Art in Isolation | Series 2 Episode 7: Art at the Hearth
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- čas přidán 29. 08. 2024
- Join Philip for an exploration of the legendary Garsington Manor; where artist Gilbert Spencer met society hostess and patron of the arts Lady Ottoline Morrell.
Visitors to the old Oxfordshire manor house at Garsington were so welcomed by the owners, Ottoline and Philip Morrell, that some would stay for months on end. Artists, writers, poets and creatives such as W. J. Turner, T. S. Eliot, Aldous Huxley, Virginia Wolf, Vanessa Bell, Lytton Strachey, Duncan Grant, David Garnett, Dora Carrington, Dorothy Brett and Siegfried Sassoon frequented Ottoline’s Oxfordshire home. In her memoir, Morrell described her home as ‘a theatre, where week after week a travelling company would arrive and play their parts ... How much they felt and saw of the beauty of the setting I never knew.’
philipmould.com/.
Philip I could listen to you each day! Thank you for your lectures and knowledge.
Talk about perfect provenance. Always a pleasure Philip and Oliver...
Always a pleasure to spend time with you Philip
Take care and stay safe
OK, BA Honours in Drama and Communications here,... painter... WOW!!! This segment should be on every art college play list. AMAZING. It ties all of these luminaries together - in ONE painting no less!! It's true Philip - you and your son (and wife supporting I think) are a wonder! Amazing stuff. I'm a bit flabbergasted by this painting and the info surrounding it. But it does an amazing job of helping us understand how friendship, sharing, knowledge and nature come together and elevate all of us. Bravo!
I just noticed that the Art of Isolation series is back again. How wonderful! Thank you Philip & the team, and stay safe.
Pleasure. Thanks
How fascinating that you found a photograph of a copy of this painting (or the original) in the artists' drawing room. What good luck!
That was particularly wonderful. Thank you!
Our lives are full of these experiences if we take the time to notice. It’s really quite wonderful - as if time really isn’t just a continuum. The older I get the more I recognize things from the past that were right under my eyes that I never took the time to focus on. Time is really all about focus, smell, taste - our senses.
Nicely put.
What an incredible serendipitous discovery. If you use Google satellite, it is possible that Morrells house is number 47 on Southend road in Garsington and that numbers 45, 43, and 41 Southend road are also seen in your painting. I believe the back section of number 53 is the brick section in your painting.
It is very clear of the love that you son Oliver has for your home through his choice of the beautiful pictures and superior editing for your introduction for each of your programs.
Both of you are creating a great lasting treasure for all who have a love of art.
Very interesting. I will look.
And thank you for your kinds words too. They are appreciated.
@@philipmould7898
Take a look at 49 Southend road, it could possibly be the barn, renovated into a house, and the gates thirty feet further to the right may be your blue gates.
Garsington manor, Morrells home, may be the prominent house you mention in the painting, which is about a hundred yards down the road from 49 and 53 Southend road.
Again, beautiful productions.
How fabulous that the similar painting was at the heart of the manor.. How superb! What great countenance! ❤️
Look forward to seeing you again as well!
I can imagine the twinkle in your eye Philip when you spotted the same painting over the fireplace in the photograph. Was also thrilled to read about the discovery you recently made of the Henri III portrait miniature.
All the best!
Thank you so much. The peace and calm that exudes from your films is a balm to the soul. You have a gift for telling wonderful stories out of these objects. You make them ten times more interesting. It's so nice of you to share it all with us. From what I've read about that Bloomsbury lot and their ilk when people nowadays behave like that they are generally chavs,but not rich and artistic! Sorry my philistine side asserting itself. Back then I'd have been their scullery maid.
Haha - different times different expectations! Thank you for your kind words.
Thank you Phillip for another wonderful discussion on a favourite painting. Thank you too Oliver for your gems.
Thanks!
Britain between the wars, very interesting period.
A moment on time, with a mini-vacation into a painting, a story to unfold, and a little something to learn. Always a pleasure to see another video from you... Thank You. Have watch your other shows for years, you do a superb job.
You are very kind. Thank you!
Great story! Wonderful painting! The gate and sky are a lovely balance, just lovely, thank you✨🕊🙏🏻🌹
Nice way to start a weekend - thank you Phillip & team/operator!
Even though there is no human activity in the picture, it seems to have a joyous feel to it. Or maybe it's just me. The picture has a fascinating history. The photograph is a priceless bit of historical information. Once again, thanks for sharing.
How exciting to have found that photograph containing the painting or a version there of. He did a wonderful job of smoothly drawing the eye into the center of the horizon line.
Agreed. Thanks.
Beautiful. Relaxing. Relief. Calm. Knowledge.
Thanks!
I do appreciate these glimpes into the other side of paintings you do. I especially liked the photographs this time. Wouldn't it be wonderful to have those kinds of artistic communities now and equally for the artist's, at that time, to recieve the amount of monies that their paintings would often fetch, after their deaths, in auction and dealer houses. How an artists life could be so much improved.
I recently rewatched Carrington with Emma Thompson and Jonathan Pryce. I’d first watched it in the 1990s in my very early 20s before I knew anything of the Bloomsbury set and now older and a bit more knowledgeable, I appreciated the movie even more. Your Art In Isolation series also made me appreciate the creatives depicted in that film even more. I think Carrington is probably the best movie or series about the group it’s definitely worth a watch or a rewatch.
Great suggestion. I will. Thank you!
What a marvellous bit of storytelling
Thanks. The art does the hard work.
What a revelation , this provenance .And thank you again for a fascinating episode ! Always a pleasure to know there is another episode coming from your beautiful house full of treasures !
Thank you!
It’s amazing when you find the history of a painting.
My husband once bought a photo of an Edwardian gentleman stood at the front door of his country home complete in plus 4’s 😁. He bought it for a few pounds from a vintage market for some strange reason. Imagine our surprise when visiting Cragside a year or so later, there hung in the main entrance was this same photograph only a much much bigger copy!😂😂
Amazing!
Oh, my, you outdid yourself with this one! I was on the edge of my seat, it was like watch the best mystery program! Thank you so very much!
Thank you!
Love the old fire place Philip, always makes a room feel real, homely and befitting good company and fine paintings.
Thanks! Agreed.
Thank you! Stay well, stay healthy all of you!
Excellent and inspiring as always. Please keep these coming!
That’s so fascinating! I think I’d be a terrible guest in your house as I would gazing around the room all the time at all your eclectic art works. Each one tells such an interesting story.
Ha! Thanks
Wonderful! Your videos are so very appreciated! I learn something new and interesting with each instalment!
Thank you!
Wow! Just watched this one twice, and will again...What an interesting series of discoveries ; all due to the name Philip Morrell on your Gilbert Spencer painting. (Just based on the self portrait by Spencer’s older brother, I’d be curious to see more of his work).
It goes without saying that the photos of 1920’s literary luminaries, (such as T.S. Elliot and Virginia Woolf) are of interest, but the one behind the lens-Lady Ottoline Morrell-really stood out! So iconic in the photo, and active in the portrait. She, too, could be interesting to research, starting with her first name, Ottoline, which I’ve never seen before.
How great that you ended up with this painting (which literally has your name on it), “eight or nine years” after it first caught your eye. And now, after a bit of research, you’re able to share both the painting and its satellite stories, with all of us watching online.
Thank you, Philip Mould-I really needed this reminder of serendipitous connection today: Through Art, through story, through this platform, and through this Pandemic.
Thank you for your thoughtful and warming response.
my favorite theme, so good.
Thank you for another great story. I live in a 1920s bungalow and always take away something when I see a period interior. This time I see the earthy tones of the picture with the blue doors. I think I'm heading in the right direction.
Excellent! Thanks.
So pleased to see these programs once more....really enjoyable! Regards, and many thanks, Cynthia......South Australia
Enjoying this series emensly👏🏻Your interesting story that comes with this painting realy add value to the provinance. Stay well and healthy yourself😊
It is interesting how backed in 20’s and 30’s you can gather around together amongst your artists friends and have a intellectual discussion about ideas and current events. (love the old photos)
Superb! Philip is a joy to listen to , in this Covid horror lockdown! Many Thanks Sir!
Pleasure thanks.
What a find! Really enjoyed this vlog Philip and co. Many thanks for posting it.
It must have been thrilling to see the image in that photograph, taking pride of place above the fireplace. I live only about three miles from Garsington, so this episode was exciting for me, too!!
It was! Thank you.
How fun is this! A mystery ‘solved’ as it were, hanging above your Telly with a story of it’s very own! How the mind would play on a wintry day just gazing at it’s form! Love, love your posts Philip Mould, stay healthy as you are already handsome and wise!
Thank you!
Thank you so very much! This series has been such a gift and your generosity of spirit, time, and creativity have made many evenings so much brighter and more interesting. We are getting by (in Pennsylvania) better than many but still it's been a difficult year. The art history, descriptions of techniques and informed view of the paintings have enriched our lives in the stressful short term, but will also stay with us the rest of our lives. Again, thank you Philip and Oliver (and the rest of your family - this is obviously a concerted team effort!)
That’s very generous of you. Thank you!
Thank you for sharing your home, your artwork, and your knowledge with us all. Loved the story of you finding the history and photos of this painting.
Thankyou Phillip
I'm so glad I discovered this. It's so nice to find someone who actually talks about art. I'm definitely subscribing to this channel. Thank you.
Once agaiRegards from Melbourne, Australian, thank you. You have given us insight and meaning.
Isn't it fascinating how Google seems to sometimes, read our minds? I got goosebumps when you noted the picture in the background!
True!
Thank you.
Thank you for putting on such a fabulous series about art. My wife and I have enjoyed every episode and look forward to seeing more. Cheers and keep safe.
Wonderful discovery. Thank you!
This really was so helpful during the pandemic. As a nurse it was a chance to escape.
Thanks for another fascinating trip in the wonderful world of art Philip!
Beautiful and so educational! You are a crown jewel of British Art Appreciation my friend 😊👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏😊
Love your series. Thanks Oliver and Phillip. Greatly appreciated
How absolutely wonderful.
I love that painting of the village, I want to live in it.
To live somewhere like that would be a dream.
Amazing journey of research on this painting...thank you for sharing.
Thankyou, brilliant ! I am very interested in Gilbert Spencer, especially as I lived for 5 years, in an old cottage on Hook End Farm, where the farming family the Adlers, had been gifted some of his sketches of the farm, as he prepared to make the large painting of Hook End Farm. I noticed years later the Royal Academy also has one or two paintings by him of woodland, fields and pathways on the same farm, which I was thrilled to see displayed at the R.A. one year. Hook End Lane is a hidden beauty spot in the ancient hills of Berkshire, and I keep my own little oil painting view of it from the cottage window, for 30 years ago. I sometimes go back to visit. I don't know how he discovered it originally as it is really tucked away. However the farmer who grew up there very proudly remembered him.
Great talk. The painting was a steal at just £8,500 when he bought it at auction 8 years ago.
Amazing,.....thank you for sharing.
thank you so much for giving us these beautiful insights into wonderful paintings, I am always waiting for the next one, there will never be enough for me.
Another lovely painting thank you
Stay healthy Philip. Good show.
Wanderful episode!!! Thank you!!!
That is a nice painting. And, fascinating backstory through Google searching. Seeing that photo with the painting on the wall with the people standing around is is a great backstory. And then, you wonder what trip that painting took from that time on that wall to now being on your wall. A very interesting video. Thanks.
Oh what a wonderful painting..and your frame is far better than their choice too.
It could be the setting for Downton Abbey..which I believe the village was filmed in Oxford ...I think 🤔.
Thank you for another great episode.
It’s a pleasure. Thank you!
Such a lovely man !!!!, Thank you Phillip
Finding that photo on google must have been so exciting. Love this video!
Always enjoy watching Art in Isolation and did have a giggle with the Netflix reference. Keep up the great work and stay safe and healthy. Regards from Down Under 🖼🎨🇦🇺🦘
Thank you Maureen!
Interesting subject, glad to also see some normality with a 🖥 .
Another interesting story behind a painting.
Read a good book beats watching Netflix. I'm enjoying Irene Nemirovsky at present in between watching these lovely videos. Thank you.
Un excellent tableau,j'aime bien ce genre de peinture.en passant,cela est dommage que l'on ne voit plus vos émissions de télévision sur les recherches de ''faux ou fortune'' ,car c'était d'excellentes émissions sur l'Art.Difficile de trouver ces émissions en langage Français. Une très bonne continuation pour vos projets,vive les Arts et portez-vous bien avec ce covid.
🎹Théret Jean-Luc.
Merci bien Jean-Luc.
You have really succeeded in making a gift for us in isolation. I'm watching this on the "other side" of the lockdown in the US - people are just now revealing their faces in upper NY state - suddenly, the deep chasms between people are closing. I'm about to have a Vaccination Jubilee Dance Party in fact - planned months ago as an outdoor party - now it can be indoors too. Woweeee!
Thanks for this great show!
Warm regards
Jennie
Brilliant! Well done laddy!!😁😁😁
This series continuing through our lockdowns has honestly been a gift for me, as soon as the opening music starts I feel myself relax - it’s like a duvet of comfort 😊. I just love it ....and Philip Mould....and Oliver’s filmmaking......Thankyou Thankyou Thankyou 🤗
Wow! It is different. Look at the plumes of smoke from the chimneys. That would be an interesting group upon which to eavesdrop.
Wonderful, what a story
I have always considered you to be a man of wonderful artistic taste and exceptional scholarly approach to art that you transmit with ease to your viewers. Your taste also extends to the fact that you have a normal sized TV , an exception today judging by the number of households with Odeon sized screens adorning their walls !
Haha! Thank you. My wife stopped me upsizing....
Wonder why the one 'dislike'; guess you can't olease everyone. Always interesting.
Absolutely fascinating; x
Cedric is the star of course!😁
Fantastic story!
Lovely programme. Many thanks. Warren
Thank you Philip. Exquisitely interesting as ever 🙏💐
Love all the back ground on each artist and your description and ideas on all the paintings, I would just look at them and think they were lovely, but you bring each one alive !
A wonderful Video. It is really something to
see all of of those famous people together.
I really like the Painting. It has a relaxing quality.
and it has a warmth too. Hi to the Beautiful Dog.
She looks as though she ran out of the house out
of excitement to get to the Snow before you could
get her coat on. It made me laugh.
Thank You for an enjoyable Video.
Jeff
Wow Philip, how absolutely wonderful and fascinating?!
Always enjoyable.....
Wow that’s amazing. Thank you
Thank you for all of this wonderful lock-down series. This one with the wonderful photos and your Google journey was great fun :)
So enjoyed this look as the Bloomsbury group!
I have to admit I was overly keen on the painting and had to agree that like many others was more aware of the works of Stanley Spencer. However, to hear the history behind the painting and all the people he mixed with I was blown away. Oh to live at the time of Siegfried Sassoon, Virginia Woolf, Sackville-West.
Have to say surprised to hear you watch Netflix Philip! Desperate measures in times of lockdown?
Thank you! He’s a slower burn than his brother, but rewarding.
A bit like Augustus John and his sister Gwen John. There must be many more examples.
Belíssimos e instrutivos os teus vídeos.
E a casa com o jardim são maravilhosos.
Parabéns!
What a Fascinating story and thank you so much for all the beautiful portraits and wonderful old photos .I met
Dorthy Brett a long time ago in Taos, New Mexico
Thank you! Interesting.
Brilliant!!! Thank you so much!
Just having a pint at the Lady Ottoline in WC1 and it put me in mind of this episode. Some good Bloomsbury prints on the walls
This picture oozes calmness and draws one into- and beyond the gates and the clouds seem to flow the same direction. I still don't see vibrancy here which usually represent beauty. And to me art is only art when it oozes beauty. I would see -look at it once or twice than the image would sink into oblivion.
Thanks. After surviving 10 days in Covid hospital with oxygen level falling to mid seventies for few days, and pulling through with steroids etc, life seems more beautiful. Back to my easel. Maybe something worth a museum display can be created by my mind and body still.
Welcome back! What a terrible trial.
@@philipmould7898 🙏
Brilliant. What a wonderful series
Philip, You know, it is rather interesting that you have picked the subject of art works, that depict your local village.
It was only just a few days ago, when I considered doing a landscape painting of the overhead shot of your estate, -seen in the opening and closing of the program. Coincidence. Cheers!~
Great !
very interesting Phillip, thanks for sharing with us.