What I Think About Art: #1 (The Most Famous)

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  • čas přidán 23. 07. 2024
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    Please use the wikipedia links below to educate yourself and practice forming your own opinions about these art pieces:
    Mona Lisa: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mona_Lisa
    The Starry Night: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sta...
    The Scream: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Scream
    The Last Supper: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Las...
    The Creation of Adam: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cre...
    Girl with a Pearl Earring: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girl_wi...
    The Persistence of Memory: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Per...
    The Night Watch: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Nig...
    The Birth of Venus: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bir...
    American Gothic: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/America...
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Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @jtpyro4352
    @jtpyro4352 Před 7 lety +838

    "Personally i make art because...*sigh*... I don't know why i make art." that was my favorite phrase in this video XD i don't know why it made me laugh

    • @bryandogoc2122
      @bryandogoc2122 Před 5 lety +1

      TowerProductions i can relate lol

    • @CanalTremocos
      @CanalTremocos Před 4 lety +1

      For an instant it looked Peter would finally settle the Plato vs Aquinas feud. It fizzled.

    • @maggs131
      @maggs131 Před 4 lety

      His follow up and redirection is just as funny. ......shes got a really big earring.... lol

  • @Kelly99844
    @Kelly99844 Před 7 lety +558

    I never EVER noticed that the Mona Lisa had a veil. That's so trippy.

    • @OD_30
      @OD_30 Před 4 lety +4

      Same here!

    • @ricardorochadev
      @ricardorochadev Před 4 lety +6

      It has, and it exposes the main reason Monalisa is the most important painting in Reinascence Art. The technique called sfumato was a revolutionary idea to reproduce nuance of light and shadow, by mixin of
      different pigments, which is essentially important to recreate a subtle face expression,
      (or the absence of it.)

    • @denmun9722
      @denmun9722 Před 3 lety +1

      Mandela effect

    • @luismangiaterra1031
      @luismangiaterra1031 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ricardorochadev I think the mina lisa as a man and a woman.
      From one angle she is smiling and from a different angle, she's not.

    • @maggs131
      @maggs131 Před 2 lety

      Not same here.... I always knew

  • @democratictotalitariansoci1462

    2:18 ..and this was painted by Leonardo Di Capr%$% Di Vinchi... You killed me with that dude. subbed

    • @xelsor
      @xelsor Před 7 lety +34

      not sure... is this a comedy- or an artchannel?

    • @democratictotalitariansoci1462
      @democratictotalitariansoci1462 Před 7 lety +32

      xelsor​ art requires high IQ, high IQ likes humor, art without a bit of humor isn't art. I think.

    • @drew.k2385
      @drew.k2385 Před 7 lety +9

      i take that comment is comedy as well?

    • @spoopers101
      @spoopers101 Před 7 lety +24

      Da Vinci, not Di Vinchi

    • @jorgepeterbarton
      @jorgepeterbarton Před 7 lety +6

      what if he did, like inception innit.

  • @resikek1207
    @resikek1207 Před 7 lety +1711

    your sense of humor is so fantastically dry and subtle that it goes over a lot of heads. thankyou

    • @jasjkdgerclynregret3272
      @jasjkdgerclynregret3272 Před 7 lety +15

      no, I get the jokes, they're just not funny

    • @resikek1207
      @resikek1207 Před 7 lety +39

      Jasjkdgerclyn regret thats always subjective friendo
      and youre here complaining on his videos anyway??

    • @cassiesmith4826
      @cassiesmith4826 Před 7 lety +23

      Keresiya Lovely-Girl I agree. I love it. He's very intriguing and attractive to me.

    • @Eduardo-hc9tk
      @Eduardo-hc9tk Před 5 lety +6

      Didn't know people who don't find something humorous, is considered a hater. Thanks for the lesson, @Keres.

    • @TheDantheman12121
      @TheDantheman12121 Před 5 lety +6

      @@jasjkdgerclynregret3272 Exactly lol. I appreciate the fact he does it all dryly and does not make a big deal out of his jokes like he expects you to laugh but people get his jokes bro trust me.

  • @peter_draws
    @peter_draws  Před 8 lety +1151

    When I was little all the kids my age told each other that the Mona Lisa was special and had some sort of strange optical illusion that made her eyes look right at you no matter where you were. Now, years later, I'm only half sure this isn't true.

    • @roosvervelde3180
      @roosvervelde3180 Před 8 lety +71

      Did you notice that the two parts of the horizon don't line up? One is higher than the other. Pretty awesome mistake for such a famous painting.

    • @peter_draws
      @peter_draws  Před 8 lety +420

      A mistake easily avoided by drawing her headless.

    • @Johnsavag
      @Johnsavag Před 8 lety +19

      Machiavelli and Da Vinci actually conspired to reroute and steal the Arno river in the background of the painting, but when several workers were killed in the attempt they went their separate ways. Machiavelli left politics and wrote The Prince, and Da Vinci threw the river in his painting.

    • @jordancarey9246
      @jordancarey9246 Před 8 lety +21

      +Roos Vervelde he did it on purpose in order to make the left side look bigger, therefore enhancing the feminine within the painting. considering the Mona Lisa is of a hermaphrodite, and Da Vinci believed in the divine feminine, I think it's a pretty important mistake d:

    • @roosvervelde3180
      @roosvervelde3180 Před 8 lety +2

      +Jordan elliott Did it really have a reason? I did not know!

  • @ohvnaq
    @ohvnaq Před 8 lety +216

    i hit subscibe the moment you said "if they chopped off her head right here and i could see more of the background..."

  • @jadek8437
    @jadek8437 Před 7 lety +285

    My favourite part is all the unnecessary camera angles

  • @fruit5003
    @fruit5003 Před 7 lety +328

    Yup, that *painting* was really well *drawn*

    • @EyeLean5280
      @EyeLean5280 Před 7 lety +43

      Well, to be fair, most paintings have drawing at their foundation.

    • @fruit5003
      @fruit5003 Před 7 lety +8

      Of course, that's completely understandable.

    • @brainwashedarchive
      @brainwashedarchive Před 7 lety +1

      Fruit500 LMAO

    • @NATA5II
      @NATA5II Před 6 lety +6

      My teachers always said painting is drawing.

    • @-zephyressence-2018
      @-zephyressence-2018 Před 4 lety +1

      In order to paint you must first learn to draw, because drawing is understanding how to see. And you can't create without understanding what you see. And someone else once said "I don't paint, I draw with a brush instead of a pencil."

  • @adfxceedfgdfvvbasdfrtvcx
    @adfxceedfgdfvvbasdfrtvcx Před 8 lety +711

    I almost thought the last full brown page was going to be a rant on some modern art piece

  • @nola1439
    @nola1439 Před 7 lety +113

    Michelangelo really knocked it out the park painting these weird bulbous people
    Favorite thing anyone's ever said probably

  • @CeruleanPandas
    @CeruleanPandas Před 7 lety +594

    "You don't have to be good at drawing feet. At all. Not even a little bit. You can draw feet...really bad" 19:25
    That part is funny AND encouraging, since all the toes I draw look like diseased caterpillars

    • @bubblebass1902
      @bubblebass1902 Před 7 lety +5

      fey yknow what else is deceased? Me after reading this comment 😏

    • @whataboutbob9786
      @whataboutbob9786 Před 6 lety +4

      Athletes foot has been the bane of man since the invention of boots! Now that I think of it, sometimes my toes feel like hairless catapillars.

    • @darbdarb7611
      @darbdarb7611 Před 6 lety +8

      I don't know how to draw feet so I just draw socks instead

    • @Angelina-nm9lx
      @Angelina-nm9lx Před 6 lety

      francis. yr comment has me wheezing ghtdniheszvfgf

    • @Space_Potat
      @Space_Potat Před 5 lety +1

      francis poor caterpillars

  • @coleyamos
    @coleyamos Před 6 lety +26

    I like him. I like that he is comfortable admitting he doesn't know things. He doesn't seek to impress, only to express.
    He has my sub.

  • @sixdsix5028
    @sixdsix5028 Před 8 lety +346

    By Leonardo Dicaprio...lol

  • @lunarlight2585
    @lunarlight2585 Před 8 lety +637

    I make art, I don't know why I make art,... She has a big earring 😂

  • @9Tensai9
    @9Tensai9 Před 7 lety +33

    Whenever I see your videos it feels like when you visit a friend's house, but he's an artsy dude.
    And then he starts talking about art and/or showing you his drawings and stuff.
    I like it

  • @MakzLazor555
    @MakzLazor555 Před 7 lety +69

    how distraught you were at girl with a pearl earring
    i feel like you want to be mad but you don't know how

  • @emmyliv6731
    @emmyliv6731 Před 7 lety +268

    "This is the first thing that struck me besides the naked girl in the middle"

  • @trixielove
    @trixielove Před 8 lety +77

    thank you for thinking for me, i think i appreciate it.. do i appreciate it? idk

  • @sarelvalentin6076
    @sarelvalentin6076 Před 7 lety +135

    "its by Leonardo DiCapr- DaVinci" that would have been golden

    • @Sunwakka
      @Sunwakka Před 7 lety

      came down to comment that, but you beat me to it

    • @getmine9490
      @getmine9490 Před 7 lety

      I would bet he beats something else as well

    • @getmine9490
      @getmine9490 Před 7 lety

      Maybe something along the lines of ham?

    • @glassofmilk7141
      @glassofmilk7141 Před 7 lety

      +Dat One Boi

  • @1atomicsquid
    @1atomicsquid Před 8 lety +10

    "its okay to not think every painting is amazing just 'cause it famous."
    preach!

  • @jasminezhu6282
    @jasminezhu6282 Před 8 lety +110

    For those wishing to see more of the background: s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/19/29/31/192931104542c0b845ff1c81649c3df8.jpg

  • @Blaze22F
    @Blaze22F Před 7 lety +51

    "Personally, I make art cause...........I don't know why I make art" LOL that distressed expression made me spit out my rice

  • @alexandrakaidan-berry332
    @alexandrakaidan-berry332 Před 7 lety +23

    You are a fantastic teacher. The art world needs the pretension to go. Goodness all the cruel art critiques I suffered through. Hopefully you are the beginning to new art education. You are awesome!

  • @BeardedBarley1
    @BeardedBarley1 Před 8 lety +116

    I really thoroughly enjoyed your humorous critique of famous artwork, especially coming from an artist like you. I have always found it bizarre that to "appreciate" famous artwork, we must take classes like art history (which I did and always aced) to be told what to think about them. I think there is a correlation between poetry at its height and "drawings/paintings": At one point, poetry was soooooooo popular like pop music. It was the rage at the time. Then people tried to complicate it so as to come across as intellectually superior to the others in order to outdo the other poets while others read more into the poems than was actually there. Suddenly, no one liked poetry the way it used to be liked and poets could not earn a living off of their work. This kind of art is the same way. If it's too complicated for the average Joe to understand, people are going to stop paying attention. So to try be "the best" at art isn't necessarily a good thing because it loses people.

    • @BeardedBarley1
      @BeardedBarley1 Před 8 lety +8

      I have another example of what I'm trying to say. My sons were wonderful and greatly promising composers of a type of rock music when they were younger, composing many songs before they were eighteen. Their songs had great hooks, carried great weight emotionally, and encouraged the listeners even possibly to step into the spiritual side of things to bring about a kind of worshipful attitude toward God while listening to it. Then they met a little twerp who thought he was "all that" musically because his grandfather was a famous pianist. He corrupted their art by telling them the chords needed to be more complicated. But in so doing, their work lost the simplistic beauty they originally had, feeling forced and not emotionally uplifting and freeing, losing what was originally great about it. After the loser burned them, several years later, they came out of that problem with music and once again began creating the emotionally and spiritually rich music they used to create and love.

    • @BeardedBarley1
      @BeardedBarley1 Před 8 lety +6

      So no one should have to explain art if it is really art. If it moves a person in whatever way emotionally, it's art. If not, it's practice. But what moves one person might not another. The saying that "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder" is really applicable here. To complicate it just means there is something lacking inherently in the work itself. And so I enjoyed the tongue in cheek observations with regard to these famous works of art since the art snobs have way overcomplicated them as well as other works, corrupting many new aspiring artists so that they create things like a dot on a white canvas. Oh brother!

    • @Demention94
      @Demention94 Před 8 lety +17

      +BeardedBarley1 Nice comment. I think intellectualizing art is a bit like marrying your second cousin. Just kinda wrong.

    • @Bilesmith
      @Bilesmith Před 8 lety +8

      yeah, art is supposed to be the opposite of science. so putting art in "borders", linearizing it and making it scientific (basically telling artists and audiences what they should or should not like) should really be unappreciated in the art world. I mean there is technicality in art, and you can be taught to appreciate it, but I dont believe for a second that (for example) people should flock to the mona lisa just because it's supposed to be "beautiful" or what not

    • @slendy9600
      @slendy9600 Před 7 lety +1

      BeardedBarley1 very interesting perspective. i think your onto something

  • @drbtea3283
    @drbtea3283 Před 7 lety +43

    "I think I would like this more if she was headless." oh man i lost it there. Love your humor and videos. You got yourself a sub 👍

  • @michaelhoilman6897
    @michaelhoilman6897 Před 4 lety +5

    I see what you are doing, Sir. Lulling us into this tongue-in-cheek banter, all the while giving us a solid art history lesson. Not to mention telling us it's alright to feel how we feel about a painting, giving us agency to have confidence in our own opinion. The little caveats of intrigue to lead us into thinking critically for OUURSELVES. Kudos to you! (And yes, I wrote this purposely in a somewhat "high-brow" manner) wink, wink, nudge, nudge.

  • @rileysnyder3941
    @rileysnyder3941 Před 7 lety +2

    The Mona Lisa is famous because it is one of the first paintings that explored the idea of foreground, middle ground, and background. Davinci was one of the first Renaissance artists to capture a since of depth.

  • @EmilyConnery
    @EmilyConnery Před 7 lety +167

    I like your face. and your art.

  • @DerEineDa96
    @DerEineDa96 Před 8 lety +52

    i really didn't see this coming, but it's a great idea for a series! i thoroughly enjoyed this, hope you'll do more in the future.
    have a nice day, peter!

  • @artdestination3009
    @artdestination3009 Před 7 lety +310

    you can't tell if he's joking or not

    • @gregorysgarrison
      @gregorysgarrison Před 7 lety +151

      In life now and forever, always assume people are joking. They usually are. Likewise, you yourself should never take anything seriously and always be joking.
      You're welcome

    • @Cabazorro0
      @Cabazorro0 Před 7 lety +125

      Greg Garrison you are joking right?

    • @cartapax5077
      @cartapax5077 Před 6 lety +3

      Neither he.

    • @xdtony650
      @xdtony650 Před 5 lety +1

      Assumption is the mother of all failures

  • @dinkysinky7714
    @dinkysinky7714 Před 7 lety +8

    I saw The Creation of Adam in the Sistine Chapel last year and it was the most amazing thing I've ever seen. Seeing the Sistine Chapel was literally the only goal I set for myself when I was younger. I'm 16 and I have no more life goals. Nice.

    • @Bobstew68
      @Bobstew68 Před 7 lety +4

      Next goal: Earn all achievements in Clicker Heroes!

    • @Buford_T_Justice1
      @Buford_T_Justice1 Před 7 lety +1

      Dani Siclari Absolutely! When I first saw the Ceiling of The Sistine Chapel my mind was figuratively blown away and I literally had a stroke. Humbling as it is awesome!

  • @shaheerrahman4278
    @shaheerrahman4278 Před 7 lety +3

    dang im surprised about how knowledgeable Peter is about art history. I love it!!

  • @Impleione
    @Impleione Před 8 lety +18

    "Personally, I make art, because...
    I don't know why I make art...
    She's got a big earring"
    taken out of context, this had me giggling :D
    keep doing all the things!

  • @sf842
    @sf842 Před 8 lety +6

    this is it
    this is my favorite video on the internet
    thank you Peter, i can't wait to see the next episode, this is absolute gold

  • @stephaniel.3799
    @stephaniel.3799 Před 8 lety +9

    I was cracking up at the Botticelli foot montage haha

  • @neamo3899
    @neamo3899 Před 7 lety +68

    I don't even like art but this man is the new Bob Ross, his voice is so relaxing

  • @lowhangingvegetable
    @lowhangingvegetable Před 8 lety +7

    This was genuinely really enjoyable. I hope there are more to come

  • @roosvervelde3180
    @roosvervelde3180 Před 8 lety +194

    Why does it feel like Peter is slowly turning into Bob Ross xD

  • @itsorigano4870
    @itsorigano4870 Před 7 lety +6

    Honestly I never saw that veil until today. Thanks for zooming in, really

  • @hesketh9008
    @hesketh9008 Před 6 lety +6

    3:05 “... and her hands”
    I think I know a certain cat loving serial killer who feels the same way.

  • @jorgepeterbarton
    @jorgepeterbarton Před 7 lety +30

    Munch is actually good but after seeing a whole gallery of his work in Bergen, The Scream was actually the most underwhelming.
    Same with Van Gogh, tourists gathered around sunflowers, when its not his best-possibly the most mundane, and there's great other stuff around in the van gogh gallery people just walk past like zombies.
    And the last supper was just really shit(at least in person nowadays), compared to basically every church in Italy-or art in the very same church.. There's a massive door in the middle of it and its always re-edited in pictures for colours.

    • @jorgepeterbarton
      @jorgepeterbarton Před 7 lety +1

      and yeh, same with vermeer....his other work is actually great and stands out......girl with a pearl earing is just a boring nice painting, someone wrote a book about it or something.
      Dali is just a bad painter, technically even in the modern sense.
      He improved 500% when he used film and photography...

    • @samcollins5276
      @samcollins5276 Před 7 lety

      Nighthawks by Munch is probably my favourite painting ever. You should watch TheNerdwriter1's video on Nighthawks. Actually, all of TheNerdwriter1's videos

    • @jorgepeterbarton
      @jorgepeterbarton Před 7 lety

      Sam Collins as in the one by Hopper or is this something else?

    • @samcollins5276
      @samcollins5276 Před 7 lety

      jorgepeterbarton The channel is TheNerdwriter1

    • @givernymiedema6036
      @givernymiedema6036 Před 4 lety

      @@jorgepeterbarton Yeah, it's hoppers'

  • @streetscooterfilmz
    @streetscooterfilmz Před 8 lety +3

    I have been watching your videos for about two years now and you have inspired me to make my drawings more abstract, yet I have just started painting and I would love for you to do more painting to help me get inspiration. Keep doing what your doing because I love your videos

  • @coffeebot3000
    @coffeebot3000 Před 7 lety +2

    This was really Interesting to hear your take on these paintings.
    I'd love to see another installment of this.

  • @MasonWestWriting
    @MasonWestWriting Před 7 lety +32

    Your thoughts on art are interesting to someone like me who has only a little formal training in art history. Even when I don't outright agree with you, your ideas are still interesting and well spoken. Your theory that the Mona Lisa's fame rests with its having gone viral after the theft is plausible. Though in some cases-the Vermeer and Munch, for examples-the fame legitimately rests in the art itself though perhaps in subtleties that might be beyond my reach.
    My friend Hugh Starbuck has written about Botticelli's The Birth of Venus. This is a Renaissance painting, which means it's at the beginning of the Western tradition of classical art, which in turn means it is one of the first if not THE first nude, and this in Florence where the Church literally breathed down the necks of artists. Botticelli got away with the nude because an important aspect of the Renaissance was the revival of the classical Greek and Roman texts that had been preserved in the scriptoria of Medieval monasteries. The classical writings preserved civilization through the slow-motion disaster of the Dark Ages, so their value was highly esteemed. The Greek and Roman texts naturally referenced the pagan gods, but the Neo-platonic movement of Renaissance Florence tolerated these gods not as gods per se but as symbolic values in allegorical works. The Greeks and Romans had used nude physically perfect specimens to represent gods. So, as an allegory, the Birth of Venus represents the awakening at puberty of love and sexuality in an adolescent female, which is why Venus is born full-grown: puberty in the 15th century marked the onset of adulthood.
    But, allegory shmallegory, any adult human male, even a priest, isn't going to care about the allegorical value of a painting with a naked woman in the picture. He's going to be into the nude human form. That conflict is the cutting edge of the eternal conflict between authoritarians, who have always sought to shame women for their bodies, and the artists, who have always realized that the concept of beauty has its origins in the form of the nude female (or perhaps in the nude human). Art exploited the Church's tolerance for nude gods with a series of reclining nude Venus paintings ranging from Giorgione in 1510 all the way to Manet's Olympia (1863). In that 350-year span of reclining nudes, the allegorical value of Venus became more and more lip service. By the time Olympia comes along, she's become a rather emo whore ready for her next customer.
    Starbuck's book, which explains all this much better than I can, is at a.co/g9NDNyT

    • @elsagrace3893
      @elsagrace3893 Před 7 lety +5

      Mason West m'kayyy!

    • @EyeLean5280
      @EyeLean5280 Před 7 lety +3

      "Your thoughts on art are interesting to someone like me who has only a little formal training in art history."
      May I suggest you shop around a bit more, then? As someone who has a great deal of formal training in art history, I can tell you there are much more worthwhile thoughts out there on the subject.
      And I'm not just saying this because his views are unconventional. I couldn't care less about convention myself. I'm saying it because his views are ill-informed.

    • @MasonWestWriting
      @MasonWestWriting Před 7 lety +2

      EyeLean5280 oh of course I realize I've not got the brass ring yet, thank you, so of course I continue when I can with dozens of searches.
      "his views" meaning the guy in the video or High Starbuck?

    • @EyeLean5280
      @EyeLean5280 Před 7 lety +3

      In the video. He seems well-intentioned but...

    • @MasonWestWriting
      @MasonWestWriting Před 7 lety +2

      EyeLean5280 yes, that's true. All dressed up in good intentions, but...

  • @neverlandnights
    @neverlandnights Před 7 lety +28

    "Personally I make art because... I don't know why I make art..."

  • @michael3920
    @michael3920 Před 7 lety +16

    Hey Peter! can we get part 2? this was so fun to watch and i need more.

  • @luxlox9029
    @luxlox9029 Před 6 lety +1

    I think one of my favourite things are ‘The Girl with the Pearl earring” is how the earring is actually just two smudges of paint, like, just wow. It’s a really good show on how paintings utilise illusion, idk, i just really like it🤷‍♀️

  • @Vikifox_
    @Vikifox_ Před 7 lety +1

    That was soooooo amazing! AH! I can't wait to see more!

  • @Fr3akymet4l
    @Fr3akymet4l Před 7 lety +10

    I like it how he doesn't praise all these paintings just because they're famous.
    Good to hear that from a guy on CZcams who has 200.000 subs.

  • @MaryCorbell
    @MaryCorbell Před 7 lety +4

    Hi Peter! I just recently started watching your videos, though I have seen quite a few already. I really appreciate your art and your sense of humor :D please make another one of these videos, just for fun, you got me laughing :)
    You're incredibly talented and it's a pleasure to watch you work :) Keep it up, my friend!

  • @jilliangraceart
    @jilliangraceart Před 7 lety +2

    Your videos always make me laugh, I love your sense of humor. Also, I love your art so it's a win-win!

  • @sus.drawings9056
    @sus.drawings9056 Před 5 lety +1

    As someone who’s been struggling with bringing himself to create more art work, this video has helped me a lot. Since I seldomly create anything, watching your channel was making disappointed in myself, and also envious of you for always creating with your unique style almost every day. Anyway this was oddly inspiring because I do know that when I put my all into something I want to make I end up pretty happy with it. So I’ve realized maybe I just haven’t been inspired enough to make those types of pieces recently, and if that’s so then it’s okay, because if I can bring myself to create something when I know I feel like it’s right then I think I can be happier with myself. Thanks Peter…lol also your goofy little side tangents always crack me up

  • @nbrader
    @nbrader Před 7 lety +4

    22:13 I'm so glad he didn't start talking about the brown painting after American Gothic.

  • @supersayainjesus7204
    @supersayainjesus7204 Před 7 lety +14

    "Done by Leonardo DiCapr... Davinci, of course" LMAO You just caught yourself Peter!

  • @annangel4828
    @annangel4828 Před rokem

    Was having a crap day and this cheered me. You're a gem, PD!

  • @mattcallard721
    @mattcallard721 Před 8 lety +1

    Love this commentary, cant wait for part 2 Peter!!

  • @lilcelio2309
    @lilcelio2309 Před 7 lety +31

    A cool fact is that the "parachute" and the God's part of the painting in The creation of Adam, actually represents the anatomy of a human brain, Michelangelo didn't belive in God so he painted it like saying that God is a human creation... Isn't that cool?

  • @piercedbycreativity5755
    @piercedbycreativity5755 Před 8 lety +4

    WHAT AN AWESOME VIDEO KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK PETER

  • @MiaCryptkeeper
    @MiaCryptkeeper Před 8 lety +1

    Really enjoyed this video. Can't wait for the next one :)

  • @thomasfoolery9733
    @thomasfoolery9733 Před 8 lety

    I think this is AMAZING!!! Your opinions are SENSATIONAL!

  • @joshuabolin4440
    @joshuabolin4440 Před 7 lety +9

    Great channel. I love his sense of humor.

  • @LilyIggy
    @LilyIggy Před 8 lety +3

    I absolutely love this, Peter :)

  • @themarkoftheslayer1611
    @themarkoftheslayer1611 Před 4 lety +1

    This channel is a gem I’m so happy I found it

  • @Cyriljayant
    @Cyriljayant Před 6 lety +1

    The most humorous art critiques and I love it!

  • @xoXDarkCuackXox
    @xoXDarkCuackXox Před 8 lety +262

    So.. new subscriber here, im not sure if you're being sarcastic or for real or you hop from one to the other hahha
    Also you sound drunk and like you're going to burp at any time lol

  • @BrendanLee08
    @BrendanLee08 Před 8 lety +4

    I love your voice so much, it makes me sleepy so I watch it before I sleep

  • @MrBobopsp
    @MrBobopsp Před 8 lety

    this was awesome, can't wait for the next episode

  • @roadfleam
    @roadfleam Před 7 lety

    peter! all your videos are so pleasant and calming, the way you speak is poetry to me.

  • @jacobacostamasterscribe2200

    Hey, Peter. It's been a while. But dang you've grown huge! 144k subs? I remember back when you had not even 200. The good old days, well you deserve it, keep up the good work

  • @abbysart2014
    @abbysart2014 Před 7 lety +3

    13:14 "personally I make art because... I don't know why I make art"
    He sounded so sad..

  • @MicahBuzanANIMATION
    @MicahBuzanANIMATION Před 7 lety

    It's fun to hear your thoughts on these topics. I'd be interested in seeing more videos like this!

  • @zxr9291
    @zxr9291 Před 6 lety +1

    "the disintegration of the persistence of memory" is my new favourite piece of art ever, thanks for introducing it to me

  • @jangofet555
    @jangofet555 Před 7 lety +6

    what a wonderful show i just watched. you are hilarious, i laughed so much. thank you for being you. ;)

  • @DelbertStinkfester
    @DelbertStinkfester Před 8 lety +8

    I'm hoping that some day there will be a VR tour of the Louvre and the Chicago Art Museum....

  • @ronanderson1023
    @ronanderson1023 Před 7 lety

    Your voice and attitude is just plain relaxing, I feel like I'm in the library :)
    Keep up the good work! All the best

  • @Capinyx
    @Capinyx Před 7 lety +2

    10:13 love your casual humor

  • @Emma-rh8bt
    @Emma-rh8bt Před 8 lety +18

    After listening to so many art lectures basically saying the same things and analysing these same paintings far too deeply it's nice to just hear someones unscripted thoughts and honest personal opinions on these paintings. It's also nice to just hear some well researched context about each of the individual paintings :)

  • @BulletproofLeprosy
    @BulletproofLeprosy Před 7 lety +61

    I've never seen Woody Allen so relaxed

    • @thatsoundsaboutright7483
      @thatsoundsaboutright7483 Před 6 lety

      vizibongo you're the opposite of funny and/or likable. Stop existing please

    • @Gobi_Ness
      @Gobi_Ness Před 6 lety

      that sounds about right, what A childish comment. But I guess your parents never taught you to think before you speak. 🤔

    • @Creepypandaification
      @Creepypandaification Před 4 lety +3

      I thought it was funny.

    • @weshouldtakeacid2848
      @weshouldtakeacid2848 Před 4 lety +2

      IT was a funny comment tbh

  • @whatever1068
    @whatever1068 Před 8 lety

    I love listening to you talk,it's so interesting. Keep it up!

  • @PeacockEarings
    @PeacockEarings Před 8 lety

    This is probably a weird comment but I stumbled upon one of your videos during a mental break from thesis writing and your voice is really relaxing. Really helped relax, de-stress and refocus. Thanks!

  • @pheonixrises11
    @pheonixrises11 Před 7 lety +4

    I want a starry night umbrella. T_T
    I saw it at an art museum shop.
    But it was on display only.
    And they only had the other umbrella.
    WHYYYYYYYYY?
    Starry night is my favorite painting!
    And this video brought back tragic memories!

  • @cub3839
    @cub3839 Před 7 lety +47

    Some people do not understand your sense of humor. blows my mind

  • @edenwhitmore788
    @edenwhitmore788 Před 7 lety +1

    I love your casual sense of humor. It's just so subtle and silly.

  • @slathas
    @slathas Před 6 lety

    This was super amazing. Thank you for talking about this :)

  • @melanieperez1699
    @melanieperez1699 Před 4 lety +3

    13:26 I love how distressed he is.

  • @cataleya1285
    @cataleya1285 Před 8 lety +4

    Nothing about Malevich's Black Square? Would have loved to get your opinion about that one ;-) Maybe in a second part?

  • @cardjunkee6
    @cardjunkee6 Před 7 lety

    You are a massive inspiration and I've known about your channel for around 30 minutes

  • @macdad159
    @macdad159 Před 7 lety +1

    I love your commentary and critique on art.

  • @chrisr.2013
    @chrisr.2013 Před 7 lety +3

    Where is the second video? I really loved this video/series.

  • @GKOALA7
    @GKOALA7 Před 8 lety +20

    I'm dying to know. What printer did you use to print so big?

    • @peter_draws
      @peter_draws  Před 8 lety +41

      I went to a print shop

    • @Sluxslol
      @Sluxslol Před 7 lety +9

      Do they sell big printers there?

    • @ApplicationBot
      @ApplicationBot Před 7 lety

      why not just write on a piece of paper why waste your time and money for a print

  • @RumerPriestly
    @RumerPriestly Před 7 lety +2

    I would love to see more of this, it was great!

  • @MoAYounes
    @MoAYounes Před 8 lety

    Saw your vids before, just subscribed for the quirky sense of humour. Keep up the great work!

  • @FrumpyDucks
    @FrumpyDucks Před 8 lety +19

    will you do one about modern art, like canvases painted completely white being taken seriously as artwork :)

    • @LukieLuke5
      @LukieLuke5 Před 8 lety +3

      The thing about just a white canvas, is that it's literally been done 100s of times by different people. You can find meaning in it if you try, and maybe the artist had meaning in mind when painting it. but in reality, it's just a white canvas and it's lazy, crappy art.

    • @stuffandpoop
      @stuffandpoop Před 8 lety

      It hadn't been done hundreds of times when the first guy did it.

    • @LukieLuke5
      @LukieLuke5 Před 8 lety +5

      stuffandpoop I did it when I picked up an empty canvas and set it down.

    • @PixelSwitch7
      @PixelSwitch7 Před 8 lety +6

      A lot of that type of art is meant to question whether or not art even has to have a meaning. I don't think it's meant to be some sort of great work, but it opens up the conversation about the role art plays in society and the role an artist has in creating art.

    • @scarlettemoore441
      @scarlettemoore441 Před 8 lety +2

      you are all seriously tumblr artists. Some art isn't about appreciating it's aesthetic qualities, but instead looking at the meaning, heck, some artwork is intentionally bad. Bad art is still art, a blank canvas is still art. Your comment only proves how little galleries you have been to and how little you know about art, I have never seen an entirely white canvas, and most of the significant artists these days are actually doing astounding work. Minimalistic artwork is about emphasising the art elements and principles of the work, that in itself is a meaning.

  • @TheNovemberlight
    @TheNovemberlight Před 8 lety +137

    This video makes me want to write lots of pretentious stuff, so here goes: lots of pretentious stuff

  • @Sakorathecreature
    @Sakorathecreature Před 7 lety +1

    Please make a part 2!! I love this video of yours :)

  • @randommusicman1852
    @randommusicman1852 Před 7 lety

    I love your creativity and these videos are the reason I subscribe we need more channels like this.

  • @addisonkempf649
    @addisonkempf649 Před 7 lety +3

    211,000th subscriber here, I like your vids keep it up!
    "personally i make art cause... idk why i make art" lol that part made me sad...

  • @Art2.mp4
    @Art2.mp4 Před 7 lety +7

    Never noticed it before, but close up it seems Judas is already holding the bag of coins he sold jesus for later on. Interensting.

    • @Hod9
      @Hod9 Před 7 lety +9

      R2 very very interensting

    • @Myrslokstok
      @Myrslokstok Před 4 lety

      Didnt he tell Jesus about it and He was ok with it.

  • @ChinchillupaGuy
    @ChinchillupaGuy Před 8 lety +1

    The vanishing point in the last supper is actually a big part of why it was famous. It was considered revolutionary at the time, because people were still figuring out depth and perspective.

  • @laurawbingham
    @laurawbingham Před 7 lety +1

    This video is more valuable than a lot of the art history classes I took in college!