This Painting Is More Disturbing Than You Think. Here’s Why.

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  • Опубликовано: 5 фев 2025
  • This piece is called The Great Wave, also known as Under The Wave Off Kanagawa by Katsushika Hokusai. You’ve probably seen it more times than you can count, but you might discover that you’ve been looking at it wrong the all along. It seems so calm and serene. But if we look a little closer, it begins to look a lot less free-spirited and fun-loving. Why? Because of the 3 boats full of fishermen below the Great Wave, desperately trying to save themselves from being SWALLOWED WHOLE by the turbulent waters.
    Hokusai created this iconic woodblock print around the year 1830, a time when Japan had basically been isolated from the rest of the world for about 200 years. During this isolation, Japanese people saw waves as a symbol of safety from foreign invasion, as the sea surrounding the island was rough which made it almost impossible to cross. But in this depiction, the water no longer looks protective but instead aggressive and I think that’s because Hokusai knew the tide was about to turn.
    The rest of the world wasn’t a fan of Japan’s isolation. They wanted a piece of Japan’s prosperity pie, so they took it. In 1853, an armed US Navy ship sailed to the island and demanded they trade freely with the rest of the world. And just like that, Japan begrudgingly opened its doors.
    The Great Wave took the world by storm. It had this unique allure because it struck the perfect balance of being exotic, while also seeming familiar to the European eye, particularly because of the use of Prussian blue. I hope this video helped you see this famous artwork in a new light! Thanks for watching!
    Credits:
    Cloud special effects from Vecteezy
    Arcadia - Wonders by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommon...
    Source: incompetech.com...
    Artist: incompetech.com/
    Frost Waltz by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommon...

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @katecoffee4744
    @katecoffee4744 Год назад +1708

    “Serene” was never a word I equated with this painting but I always found it beautiful.

    • @InThisEssayIWill...
      @InThisEssayIWill... Год назад +35

      Same. We admire the ocean for it's ability to be BOTH powerful and serene. Destructive and life giving. Anyone familiar with the ocean at all would know what type of wave we're viewing here.
      Dangerous things can still be beautiful, why else would we visit Lions in a zoo.

    • @TinaP1234
      @TinaP1234 Год назад +12

      It is a woodblock print not a painting.

    • @shadowpitched4401
      @shadowpitched4401 Год назад +15

      I always thought the depiction was of a storm at sea, even though the sky doesn't reflect this. I never found it to be serene or calm.

    • @Eat_shit--die_mad
      @Eat_shit--die_mad Год назад +6

      ​@@TinaP1234shut up and stop being asinine, block prints are a type of painting

    • @TinaP1234
      @TinaP1234 Год назад

      @@Eat_shit--die_mad Please read en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodblock_printing#:~:text=Woodblock%20printing%20or%20block%20printing,on%20textiles%20and%20later%20paper.

  • @raedwulf61
    @raedwulf61 Год назад +1008

    I never saw this as peaceful. I always saw the boatmen in extreme danger.

    • @ecurewitz
      @ecurewitz Год назад +26

      I noticed the scared fishermen when I was very young

    • @benjaminrobinson3842
      @benjaminrobinson3842 Год назад +13

      Yeah, when I was younger I always thought it looked like a tidal wave, something I later learned is a constant threat to Japan.

    • @cynthiasavage120
      @cynthiasavage120 Год назад +2

      Me too. I have always loved how I feel when I see this painting.

    • @safarit678
      @safarit678 11 месяцев назад +2

      The video poster clearly doesn't understand art

    • @RockinBoz
      @RockinBoz 11 месяцев назад +2

      Does anyone look at this and see serene?

  • @Spearca
    @Spearca Год назад +2353

    Even without fishermen in danger, that's not a "serene" sea

    • @SouthernArtist77
      @SouthernArtist77 Год назад +45

      Nope it certainly isn’t.

    • @tiararoxeanne1318
      @tiararoxeanne1318 Год назад +75

      People are deceived by the bright colors and the tiny details. It does look serene in a glance. The painter is a genious. I guess the Midsommar horror movie applied similar tactics.

    • @WVgrl59
      @WVgrl59 Год назад +28

      True but many people find crashing waves very serene but you have to look closer and see that there are people in peril.

    • @user-wo4ss8zg6o
      @user-wo4ss8zg6o Год назад +22

      My thoughts exactly. I liked it for the beautiful depiction of the turbulent sea.

    • @lanasinapayen3354
      @lanasinapayen3354 Год назад +30

      Yeah I really didn't understand that part of the video "^^ there is nothing serene about the scene at first glance

  • @pliktl
    @pliktl Год назад +376

    I was blessed to see this print in person in Washington DC. I nearly had a heart attack on the sidewalk, panicking in front of a poster that let me know ALL of the Hokusai prints were there, including 3 extras!! My father, witnessing this ordeal brought me back to earth with, "Do you want to go inside?"
    The prints are SOOOOO TINY and all the little expressions on the faces are so detailed.
    Thank you for bringing back this memory ❤❤

    • @fredneecher1746
      @fredneecher1746 Год назад +24

      I saw a similar exhibition years ago at the Royal Academy in London and it inspired me to go and live in Japan. The best art exhibition I have ever seen!

    • @dlbstl
      @dlbstl Год назад +13

      ​@@fredneecher1746 Wow! That was an impactful exhibit! Awesome that you moved to Japan!

    • @matthewrinehart2367
      @matthewrinehart2367 Год назад +12

      @pliktl Even with the debates about who owns what, experiences like yours are why museums must continue to exist. What small spark of inspiration will fuel the imagination of the next generation? I'm so glad your parents encouraged your passion.

    • @ecurewitz
      @ecurewitz Год назад +8

      They have one at the Harvard Art museum in Cambridge m but it’s not always on display. They occasionally loan it to the MFA in Boston, where I have seen it twice

    • @alphagt62
      @alphagt62 Год назад +12

      So glad you told me how tiny these prints are, I was imagining them much larger.

  • @bluegreenglue6565
    @bluegreenglue6565 Год назад +614

    I never saw serenity in this painting. The faces of the fishermen, even in their simplicity, just give me vibes of resignation. This is one of my (18-year-old) son's favorite works of art (we have it as a shower curtain and I bought him a lego kit of this print for Christmas).

    • @donofon1014
      @donofon1014 Год назад +16

      Amen ... It just roars threat... never serenity.

    • @jamesbarrett9466
      @jamesbarrett9466 Год назад +16

      There was a large Lego version on display at the Seattle Museum of Art recently as part of a Hokusai exhibit recently.

    • @bluegreenglue6565
      @bluegreenglue6565 Год назад +32

      @@ac583 "Painting" in this case is a generic term for the print -- take it easy, and please spend less time trying to shame people on a youtbue comment. sheesh! : p

    • @bluegreenglue6565
      @bluegreenglue6565 Год назад +6

      @@jamesbarrett9466 That's something I would like to see! I am glad his work is still appreciated today, in any form.

    • @erikreber3695
      @erikreber3695 Год назад +5

      The Lego sets available these days are great, in a way better than the ones i had growing up, and make me wish I was 12 again. 😅

  • @HeidiSue60
    @HeidiSue60 Год назад +456

    Even though I’ve never seen this piece with fishing boats included, it has never seemed peaceful and serene to me. Majestic. Powerful. Energetic. Vast.

    • @myriamickx7969
      @myriamickx7969 Год назад +9

      What do you mean by "never seen this piece with fishing boats included”? The fishing boats were always in the print, they are not a late addition. Maybe you mean that you never noticed them before?

    • @1daisytiger
      @1daisytiger Год назад +14

      @@myriamickx7969 Maybe they have only seen copies of the painting when it's been cropped

    • @HeidiSue60
      @HeidiSue60 Год назад +13

      @@myriamickx7969 possibly I’ve not noticed them, but more likely I’ve only seen images of the wave alone. I tend to be pretty detail oriented and I think I would notice the boats.

    • @WateryStar
      @WateryStar Год назад +12

      I had a circular mousepad that had the boats completely cropped out.

    • @ritagreen6499
      @ritagreen6499 Год назад +5

      @@myriamickx7969 The quality of the print’s reproduction may have cropped out or blurred the fishing boats. Or maybe those who reprinted the print, were able to not have to obtain copyright permission if the boats were missing, & just featured the wave.

  • @raffaeledelpizzo8069
    @raffaeledelpizzo8069 Год назад +419

    There's a misconception at the beginning of this video: this work of art has never been "calm".

    • @Jacob-ed1bl
      @Jacob-ed1bl Год назад +2

      So you know how everyone who sees the painting feels when they see it? 🙄 It's beyond idiotic to claim it's never been seen that way.

    • @Adrian-vd6ji
      @Adrian-vd6ji 11 месяцев назад

      maybe shes puffin a big j while viewing it

    • @emm_arr
      @emm_arr 11 месяцев назад +17

      @@Jacob-ed1bl So big wave = calm?
      It's beyond idiotic to claim big waves are calm.
      Do you see what I did there?!

    • @Jacob-ed1bl
      @Jacob-ed1bl 11 месяцев назад

      @emm_arr I see you're a clown that doesn't understand that it's up to the person that makes a claim to provide the evidence and proof to back that claim .🙄. What the hell is a "big wave"?, a famous surf spot 🤣. If you're referring to the Big Bang theory, it has lots of experience to be the leading theory at this time. You're obviously not up to this and will just get hammered 🤣.

    • @Outriley
      @Outriley 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@emm_arr you didn't do anything tho. The person you replied never claimed that the waves are calm

  • @jessie4127
    @jessie4127 Год назад +85

    I've seen this countless times, and never noticed the boats or the sailors. Now that its been pointed out I can't not see them. Thank you. I love these videos

  • @thelastdictator482
    @thelastdictator482 Год назад +198

    I just always assumed it depicted a tsunami -never thought it was peaceful in the moment. Maybe if you look deeper and realize that while the people are going to have a rough time, Mt Fuji simply abides, you can make some statement about how the people of Japan may go through hardship but Japan itself will endure, but that's just digging for meaning.

    • @pakde8002
      @pakde8002 Год назад +10

      I thought it referenced the Japanese legend of the great wave that defeated the Mongol invasion.

    • @nothanks5846
      @nothanks5846 Год назад +12

      Not digging at all; the fact that the series of prints focuses on Fuji-san lends credence to your theory.

    • @PhilLesh69
      @PhilLesh69 Год назад +7

      I was actually taught this by my third grade teacher in hawaii. She was a Japanese Hawaiian and she said it depicted an entire invasion fleet from China being sunk by a series of tsunamis. Whether it was legend or an actual real event was never clear to me though.

    • @TightyWhitieTrash
      @TightyWhitieTrash Год назад +2

      I took Japanese I & Japanese II in high school & my teacher said this *depicted the change happening in Japanese society* but the artist simply did this by not only showing boatmen getting engulfed by the wave, but Mt. Fuji + the city of Edo (modern day Tokyo) as well 🌊

  • @lillithcollins5192
    @lillithcollins5192 Год назад +210

    I've heard it said that the serenity of the painting is only felt by those who've only learned to read from left to right because the image ends in hope of survival. For those that can/only read right to left the image ends in the wave with the hope seemingly distant and unlikely.

    • @myriamickx7969
      @myriamickx7969 Год назад +22

      To me, the construction of this painting/print shows that it must be read from right to left. Besides, Hokusai himself titled it "Under the Wave”, which implies the fishermen are all going to die. I think the "serenity” here only exists in the author’s mind.
      This being said, among the 36 views of Mount Fuji, some are quite serene. Take a look.

    • @geraldmartin7703
      @geraldmartin7703 Год назад +11

      Interesting because Japanese is read right to left.

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@geraldmartin7703 During Hokusai's time it was right to left, but it's been left to right for well over a century now.

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito 11 месяцев назад +2

      There's serenity in the balance and in Mt. Fuji, but the sea is obviously not serene.

    • @myriamickx7969
      @myriamickx7969 11 месяцев назад +1

      @alukuhito
      You're right, it had escaped me.

  • @daveseddon5227
    @daveseddon5227 Год назад +130

    One of my favourite pieces! Thank you so much for your interpretation of it - made my day. 😊

    • @Art_Deco
      @Art_Deco  Год назад +24

      Thank you, Dave! Your comments always make my day!

    • @jmbhjllnfinjk
      @jmbhjllnfinjk 9 месяцев назад

      2nd

  • @JuliHoffman
    @JuliHoffman Год назад +60

    Omg! The constant moving because the artist's home became too unliveable. 😂 I love these little nuggets you throw into your videos. This one was fantastic!!

    • @alphagt62
      @alphagt62 Год назад +2

      It seems many a great artist was a bit on the inane side. Moving to avoid cleaning your house is a bit eccentric.

    • @thecook8964
      @thecook8964 Год назад +4

      Well he made it to 90 moving many times, so it worked for him...

    • @Trump2024asw
      @Trump2024asw 11 месяцев назад +2

      My dude I got some many questions did dude live super spartan spare bare life in like a hut type joint so after like one year dude's out? Or like whole ass house ran into the literal ground?

  • @Frei_Raum
    @Frei_Raum Год назад +32

    I love this painting. Indeed it gave me comfort in a really challenging time in my life. Because, as you said, I felt like being in one of these boats, thrown up and down, not knowing if I would drown and how to come out of my misery. I just could hang on. What gave me consolation was Mount Fuji. It remembered me, that always there is a still space in us, even in the greatest waves. It may seem very little compared to the actual turbulences. But it's always there and in reality it's huge.

  • @moritod
    @moritod Год назад +43

    TIL that the Great Wave has boats in it. I'm so embarrassed I never noticed them before! I love it even more now - it tells such an amazing story. Thank you for sharing the details with us!

    • @HlootooThunderhammer
      @HlootooThunderhammer 10 месяцев назад +5

      Same here my guy. Never noticed the people til this video.

    • @arbyswitch5580
      @arbyswitch5580 4 дня назад

      Took me until I was in college! Don't feel bad. There's a lot of detail and the waves pull a lot of focus.

    • @bookcat123
      @bookcat123 4 часа назад

      I’m sitting here trying to decide if I truly just never saw them before or if when I saw this - always like as part of a book wrap or a notebook cover or something - that it was just cropped to not include the boats. I don’t think I even saw the mountain until college

  • @tessiepinkman
    @tessiepinkman Год назад +87

    Your videos always make my day when they are released, and this one was no different! Thank you dearly for making these videos for us all to enjoy for free. It feels like such a luxury. I hope you have a wonderful day and week! :)
    EDIT: Though I must say that I never ever saw this painting as calm or serene, and I don't think I have met anyone who does (at least that I've talked to about it). The white tip of the waves - to me - looks like they are coming to life and are trying to grab both the fishermen and me as a viewer.

    • @patmanchester8045
      @patmanchester8045 Год назад +3

      I agree with both your comments. I would like to look closely at copies in fabric etc to find out if the boats are included. I have always thought the wave had claws. but I didn't make the connection. I really do love your posts and wish you could make more.

  • @TaikoNoTetsujin
    @TaikoNoTetsujin Год назад +117

    I have never thought of this print as calm and serene...your title made me wonder how it could be MORE disturbing than I thought

    • @the_dungeoneer
      @the_dungeoneer Год назад +7

      100%! I love this work and was thinking, what have I missed?! Sadly, nothing. Still love the piece though.

  • @melanies.6030
    @melanies.6030 Год назад +13

    I'm having lunch at the museum currently showing the Hokusai exhibit, just watched your video,..can't wait to go upstairs and see this iconic work!

  • @sharonbyars3493
    @sharonbyars3493 11 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks! So interesting 😊❤

    • @Art_Deco
      @Art_Deco  11 месяцев назад

      Thank you so much for supporting the channel!

  • @Finn-de9ue
    @Finn-de9ue Год назад +111

    You should add a note about "Prussian Blue" at 2:46, at the time when this picture was made in Japan, this color were known as "Berlin Blue" not the term "Prussian Blue" that we used today

    • @panatypical
      @panatypical Год назад +10

      Well, Berlin is in Prussia....

    • @Finn-de9ue
      @Finn-de9ue Год назад +9

      @@panatypical I know, but typically Prussian was later popular, before that Berlin Blue was the name that Japanese know for this color

    • @chaneladoptsyuh
      @chaneladoptsyuh Год назад +4

      Can you list a source? I can't seem to find an article talking about it. Thanks :D

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito 11 месяцев назад +5

      In Japanese, this colour is called ベレンス (Berensu).

    • @dshe8637
      @dshe8637 11 месяцев назад

      Most sources I've read call it Prussian Blue. It came to Japan before 1800

  • @yeturs69420
    @yeturs69420 Год назад +24

    Ive never gotten "calm and serene" from this piece. Ive always felt like, overwhelming power and the fury of nature. Its an indifferent force, but an overwhelming one. Like "Wanderer above a sea of fog"

  • @1989barker
    @1989barker Год назад +30

    I never thought of that piece as serene, but that could just be because I grew up completely landlocked and anything more than a ripple gives me a certain amount of fear.

    • @emmareiman64
      @emmareiman64 Год назад +6

      I mean, what's in this painting is practically a Killer Wave that is shown in a similar way as to 'something that could swallow even the greatest of mountains & spare no-one'
      I'd say your feeling of fear when it comes to the image is more than suitable

    • @Trotoloko
      @Trotoloko 10 месяцев назад +1

      I'm a sea boy, and no, it's not a dry people thing, it's that this is just obvious and the video tried to gaslight the viewers into thinking that there's people assuming serenity.

  • @Caranig
    @Caranig Год назад +34

    The first time I ever ran into this piece was as cover art on an edition of Shipwrecks by Akira Yoshimura, so I always associated it as depicting boaters dying in the waves or possibly in a tsunami, since the wave depicted is so much bigger than the mountain. I've never heard anyone call this piece serene before this video.
    Of course, I also didn't know that this was part of a much longer series focusing on Mt. Fuji. If you're intended to view it through the lens of the mountain, whereby everything from waves to human life is temporary, I can see there's a bit of serenity to be had. It's along the lines of the, "I am the sky and all of life and emotion is just clouds" lesson from therapy. Unfortunately, I was really bad at that exercise, and I'm still focusing on the fishermen just trying to survive.

  • @thetwitchywitchy
    @thetwitchywitchy Год назад +6

    I have this as a massive canvas in my living room between 6-7 feet wide, it’s been my favorite piece ever since the first time I learned about it way back in high school and then in art school I did a large project on the Views of Mt. Fuji collection for my painting class, I’ve always loved Japanese prints but these have always been special ❤ I saved up and it was the first piece I bought for my apartment walls 😊 The quote “All I have done before the age of 70 isn’t worth bothering with” has always been one of my favorite quotes from past artists, I just always found that so interesting of a statement. Pretty amazing to imagine how he saw his art over his lifetime

  • @ericeaton2386
    @ericeaton2386 Год назад +9

    This video certainly makes me appreciate the piece more. Though I never saw it as serene, I also never realized Mt. Fuji was in the back, and how serene *it* is. It does make me contemplate the crashing waves of life, and their ephemeral nature in the grand scheme of things.

  • @Lainers2000
    @Lainers2000 Год назад +28

    The detail in this block print is amazing! If you’ve ever been out in the ocean in a small fishing boat, you can understand the fear of the fishermen. Thank you.

  • @tragerec
    @tragerec Год назад +5

    I’m in the minority here, but I agree with your perspective that the image seems serene at first. Something about the colors and composition. Yes, it’s a big turbulent wave, but it’s frozen in time in its majesty and beauty. If boats were not underneath, no one would be at risk and it would simply be a snapshot of nature. This video was great - I hadn’t know about Japan’s 200 years of isolationism before or how it ended. I also had NOT noticed the boats, even though I have a printed tile of this scene in my house, which I purchased in Tokyo last year. I learned a lot - thank you!

  • @rachelburke9223
    @rachelburke9223 Год назад +149

    Im sorry who calls this wave "calm and serene"?

    • @isramubashar1227
      @isramubashar1227 Год назад +5

      I assume the older people of Japan would:
      The waves and winds (tropical storms) saved them from mongol invasions, twice
      I get what you mean, though- the way the wave towers over the fishing boats, dwarfing them and getting ready to engulf them
      It’s all very chaotic
      I *guess* it would also be serene because of the pretty colours
      Or if you view the wave the same way one would view a mountain- tall and wide and looming over you
      I think it’s more similar to how nature is in general, which can be really pretty and calm but also really dangerous

    • @МихайлоСєльський
      @МихайлоСєльський Год назад +16

      I'd say that was stated just for plot's sake) To inject a n apparent contradiction (which have never existed))

    • @keroppib4ptista
      @keroppib4ptista Год назад +1

      I did

    • @ourglass488
      @ourglass488 Год назад

      ​@@МихайлоСєльський well said

    • @rachelburke9223
      @rachelburke9223 11 месяцев назад

      I didn't mean the artwork itself y'all. I love this piece Im talking guys in the boat POV

  • @MariaPaula-uw3ds
    @MariaPaula-uw3ds Год назад +5

    I discovered today that there are people in the painting, I have only seen the wave and nothing else, not even the mount Fuji

  • @sharonkaczorowski8690
    @sharonkaczorowski8690 Год назад +4

    Brilliant video. This has been among my favorite paintings since I was a child. Hokusai is a master…and that wave is clearly part of a storm. The composition is breathtaking. The waves have always seemed to me to have claws even as a little girl.

  • @aprilwoods7735
    @aprilwoods7735 Год назад +18

    🥰 Awesome again!! Thank You so much for all you do; your time and studies and information about these works of art is amazing and inspiring☺ Can't wait to see a notification for a new show every time you upload! Sending much love💖 your way from here on the East Coast in Nova Scotia ,Canada ❤🤍Keep em' coming !!!

    • @Art_Deco
      @Art_Deco  Год назад +2

      Thank you for saying this!

  • @jaymogrified
    @jaymogrified Год назад +21

    I was curious to learn whether the wood block still exists (no 🙁) and came across a wonderful article that others might enjoy as well: “The Great Wave: Spot the Difference”; it’s on the British Museum’s website. The author has been searching out and documenting existing prints and attempting to put them on a timeline. One interesting factoid is that a woodblock might yield up 8,000 prints. Another is that the affordability of the prints sadly means that people didn’t necessarily take care of them or hang onto them.

    • @atsukorichards1675
      @atsukorichards1675 Год назад +5

      I heard that some wood block prints were used as a wrappings for ceramics when they brought them out of Japan to Europe.

    • @jaymogrified
      @jaymogrified Год назад +6

      @@atsukorichards1675 I could see that; kind of like grabbing whatever newspaper you have lying around to use as packing material, when maybe it has a story that would one day make that particular paper incredibly valuable

    • @skaweirromeda6787
      @skaweirromeda6787 9 месяцев назад

      🌊

  • @_thatkat
    @_thatkat Год назад +2

    Thanks!

    • @Art_Deco
      @Art_Deco  Год назад

      Thank you so much for supporting the channel!

  • @dillemaaaa23
    @dillemaaaa23 Год назад +12

    I swear your videos are always so amazing. Great Job!

  • @simoneofcourse1867
    @simoneofcourse1867 Год назад +5

    Woo hoo, finally. I was waiting for your next video. I always like your funny, but well researched analisys behind the art. I really missed your videos. You're doing always such a great job

  • @fingerfeller
    @fingerfeller Год назад +1

    Thanks! it is a great piece , especially since its wood block, but yes he did the set on MT fuji as the center of his series of ocean and water, trees, but the GREAT WAVE to me is an actual tsunami scene after an earthquake , fishermens boats knowing they had no chance , thats just me, i am sure the artist experienced a TSUNAMI in his 90 years and this is his interpretation of that , beautiful ocean waves or oncoming destruction as in TOHOKU 2011 earthquake ?

    • @Art_Deco
      @Art_Deco  Год назад +1

      I can see how you could see that! Thank you for supporting the channel!

  • @treering8228
    @treering8228 Год назад +7

    So excited to see you put out another video! Thank you!

    • @Art_Deco
      @Art_Deco  Год назад

      You're welcome. Thanks for watching!

  • @EricAwful313
    @EricAwful313 Год назад +3

    There is absolutely nothing calm and serene about this image. For the life of me I cannot see how anyone could possibly see this painting as calm and serene.

  • @Sashazur
    @Sashazur Год назад +24

    If you’re in Seattle or close, there is currently a show at the Seattle Art Museum with this print as well as others by the same artist, plus lots of other japanese art both classic and contemporary. I saw it last week, it’s a really amazing show.

    • @boardcertifiable
      @boardcertifiable 11 месяцев назад

      So jealous, i live too far away. 😢 glad the exhibition was good for you. :)

  • @MMfan4ever101
    @MMfan4ever101 Год назад +5

    You never fail to make me love my favorite paintings even more than I already do.

  • @cannoliwavestudios2817
    @cannoliwavestudios2817 Год назад +25

    The fact that I didn’t even notice the fishermen at first speaks to the immense presence the wave has over them.
    One of my favorite paintings (Obviously)

  • @williambarth8476
    @williambarth8476 Год назад +2

    Someone once said that because the negative space creates the opposite wave (look at it upside down), it resembles a balanced, maybe serene, Yin & Yang. So the image is both violent and serene at the same time, which I think is one explanation for its allure.
    Excellent video!

  • @bexfisch80
    @bexfisch80 Год назад +3

    I always learn something new with your videos! I just love your analysis of art pieces. "Beautiful chaos" was a great way to sum it up. ❤

  • @ericyoungstrom3634
    @ericyoungstrom3634 Год назад +6

    I bought a print of this piece because I always loved the striking boldness of the waves. It wasn’t until I hung it on my wall that I really noticed the menace, the clawed waves about to crash onto the desperate sailors below, with the distant hope of safe harbor in the form of Mt. Fuji in the background.

    • @AirQuotes
      @AirQuotes Год назад +2

      Same

    • @SarahAnnUlloa-vo1iq
      @SarahAnnUlloa-vo1iq 11 месяцев назад

      The menace of course, was the "west" encroaching like a tsunami. They were afraid of the change.

  • @updownstate
    @updownstate Год назад +4

    I've never thought this painting is serene. It's flipping scary.

  • @t.j.payeur5331
    @t.j.payeur5331 Год назад +8

    I've never seen serenity in this painting. The Old Man of the Sea is looming above them about to smash down on the helpless fragile humans just trying to survive. I know it under the title "The Trough of the Deep Sea Wave".

  • @lizacolpamanifests
    @lizacolpamanifests Год назад +2

    This is one of my favorite pieces of art. Though many people have said it’s terrifying because it’s a tsunami, I agree with you. This painting for whatever reason calmed me. Maybe it was the use of the Prussian blue or because I personally love the ocean, but being an ocean lover I loved your explanation at the end. Though this is terrifying, and there are days where we are like those fishermen in boats. Caught up in a tsunami like wave where things seem so out of our control, where we are swallowed up and only can face the reality that we at the end of the day are doomed to feel like or be destroyed by circumstances out of our control. But your explanation brought me even more peace at the end, because I never saw the mountain, that will always stand tall, observing that even these chaotic life changing moments will pass, we can heal, and we can too be like the mountains and not let the waves or tsunami’ of life swallow us whole. Even if it may seem impossible, terrifying, and disastrous, we as human beings are resilient like a mountain, and we can stand tall and stand to the test of hard and painful moments in life. I love this painting even more now, and yes as terrifying and even heartbreaking as it is, it brings me even more peace now, because it serves as a reminder of human resilience. And though these moments are painful, we have the strength of a mountain. Thank you for your great content 🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾

  • @musiclover01ization
    @musiclover01ization Год назад +3

    This was a great video. I never knew the history of this painting. Thank you for educating me about it.

  • @NoufAbdulmajeed-p1h
    @NoufAbdulmajeed-p1h 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for all these wonderful videos and your insight and analysis. Extremely impressive and interesting. Not to mention your colorful way of explaining the facts and situations with connection to each painting and all the particularities therein.. Highlighted by your most sweet irony and little jokes. The editing of all your videos is so inviting to see them all.. Please carry on with such remarkable in depth studies of famous paintings.. And your comments.

  • @ferretyluv
    @ferretyluv Год назад +5

    I’ve never heard anyone describe this painting as calm and serene. More like exciting and cool.

  • @benardmarx
    @benardmarx Год назад

    I can't tell you how much I am enjoying this channel. I am grateful for your efforts and the work you put into it. I know nothing about artwork and this channel has been inspirational

  • @for.tax.reasons
    @for.tax.reasons Год назад +5

    Loved this video! Would you ever consider doing a video of the entire series of Hokusai's views of Fuji?

  • @ble971
    @ble971 Год назад +1

    Who ever thought that was a serene scene ? Thank you all the same for sharing your knowledge about art, always a pleasure 🙏

  • @MaryLouiseEklund
    @MaryLouiseEklund Год назад +5

    Never found this painting peaceful. Having been on high even angry seas in a small boat it's terrifying I can't imagine how it would be in an open boat. I always felt it was death by angry nature.

  • @susanrose7066
    @susanrose7066 Год назад +1

    Thank you for your detailed discussions of paintings. I really enjoy your channel and getting close up views of the famous paintings.

  • @blktauna
    @blktauna Год назад +8

    Its not serene, Its full of energy and movement. That's why I love it.

  • @МихайлоСєльський
    @МихайлоСєльський Год назад +2

    Ironically while there are other notable pieces in the series, this wave ruthlessly overwhelms and overshadows those.

  • @rahemeenkhan2790
    @rahemeenkhan2790 Год назад +9

    This is my favorite RUclips channel

    • @Art_Deco
      @Art_Deco  Год назад +1

      Thank you, thank you!

    • @rahemeenkhan2790
      @rahemeenkhan2790 Год назад

      ​@@Art_Deco people like you are so necessary in a society

  • @mila4781
    @mila4781 10 месяцев назад +1

    I think it's the color that gives the soothing vibe, amidst all the chaos depicted. If it's other color of blue, like the brighter ones, would have given a sense of overwhelming chaos, thus breaking the whole theme of the series.

  • @victoriagledhill5872
    @victoriagledhill5872 Год назад +6

    Love your explanation and interpretation. Thank you for your videos.

  • @ZainabAli-tc6zu
    @ZainabAli-tc6zu Год назад +1

    This painting practically envisioned what my thoughts of the ocean were: Beautiful but dangerous

  • @SarahGreen523
    @SarahGreen523 Год назад +7

    I have a copy of this hanging in my hallway. I've always loved it, because of the color. I never noticed the men in the boats. I never noticed Mt. Fuji. I never noticed the claws of foam until I saw it up close during this video. To be fair, I am very near sighted and don't wear my glasses around the house. I will never be able to look at this picture without seeing every detail and analyzing the ideas you have put forth. I always get something out of your videos!

  • @FrisbeeGorbeh
    @FrisbeeGorbeh Год назад

    I love love love this painting! We have a huge version of it in our house. Had no idea of the history behind it, or that it was part of a whole series. It was so awesome to learn more aboit it, and I'm going to look at it from a whole new perspective.
    I never saw it as calm, more like energetic and powerful, the might of nature and how little people are in comparison. To know it also refers to Japan and their view towards the rest of the world was fascinating.
    Thanks for always teaching me something new! Looking forward to the next video!

  • @cjsilvestremusic
    @cjsilvestremusic Год назад +7

    Love this painting! I have got a print of it in my living room.

  • @debrastiens6216
    @debrastiens6216 Год назад +1

    I don’t recall ever seeing this, though I very likely have. When I opened the video and saw the waves, my first thought was that it looked like it had claws, and that seemed somewhat odd to me. And just as others on here, I did not see it as peaceful. When I read the comment from one viewer who saw the prints on display and exclaimed “They’re so TINY!”, it suddenly dawned on me. These weren’t ‘painted’ on the paper, they were printed. That meant Hokusai carved the relief of the scene and painted the areas he wanted to print onto the paper. He was not only an artist he was a woodcarver. Obviously, he loved that medium since he practiced his craft his entire life.

  • @bagandbroad
    @bagandbroad Год назад +3

    I’m terrified of the ocean, so this has always been an image about fear for me. And yet I’ve never noticed the fisherman.

  • @mike59317
    @mike59317 11 месяцев назад +1

    When I lived in Japan in the late 1990s I was told the great wave depicts the destruction of the Korean invasion by a tsunami.

  • @aroacefrog
    @aroacefrog Год назад +3

    Even without the men, it seems powerful and aggressive, rather than peaceful to me, and always has-

  • @clairekurdelak2913
    @clairekurdelak2913 Год назад +3

    I think the fact that this picture became ubiquitous is why most of us never have really looked at it! I never thought before about how it makes me feel! I would love to have a chance to look at the whole series. Is it in a book?

    • @nerdnam
      @nerdnam Год назад

      All of it is in Wikipedia.

  • @chem9773
    @chem9773 Год назад +2

    The great wave depicted here much greater than the main subject, the Mt Fuji, give the feeling that nature can be beautiful and dangerous. This painting shows how harsh the sea, but it still feels majestic, magnificent and honorable. I love the ways you interpret this as the art that forays the wave of change in Japan society at that time.

  • @melaniesmith1313
    @melaniesmith1313 Год назад +2

    The narrator assumes we look at the wave as serene. After that, I held the rest of her assertions in question.

    • @bbartky
      @bbartky Год назад +1

      Right. I had the same reaction. I watched the whole video but couldn’t take it seriously. I don’t think I’ll watch any more videos from this channel.

  • @misseddy
    @misseddy Год назад +1

    Honestly because I never noticed the boats and I’m viewing it from the cliff side perspective - it always gave me a sense of relaxation. You can hear the waves without it moving

  • @marianajmj
    @marianajmj Год назад +6

    I love the way you teach us about the paintings. It's informative and entertaining.

  • @jasonmkc7797
    @jasonmkc7797 11 месяцев назад +1

    No one ever thought this was a serene sea scape. It clearly wasn't the intent of the artist.

  • @The_New_Abnormal_World_Order
    @The_New_Abnormal_World_Order Год назад +12

    I love that he just moved house every time his place got too messy🤣🤭

  • @বেড়াল
    @বেড়াল Год назад +2

    I view it as serene. It's all consuming and wild. it can tear you apart from the things you have, than does it really matter. at the end the moment of happenning eventsand timelessnes of other aspects of life, like mount fuji, all is part of who we are, and part of our life. and realizing the vastness and how dynamic it is what gives it the serenity. It's till serene to me. Specially when i view this from the point of fuji.

  • @jashandeep9652
    @jashandeep9652 Год назад +3

    Omg, I just got so excited to see one more video of yours. ❤❤🎉🎉

  • @ForestGirlTeresa
    @ForestGirlTeresa Год назад +1

    So many reproductions of this work edit out the boatmen and just show the wave. I had quite forgotten they were there. Thanks for the video. 🌊

  • @helenalderson6608
    @helenalderson6608 Год назад +3

    I never knew any of that story/history. Thanks for the enlightenment

  • @hollipop9957
    @hollipop9957 10 месяцев назад

    I love hearing you talk about art. It's soothing and you hang on to every word. I wish we could be friends. But since that's impossible I'll be your subscriber.

  • @CineMairon
    @CineMairon Год назад +3

    Great analysis. Frankly though, I don't see how anyone would view this painting as calming. Waves raging, raising higher than the view of (clearly) Fuji Mountain, swallowing boats with people visible in them, what's calming about that?

  • @BeanerMan13
    @BeanerMan13 11 месяцев назад +1

    I knew something more sinister was going on in this painting when I realized at a young age that the seafoam on top of the waves look like gnarled fingers reaching out toward men on boats

  • @nethumyamanatunga6438
    @nethumyamanatunga6438 Год назад +3

    I have always been intrigued by this painting because it was so....different. i really liked the way Katsushika Hokusai had used the blue and the tiny details. thanks to you i have a much better understanding of this piece! thank you, i'd love to see more soon!🌊🌊🌊

  • @richardletaw4068
    @richardletaw4068 Год назад +1

    I need to tell the narrator: those aren’t fishermen, and that is not a fishing boat.
    That is a fast cargo boat, and those are high-speed oarsmen. Think 17th-century FedEx.
    They rapidly moved products such as fish and other small perishables from their ports of origin to marketplaces on suitable waters while still fresh. They were even able to travel far inland on suitable rivers.
    It is not clear to me how much danger these men are in. While conditions are “quite nautical,” as a joking sea captain said, the water is blue, meaning blue skies above. Ergo, this is not a storm, just typical conditions in the Kuroshio Current off Kanagawa.
    Other than that, I love the presentation, as it gives great historical context to the work. I learned a lot about the artist. (He sounds a lot like me!-okay, except for the art part, lol.)

  • @lindabenny4454
    @lindabenny4454 Год назад +10

    I can't say I ever found this painting peaceful or calming, but I must admit I had never noticed the fishing boats/men. I have never seen a full size print but I have been aware of it for the last 50 years, so I think the moral of this story is to look more closely!

  • @walterulasinksi7031
    @walterulasinksi7031 11 месяцев назад +2

    Hoksai’s “ The Great Wave is a Fractal painting of a Tsunami. It should be frightening, as each part of the wave is a version of the whole. Each part has the same power.

  • @littlebird8515
    @littlebird8515 Год назад +8

    this is my favorite old Japanese paintings! I never saw it as peaceful though, I saw it as fierce and mighty.

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito 11 месяцев назад +1

      It's not a painting though. It's a woodblock print (ukiyo-e). The artist first makes an image, then they (or others) carve parts of the image into wood blocks. The different blocks are dipped into different colours of ink, then pressed onto paper.

  • @labyrinthgirl17
    @labyrinthgirl17 Год назад +1

    I never found this painting relaxing or calming. It always made me think of storms, with high winds and high waves, and anyone out on the water during that kind of weather was going to be destroyed.

  • @arcadiaberger9204
    @arcadiaberger9204 Год назад +2

    I can't imagine why anyone would think of this picture as "peaceful". Surely it's obvious that it's a *_storm_* at sea.
    I have often thought of it as an emblem of violent death, actually.
    Serene?
    Really?

    • @arcadiaberger9204
      @arcadiaberger9204 Год назад

      Um, hello, @Trevorjennings35. I have been safe from COVID-19 since about this time last year, when I was infected with a case which I was unfortunate enough to infect my fiancée with as I moved in with her. We spent the first two weeks of our cohabitation laid up in terrible distress. Since then, though, we have not been reinfected.
      I hope you have been safe.
      Um...why do you ask?
      BTW, as for "pretty", that isn't my picture, sorry.
      But what inspires your interest?

  • @abigfishinabarrenswamp
    @abigfishinabarrenswamp 11 месяцев назад +1

    I’ll be the first to admit, hell yeah I thought this was serene. It was the album cover of a really soothing band and I ain’t ever really looked at it too much lol

  • @michaelstrauss6587
    @michaelstrauss6587 Год назад +2

    The branching out
    of the tree of your work
    takes root in the nuances
    of the intricacies of the past

  • @kxs7267
    @kxs7267 22 дня назад

    One of my favourite pictures, even though as a sea kayaker I've never felt happy and peaceful about that monster of a breaking wave!
    Loving the biographical and historical details. And the whole Mt Fuji series looks fabulous, I've seen a few others but I must look up all the rest.
    Thank you for another fascinating video!

  • @teleriferchnyfain
    @teleriferchnyfain Год назад +2

    I have NEVER seen this as serene lol

  • @BeachMum
    @BeachMum Год назад +1

    I never got a peace feeling when I see this piece. The whites of the waves look like fingers trying to reach out and want to grab you and swallow you up. A very uneasy feeling. The fact this is in the middle of the ocean is even more terrifying. Those boats don’t stand a chance!

  • @mariapilaryork6219
    @mariapilaryork6219 Год назад +2

    Bravo, thank you for showing the REAL paint♥

  • @stephenmeier4658
    @stephenmeier4658 Год назад +2

    This is the first time in 53 years Ive heard someone propose serenity in this print. I have, however, seen it used in reference to Kamikaze, as an image to go with the destruction of the Mongol fleet. Seems pretty obvious to even a casual view that this is a depiction of natural violence

  • @alukuhito
    @alukuhito 11 месяцев назад +3

    Cool video, but I have to be a party pooper: 4:51 You wrote "Kanazawa", not "Kanagawa". Ukiyo-e's "u" is pronounced "oo", as in "boot", not "you". Also, I never thought of this as a serene scene. Massive waves obviously very dangerous for the people in the boats.

  • @glynislailann9056
    @glynislailann9056 Год назад +1

    Thank you for your interesting, introspective & 'mind opening' perspective.

  • @gerrymandering6669
    @gerrymandering6669 Год назад +3

    everyone is concentrating on how the word “serene” was said in association with the work, but i’m more shaken by ‘The Dream of the Fisherman's Wife’ which i had never seen before and i kind of envy my younger self of about 10 minutes ago for living in blissful ignorance😭

    • @FrisbeeGorbeh
      @FrisbeeGorbeh Год назад +1

      Yep. When we saw that my husband looked in horror and said "wait, it's the same guy??" Guess he saw it before but never knew they had the same artist. I think his worldview shattered lol. Me, I had never seen it and wish to bleach that out 😂

    • @eggmansexwife
      @eggmansexwife 8 месяцев назад

      I can’t believe tentacle prn has been around for that long…

  • @rlfolder5437
    @rlfolder5437 Год назад +2

    You win the award for most soothing voice.

  • @nekoChris
    @nekoChris Год назад +4

    I never thought it was serine. That is a scary bunch of waves