Rembrandt: The power of his self portraits | National Gallery

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  • čas přidán 25. 02. 2016
  • Freelance lecturer James Heard talks you through Rembrandt's illustrious and prolific career, from the successes of his early years in Amsterdam, to his later bankruptcy and the power of his self-portraits.
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    The National Gallery houses the national collection of paintings in the Western European tradition from the 13th to the 19th centuries. The museum is free of charge and open 361 days per year, daily between 10.00 am - 6.00 pm and on Fridays between 10.00 am - 9.00 pm.
    Trafalgar Square, London, WC2N 5DN
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Komentáře • 375

  • @leylag1466
    @leylag1466 Před 2 lety +49

    I homeschool my 5 year old and 8 year old boys. We watch this channel 3-4 times a week and my kids are absolutely hooked. They follow the lectures with no interruption, are 100% focused and in awe. It’s a delight to see my boys fall in love with arts and wanting to learn more and more about it. Titian, Dali, Vermeer, van Gogh, Holbein, Van Dyke, Degas etc are all favorites of my boys. Thanks to his channel a new generation of art lovers is being raised and recruited. I can’t praise you enough. Thank you for all your work and effort. It’s very appreciated and valued.

    • @nationalgallery
      @nationalgallery  Před 2 lety +10

      We are so glad your boys are enjoying our videos, Leyla! We hope we'll see you all in the Gallery soon so they can show off their knowledge.

  • @lordbattlefield
    @lordbattlefield Před 2 lety +134

    My most favorite CZcams channel! These lectures are a treasure! The knowledge, the history, the context. This is how art should be thought at school. This is how one can fall in love with it!

    • @nationalgallery
      @nationalgallery  Před 2 lety +6

      Thank you for watching! So glad you're enjoying our videos. ❤️

    • @erepsekahs
      @erepsekahs Před 2 lety +2

      Yes. It's also how art could be taught at school,

    • @susanwilson3594
      @susanwilson3594 Před 2 lety +3

      Yes thank you, these lectures make staying at home fascinating

    • @susanwilson3594
      @susanwilson3594 Před 2 lety +2

      Greatly needed additions to everyday shut down

    • @janawaw8293
      @janawaw8293 Před rokem

      i pro mne je to video vždy jako odměna- třeba jako pro dítě nějaký zákusek v cukrárně :-) ten výklad byl po celou dobu tak zajímavý, že se usmívám ještě dalších pár minut a zkoumám ten obraz dál a znovu, výklad J. Heard - mluví tak skvěle, že si to člověk rád poslechne i vícekrát.

  • @BannerLisa
    @BannerLisa Před 3 lety +32

    Mr. Heard has a wonderful way of engaging his audience, and making the relevant points sing.

  • @og1kanobi40
    @og1kanobi40 Před 4 lety +790

    Good to see someone from Minecraft enjoying the lecture.

    • @mina0rahman
      @mina0rahman Před 4 lety +14

      💀

    • @lisastallingskeelor3328
      @lisastallingskeelor3328 Před 4 lety +49

      OG1KaNobi LOL! That’s funny. I’m wondering who is so famous or rich is sitting there and insisted on being blurred out??. Who would attend a lecture who is either that wealthy or famous?

    • @sopo1608
      @sopo1608 Před 4 lety +29

      It’s Enda from the incredibles

    • @zdanlins
      @zdanlins Před 4 lety +7

      HAHAHAHA

    • @lstarrtna4288
      @lstarrtna4288 Před 4 lety +7

      Hahaha so funny I see

  • @LisaMurphy
    @LisaMurphy Před 2 lety +36

    I visited the Museum of Art in S.F. about 10 years back and was walking through looking at painting after painting and not really feeling much, and then I came upon one that just stopped me in my tracks. It was a Rembrandt and it was unlike anything I'd ever seen. I've learned a lot about the artist since because he is by far my favorite painter of all time.

    • @gnomechild76
      @gnomechild76 Před 2 lety

      which museum in SF was it?

    • @muckstumble2056
      @muckstumble2056 Před 2 lety

      @@gnomechild76 most likely The Legion of Honor Museum . They have one Rembrandt in the permanent collection.

  • @rosavella7548
    @rosavella7548 Před 8 lety +151

    Brilliant! Very informative and enjoyable. Great to see these videos made available to the public, particularly for those who live far away from the capital and can't very easily get to the talks. Thank you.

  • @SergeiMaria
    @SergeiMaria Před 10 měsíci +7

    This lecture is a treasure! Thank you Mr.Heard, I enjoyed it so much that I’ve listened to it at least 10 times😊

  • @studogable
    @studogable Před 3 lety +7

    The Rembrandt room in the National Gallery is incredible.

  • @9sheri9
    @9sheri9 Před 2 lety +21

    Outstanding & interesting presentation; a bit of a deeper dive into what I learned in art history. Very well done, Mr Heard. I didn't want it to end. 👏

  • @viviwil30
    @viviwil30 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank YOU very much! Warm regards from Argentina ❤️🇦🇷

  • @jeffhreid
    @jeffhreid Před 4 lety +6

    What a remarkable lecturer. Quite an interesting character

  • @Huaimek861
    @Huaimek861 Před 2 lety +5

    Thank you The National Gallery , I am enjoying this talk on the history of Rembrandt , a mine of immensely interesting information .

  • @waldoisdead3507
    @waldoisdead3507 Před 3 lety +28

    If you zoom in closely on to the lecturers glasses you can see the pixel lady's face

  • @huntsail3727
    @huntsail3727 Před 2 lety +7

    Loved your enthusiam for Rembrandt and his art. Well done!

  • @annaperova7092
    @annaperova7092 Před rokem +2

    Dear, Mr. James Heard, thank you so much for shareing your knowledge about Rembrant paintings. Always when i see his works i start crying because of the details. Iam always so impressed by his attention to details and when i realise, he was working on his painting in 17th century, for me his works look like a miracle as well as opportunity to see them myself. Thank you so much for a great and deep pleasure!

  • @amilinks5684
    @amilinks5684 Před 3 lety +6

    Wonderful! Absolutely wonderful! Beautiful account of his life! I hope that more of these lectures are posted. I hope that many more people watch.

  • @cassior7460
    @cassior7460 Před 5 lety +18

    Professor James Heard, thankyou so much for this wonderful lecturer! Amazing.

  • @daveh9521
    @daveh9521 Před 4 lety +2

    Wonderful exploration of Rembrandt's portraiture and methods. As an artist of realism, these works have been a source of life long inspiration. '...not just a portrait..' indeed!

  • @sandrachitayat2124
    @sandrachitayat2124 Před 3 lety +5

    Rembrandt's eyes are amazing! So soft, yes blue, & transparent. Really like looking into the soul of the artist. I now understand how important Rembrandt is. Thank you to the lecturer, James Heard. Thoroughly enjoyable & engaging.

    • @mrbutch308
      @mrbutch308 Před 2 lety

      The genius of Rembrandt is that he had a magical ability to portray emotions (such as sadness or suffering) in the eyes of his subjects.

  • @katietheenergyworker6701
    @katietheenergyworker6701 Před 2 lety +4

    James Heard - you are brilliant! I enjoyed this so much. Thank you

  • @ralphmilburn6245
    @ralphmilburn6245 Před 4 lety +7

    Mr. Wrinkles and Mrs. Pixels ;-). The presentation was great.

  • @MiaFeigelsonGallery
    @MiaFeigelsonGallery Před 3 lety +5

    National Gallery, I was so fortunate to have been able to attend this great talk about Rembrandt, whose works I love beyond words, since I was on holidays in London on 15 February. I'd like to thank you for this great initiative and James Heard for his highly interesting dissertation!

  • @GregorysMode
    @GregorysMode Před 2 lety +3

    These lectures on youtube are priceless when you cant get there.

  • @mziuri
    @mziuri Před 6 lety +9

    This is one of the best guides I’ve ever met! Love the story very much!

  • @JFBArteist
    @JFBArteist Před 6 lety +13

    Thank you for an excellent narrative to Rembrandt's art. I have studied Rembrandt along with the other great artists as they're a true inspiration to my own art. Gladly you mentioned a few things here which I didn't already know.

    • @MrSmokincodz
      @MrSmokincodz Před 5 lety

      John Barrows do u like Caravaggio ? Cool you study art, I love it as well

  • @cryptonite8495
    @cryptonite8495 Před 2 lety +5

    The woman in red in the front row, apparently the back of her head is so recognizable, and it being so crucial that she not be seen attending an art lecture, that she must be pixelated.

  • @Jameson_Visual_Arts_Studios
    @Jameson_Visual_Arts_Studios Před 9 měsíci +1

    Love these talks on great works of art in the National Portrait Gallery that I listen to while painting in my art studio! They remind me so much of talks at The Art Institute Of Chicago that I listened to as a student at SAIC next door working in the museum day in, and day out with patrons, and works by the Old Masters, and Contemporary artists! I got to listen to the gallery talks, work in art studios next door, and meet, and talk with artists like David Hockney, Ellsworth Kelly, Kehinde Wiley, Susanna Coffey, Richard Hunt, Barbara Rossi, Jim Nutt, William Pope L., and James Bishop among others whose generous conversations, and work I appreciate to this day!
    🎨🖼️🌿🌌

  • @MiaFeigelsonGallery
    @MiaFeigelsonGallery Před rokem

    On this day in 2016 my younger and I attended this fantastic lecture which we both enjoyed enormously ! Dear National Gallery, I'd like to thank you for this great initiative as well as Professor James Heard for his highly interesting dissertation!

  • @Scottie404
    @Scottie404 Před 2 lety +4

    I visited the Rembrandt Exhibition at Art Institute of Chicago a couple of years ago - his paintings are mesmerizing.

  • @user-ol3xk5fc7h
    @user-ol3xk5fc7h Před 3 měsíci

    “Nobody creates in a vacuum. we’re always looking around.” Is exactly what I needed to hear as an artist

  • @janawaw8293
    @janawaw8293 Před rokem +1

    Mnohokrát děkuji za velmi zajímavé informace a detaily. Lituji, že jsem nestudovala tento obor, mohla bych to poslouchat každý den a nikdy by se mne to nepřestalo bavit.

  • @brianthornton6269
    @brianthornton6269 Před 2 lety +5

    This history lesson here is wonderful!

  • @Ninanotlina
    @Ninanotlina Před 3 lety +2

    Was introduced to Rembrandt’s paintings in my 3rd year Aesthetics lectures. Now he’s one of the masters I look out for whenever I visit an art gallery. Thanks for an interesting lecture 🤗

  • @fleur7891
    @fleur7891 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for yet another most enjoyable lecture.

  • @sparklebutt1119
    @sparklebutt1119 Před rokem

    Mr. Heard is a wonderful lecturer! So engaging and interesting to listen to Mr. Heard.

  • @YoshiMario69
    @YoshiMario69 Před 2 měsíci

    wonderful painting, wonderful explanation, this man loves his job and loves art and is enjoying sharing his joy!

  • @xw049
    @xw049 Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you very much for National Gallery! Great lecturer!

  • @KevinSpence
    @KevinSpence Před rokem

    Somehow just found this channel. Unreal. Thank you!!!

  • @saraht4973
    @saraht4973 Před 4 lety +5

    Lovely, thank you so much for giving us the lessons on these fantastic paintings.

  • @adelezierler1547
    @adelezierler1547 Před 4 lety +3

    This was an excellent and enlightening lecture & experience for me to know something I would have never found out on my own.

  • @sherrylhenning5630
    @sherrylhenning5630 Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you for posting this interesting and informative lecture where people like me can access it! This is awesome!!!!!!!

  • @alladadaian6530
    @alladadaian6530 Před 4 lety +3

    Wonderful, very interesting. Diction very clear, thank you.

  • @SrinivasanDurairaj
    @SrinivasanDurairaj Před 5 lety +4

    Wonderful !!! Brilliant !!!

  • @terencebarrett2897
    @terencebarrett2897 Před 7 lety +37

    absolutely brilliant and informative ''thank you'' as I live far away from the capital, and to put it bluntly, from a town in north east of england where really you live day to day and this can be another world,if you know what I mean, its absolutely wonderful I can get to see these wonderful paintings and lectures and information. thank you very much ,thanks you tubers

    • @stephenchristian6231
      @stephenchristian6231 Před 3 lety +3

      Spoil yourself and go to the gallery. It's free.
      To be next to the art looking straight into the eyes of the master is unforgettable.
      Just a train ride into the city.

    • @terencebarrett2897
      @terencebarrett2897 Před 3 lety

      @@stephenchristian6231 I might just do that Stephen .its just health situations, but we have a big city near, and I might try that,when everything settles down and things get back to normal., you tube caters for everyone,worldwide, no matter what your interest is, best of luck Stephen 'to you and your family.

  • @Sneewitchen1
    @Sneewitchen1 Před 4 lety +6

    Amazing lecture! 🙏💝

  • @SouthArtDealer
    @SouthArtDealer Před 4 lety +7

    Great informative, must admit Mr James it is fascinating to hear this with such elegant accent

  • @artplussk_222
    @artplussk_222 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow great to see this painting as well as the video.

  • @Jelenicza
    @Jelenicza Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant, thank you!

  • @midnightchannel7759
    @midnightchannel7759 Před 2 lety +2

    Really very interesting lecture, wonderful selection of little-known facts on the man, thank you! :-)

  • @user-fs4hw9sl4q
    @user-fs4hw9sl4q Před 3 lety +1

    thank you for your lecture!

  • @laus7080
    @laus7080 Před 3 lety +2

    I love the passion with wich he speaks.

  • @americaneagle76
    @americaneagle76 Před 3 měsíci

    THAT IS AN AMAZING INTERPRETATION, WELL DONE!

  • @Gizmo2261
    @Gizmo2261 Před 3 lety +1

    Fantastic presentation - that was excellent!

  • @user-zj3mc9pp4e
    @user-zj3mc9pp4e Před rokem

    Thank you very much! Very informative.

  • @paulashford4155
    @paulashford4155 Před 7 lety +2

    Enjoyable..Thanks!!

  • @andrzejmaranda3699
    @andrzejmaranda3699 Před rokem

    The National Gallery: it's SOO INTERESTING & FULL INFORMATION.

  • @MariannaK94
    @MariannaK94 Před 5 lety +2

    Thank you for shearing.

  • @anadecozar9562
    @anadecozar9562 Před 10 měsíci

    What a brilliant lecture - thank-you!

    • @nationalgallery
      @nationalgallery  Před 9 měsíci

      Thanks for watching! What was the favourite thing you learned?

  • @richardevans8979
    @richardevans8979 Před 4 lety +36

    Not only did Mrs Minecraf ruin a perfectly good video, she's managed to generate more interest for herself than the artist! Way to go, #nailedit

  • @dasLeichtflugzeug
    @dasLeichtflugzeug Před 6 lety +2

    Very educational. This exact painting is on loan at the Norton Simon Museum Pasadena, CA until March 2018.

    • @kocahilmi
      @kocahilmi Před 6 lety

      J Wang Thomas crown much?

  • @olyalamb7179
    @olyalamb7179 Před 2 lety +1

    AMAZING from 🇳🇿👏💐

  • @jacobusbaker9285
    @jacobusbaker9285 Před 6 lety +14

    When he was good, he was the best. Unsurpassed. Hollands Glorie.

  • @creativeartbyluvensky
    @creativeartbyluvensky Před 4 lety

    Thank you for sharing

  • @judihopewell7148
    @judihopewell7148 Před 5 lety +4

    Marvellous thank you

  • @wilsonconvictor
    @wilsonconvictor Před rokem

    Interesting lecture, especially towards the end.

  • @outsidethepyramid
    @outsidethepyramid Před 4 lety +186

    i don't want to be seen in the video. I know I'll sit front center.

  • @karenholland6910
    @karenholland6910 Před 7 lety +2

    Thankyou so much, this was wonderful. I am training to be an art gallery guide so watching your presentation was a bonus.

  • @brochanteur8253
    @brochanteur8253 Před 3 lety

    Merci beaucoup .

  • @Bechora2012
    @Bechora2012 Před 4 lety

    amazing !!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @joaomirandaartista
    @joaomirandaartista Před 5 lety +2

    amazing

  • @lynnoleary9953
    @lynnoleary9953 Před 2 lety

    James Heard is a remarkable "teacher." What a gift.

  • @y2ktube
    @y2ktube Před 6 lety +58

    The BACK of a head !
    I've never heard or seen a Magazine Cover, or a Wanted Poster, or a Security Video, or Crime Photo of the BACK of a
    HEAD ! - RIdiculous ...

  • @cristina-nt8vs
    @cristina-nt8vs Před 4 lety

    Thank you.

  • @jannybloemers9508
    @jannybloemers9508 Před 3 lety +1

    Marten and opjen,very beautiful painting from the netherlands and france,i hope it is to see,thank you,janny,the netherlands.

  • @dingfang1757
    @dingfang1757 Před 4 lety

    Watching it from China,thanks for the informative explanation!

  • @jasonmason2471
    @jasonmason2471 Před rokem

    I never cared much for Rembrandt, but this speaker certainly tickled my interest.

  • @manueldelcerro6426
    @manueldelcerro6426 Před 4 lety +12

    Who is the pixilated lady, and why did her image needed to be obliterated while attending a public lecture in a public space? Thanks for the good lecture.

    • @kevinchambers1609
      @kevinchambers1609 Před 4 lety +1

      She was having a bad hair day and she didn't want anyone to know.

  • @contecrayononpaper
    @contecrayononpaper Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the ride.

  • @anthonyflores1606
    @anthonyflores1606 Před rokem

    I love these National Gallery videos. They are marvelously informative, wonderfully produced and expertly curated. If I may make one suggestion: find a good dry cleaner, Your shirt is a distraction to your obvious genius.

  • @WillN2Go1
    @WillN2Go1 Před 4 lety +22

    They're hung too high. A Rembrandt portrait should be viewed at eye level. In the 1970s I learned of a technique for viewing Rembrandt portraits. Works also for portraits by Reuben, Murrillo, at least one Lucien Freud, Francis Bacon. Stand a bit more than arm's length from the canvas, where the artist would've stood while viewing the painting as he worked. For right handed painters like Rembrandt stand with your right eye towards the painting, close your left eye just a little. You want to primarily use your right eye, but you also need you left. The effect will be that the face in the portrait will 'pop' almost three dimensional, and the emotional expression the artist put into the painting will be apparent. It can be quite startling. For left handed painters (Reubens, Freud, Murillo?) do the opposite. Now is this real? Well, switch eyes. What will happen with a Rembrandt portrait where the subject is looking off to your left, the left cheek in the portrait will appear wider. If you switch between eyes, the handedness of the artist usually becomes apparent, and the distortion in the cheek will seem either right or wrong. I haven't noticed this in any Italian painters. The earliest instance of the effect is from a 1515 painting by a Spanish painter who may have spent some time in the Netherlands. And Rubens work in the National Gallery (London)? If it's a portrait, then yes the effect is there. If there's a second person or figure, or more in the canvas the effect is not there.
    I also think that this technique or trick could be rediscovered by artists over and over again. If you just keep tweaking a portrait and looking, I think you'll eventually arrive at it. One would expect Leonardo, one of the most observant painters in history to have discovered this. I wasn't able to look at enough portraits by Italians to see. (In the Louvre I was all alone looking at the Rembrandts while the gallery with the Mona Lisa was a hot mosh pit) With modern painters like Freud and Bacon, the effect is at the same distance as Rembrandt, so there's a lot of canvas that isn't wasted, it just means that this effect is not all there is to the work.
    A general principle that could be derived from this is, how did the artist look at their work? Where did they stand? What was the lighting like? (I photographed some Rothkos donated to Los Angeles MOCA. Count Ponza who'd donated them stipulated they be exhibited in low light. Some of the paint Rothko used is fugitive, meaning it's shifting in color over the years. Low light helps delay this. Low light also helps the hypnotic floating shapes to hypnotically float. If you've ever woken up in a dark room, things are a lot more mysterious. This is probably what Rothko intended.)
    Rembrandt seems well aware of how human vision worked. The fovea area, dead center and very small. We can read text with this very small part of the eye, a bit farther out we can't -- if we look at a page of text we think we can see all the words, we can only see a small circle. But if we wonder, what about the corner - then our eye snaps on it and we can. Color information also drops off away from the very center, but my ad hoc experiments is that it doesn't seem to drop off as quickly as the explanations say it does. Just being a busy body. It boggles my mind that curators don't seem to be aware of this. I read about this, this is not my discovery, but haven't even seen a reference to or mention of the effect since.

  • @2335467
    @2335467 Před 4 lety +37

    Why is that one lady pixalated, only that one lady, that's odd.

  • @maskretek4099
    @maskretek4099 Před 2 lety

    Prachtig college.
    Bravo!

  • @stevie-ray2020
    @stevie-ray2020 Před rokem +1

    Rembrandt's self-portraits could seen as an effective method of advertising his skills to potential clientele in a period when an artist needed to prove that he could produce a flattering but realistic image of the sitter in whatever attire they chose!

  • @ievaieva6886
    @ievaieva6886 Před 3 lety

    here the night before my art history exam. thank you

  • @8nansky528
    @8nansky528 Před 2 lety +1

    I ADORE READING

  • @stevebuk100
    @stevebuk100 Před 4 lety +4

    You need to make the audience aware that they will be shown if they sit in at the talk, if they don’t want to be seen then they can leave and not spoil it for the rest of us.

  • @DM-cy2tj
    @DM-cy2tj Před 4 lety +46

    Here's a tip for future video's. As this is essentially a video about the appreciation of a painting, why not keep the camera more fixed on the painting itself, with periodic shots of the commentator for variety where appropriate, NOT vice-versa. Where the painting itself was shown, rather than the audience, the clips were too short to fully appreciate the detail being described.
    In other words, forget about filming rows of backs of heads, no-one is interested in the audience, and as a real bonus viewers won't sometimes need to watch 30 minutes of distracting and unnecessary pixellation. I do think that most people who come to this National Gallery video channel arrive with a genuine hope of learning and appreciation of the painting and its painter, together with full due respect for the first class curators and commentators. Yet like this video and many others show, many probably leave in great disappointment at extremely poor videography and subsequent editing.

    • @EM-qx3hx
      @EM-qx3hx Před 3 lety +4

      Well said, I totally agree!

    • @olavbjortomt1596
      @olavbjortomt1596 Před 2 lety +8

      I assumed a lot of people interested in these videos downloaded a hi-res photo of the painting from the National Gallery website, or just opened the webpage in another desktop window, rather than settle for peaks on the lower quality video, if that's what you really want to look at. You can even just listen to the audio and fill your computer screen with the painting if you want. In other words, visit www.nationalgallery.org.uk. (Apologies if this has already occurred to you).

    • @noeldeleon1671
      @noeldeleon1671 Před 2 lety +1

      Stop complaining

  • @madeleineblu
    @madeleineblu Před 4 měsíci

    So informative, thank you. Rembrandt's eyes, the painting of, superb yes, but slightly a skewed? The right eye (looking in) does not seem to be focussing on the same subject as the left. Any thoughts on this please?

  • @budjitresvalles6397
    @budjitresvalles6397 Před 6 lety +191

    The pixalated lady is distracting me from enjoying this video. :/

    • @imambaybars3405
      @imambaybars3405 Před 5 lety +121

      I feel sorry for the people sitting behind her, they must have thought Rembrandt was a cubist

    • @ljonathan9661
      @ljonathan9661 Před 5 lety +13

      I Thought I was the only one. Gee!

    • @raduapp123
      @raduapp123 Před 5 lety +21

      @@imambaybars3405 :)))))))))))) This is the funniest comment on youtube

    • @clearlake3492
      @clearlake3492 Před 5 lety +6

      @@imambaybars3405 I laughed

    • @Sumonebody
      @Sumonebody Před 5 lety +26

      What a prick, why would they sit at the very, very front of a recorded lecture, then actively remove permission to be on camera.

  • @pegtrezevant3809
    @pegtrezevant3809 Před 7 lety +4

    Wonderful lecture, thank you James Heard. I would like to track down the quote about portraiture said in the final moments of the video clip: "A portrait is a miraculous digest of the whole man both in body and spirit." I believe it's attributed to Christian Huygens...but I can't locate the quote.

    • @lorraines1173
      @lorraines1173 Před 6 lety

      Leonardo painted one of the most important paintings in the world hardly thing he had difficult with colour in that on sir.

    • @nothersheep
      @nothersheep Před 4 lety

      Any luck tracking down that quote? It might be that Heard is ascribing a Constantijn Huygens quote to his son Christiaan? In the first chapter of STYLISTIC FEATURES OF THE 1630’S: THE PORTRAITS there’s a similar quote describing the work of Lievens.
      ‘ut huit potissimum parti, tanquam, potius hominis, corporis, iniquam, animique mirabili compendio, incumbat’ (translated as: that the latter [Lievens] may apply himself best to that part [of art] that as it were provides a wonderful summing-up of the whole man, of both his body and his spirit).
      The footnote reads : J.A. Worp, ‘Constantijn Huygens over de schidlers van zin tiljd’, O. H. 9 (1891), pp. 106-136, 307-308, esp 121 122 and 128

  • @lisastallingskeelor3328
    @lisastallingskeelor3328 Před 4 lety +2

    Very informative. The speaker looks familiar. Isn’t he a regular on the antiques roadshow?

  • @frankpapandrea1
    @frankpapandrea1 Před 4 lety +18

    she had a nike logo tatooed on her head

  • @Siansonea
    @Siansonea Před 4 lety +12

    If I'm a portrait painter, I would probably paint self-portraits as 'commercials', to show a prospective client how well I can capture and/or embellish a likeness. I could also paint portraits of well-known or often-seen persons for the same purpose, but then I run the risk that the prospective client is unfamiliar with that person. If the portrait is of the artist, then the client can look from one to the other in real time, and decide if the technique is up to scratch. These portraits would have a limited shelf life, as the appearance of the artist changes, so I would have to do new ones periodically.

    • @sandrachitayat2124
      @sandrachitayat2124 Před 3 lety

      Yes, but this painting he discusses is so...humanist. Way before it's time. It shows Rembrant as a very sensitive & perceptive artist. You only have to look at the eyes. Like a photo! So translucent, the eyes through which the artist SEES & CREATES!

    • @enzocypriani5055
      @enzocypriani5055 Před 2 lety

      Interesting point of view

  • @Poemsapennyeach
    @Poemsapennyeach Před 5 lety

    Hi James...Greetings from James Burr. Kristine.

  • @bingeltube
    @bingeltube Před 5 lety +1

    Recommendable

  • @rexchristiankennedymontroy2052

    Why is the lower central part /head of one of the audience is covered/blurred?

  • @melanieohara6941
    @melanieohara6941 Před 4 lety +2

    Love the Professor’s crinkled, rumply, disheveled shirt-topped with a tie. Irons are good things to keep handy. 😊

  • @chekeichan
    @chekeichan Před 4 lety

    I think I found Carmen Sandiego (wonderful lecture btw!)

  • @lafregaste
    @lafregaste Před 2 lety +1

    I was only listening but I did look at the video a couple times and it was quite interesting the blurring of the one person. Why? is only 1 person so it means that one person had an issue with his face online, did they ask everyone if they wanted to be in the video and he didn't agree? are they a minor? I wonder...

  • @blueocean9305
    @blueocean9305 Před 2 lety

    Flash photography where only half of the face is direct lit and and the shoulders are turned is often used for portraits. This is very popular for headshots. The pose is called "the Rembrandt".