At 9:36. As someone who was born in Guatemala and left at 7 years of age to move to Washington, in the United States, I can tell you that those 7 years DEFINITELY made a HUGE impact on me and on everything I do. Now I get Paul Gauguin. I get him. Those first 8 years of his life in Peru made the man way, way, way more than anything else that happened to him in his life. It's indelible. It's all over his art. I get him. Was he fluent in Spanish? He must've been since I still am...
I lived in Argentina until the age of 9 before moving to the United States. Although I think in English now and I am very much americanized, those nine years will always be so important to me and play a big role in who I am today. It’s also so interesting hearing about people with similar stories!
@@dr.barrycohn5461 God bless him, he sets off my early warning systems. Because of the centrality of emotion Art has been in the dominion of the devil for a long, long time. Restoration has begun.
And feeling like a young man in her arms and inside her inspired the paint more pictures of her because he thinks about her all the time Love is a Many-Splendored Thing warm Island it's swimming in the ocean together he found Paradise a new way to live life and enjoy painting paintings you left this world behind sedative before when he was young no preservatives dreams to come true you find happiness in life to feel better...........😍😄😊😍🐷🦄🦓🐺🐕🦝
This was so thorough. He went everywhere Gaugin went!!! Makes it so much more alive. Must have been so much work and so goshdarn bloody expensive... Well done!!
The film is fantastic. I returned from the Marquesas islands recently and it is very pleasant to see all the familiar places again. This is the best film I have ever watched about Gauguin. Thank you.
I was in Tahiti in 2008. Visited the gardens where Gauguin painted. It really is paradise. I remember sitting on the sea wall in Huahine-iti, enjoying the sun, sipping pineapple juice. Some young girls, were swimming in the water, laughing and singing. It was right out a film or novel. I will never forget that. It was over the Xmas holidays too. So there were xmas lights up. Im from Canada so the winters are cold and the lights were always casting their glow all night. In Tahiti it was different. Warm, the smells. Perfect.
Best art documentary I've ever enjoyed. Dispels all the generalized propagations of Gauguin myths, to embrace the viewer in a life beyond all myths. Thank you so much.
Waldemar - I adore all your work. As an anthropologist I do have to make a comment about you questioning the authenticity of Gaugin's young wife and her stories and legends. I married into the Cook Island community over 30 years ago. The Cook Islands and Tahiti were one extended archaepelago until carved up by the colonial powers - they share language and customs with very small variations. Despite the hyper Christianity that now engulfs the Islands, a majority of traditional legends were retained successfully mainly via song. Although young, she would have been exposed to these stories and in fact would have been expected to remember these and pass them on to her own descendants. While Gaugin no doubt embellished and mixed aspects of all sorts of inventions - this does not mean the stories themselves were not preserved.
Yeah that flippant comment of his stuck out sorely, but Waldemar does make those kind of blunders from time to time. Small price to pay for colourful, engaging presentations.
Wonder doco but his young wife would have known her stories and legends. Me too I am married to a Bougainville island woman and my young daughters know stories and custom and language.
@ Lena Rodriguez Tarot Down Under Yes, of course, his young Tahitian wife would have been immersed in the history and mythology of her people. Thank you for pointing this out. And how lovely was Gauguin's gift of weaving together of all the life around him into a flowing work of art. He's one of my very favorites. Absolutely first class presentation! Thank you so much.
Such a good work by Waldemar Januszczak; I was not thinking about learning more about Gauguin but the narrative is so good that pulled me in. Thank you.
22:34 This is Met! The music is perfect, bright, charming, cascade of "no I don't do dishes" kind of joyful playfulness... reminds me of Giorgone's "Tempest" with the storm in the background.
I love the documentary, love the Impressionists and just love the way Waldemar narrates, is like listening to a passionate teacher who doesn't care about what his students think of the drama in his lessons.
Very good. Yet wondering, all the travel on ship at this time in history - and so often - what was it like? Amazing how often he went back and forth on ship to the Far East and Europe.
Your thorough approach, supported by impressive video imagery, Waldemar, is most welcome. And your somewhat grim, sardonic tone of voice, tinged with a weighty bitterness, adds a unique edginess and dark inevitability to your commanding presentations. Of course when you take such a dramatic approach, more lofty, compassionate and sympathetic sentiments are lost in your turmoil-laced, wide-eyed projections. In prepandemic days I had the good fortune to attend a travelling art exhibition which featured, in the first room, five marvelous, original Gauguin canvases. The magic, charm, originality and beauty that leaped out at the viewer had an unforgettable impact. His genius was staggering. One last comment: I lived as a teen in an elegant building, and the woman in the vast penthouse collected major European, A-list art, including Gaugin's. She had heard about my strong interest in art and invited me to view her wondrous collection which included important works by Picasso, Matisse, Giacometti, Chagall, Modigliani and many more! In the basement of the apartment building one day I found the packing case of a wonderful Gaugin drawing, purchased at Sotheby's. I made off with the sturdy, not-all-that-large box and took it with me, when I went away to art school in New York, The Cooper Union School for the Advancement of Art and Architecture, considered the top art school in North America, if not the world. It made all the sense in the world for me at the time to tuck the Gauguin packing box under my bed for protection, inspiration and good luck!
What a life!!! All the adventure and drama a movie could ever need. This is an exceptional documentary on anyone’s life. Congratulations on a great piece of journalism . Bravo
Obrazy są prymitywne. Zydzi zrobili z niego wielkiego artystę../jak z reszty/ Zadłużył się , zostawił dużą swoją rodzinę bez środków do życia i wyjechał by podobno malować...Utrzymywały go młode kobiety, które wykorzystywał seksualnie 14-17 letnie czyli był zwykłym zboczeńcem . Nie ma się kim podniecać i tworzyć historii . Ale te młode kobiety na obrazach są namalowane prymitywnie ,kanciasto ale nie z jednym okiem jak u Picasso . Z tego też robią artystę ...polecam film BBC
Great documentary that popped up in my recommendations. The first of this series by Waldemar Januszczak and certainly not the last I'm going to watch. Thank you.
@@malamutmadre4930 ??What did he wrong? I find this and ALL documentaries by Janusczak as great job! Included his talks etc. He KNOWS what he is doing ;) S studying a history of Art myself, I know a little about the topic yet, but he is bringing a brand new sights into a common knowledge. I really, really aprpreciate that frash look!
Certainly one of the best documentaries I've seen. I think my Brother who is a very talented artist too, will enjoy it. He taught me a lot about these artists and lives the life.
“Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?”― Tennessee Williams.........................
There is no such such time as the present, no such thing as now. Time would have to stand still in order for to be true. There is only the past, and the future.
Way back in the late 1950's and early '60's my father spent some time creating Polynesian decor for a tiki restaurant in Tiburon, Ca. called Tiburon Tommie's. When I was a toddler he was busy making tikis and painting Gauguin reproductions for the restaurant..But I was so young it just left a huge mark on my brain without knowing what I was seeing. Later he was only painting his own works, which he'd done since the 1930's. Anyway, when I was 16 I was taken by friends to the Metropolitan in NY and came face to face with the beautiful Orange painting "Two Tahitian Women" which tapped me right back to my toddler hood..When I got back to California, my mother helped me understand why I was so transfixed by the piece. I did idolize my father and his skills were so amazing. He died when I was still a kid..I'm loving this great piece, thanks so much Waldy!
So wonderful! I live in Marin. I wish your dad's restaurant was still there. What a wonderful thing to be exposed to as a child the creation of that art. I miss the Tiki restaurants they were so fun Trader Vic's, etc..
Excellent work. I have long been fascinated by Gauguin and was surprised to learn that almost all I thought I knew about him was wrong. As is usually the case, the best insight to a work of art is the work itself. Januszczak is amazing.
Waldemar, Hughes and Collings are the only critics, narrators, script writers and presenters that are worth a bumper. Outstanding doco, production values, music, editing….many thanks.
Havent seen Collings but Hughes is great. As is Waldemar too. I'm half-way through her excellent Istanbul book. Well-researched, well-written, and comprehensive. She's no lightweight! (not that anyone has said so)
I read Somerset Maugham's "The Moon and Sixpence" when I was in college. The book was based on the life of Gauguin, so at the foolish age of twenty I thought I knew about Gauguin's life. Not even close! Great job!
You my dear sir are a true scholar. Thank you so much for your extensive research. I am an artist - sculptor myself. Now I have an understanding of who Paul really was and you have shown me many of his works that I have never seen. He was my kind of fellow. What a glorious time in history that he lived in. He was and still is larger than life.
Absolutely fascinating...both the documentary, and even moreso the life of Gauguin... Seems almost impossible that, in that era of travel, that he could've managed SO MANY chapters and destinations... Mr. Januszyak(sic), I must congratulate you on this absolutely SUPERB work... Thank you
WOW! What a journey your document has taken me to! Absolutely love the humorous at times and detailed account of this very colourful yet courageous, multitalented artist! The name I shall never forget!
Annoying ads. I have the impression that RUclips is placing more ads than ever before. A couple of ads here and there are understandable, but ads every 4 minutes is an abuse, and they are now 2 ads back to back each time! This will be the beginning of their downfall.
Thank you Waldemar Januszczak for another first-rate documentary/tribute. I watched the tribute on V.v.Gof and now this. These tributes to these multi-talented artists are choice, exemplary if you will. I will watch others in the perspective series.
At 1:08:04. Well, that's unexpected. That dining room in this humble establishment has a good $40 million to $80 million worth of art on its pokey little walls. Have they outfitted the place with climate-adjusting machinery to keep such valuable art from deteriorating? I would start dismantling the place and placing all those paintings in a proper museum...
Wonderfully told, Januszczak! How fascinating, that for the rest of his life Gauguin carried with him the memory of, and frequently used in his own most outstanding paintings, the lemon flavoured back-lit luminosity of Van Gogh's Sunflowers.
Another great documentary by the great Waldemar Januszczak. Subtlely funny ("that ghastly thing, an artists colony"), slightly irreverant, an a touch opinionated, and at the same time very well-informed. A excellent mix of casual presentation with excellent diction. One of the few presenters I can stand. No stiff academic (I'm a academic), no affectations that quickly get annoying. Thank you!
Wow! What a life! 😮 Him giving up his banker life to pursue art, and bursting out crying for "failing" his family must hit hard to so many... Those who gave up their art to provide for their families, and those who like him gave up his salary to follow his art...
Quite simply one of the best biographies of any artist I have ever had the pleasure to view. Well done to all involved, you should all be rightly proud of this outstanding documentary. Thank you.
Thank you Waldemar. What a fantastic documentary. It is amazing how through all his trials and tribulations, he continued to pour all his emotions into so many different artistic projects.
Superb documentary !!! Thank you for making something like This !!!! And ... Gaughan... well, ... that Man had REALLY.... GUTS !!! He lived life of 10 people in just one . So many distant places , so many Adventures, new beginings, ... totaly different cultures, languages and countries. Through entire documentary I felt like a child listening to a some kind of " Sinbad and his adventures " story. P. Gaughan ... just .... Deep , deep, appreciations !!!!!!! A Man to be remembered.
Fascinating documentary on the most adverturous and versatile badboy artist since Benvenuto Cellini. Chapeau bas, Monsieur Januszczak. I love all your documentaries but this is the best.
Thank you very much for the splendid and insightful portrait of Paul Gauguin. I thoroughly enjoyed the history and paintings. Truly an awesome documentary.
Co ci się podoba? że zostawił rodzinę w długach i wyjechał by paćkać te swoje prymitywne obrazy , i wykorzystywać nieletnie kobiety seksualnie , które go właściwie utrzymywały bo by umarł z głodu ?
Great biography presented in a great way! I really enjoyed it and the 2 hrs went by in a total enjoyment! Wish there were more documentaries as this one!
Fabulous work , well done , I’m mesmerized by the extent of the search .. including my home land , Panama. I definitely recommend it , for sure I’ll watch it again . God bless your work , look forward for more , Greetings from California.
Thank you for this. I will probably never see these wonderful places. Thanks to you I have had a small visit there as Gauguin has done ! Now the world has seen his talent through his wonderful art !
Amazing. It's almost too much, almost. Very learned and entertaining intro and deep dive into Gauguin, the Van Gogh is just icing. Take it in 20 minute viewings so you can process the extraordinary life this man led.
Totally engrossed....I will certainly be watching many more of his art documentaries...fabulously well researched , and presented with such gusto and personality ....completely irresistible
Great documentary, very well done especially taking the viewers to the places where Gauguin travelled, lived produced his paintings, plus explaining the paintings. I have enjoyed it, thank you so much.
Waldemar, Thanks for such a wonderful video. Your programmes are always so worthwhile and insightful. You always seem to change the way I see art history, and thereby refresh my interest.
I absolutely love your channel! Waldermar Januszczak is a phenomenal host, and with the collective efforts of him and your production team, you just know bring the art to life! Keep up the great work! :)
A superb, compassionate and engrosing documentary! 👌 Thank you for your passionate search for truth and meaning, in a life which had previously repelled me too much to explore. 💕
His history formed him and his art has in ways formed me and all artists reveal their layers of experiences......to share .......to infirm.....and we are all one. Well done documentary.
Such an intriguing chap this guy is and his presentation of Gauguin is most impressive. Happy to become a new subscriber and I look forward to watching more episodes. Thanks very much for posting and be safe 🙏
Incredibly researched, beautifully edited and composed; a must see for any novice art historian or for one wishing to delve deeper into the personal incentives which helped drive the creative genius behind one of impressionist art's most enigmatic founders. One of Waldemar's best!
Fabo doco....the best I've seen ever. The commentator took us through Gaugin's life by travelling to everywhere PG lived. Learned heaps.Thanks. As to Gaugin's delight in young girls that was culture in the Pacific & other countries at that time. Pity there was no penicillin back then....shame. To die rotting in Paradise addicted to morphine. Morgan Onate
Watched this Gaughin program twice now. As I basically whooped with delight with every new view and new takes on the paintings I was familiar with.... So not a question about Gauguin. I want to know if you're doing a Perspective Film no English painter Francis Bacon I live in Hope Cheers Morgan nz
Fabulous, all I didn't get from a number of art books despite my long interest in Gauguin. And all that with the many original places. Thank you very much!
This was a pleasure to watch and to learn things I thought I knew, but didn't. Very relatable, down to earth presentation. Gauguin, the real deal Bohemian. Thanks Waldy.
I was at the Musee d'Orsay back in 2009 and saw many of Gauguin's paintings. What I didn't know was that he lived almost 8 years in Downtown Lima, Perú. I am peruvian so the next weekend I am going to look around his former house, I hope it is still there. Thanks for another great documentary!
I love the way this man presents these programmes, warts and all with a sense of irony and humour. This down-to-earth teaching approach was my style as a teacher too, now long retired. He really deserves an Oscar!
Waldemar is Genius- total experience of ART, story, storytelling, explication , music, humor, etc! My first Waldemar--today's serendipitous foun--A TREASURE
There's a new documentary that proves that Vincent had cut off most of his ear, leaving only a part of the lobe, not the other way around and furthermore, Rachel wasn't a sex worker in a brothel, but rather a cleaner at the brothel Vincent used to visit. You can find the documentary here on RUclips and it's absolutely fascinating .. BBC The Mystery of Van Goghs Ear
Fabulous! I'm glad this 'algorithm-ed' into suggestions. I love this guy. I recall seeing him in a wonderful documentary about the Goths & Visigoths a while ago. (I'm a huge history nerd) He looks much younger here. He's an enthusiastic presenter. I see there's more. ~Thanks~ Greetings from Canada 🇨🇦
Gaugin as a person sort of gets a bum rap. This thorough look at his life sheds sheds so much light on who he really was against a backdrop of an extraordinary body of work. Through this documentary 'I've gained a greater understanding of Gaugin as a driven artist and much more respect for the singular voice he achieved.
Fantastic research Waldemar & your team My 2nd look at this doco: I find it just as informative as the 1st time. You're inspiring - all of you. Morganz
excellent documentary Film. I visited Gauguins art exhibit in Tahitee in the sixities and never forgot his art, it was my favouite along with his friend's Vincent VanGogh. Thank you so much for this stunning work of this unforgettable artist and his art.
Love this guy who presents these...he does a wonderful job of bringing the artist to real life... just watched his presentation s on van Gogh...enjoy this very much
I agree with so many of the comments. Probably the best docco I've ever seen. It felt lifechanging somehow, so inspiring and a much more in depth look at one of Arts largest figures than I've ever heard about. I'll have to return to the richness of these journeys of him finding his inspiration and using such courage. Although very sad to me how unravelled he seemed at the end
No course on art history could've been so detailed, so complete, so intriguing. Thank you for your generosity!
I love his disrespect .
I agree minored in art history courses were never complete or informative as these your videos... THANK YOU!!!
At 9:36. As someone who was born in Guatemala and left at 7 years of age to move to Washington, in the United States, I can tell you that those 7 years DEFINITELY made a HUGE impact on me and on everything I do. Now I get Paul Gauguin. I get him. Those first 8 years of his life in Peru made the man way, way, way more than anything else that happened to him in his life. It's indelible. It's all over his art. I get him. Was he fluent in Spanish? He must've been since I still am...
I grew up in Guatemala City snd Buenos Aires and I know exactly what you mean
"Give Me A Child Until He Is 7 And I Will Show You The Man." - Aristotle
I lived in Argentina until the age of 9 before moving to the United States. Although I think in English now and I am very much americanized, those nine years will always be so important to me and play a big role in who I am today. It’s also so interesting hearing about people with similar stories!
I left Africa when I was seven ...
Who is here for Januszczak? He is saving my quarantine. I feel like there should be a muppet made of Januszczak -- not in a mocking way, a fun ode.
I love this guy! I have known nothing about fine art for the first 68 years of my life. Which is being corrected by this series! Thank you Mr J
Probably two faced.
Yes, erudition on steroids.
@@dr.barrycohn5461 God bless him, he sets off my early warning systems. Because of the centrality of emotion Art has been in the dominion of the devil for a long, long time. Restoration has begun.
And feeling like a young man in her arms and inside her inspired the paint more pictures of her because he thinks about her all the time Love is a Many-Splendored Thing warm Island it's swimming in the ocean together he found Paradise a new way to live life and enjoy painting paintings you left this world behind sedative before when he was young no preservatives dreams to come true you find happiness in life to feel better...........😍😄😊😍🐷🦄🦓🐺🐕🦝
“Nuns don’t like letting Gauguin through the door.” You’re such a masterful story teller.
This was so thorough. He went everywhere Gaugin went!!! Makes it so much more alive. Must have been so much work and so goshdarn bloody expensive... Well done!!
This should be a tour. For tourist. I would pay money!
The film is fantastic. I returned from the Marquesas islands recently and it is very pleasant to see all the familiar places again. This is the best film I have ever watched about Gauguin. Thank you.
The best documentary I've ever seen on Gauguin, and that includes all the books on him too. THANK YOU.
I am only now discovering this great artist, how refreshing it is.
@@santyhen85 I will need google translator and can only guess that your reply/comment, is positive in nature.
I agree ~
I was in Tahiti in 2008. Visited the gardens where Gauguin painted. It really is paradise. I remember sitting on the sea wall in Huahine-iti, enjoying the sun, sipping pineapple juice. Some young girls, were swimming in the water, laughing and singing. It was right out a film or novel. I will never forget that. It was over the Xmas holidays too. So there were xmas lights up. Im from Canada so the winters are cold and the lights were always casting their glow all night. In Tahiti it was different. Warm, the smells. Perfect.
Best art documentary I've ever enjoyed. Dispels all the generalized propagations of Gauguin myths, to embrace the viewer in a life beyond all myths. Thank you so much.
Waldemar - I adore all your work. As an anthropologist I do have to make a comment about you questioning the authenticity of Gaugin's young wife and her stories and legends. I married into the Cook Island community over 30 years ago. The Cook Islands and Tahiti were one extended archaepelago until carved up by the colonial powers - they share language and customs with very small variations. Despite the hyper Christianity that now engulfs the Islands, a majority of traditional legends were retained successfully mainly via song. Although young, she would have been exposed to these stories and in fact would have been expected to remember these and pass them on to her own descendants. While Gaugin no doubt embellished and mixed aspects of all sorts of inventions - this does not mean the stories themselves were not preserved.
〈j
Yeah that flippant comment of his stuck out sorely, but Waldemar does make those kind of blunders from time to time. Small price to pay for colourful, engaging presentations.
Wonder doco but his young wife would have known her stories and legends. Me too I am married to a Bougainville island woman and my young daughters know stories and custom and language.
@@andrewkilvert328 Exactly! Thanks for commenting back to me
@ Lena Rodriguez Tarot Down Under Yes, of course, his young Tahitian wife would have been immersed in the history and mythology of her people. Thank you for pointing this out. And how lovely was Gauguin's gift of weaving together of all the life around him into a flowing work of art. He's one of my very favorites. Absolutely first class presentation! Thank you so much.
Such a good work by Waldemar Januszczak; I was not thinking about learning more about Gauguin but the narrative is so good that pulled me in. Thank you.
He's funny.
Seriously! I don’t like Modern art (I try to, but do not) but this drama is fascinating!
What a fantastic documentary! The history, stories, art.. very well done sir. Thank you.
I agree. Thank you.
I have always liked Januszczak, he is exactly the right level of humour/sarcasm and erudition to tell a tale with massive panache!!!
22:34 This is Met!
The music is perfect, bright, charming, cascade of "no I don't do dishes" kind of joyful playfulness... reminds me of Giorgone's "Tempest" with the storm in the background.
I love the documentary, love the Impressionists and just love the way Waldemar narrates, is like listening to a passionate teacher who doesn't care about what his students think of the drama in his lessons.
Very good. Yet wondering, all the travel on ship at this time in history - and so often - what was it like? Amazing how often he went back and forth on ship to the Far East and Europe.
Post impressionist....
Yes I couldn’t agree more really watchable thanks Perspective
' Perspective ' You make brilliant and authentic documentaries. Thank you.
Your staff are top notch for creating things like this.
WONDERFUL! I Never knew anything about Gaugin. I feel this was a truthful yet compassionate look at a complex life done with excellent research
Your thorough approach, supported by impressive video imagery, Waldemar, is most welcome. And your somewhat grim, sardonic tone of voice, tinged with a weighty bitterness, adds a unique edginess and dark inevitability to your commanding presentations. Of course when you take such a dramatic approach, more lofty, compassionate and sympathetic sentiments are lost in your turmoil-laced, wide-eyed projections. In prepandemic days I had the good fortune to attend a travelling art exhibition which featured, in the first room, five marvelous, original Gauguin canvases. The magic, charm, originality and beauty that leaped out at the viewer had an unforgettable impact. His genius was staggering.
One last comment: I lived as a teen in an elegant building, and the woman in the vast penthouse collected major European, A-list art, including Gaugin's. She had heard about my strong interest in art and invited me to view her wondrous collection which included important works by Picasso, Matisse, Giacometti, Chagall, Modigliani and many more! In the basement of the apartment building one day I found the packing case of a wonderful Gaugin drawing, purchased at Sotheby's. I made off with the sturdy, not-all-that-large box and took it with me, when I went away to art school in New York, The Cooper Union School for the Advancement of Art and Architecture, considered the top art school in North America, if not the world. It made all the sense in the world for me at the time to tuck the Gauguin packing box under my bed for protection, inspiration and good luck!
What a life!!! All the adventure and drama a movie could ever need. This is an exceptional documentary on anyone’s life. Congratulations on a great piece of journalism .
Bravo
That was a wonderful documentary. I learned so much more about Gauguin than I ever imagined possible. Thank you very much.
What a story, brilliantly presented with lovely art. Thank you
Waldemar is a briliant
Yes, I didn't know how Gaugin was that involved in Van Gogh cutting his ear.
Obrazy są prymitywne. Zydzi zrobili z niego wielkiego artystę../jak z reszty/ Zadłużył się , zostawił dużą swoją rodzinę bez środków do życia i wyjechał by podobno malować...Utrzymywały go młode kobiety, które wykorzystywał seksualnie 14-17 letnie czyli był zwykłym zboczeńcem . Nie ma się kim podniecać i tworzyć historii . Ale te młode kobiety na obrazach są namalowane prymitywnie ,kanciasto ale nie z jednym okiem jak u Picasso . Z tego też robią artystę ...polecam film BBC
Great documentary that popped up in my recommendations. The first of this series by Waldemar Januszczak and certainly not the last I'm going to watch. Thank you.
Same here. You took the words out of my mouth.
Me too ~
świetne dokumenty to są filmy BBC a nie jakiegoś Januszczaka ...
@@malamutmadre4930 ??What did he wrong? I find this and ALL documentaries by Janusczak as great job! Included his talks etc.
He KNOWS what he is doing ;) S studying a history of Art myself, I know a little about the topic yet, but he is bringing a brand new sights into a common knowledge. I really, really aprpreciate that frash look!
Certainly one of the best documentaries I've seen. I think my Brother who is a very talented artist too, will enjoy it. He taught me a lot about these artists and lives the life.
Best ever documentary on any artist biography
“Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?”― Tennessee Williams.........................
I'm not a Buddhist, but the Buddhist strive to live in the moment.
@@topherthe11th23 : And it could be said, 'The future is now!'
There is no such such time as the present, no such thing as now. Time would have to stand still in order for to be true. There is only the past, and the future.
I hope that everybody writing on this thread has read the Four Quartets by T S Eliot
"life is but a dream within a dream" edgar Allan Poe
Way back in the late 1950's and early '60's my father spent some time creating Polynesian decor for a tiki restaurant in Tiburon, Ca. called Tiburon Tommie's. When I was a toddler he was busy making tikis and painting Gauguin reproductions for the restaurant..But I was so young it just left a huge mark on my brain without knowing what I was seeing. Later he was only painting his own works, which he'd done since the 1930's. Anyway, when I was 16 I was taken by friends to the Metropolitan in NY and came face to face with the beautiful Orange painting "Two Tahitian Women" which tapped me right back to my toddler hood..When I got back to California, my mother helped me understand why I was so transfixed by the piece. I did idolize my father and his skills were so amazing. He died when I was still a kid..I'm loving this great piece, thanks so much Waldy!
Beautiful story. Thanks for sharing.
Cool. Life can so often be magical.
Your father sounds like he was a fascinating man. Thank you for sharing ~
So wonderful! I live in Marin. I wish your dad's restaurant was still there. What a wonderful thing to be exposed to as a child the creation of that art. I miss the Tiki restaurants they were so fun Trader Vic's, etc..
Do you or your mom still own any of your father's Gauguin reproductions?
I love all your art docs since I looked at The man who invented modern art. Your videos are timeless. Thank you.
Excellent work. I have long been fascinated by Gauguin and was surprised to learn that almost all I thought I knew about him was wrong. As is usually the case, the best insight to a work of art is the work itself. Januszczak is amazing.
Thorough yet not academically boring. That is quite a feat, Mr. Januszczak. Thank you very much!
Waldemar, Hughes and Collings are the only critics, narrators, script writers and presenters that are worth a bumper. Outstanding doco, production values, music, editing….many thanks.
Havent seen Collings but Hughes is great. As is Waldemar too. I'm half-way through her excellent Istanbul book. Well-researched, well-written, and comprehensive. She's no lightweight! (not that anyone has said so)
@@granthurlburt4062 Umm.... "her"???🙄
You forgot, Simon Schama.
Beautiful art, beautiful music, and, above all, a beautiful narration! Thank you, Waldemar Januszczak1
I read Somerset Maugham's "The Moon and Sixpence" when I was in college. The book was based on the life of Gauguin, so at the foolish age of twenty I thought I knew about Gauguin's life. Not even close! Great job!
LITERALLY SAME!!
You my dear sir are a true scholar. Thank you so much for your extensive research. I am an artist - sculptor myself. Now I have an understanding of who Paul really was and you have shown me many of his works that I have never seen. He was my kind of fellow. What a glorious time in history that he lived in. He was and still is larger than life.
I am so excited that there is another season of Walter's documentaries! I will never get enough of them! Thank you, Walter!
Absolutely fascinating...both the documentary, and even moreso the life of Gauguin...
Seems almost impossible that, in that era of travel, that he could've managed SO MANY chapters and destinations...
Mr. Januszyak(sic), I must congratulate you on this absolutely SUPERB work...
Thank you
WOW! What a journey your document has taken me to! Absolutely love the humorous at times and detailed account of this very colourful yet courageous, multitalented artist! The name I shall never forget!
What a life, what a personality, what a talent! Waldemar Januszczak is amazing. An absolute delight to watch. Thank you.
This documentary is in itself an extraordinary work of art. Thank you.
This is a truly remarkable tribute, one that Gaugin would have loved.
. B Hb. Knjj b
Fabulous! What a life story. Waldemar & Company are artists in their own right.
Pengagum Kubus SC..Simple Cubic😁😁😝👍
The ads are annoying but the documentary is astounding. Another brilliant piece from Waldemar. I do love his style of presentation
If you are on a computer you can use adblock, if you are on a mobile device skip to the end of the video and reload it without the ads 😉
RUclips Premium. No ads.
Annoying ads. I have the impression that RUclips is placing more ads than ever before. A couple of ads here and there are understandable, but ads every 4 minutes is an abuse, and they are now 2 ads back to back each time! This will be the beginning of their downfall.
@@gjr72 - YT dont dictate the ads, the uploader of the content dictates the number of ads. Just install an ad blocker - I never saw one advert.
Dene, be true, are you Waldemar?
Thank you Waldemar Januszczak for another first-rate documentary/tribute. I watched the tribute on V.v.Gof and now this. These tributes to these multi-talented artists are choice, exemplary if you will. I will watch others in the perspective series.
Fascinating, I just learnt so much and enjoyed every minute of this documentary.
Simply excellent as usually! Po prostu wspaniale!
I've watched so many of Januszczak's documentaries and love them all...but this one is truly stunning.
At 1:08:04. Well, that's unexpected. That dining room in this humble establishment has a good $40 million to $80 million worth of art on its pokey little walls. Have they outfitted the place with climate-adjusting machinery to keep such valuable art from deteriorating? I would start dismantling the place and placing all those paintings in a proper museum...
Wonderfully told, Januszczak! How fascinating, that for the rest of his life Gauguin carried with him the memory of, and frequently used in his own most outstanding paintings, the lemon flavoured back-lit luminosity of Van Gogh's Sunflowers.
Another great documentary by the great Waldemar Januszczak. Subtlely funny ("that ghastly thing, an artists colony"), slightly irreverant, an a touch opinionated, and at the same time very well-informed. A excellent mix of casual presentation with excellent diction. One of the few presenters I can stand. No stiff academic (I'm a academic), no affectations that quickly get annoying. Thank you!
Wow! What a life! 😮
Him giving up his banker life to pursue art, and bursting out crying for "failing" his family must hit hard to so many... Those who gave up their art to provide for their families, and those who like him gave up his salary to follow his art...
Quite simply one of the best biographies of any artist I have ever had the pleasure to view. Well done to all involved, you should all be rightly proud of this outstanding documentary. Thank you.
Thank you Waldemar. What a fantastic documentary. It is amazing how through all his trials and tribulations, he continued to pour all his emotions into so many different artistic projects.
Superb documentary !!!
Thank you for making something like This !!!!
And ... Gaughan... well, ... that Man had REALLY.... GUTS !!!
He lived life of 10 people in just one .
So many distant places , so many Adventures, new beginings,
... totaly different cultures, languages and countries.
Through entire documentary I felt like a child listening to a some kind of
" Sinbad and his adventures " story.
P. Gaughan ... just .... Deep , deep, appreciations !!!!!!!
A Man to be remembered.
Fascinating documentary on the most adverturous and versatile badboy artist since Benvenuto Cellini. Chapeau bas, Monsieur Januszczak. I love all your documentaries but this is the best.
Absolutely wonderful. Maybe the best art documentary I've ever seen. Thank you so much.
This film is filled with so much information I did not know. And what amazing art. I love hearing the details of the artist life. Thank You!
Amazing documentary! Superb! I dont mind the ads, as I know the money from them will be put to produce more of these art documentary gems.
i really envy your faith
I find it worthwhile to pay for ad-free Premium membership since I prefer YT over TV or other streaming services.
Compellingly well presented documentary. Thank you.
The best art history videos (and some of the best videos on any subject) around!
Thank you very much for the splendid and insightful portrait of Paul Gauguin. I thoroughly enjoyed the history and paintings. Truly an awesome documentary.
Co ci się podoba? że zostawił rodzinę w długach i wyjechał by paćkać te swoje prymitywne obrazy , i wykorzystywać nieletnie kobiety seksualnie , które go właściwie utrzymywały bo by umarł z głodu ?
Great biography presented in a great way! I really enjoyed it and the 2 hrs went by in a total enjoyment! Wish there were more documentaries as this one!
obejrzyj na BBC zmienisz zdanie
Fabulous work , well done , I’m mesmerized by the extent of the search .. including my home land , Panama. I definitely recommend it , for sure I’ll watch it again . God bless your work , look forward for more ,
Greetings from California.
More of these 2-hour specials, please!
Thank you for this. I will probably never see these wonderful places. Thanks to you I have had a small visit there as Gauguin has done ! Now the world has seen his talent through his wonderful art !
Amazing. It's almost too much, almost. Very learned and entertaining intro and deep dive into Gauguin, the Van Gogh is just icing. Take it in 20 minute viewings so you can process the extraordinary life this man led.
Totally engrossed....I will certainly be watching many more of his art documentaries...fabulously well researched , and presented with such gusto and personality ....completely irresistible
fascinating! I was a foreigner born in Peru myself! Who would have thought this of Gauguin! ...captivating doecumentary. Thank you!
Wonderful documentary! Learned a lot. Even that he resided briefly in Panama.
The best , most complete and accurate doc of his life, highly interesting
Great documentary, very well done especially taking the viewers to the places where Gauguin travelled, lived produced his paintings, plus explaining the paintings. I have enjoyed it, thank you so much.
Waldemar, Thanks for such a wonderful video. Your programmes are always so worthwhile and insightful. You always seem to change the way I see art history, and thereby refresh my interest.
A deep, intense tour de force on your part Waldemar. Bravo. Hats off to you! Merci beaucoup mon ami. 🙏
I absolutely love your channel! Waldermar Januszczak is a phenomenal host, and with the collective efforts of him and your production team, you just know bring the art to life! Keep up the great work! :)
Rarely do we get this type of frank reportage.I enjoyed this immensely. Thanks
Another superb effort. That. picture of Aline sleeping is not only "the first real Gaugin", it's one of the greatest
A superb, compassionate and engrosing documentary! 👌
Thank you for your passionate search for truth and meaning, in a life which had previously repelled me too much to explore. 💕
His history formed him and his art has in ways formed me and all artists reveal their layers of experiences......to share .......to infirm.....and we are all one. Well done documentary.
Such an intriguing chap this guy is and his presentation of Gauguin is most impressive. Happy to become a new subscriber and I look forward to watching more episodes. Thanks very much for posting and be safe 🙏
Fantastic to watch & listen. A potent artist and his story beginning to end!
Incredibly researched, beautifully edited and composed; a must see for any novice art historian or for one wishing to delve deeper into the personal incentives which helped drive the creative genius behind one of impressionist art's most enigmatic founders. One of Waldemar's best!
Fabo doco....the best I've seen ever. The commentator took us through Gaugin's life by travelling to everywhere PG lived. Learned heaps.Thanks. As to Gaugin's delight in young girls that was culture in the Pacific & other countries at that time. Pity there was no penicillin back then....shame. To die rotting in Paradise addicted to morphine. Morgan Onate
Watched this Gaughin program twice now.
As I basically whooped with delight with every new view and new takes on the paintings I was familiar with....
So not a question about Gauguin.
I want to know if you're doing a Perspective Film no English painter
Francis Bacon
I live in Hope
Cheers Morgan nz
Fabulous, all I didn't get from a number of art books despite my long interest in Gauguin. And all that with the many original places. Thank you very much!
This was a pleasure to watch and to learn things I thought I knew, but didn't. Very relatable, down to earth presentation. Gauguin, the real deal Bohemian. Thanks Waldy.
I was at the Musee d'Orsay back in 2009 and saw many of Gauguin's paintings. What I didn't know was that he lived almost 8 years in Downtown Lima, Perú. I am peruvian so the next weekend I am going to look around his former house, I hope it is still there. Thanks for another great documentary!
I love the way this man presents these programmes, warts and all with a sense of irony and humour. This down-to-earth teaching approach was my style as a teacher too, now long retired. He really deserves an Oscar!
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@@erikabrill4897 Have no idea what "]" is supposed to mean?
Spectacular, a triumph! Waldemar is an artist in his own right as this masterpiece of filmmaking attests. Bravo!
Wonderful. PLEASE do a piece on Johanna, the widow of Theodore Van Gogh and the reason his brother is famous.
this man single handedly re-ignited my dormant interest in art and reminded me of my love of the impressionists......merci mon ami
An amazing account of Gauguin’s life, thank you so very much for an outstanding documentary on the man that influenced my exotic wanderings.
Waldemar is Genius- total experience of ART, story, storytelling, explication , music, humor, etc! My first Waldemar--today's serendipitous foun--A TREASURE
Symbolism's Problem Child is a well rounded and robust portrait with insights as elegant as an eyelid on Gaugin's sculpture of Emile.
As always, detailed.. exhaustively, passionately... well done! Waldemar, thank you very much!
There's a new documentary that proves that Vincent had cut off most of his ear, leaving only a part of the lobe, not the other way around and furthermore, Rachel wasn't a sex worker in a brothel, but rather a cleaner at the brothel Vincent used to visit. You can find the documentary here on RUclips and it's absolutely fascinating .. BBC The Mystery of Van Goghs Ear
I prefer that Gauguin flicked Vincent's ear off with his sword after all he was a expert swordsman. CHEERS
Thanks
Can't trust anything the woke BBC does nowadays.
Fabulous! I'm glad this 'algorithm-ed' into suggestions.
I love this guy. I recall seeing him in a wonderful documentary about the Goths & Visigoths a while ago. (I'm a huge history nerd) He looks much younger here. He's an enthusiastic presenter. I see there's more.
~Thanks~ Greetings from Canada 🇨🇦
Gaugin as a person sort of gets a bum rap. This thorough look at his life sheds sheds so much light on who he really was against a backdrop of an extraordinary body of work. Through this documentary 'I've gained a greater understanding of Gaugin as a driven artist and much more respect for the singular voice he achieved.
This is a helluva travelogue as well as an art history lesson! So great to see all the locations.
Thank you! I have enjoyed this immensely.
Fantastic research Waldemar & your team My 2nd look at this doco: I find it just as informative as the 1st time. You're inspiring - all of you. Morganz
I love art history and this program is the creme de la creme! Thank you so very much!
excellent documentary Film. I visited Gauguins art exhibit in Tahitee in the sixities and never forgot his art, it was my favouite along with his friend's Vincent VanGogh. Thank you so much for this stunning work of this unforgettable artist and his art.
Love this guy who presents these...he does a wonderful job of bringing the artist to real life... just watched his presentation s on van Gogh...enjoy this very much
I agree with so many of the comments. Probably the best docco I've ever seen. It felt lifechanging somehow, so inspiring and a much more in depth look at one of Arts largest figures than I've ever heard about. I'll have to return to the richness of these journeys of him finding his inspiration and using such courage. Although very sad to me how unravelled he seemed at the end