History of Industrial Design Week 5: Art Deco

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  • čas přidán 20. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 792

  • @hythekent
    @hythekent Před rokem +26

    Three years have passed since you made this superb video for your students, and for the wider world. Those of us who love design, and here, with this video art deco, please accept our sincere appreciation.

  • @cutclassnotfrog
    @cutclassnotfrog Před 4 lety +127

    As someone who can’t afford traditional education thank you for making your knowledge accessible!!!!!

    • @mycatmydog
      @mycatmydog Před 10 měsíci +1

      I was very happy with your comment, thank you for watching our videos. a big hug!

    • @kevincinnamontoast3669
      @kevincinnamontoast3669 Před 3 měsíci

      Read a BOOK. Visit a free library...

  • @madeleine1313
    @madeleine1313 Před 4 lety +587

    Thank you, I am not student just someone who likes Art Deco. I found your presentation so interesting and I have learned a lot. : )

    • @joannemason5581
      @joannemason5581 Před 3 lety +19

      Me too. Thoroughly enjoyed the class.

    • @texasgma3578
      @texasgma3578 Před 3 lety +7

      I enjoyed this presentation as well. I love bakelite jewelry so I found it really interesting.

    • @Beezard1977
      @Beezard1977 Před 3 lety +7

      Same here. This was great.

    • @elissam.corsmeier469
      @elissam.corsmeier469 Před 3 lety +4

      Same

    • @werdw4849
      @werdw4849 Před 3 lety +3

      Same boat and love this stuff! Thank you for making this available to the web :) and public.

  • @steffenbrandorff4902
    @steffenbrandorff4902 Před 4 lety +281

    What a treasure chest of knowledge. I am not one of your students, but an old guy trying to learn about design. I have never encountered videos of a similar breadth and depth. Thank you for doing it even when you seem to think nobody is watching - I will be. Greetings from Denmark, Europe.

    • @redlady935
      @redlady935 Před 2 lety +7

      Yes they are facinating aren't they

  • @loaferlover
    @loaferlover Před 2 lety +76

    This presentation was so absolutely informative..wow. I am 80 years old...and I am a former high school teacher. Your ability to instruct, inform, and present such detailed information is a real gift. I can well imagine your students are so delighted to be in your classes. I thoroughly enjoyed this one presentation and I learned so much. Thank you for sharing.

    • @elm4nsuri
      @elm4nsuri Před rokem

      of course they'b de, all they have to do is look at the pretty pictures, nothing else is expected of their lazy asses...... . this is the equivalent of watching tv as "academic" studies go....

  • @atlantaW00F
    @atlantaW00F Před 3 lety +75

    Please don’t be so hard on your production values. You are an educator.... a teacher.... And by God you can teach! I not only stayed for the entire program I was fascinated.

  • @mikeeb290
    @mikeeb290 Před 3 lety +77

    I'm only 5 minutes in and I can tell you're a great teacher. I came for just a presentation on Art Deco but I am subscribing because of your attitude and look forward to seeing more content!

  • @mano0n
    @mano0n Před 4 lety +131

    OK I'm a doctor from Brussels so I have no idea how I got here but I am passionate about Art Nouveau and Art Deco and this is just such a lovely class. Thank you very much for sharing your knowledge. Cheers !

    • @HistoryofID
      @HistoryofID  Před 4 lety +29

      Hooray! Thanks for joining the party! The Van Buuren house in Uccle is one of my FAVAORITE places; you are lucky to be near it!

    • @stevengermadnik3162
      @stevengermadnik3162 Před 3 lety

      Doctor, not to be flip but there's ALOT OF here in the US SUFFERING IN NEEDLESS PAIN DUE TO THE GOVT DICTATEING WHAT MEDS YOU CAN PRESCRIBE SO WE CAN ENJOY THIS PROGRAM. DONT LET IT HAPPEN IN YOUR COUNTRY. THATS WHY YOU CAME ONTO THE SITE.

    • @bthedwards
      @bthedwards Před 3 lety

      @SEAN PETAIA me

    • @vdovoodoo8201
      @vdovoodoo8201 Před 3 lety

      @SEAN PETAIA Me to too also

    • @CookedOnions
      @CookedOnions Před 2 lety +12

      @@stevengermadnik3162 Calm down dude lol. Sounds like you need to be prescribed something.

  • @ZTK-RC
    @ZTK-RC Před 4 lety +87

    Please don't feel like you are going on too long, this is all very fascinating.

  • @aurionc2468
    @aurionc2468 Před 2 lety +5

    Thank you for this. I am a writer jumping into a 1920s film noir based project and I wanted to get a quick-n-dirty feel for the times. Instead, I got a nuanced, eclectic, informative perspective on American manufacture and world history. And a handsomely-voiced teacher to boot! Thank you 🙏🏾

    • @jkknyc
      @jkknyc Před 6 měsíci

      Ditto on the voice: yours was made for broadcast.

  • @eriksmith6873
    @eriksmith6873 Před 3 lety +68

    Hi there -- Hey, I just want to say that I am one of the "outsiders" (not in your class) who stumbled across your video and found it fascinating. Honestly, the content you provide here is of such value -- available nowhere else on CZcams -- that you really don't need to make apologies for the lack of slickness. I think there are many of us who enjoy watching academic-level lectures on everything from the Napoleonic Wars to the history of industrial design. Honestly, the apologies get a little distracting and they really aren't needed. It is rare that I learn something new in a field I already know plenty about. Where art deco is concerned, I've loved the style all my life, and I am currently furnishing a vintage-1935 house entirely in art deco furnishings. I find that the angular style of 1925-1935 mates very well with the later streamline moderne style of about 1936-1952. (I hate that so many call this "midcentury modern," as late-50s styles really are quite different than what came before.) One other thing I have noticed, in looking at what is readily available in my region, the Pacific Northwest, shopping via Craigslist and FB Marketplace, is that about half of what survives was originally available at some point in the Sears catalog. This shows us the inordinate influence of department stores in promoting the new style, something you note in your script, and a point that often is overlooked. Anyway, I think your video is a great service to the general public, not just the students in your class. If slickness is a concern, your PowerPoint slides and your core script are so good and so spot-on that I think this might be worth redoing. I am fascinated by the history of industrial design, and there is really no one on CZcams who describes it with the authority, detail and level of academic knowledge that you do here. A little tweaking and I think you could establish preeminence in the field. A friendly suggestion from someone who enjoyed your presentation immensely. (P.S. -- My hometown is Spokane, Wash., and I loved seeing the slide of our fabulous vintage-1931 Fox Theater, where I saw many a Disney movie and became acquainted with art deco as a kid. I think that's where I got hooked.)

  • @billeekroll8921
    @billeekroll8921 Před rokem +2

    I hope this comment is read. I just wanted to say that these videos have helped me get through one of the worst periods of depression I've ever experienced. Thank you for posting them. It's been very nice hearing your take on a specific and paramount part of the ongoing human endeavor. It's nice seeing beautiful things and learning about their creation and contribution to the story of humanity and our progression. Thank you.

    • @HistoryofID
      @HistoryofID  Před rokem +2

      MANY thanks for this lovely comment!!!!

  • @lemony4870
    @lemony4870 Před 3 lety +26

    This was really interesting - not a 'hot mess' at all! Thank you for sharing beyond your students.

  • @seamlab8870
    @seamlab8870 Před 2 lety +2

    I was obsessed with Art Deco as a child and have always been a Design aficionado. Including industrial design. Thank you for the rich, deep research and illuminating lecture!

  • @austinnorton1152
    @austinnorton1152 Před 3 lety +31

    This is a fantastic lecture. Thank you so much for posting this on CZcams for all of us to listen to! With your knowledge, personality, and voice I think you’d make an excellent podcaster or CZcamsr. Would love to see more content about design from you. Thanks again!

  • @Lince_uai
    @Lince_uai Před 2 lety +1

    I started to watch this to relax before going to bed and ended up going to sleep at 2AM because I couldn't stop watching. You are an amazing teacher. Thank you for sharing this with us!

  • @Monaco_mechanical
    @Monaco_mechanical Před 2 lety +1

    I'm a plumber and a student at the General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen. I work in some of the most incredible old buildings in new York City. I've seen art deco bathrooms so spectacular, beyond description!. This is such a wonderful presentation, thank you for posting this for all to enjoy. -Eric Monaco

  • @leeharman3762
    @leeharman3762 Před 3 lety +21

    This is incredible. What an amazing resource! I also love your teaching style and sense of humor & adaptability in light of the contemporary situation. As a fellow teacher during the pandemic, I really and truly appreciate this.

  • @shadowrundas
    @shadowrundas Před 3 lety +2

    hello, I am also not a student,
    This channel is an absolute gold mine of knowledge! thank you for making it public!

  • @nilo70
    @nilo70 Před 2 lety +2

    Professor Bird , I want to assure you that I am enthralled by all of this information . Thank you so very much for making this happen. Cheers from California !

  • @kamilapavlova3692
    @kamilapavlova3692 Před 3 lety +10

    I am a Latvian living in France and being a member of Toulouse Art Deco association. Your lecture was so informative, gave an opportunity to see some other angles and perspectives of Art Deco style, see the context . Thanks for your as well humor. Your students must be lucky to have you.

  • @rickardastrom2570
    @rickardastrom2570 Před 4 lety +40

    I'm watching this from Umea Institute of Design in Sweden as we're in the same boat regarding student presence. I love your presentation and now I wish I had access to the previous weeks. :-)

    • @HistoryofID
      @HistoryofID  Před 4 lety +15

      Well there are still 6 weeks to go!!!!! Stay tuned!

    • @rickardastrom2570
      @rickardastrom2570 Před 4 lety +4

      @@HistoryofID Oh, I will. 😄

    • @pistolannie6500
      @pistolannie6500 Před 2 lety

      @@HistoryofID Is there the Possibility of your recording the PREVIOUS CLASSES.... And ANYthing Else related???? I would even put up with Ads, but would really like to hear A LOT MORE! I wish Others would do this!
      I was done out of Any Higher education! I think that's why I Now gravitate towards any World History, Art History, etc...
      By the time I was Finally "free" to pursue things like that.... go out and get the Learning I CRAVED.... I had become too Ill & too Disabled and in NO better financial shape to even Pay for these websites that want a monthly FEE.. to access the videos. Something I just CANNOT do!! So TY for making these available for ALL... And YES, I assure u, even IF, some of your students didn't make it the end... MANY of us DID! This is actually... about the 3rd? time I've watched them. lol.
      (p. s. I frankly LIKE the straight "unedited" versions)

  • @GeahkBurchill
    @GeahkBurchill Před 2 lety +2

    I’m so glad CZcams recommended your lecture. You definitely didn’t waste time and you can be assured it was worth the donning off coat and tie. This stuff is my jam.

  • @romeovau7242
    @romeovau7242 Před 4 lety +10

    As a random person trying to figure out for the first time - the transition, era and influences of Art Deco.
    This was "streamlined" beautifully.
    Most valuable 2 hours I've spent this year. Bravo! 👍🏻
    Please keep this open & expanded for us, the non-students 😁

  • @1LSWilliam
    @1LSWilliam Před 2 lety +1

    I did not think I could love Art Deco more than I did, but now I do and I thank you for finding even greater coherence in the movement than I had.

  • @alexandranicu5417
    @alexandranicu5417 Před 2 lety +2

    Your students are SO LUCKY to have you. The video is full of amazing information and your humour is making it even more pleasurable. Thank you for sharing it with us.

  • @SoyIchmarcos
    @SoyIchmarcos Před 3 lety +2

    I wish I had a professor like Matthew Bird!!! Lucky students!! Super explanation, clear and also full of interesting details. I hope his students valued the amazing work he did.

  • @funderbee
    @funderbee Před 3 lety +2

    The thing that brought me here is
    1)loving the style
    2)minecraft
    3)when trying to understand the mannerisms and mentality of the design, gained through well educated teachers, allows for creativity to flow from a state of natural, while drawing on the principles internalized from the talk

  • @SebastianTinajero
    @SebastianTinajero Před 2 lety +1

    This is why I love the internet and CZcams. I’m not a student nor studying design just came across this gem of knowledge and Im here for it.

  • @thrillscience
    @thrillscience Před 4 lety +47

    Just what I needed! Thank you, Matthew!
    (And your CZcams audience isn't wearing pants either!)

  • @peggypeter8070
    @peggypeter8070 Před 2 lety +8

    11-2021, I found this fascinating and loved all the visuals! Thank you so much! I wish this design period is reproduced more today for all of us who love Art Deco and can’t afford the few pieces on the market for sale.

  • @johnnemo6509
    @johnnemo6509 Před rokem

    I have been an engineer in consumer electronics for 30 years, these lectures reignite my enthusiasm of designing and building things. I wish I had access to this lectures when I was at university. I constantly rewatch these lectures and I share them with my nieces and nephews who are starting their careers to try to inspire a love of I.D. BTW Love the "hot mess" approach it's charming and brings a human side to a subject that can tend to the clinical and cold.....Thinks...... sterile white surfaces and turtle neck sweaters of my former company.. Many , many thanks!

  • @OliverPickard
    @OliverPickard Před 2 lety +1

    Greetings form France. What a beautiful thing the internet is that we can freely educate and touch the lives of people who we may never meet on the other side of the globe. Thank you very much for your time, effort and passion in making this.

  • @HomeBuiltByHoward
    @HomeBuiltByHoward Před 4 lety +11

    Thanks Matthew. I've been following your videos for a few years now and relish each one. I've been a professional designer for about 20 years and still learn new things every time I watch. Your video on efficiency has been shared with my clients to explain some of the design decisions I make for them.
    I'm really looking forward to seeing way more content now that we have the plague.

    • @HomeBuiltByHoward
      @HomeBuiltByHoward Před 4 lety

      You will want to read it... all 444 pages on line and free... archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.74386/page/n3/mode/2up

  • @rolandcharriez7631
    @rolandcharriez7631 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the video. I am an industrial designer who worked at Teague in the late 70's. Everything stated in your video rang true to my thinking. When I try to tell non-design folk of what industrial designers do I use the analogy of being artisans in the past that creates objects people touch and use; Stone carvers, mural painters, furniture makers and architects. They all created wonders in products and in design. Someone had to design it and make it or get it made. I consider ourselves modern "Artisans". Forever changing what we do for society and humanity. Enjoyed your talk; wasn't boring.

  • @aweb_2u
    @aweb_2u Před 3 lety +6

    Stumbled upon this at 1:30 AM. In addition to being really informative, it's interesting to see how 100 years ago a unique set of circumstances created this interesting design style and now a unique set of circumstances led me to watch this lecture. I'm not a student at all, but I enjoyed watching this and learning from you

  • @BobNWFA
    @BobNWFA Před rokem

    I've watched this twice, about a year apart, and learned new things each time. Prof. Bird, you are a fabulous historian and presenter!

  • @mrmoon...
    @mrmoon... Před 4 lety +17

    I waited for your lectures since your lecture on "Bauhaus to Broadway" please please put more your interesting lectured on youtube, Or udemy, or any other platform. Your lectures are incredibly interesting!!!!

  • @lesslostmedia2780
    @lesslostmedia2780 Před 5 měsíci

    I walked around Miami Beach today & feel like I "discovered" Art Deco for the first time in my life. THANK YOU, Matthew Bird, for sharing this wonderful video with us. What an incredible introduction to Art Deco. Your expertise, insight, and humor are appreciated more than I can even say.

  • @marklewis1753
    @marklewis1753 Před rokem

    When I see a photograph with Art Deco images, my heart involuntarily misses a beat, and I feel an overwhelming sense of joy. I don't know anything about art, style or design but growing up as a lonely and isolated child who sought refuge in the movies of the 1930's, Art Deco symbolizes a promissory note for a more beautiful and prosperous future liberated from war, poverty, crime and racism. I wished with all my heart that I could exist in that world!

  • @davidcarlin3850
    @davidcarlin3850 Před 2 lety

    Absolutely spectacular information presented from the period. Not a student currently but a 54 year old lover of Art Deco who always loves to learn. Thank you !!!!

  • @pauldreeves
    @pauldreeves Před 3 lety +6

    Just adding to the praise already here. As someone who can barley make it through a 5-10 minute CZcams video, I’ve just made it through two hours of really fascinating
    and well presented stuff. I’ll be watching more! Thanks for uploading.

  • @petezaria9409
    @petezaria9409 Před 3 lety +7

    Mathew, it's now 2021, I just found your lecture, watched it all in one sitting. How I wish, I was 40 years (gulp) younger and could change my career path and attend your class at The Rhode Island School of Design.

    • @lauryburr7044
      @lauryburr7044 Před 2 lety

      Now 2022 and were I 50 years younger I'd join you!!

  • @Brot-o-Typ
    @Brot-o-Typ Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you very much for making this freely available! I had never thought about Industrial desing in the past, heck i didn't even knew who this guy on out (now retired) 10 swissfrancs bill was. But this lecture was so interesting and well produced that I watched everything and it sparked my interested in design!

  • @edindoffer687
    @edindoffer687 Před rokem +1

    This is more than two years later, but I am so glad I happened upon this recorded lecture. First, we are restoring our basement that was originally a speakeasy, and after watching I learned that the style is clearly inspired by Donald Deskey's designs. I will look further into his designs, and I am sure the decor will fall into place. Second, we are casually looking for future art schools for my 13-year-old daughter and after sitting through your lecture, I am sure RISD will be at the top of her list. I also know a few RISD alumni who are fantastic artists and wonderful people.

  • @candib9710
    @candib9710 Před 4 lety +13

    I’m not in your class or your school and I find this very interesting and funny. Especially the part when you got side tracked going off on a tangent about hiccuping 😂

  • @PolRaDaemon
    @PolRaDaemon Před 3 lety +1

    I just HAVE TO say this session was absolutely BRILLIANT! I am not a student, I studied engineering and later also illustration, am a huge fan of industrial design and despite working in the field for 20 odd years I still found this excellent.
    Please do not think for one second we are not following or not entertained.
    Excellent work - I am now going to go back and watch your previous sessions about Art Nouveau! I hope you will do one for Googie too at some point!
    Keep up the excellent work!

  • @alberthafreislich3533

    Matthew, you are an extraordinary teacher! I am a Primary School teacher from South Africa and come from an academic family that loves history and art. The way in which you combined these two fields with your remarkable knowledge and passion for this topic is inspiring! I now understand objects that were in my grandparents' homes so much better.

  • @4illeen
    @4illeen Před 2 lety +3

    This video was one of my best random finds on this platform and even though I am not your student and two years late to the party, I have listened through and learned a lot out of it. You have a very natural and clear way of conveying information. I didn't feel like I was sitting in a lecture, I felt like a good friend of mine wanted to share with me something they are very passionate about and it so happened that they knew a lot about art deco. I will definitely check other videos now. Greetings from Poland.

  • @mrretrovampire
    @mrretrovampire Před 3 lety +2

    What a fantastic summary of this style and period ! I have been in love with this addictive material ,actively collecting it from 25 until the age of 65, and still pursuing it .

  • @Monkismo
    @Monkismo Před 2 lety

    I have always loved and dabbled in art, but it is a real escape from the world's horrors these days. So glad I found these lectures. Thanks, you're the best!

  • @deborahdavis6801
    @deborahdavis6801 Před 3 lety

    I also am not one of your students but as a 64 year old woman I am now obsessed with your program! You are wonderful in your presentation, being quite natural and including so many aspects of humanity in your teaching. Thank you for helping expand knowledge!

  • @keeferhuges307
    @keeferhuges307 Před rokem +1

    Yes, yes, we are still watching at the very end. No, no, we're not doing anything else. We're riveted to the screen.
    Such a good teacher.
    k

  • @sethbrown1763
    @sethbrown1763 Před 2 lety +1

    I just want to say that I wandered onto your video Sunday, 3rd April 2022 and I watched THE WHOLE THING!!!
    :)
    Since that seemed to be a concern for you. I am not an industrial design student. I'm a retired IT guy.
    It was interesting. Your enthusiasm for the subject was lovely.
    You made it very engaging AND you made it all make sense. How Paris 1925, the emergence of new materials/new tech influenced design and modern life, how people's expectations were changed and channeled by design and tech.
    Very interesting ideas.
    Thank you, sir!

  • @combatgirl38
    @combatgirl38 Před 2 lety +1

    Also here of my own free will, and I feel grateful for it too! I grew up in a very large family of doctors and academics and listening to you crack deadpan jokes and move on as if you'd never made them is my second favorite part of stumbling upon and slipping into the back of this class. The first is learning the technical angles of an era that stole and kept my heart almost 40 years ago. I have always found great joy in the streamlining designs and I had No idea that it also serves a key purpose in structural integrity.
    Thank you very much for your time and excellent deliverance of your vast knowledge of this endlessly fascinating subject! I will be looking forward to seeking out the rest of your classes.

    • @combatgirl38
      @combatgirl38 Před 2 lety

      I'm from Minneapolis, where I am right now because Minnesotans have a curse of Always coming back [if you aren't fabulously rich] after having traveled and lived elsewhere, and I had to look up Donald Deskey. I must say that I was shocked to see that he is from Blue Earth, MN, because even today that is the middle of nowhere. I can't imagine it rearing someone so majorly artistically influential as he! After shamefully admitting that I've Somehow gone this far without recognizing his name, I was disappointed to find that I'm not a big fan of the chunky deco styles that I've seen of his just now. I Was, however, elated to see that I adore his mid century designs and remember always liking those early Jiffy and Crest color and design schemes. I'm excited to find out more about his work.
      The Minneapolis Museum of Art owns a jade green enamel and chrome art deco vanity in the skyscraper motif that is Impossibly tall and narrow and shiny and so Goddamn *Epic* that I had to seek out someone of authority when I was there last (I live across the street), and ask them where the Heck it is because I haven't seen it in years. She said that they've parked it in storage where it actually Lives and it's only on display for special occasions. It's an Absolute Travesty. I feel like picketing over it!!!

    • @combatgirl38
      @combatgirl38 Před 2 lety

      Sorry I keep commenting but that "The Zephyr" desk clock, c. 1934 you commented on is also part of the MIA! I'm not trying to be a "Hater", but if we can look at some of those 'contemporary modern abstract' paintings made in the last decade every single time we visit, I certainly think that the 3 Kem Weber pieces we have Plenty of room for can come up from the cellar and join the daily family activities with everyone else. It's only logical. Gawd!
      Just discovering the Entire gifted Modernism Collection (...Of Incredible Stuff! ), I see the red Ice Gun you loved ( as did I!) is also in our substantial stash, so you likely know this already. There's so much gaping space at the MIA that we could make way for the entire collection and likely draw far more consistent interest than the gloomy period room in which George Washington's ghost sits bored to death inside, year after year after year...

  • @beulahsbandana5742
    @beulahsbandana5742 Před 4 lety +1

    These lectures have been such an excellent introduction into the world of ID! Thank you for posting these publicly Matthew! My husband and I have loved watched them. Please keep posting them!!

    • @HistoryofID
      @HistoryofID  Před 4 lety

      Hooray! Many thanks. Class starts again soon and I will get the first few that were live last time up here as well....

  • @android01978
    @android01978 Před 2 lety +1

    I guess I should thank Covid. Without it, this would have been limited to those in your class. Instead, here I am in Melbourne, Australia enjoying this look into Art Deco while wondering what I missed in weeks 1-4.
    Thank you for making this available for the world to see.

  • @philippeborg
    @philippeborg Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you! I discovered your video by chance (a year later). I'm just someone who likes Art Déco and, thanks to you, I learned so much... (greetings from Belgium!)

  • @maurinedoyle9964
    @maurinedoyle9964 Před 2 lety +1

    Not a student but you had me at Art Deco - of which I can't get enough
    You taught me so much
    Thank you for this and your time

  • @Tollef.m
    @Tollef.m Před rokem +1

    Absolutely incredible presentation. The 2 hours actually went by really fast. A+ from beginning to end. Massive thank you for sharing your extensive knowledge, expertise and enthusiasm. Will be watching this again.

  • @juanmaperera
    @juanmaperera Před 2 lety +1

    I wish I have a teacher like you, Matthew. Absolutely beautiful presentation. Full of examples, references and in depth analysis of this fantastic era of design. And I love your touch of humour too. I'm subscribing to your channel and I will be browsing your videos for the next couple of weeks, maybe. Keep up the good work, and thank you for sharing your amazing knowledge and taking the time to do this.

  • @jenniferharper4962
    @jenniferharper4962 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow! Came across this gem in my feed! Love this. Quite funny, at 42.52 mins in he says none of that matter, no one is still watching! Of course I am!

  • @ChuckStaley
    @ChuckStaley Před 7 měsíci

    When I hit my 85th birthday almost a decade ago, I was bored and tried my hand at creating Art Deco wall art. Now I'm creating videos. Everyone is invited to stop by. Matthew, I enjoyed the learning opportunity. 😎

  • @lindaoffenbach
    @lindaoffenbach Před 2 lety

    Well, this I have to say is a genuine diamond on YT. Although I’ve had Art History as a minor subject, my specific interest in the area of industrial arts has always been Art Deco. I made it an integrated element in the interior design of our house as much as feasible including accessories, although it’s never been easy. The history of Art Deco itself and its flow of development is profusely well explained in this lecture. I’ve learned many new details and facts. Thank you so much.

  • @FlyBoyDash1
    @FlyBoyDash1 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you Matthew! 23 y/o architecture student and you changed my world!

    • @HistoryofID
      @HistoryofID  Před 4 lety +1

      Hooray! Glad you found he videos and have enjoyed them!

  • @blumasa5941
    @blumasa5941 Před 2 lety

    I'm an industrial designer. I never stopped being a student. Thanks for this and all the other videos you've published since.

  • @shirleykathan-sayess5764
    @shirleykathan-sayess5764 Před 2 lety +1

    OMG! I wish all my hot messes were as excellent as yours. Absolutely wonderful video. How I wish the art history classes I took in the 1960’s (Mass College of Art) had been as interesting and the professors as charismatic as you. THANK YOU! Now I must watch your other videos. And, BTW, I watched to the end and enjoyed every minute. And if you can forgive a 73-year-old grandmother, you are too hard on yourself!
    ❤️ Shirley

  • @tanyakolotusha3224
    @tanyakolotusha3224 Před 3 lety +7

    Really amazing lecture, thank you so much for sharing

  • @boblee5556
    @boblee5556 Před 3 lety +1

    Professor Bird,
    I am a Computer Programming student in CA and i am going to use a quote from you in a paper I am writing on the bad designs of online Ads. You are awesome and this class is an amazing resource. Thank you so much for your time and the effort of these videos.

  • @odysseasgrey7364
    @odysseasgrey7364 Před 2 lety +1

    What a great presentation! Thank you so much for makin this publicly available. Love your sence of humor as well. Thanks again!

  • @kimmckisick-monroe8578

    you happened to show up in my feed... and now I wish I had been an actual student of yours. you may have been sitting at home, talking to the interverse, imagining no one was listening... but you reached me and enriched my love for and understanding of all things shiny, pretty, innovative and usefully wonderful. thank you!

  • @tobeyforsman
    @tobeyforsman Před rokem

    Sunday coffee, building furniture and watching/listening to this lecture is a treat. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @davids9588
    @davids9588 Před 7 měsíci

    Bravo! We're still here at the end of the video. My wife and I watched it over a three-evening period. It's good to see it when someone adapts to the COVID and post-COVID era. Good lessons and material. Maybe our next generation will make some of these old things new again.

  • @chadHK
    @chadHK Před 7 měsíci

    Self-depreciating aside, this is one hell of a tutorial that is engaging and very thorough. I was distracted by the teacher perhaps not wearing pants, and the phallic-like silver object on the shelf behind him didn't help, but this and his other vids on Bel Geddes and ID are good enough to buy. I am very grateful for this man.

  • @MrZooBreak
    @MrZooBreak Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks, Matthew! This is AWESOME! Charming, funny, informative, and very compelling. Art Deco really needed the in-depth treatment you give it here. Watched it to the end with relish, and have started watching the one on Art Noveau. Absolutely fascinating, and very well presented. No need to stop apologizing, since it's so funny when you do!

  • @SM-mb4im
    @SM-mb4im Před 3 lety +1

    I'm only :20 minutes into this lecture and already my understanding of art deco has been forever expanded thanks to your BEAUTIFULLY assembled presentation. You make crisis mode look easy and I can't thank you enough. (Now back to the show.)

  • @CookedOnions
    @CookedOnions Před 2 lety

    An interesting time in history. A few years ago "eavesdropping" on a classroom would have been considered rude. Now I can watch a classroom in the front seat and get the same experience as everyone else. I think that is absolutely amazing.

  • @yl9154
    @yl9154 Před 2 lety

    I can't help but think that maybe there is a design lesson to be drawn from this video intended for a class and that now has 140 000 views! Thank you, it was an enjoyable and educative 2 hours.

  • @finolacat8355
    @finolacat8355 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you. I am from Italy and loved Art Deco even when it wasn't popular here due to its overlapping the Fascist regime. I love the connection with industrial design and engineering.

  • @lancegreene871
    @lancegreene871 Před 2 lety

    Just a random environmental scientist enjoying these videos while I toil away on work. I'm finding all of these presentations really entertaining. Perhaps its the nostalgia of sitting in college lecture, but as a novice furniture maker/hobbyist, I'm finding a bit of inspiration

  • @sunnygreenings4840
    @sunnygreenings4840 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm no longer a student, but I love art history and all the objects and design you talked about. You were just so good. You looked relaxed and prepared, and the talk + visuals held together so well. I learned loads from you while having a great time. And now I have new ways to look at designed things. A+!

  • @peterhudson4027
    @peterhudson4027 Před 6 měsíci

    I came across this video while idly searching for inspiring art deco images for a home art project, and I am now hooked on your whole lecture series! Thank you for making these available to us all.

  • @MrRapota
    @MrRapota Před 2 lety

    Let me thank you! I'm from Ukraine and you're the best lecturer. I'm happy to learn from you! Thanks a lot!

  • @waltercook7508
    @waltercook7508 Před 3 lety

    Dear Matthew Bird. I am only writing this as I am concerned that you think that you are communicating something that is not well edited as book would be. I love your approach in this lecture. As an old sifter through op, junk, second hand and antique shops, especially from 1960 to 1993 I loved your lecture. It was like visiting all the shops previously listed, with someone who could identify and fit into a larger story, artefacts and material culture that wash up from our past. Keep it up! Viva for the junk shop approach to industrial design history.

  • @ElmarLecher
    @ElmarLecher Před 2 lety

    Thank you a lot. I am not a student but a woodworker and this is the best series on Industrial Design.
    Super Awesome!

  • @gregofili
    @gregofili Před rokem

    I am still watching. Awesome information dense content ! Mr Bird has great energy and his subject matter expertise is a gift for the rest of us.

  • @oddsbodkin5398
    @oddsbodkin5398 Před 2 lety

    I came upon your pandemic-driven workaround presentation, and I have to say I was utterly charmed and disarmed by your honesty and complete brilliance. And humor. And thoroughness. This was revelatory, and fun, and you are a fine professor indeed. I was born in 1953, and grew up with those bakelite phones, and those aluminum coffee percolators. And those roundish radios, never knowing that the horizontal lines were not only for looks but for venting heat from the components inside. The skyscraper-imitating cabinets were glorious to behold. And the early radio cabinets on their tall sculpted legs. I could go on and on, but this was a fine detour to take into a world I know very little about. Thank you. Odds Bodkin

    • @HistoryofID
      @HistoryofID  Před 2 lety

      Many thanks! Coming from you that means even more! Story telling is the underlying skill set!!!

  • @sicplano
    @sicplano Před 3 lety

    I’m not a student but come from a scientific academic background (PhD Microbiologist). If I had it to do all over again this would be a career path I might pursue. Though Covid is a very difficult time for us all, the crystalline shapes of viruses and some other microbial life forms are amazing. They should be looked at more from a form is function perspective. I think they have many hidden secrets to offer. Many are also quite aesthetically beautiful in their order and pattern. Thank you for posting such a wonderful presentation. Your class is blessed to have you.

  • @LukeVilent
    @LukeVilent Před 2 lety

    I am an AI engineer from Germany with a degree in an even more advanced math, and a wannabe sci-fi writer/game designer. It is because of my desire to be a game designer that became Art Deco one of my fascinations along with Art Nouveau and Romanic architecture. I find this style as an example of a celebration of art growing through (self-imposed) restrictions, much like Japanese Ukiyo-E (Hokusai, Hiroshige) and pixelart.
    This lecture is an absolute pleasure to watch and listen to, I would definitely check out your other lectures.

  • @m.entera3196
    @m.entera3196 Před 3 lety

    I'm a full time professional artist now in my seventies, and while my education was in classical painting and sculpting technique I've always been a huge admirer of illustration and applied arts, and RISD has always been the school where so many great ones have started their careers. And also teach there. Thanks for posting these lectures.

  • @amateurgenius5931
    @amateurgenius5931 Před 2 lety

    I have never had much of an interest in art. I stumbled upon this video at 1am and watched the whole thing. Very interesting. Thank you!

  • @johni4213
    @johni4213 Před 2 lety +1

    Don't know how I got here and not a student but love Art Deco and Steam Punk! This is an awesome video! Thank you look forward to more!

  • @rachelkoiks
    @rachelkoiks Před 2 lety

    I’m very happy you included Norman Bel Geddes! As much as I love Art Deco, I HATED this dresser in my bedroom because it’s made of metal and didn’t match my solid wood furniture in my bedroom, in a house built by my great grandfather during the deco period leaving behind deco hardware and features scattered all around. When I was debating on painting this metal dresser or selling it, I thought to learn about it before destroying it by paint and googled the label mark, even though I thought it was cheap 1970’s furniture. And that was when I first heard of the Geddes name, and I was shocked when I saw my dresser sold on numerous sites for $3000-$4000! I couldn’t believe that I was so wrong and thought this dresser was much newer, BECAUSE of its design and made of metal. After learning about him and learning about Futurama, his ideas of freeways and his designs SO early before many other designers. I gained so much respect for him (and the dresser) even though he had some radical ideas and thought so highly of himself. Some were pure science fiction and some were just so cool and ahead of his time.
    **I’m at the end and I was listening! 🙋🏻‍♀️
    (I used to sneak into an elective history class my senior year in high school 2 days a week because I had a free period.
    I sat behind him while he stood at the projector so he wouldn’t see/recognize me.
    He noticed me 20 mins into the 2nd day, did a double take and said, “Wait, you’re not in this class.”
    I sort of pleaded and asked to stay when I said I wanted to take this class but it wouldn’t fit in my schedule.
    That’s when he noticed my desk.
    “AND YOU’RE TAKING NOTES???”
    “Out!” He pointed to the door, skeptical because I’ve pulled a prank on him the year before doing something similar.
    I was bummed. I actually like history.
    So he told me if I want to join his class, I’ll need a note every day I’m there and won’t be able to get school credit for it so note taking won’t be required.) 😂

  • @ramielledejager3606
    @ramielledejager3606 Před rokem

    Thank you so much for doing this. I am an entrepreneur in South Africa and I run an Industrial Design and manufacturing company- my partner is an industrial design and this really helped me understand deeper about Industrial Design.

  • @HillbillySkeleton
    @HillbillySkeleton Před rokem

    I love and collect Art Deco and I appreciate your erudite knowledge about the subject. I'm discovering information about the things I own that I never knew! Don't underestimate how entertaining you are either. I do usually give up on a CZcams by now but I'm sticking with this to the end. A constant diorama of examples is capable of maintaining my interest to the end. Thank you.

  • @lori8553
    @lori8553 Před 2 lety

    Dear Sir,
    I am so impressed with your knowledge and feel extremely lucky to have run across your online class.
    Although you should be paid well for your classes.
    I was a sign painter 👨‍🎨 back in the day and just as my skill level became professional in lettering it all went to the computer cutters. At that point I focused on layout and design. And onto fine art classes.
    So you can see how much I appreciate you with a great deal of respect.
    Thank you for your passion.....

  • @louisecarson3912
    @louisecarson3912 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm not a student,.more over a middle aged woman in love with all things Art Deco. Looking forward to viewing other weeks and topics you have posted. An absolute delight. Thank you

  • @BrokebackBob
    @BrokebackBob Před 2 lety +1

    Matthew, I just discovered your channel and I am so glad I did. I think you're an excellent teacher and I thoroughly enjoyed this video and I stayed to the last second absolutely engaged. I just wanted to let you know how much I appreciate all the work that it took for you to put this material together and talk about it so knowledgeably. There is nothing greater than a fine teacher.

  • @souprememc
    @souprememc Před 2 lety

    I’m a software engineer now, but started my career in the dotcom era as a web designer and ID became a huge interest…fascinating lecture!

  • @pistolannie6500
    @pistolannie6500 Před rokem

    I'm not only STILL watching..... I'm... STIIILLL Watching 👀 (2yrs later) I made them into a PLAYLIST, And I rewatch them!
    I find them not only informative, BUT, also surprisingly soothing and calming. Chill Out AND learn at the same time! 😎🤓🤗