Samuel Peploe: A collection of 270 paintings (HD)

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  • čas přidán 29. 04. 2018
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    Samuel Peploe: A collection of 270 paintings (HD)
    Description: "Born in Edinburgh in 1871 and educated at the Collegiate School in Charlotte Square, Samuel John Peploe had good academic ability but no interest in the professions, preferring to walk, sail or sketch.
    By 1893 he was enrolled for classes in The Trustees' Academy, the forerunner of Edinburgh College of Art, and the following year was in Paris at the Academie Julian under the neo-classicist William Bouguereau, and later at the Academie Colarossi. Long study nurtured his natural ability and helped him perfect an early style based on the Dutch masters.
    From 1901, Peploe began a lifelong habit of taking painting trips to northern France and to the Hebrides, with J D Fergusson. He exhibited regularly at the Royal Scottish Academy, and the Royal Glasgow Institute from 1900 and had his first one-man show at the Scottish Gallery in 1903.
    By 1906 his earlier still life and figure paintings, characterised by dark backgrounds, gave way to paler colours, greys and pinks. This was in part due to a move to a new, lighter studio in York Place. His second exhibition in 1909 was successful but his eyes were turning to Paris and the next year he moved and married Margaret MacKay whom he had met on a painting trip to Barra in 1894. France liberated his palette as evidenced by Fauvist panels painted in Royan (1910), Cassis (1911, 1913) and in Paris. His stuido paintings show the influence of Van Gogh and de Segonzac.
    The Peploes came back to Edinburgh in 1912 with dozens of paintings much too advanced for Edinburgh. Rejected by his old dealer, Peploe put on his own show a the New Gallery in Shandwick Place, where the Society of Eight had their inaugural exhibition in the same year. For the next fifteen years Peploe retained a brilliant palette, evolving a mature style containing elements of Cezanne, the Jazz Age and Matisse. By the late 1920's he had reverted to a more sonorous, tonal painting, still enlivened by brilliant colour chords, but weightier and cooler.
    In 1933 he taught two terms at the College of Art in Edinburgh, making a considerable impact. Best known for his still lifes of tulips, Peploe had a wide range of subjects including figure painting and particularly landscape. "
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    MUSIC: Kevin MacLeod - Meditation Impromptu 02
    Meditation Impromptu 02 by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
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    Kevin MacLeod - Meditation Impromptu 03
    Meditation Impromptu 03 by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
    Source: incompetech.com/music/royalty-...
    Artist: incompetech.com/
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Komentáře • 12

  • @dorydiavelone3531
    @dorydiavelone3531 Před rokem

    So inspired by his work…. THANK YOU!!

  • @MrMadalien
    @MrMadalien Před 6 lety +2

    I like the thick brushstrokes he used as lines! Probably the best example I've ever seen of that, usually thick outlines in impressionism are accompanied by a lack in form but this guy got it!

  • @MM-fb9fi
    @MM-fb9fi Před rokem

    Thank you for this. It is a real treat for I have long been a fan of Peploe and the movement he was a part of.

  • @garrywilson2030
    @garrywilson2030 Před 5 lety +1

    I love how expressive his art was.His still lifes were just gorgeous.

  • @sabrinanascimento5248
    @sabrinanascimento5248 Před 3 lety

    Gorgeous paintings and still life.

  • @sabrinanascimento1267
    @sabrinanascimento1267 Před 3 lety

    Wonderful Art

  • @kanwaraulakh4042
    @kanwaraulakh4042 Před 9 měsíci

    Surprisingly not mainstream

  • @sabrinanascimento5248
    @sabrinanascimento5248 Před 3 lety

    Very nice.

  • @charleswebster2682
    @charleswebster2682 Před 6 lety

    Open yet mysterious like a drug

  • @davidkuperman6882
    @davidkuperman6882 Před 3 lety

    !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @Impressio_Nisti
    @Impressio_Nisti Před 5 lety +2

    4:09 Delicious

  • @Lmillertekdok
    @Lmillertekdok Před 5 lety +1

    His paintings are neither inventive nor imaginative, and are quite repetitive, even within his own body of work - but I love them all anyway.