation of the video. So informative; one of my favorite Picasso pieces, along with Garçon à la pipe & La Vie.

  • @CautionCU
    @CautionCU 7 лет назад +4

    love this one, it's Olympia and Luncheon in one.

  • @BorselinoThadchack
    @BorselinoThadchack 4 месяца назад

    as always you guys are fantastic

  • @angelajsacaartistaffiliatedwpl

    Beautiful collection

  • @trekkingwithellie
    @trekkingwithellie 7 лет назад +2

    Always a great piece to learn about. :)

  • @asderc1
    @asderc1 7 лет назад +6

    Really interesting

  • @donhendershot9705
    @donhendershot9705 7 лет назад +3

    I believe that, in context with the elements discussed here, Picasso was attempting to learn how to create 3-dimensional paintings in order to better market them. Competition within the painting market became tough due to the invention and use of the camera obscura.

  • @bnkundwa
    @bnkundwa 3 года назад

    A masterpiece.

  • @PeterFritzWalter
    @PeterFritzWalter 7 лет назад

    Fantastic analysis, thank you so much!

  • @GRJLS.
    @GRJLS. 3 года назад

    Picasso is my favorite painter/artist.

  • @palm0607
    @palm0607 7 лет назад +5

    one of my favorite paintings when I visited the MoMa......although as whole I don't like the MoMa.

  • @CyberCheese392
    @CyberCheese392 3 года назад

    4k quality! Good!!

  • @danielmaxramirez8148
    @danielmaxramirez8148 5 лет назад

    men tus videos son lo max +100

  • @darklingeraeld-ridge7946
    @darklingeraeld-ridge7946 6 лет назад +2

    It is wrong, ultimately, to flatly say that an artist is a "product" of her or his time..... Picasso's interest in African, Iberian and other so-called 'primitive' arts was an act of volition, deliberate, and (apart from Gauguin), almost unprecedented. To see artists as products is to miss how startlingly original they can be (and even more endanger the quietly revealing or alternative notes they can sound) - even while, as here, pointing that originality up. Art historically, one of the surprising things about the pioneering and post Analytic phases of Picasso's Cubism, is how rooted it is in the medieval church art of his native region. This is best viewed at the churches museum in Barcelona.

    • @susomedin5770
      @susomedin5770 6 лет назад

      Darklinger AEld-ridge
      His native region was Andalucía.

  • @jmove7647
    @jmove7647 3 года назад +1

    art history II!

  • @craignunnallypurcell
    @craignunnallypurcell 4 года назад +5

    Why no commentary about treating women as sexual objects ?

  • @jonimaedelossantos5468
    @jonimaedelossantos5468 4 года назад +1

    I don't understand why this is supposed to feel "dangerous"

    • @germanbuenrostroestrada4747
      @germanbuenrostroestrada4747 Год назад

      In a thesis analysis I did for this painting, perhaps it was Picasso's fear for syphilis, but for the audience is how this painting becomes confrontational and crating a dialogue with the audience, almost as if soliciting. This painting was intended to break the space between the boundaries of classical art, style, and even how the art is viewed and most importantly, the viewer. This is probably how this painting had connotation with danger/confrontation

  • @GoatMen
    @GoatMen 7 лет назад +6

    I guess based on this comments section I am the only person who thinks that this was turning point for the degradation of art.

    • @syb2965
      @syb2965 6 лет назад +2

      The degradation of art started with dadaism.

    • @ashkachaudhary268
      @ashkachaudhary268 5 лет назад +2

      Dude chill the f out

    • @combatantezoteric2965
      @combatantezoteric2965 5 лет назад +5

      The degradation of art started with the renaissance, or ok, let's say mannerism.

    • @riccardo8896
      @riccardo8896 4 года назад +3

      Peepoopee I don't like painting
      If I don't like it's degenerate art
      Painters should do what a camera does in 30seconds
      Otherwise the
      Painting is degenerate peepoopeepoopee

    • @gemstonegynoid7475
      @gemstonegynoid7475 27 дней назад

      always has been such a cowardly perspective to consider any art a degradation.

  • @Tukker607
    @Tukker607 5 лет назад

    Hodeh kankersaai