- published: 13 Apr 2014
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Art is a diverse range of human activities in creating visual, auditory or performing artifacts – artworks, expressing the author's imaginative or technical skill, intended to be appreciated for their beauty or emotional power. In their most general form these activities include the production of works of art, the criticism of art, the study of the history of art, and the aesthetic dissemination of art.
The oldest form of art are visual arts, which include creation of images or objects in fields including painting, sculpture, printmaking, photography, and other visual media. Architecture is often included as one of the visual arts; however, like the decorative arts, it involves the creation of objects where the practical considerations of use are essential—in a way that they usually are not in a painting, for example. Music, theatre, film, dance, and other performing arts, as well as literature and other media such as interactive media, are included in a broader definition of art or the arts. Until the 17th century, art referred to any skill or mastery and was not differentiated from crafts or sciences. In modern usage after the 17th century, where aesthetic considerations are paramount, the fine arts are separated and distinguished from acquired skills in general, such as the decorative or applied arts.
1922 (MCMXXII) was a common year starting on Sunday (dominical letter A) of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Saturday (dominical letter B) of the Julian calendar, the 1922nd year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 922nd year of the 2nd millennium, the 22nd year of the 20th century, and the 3rd year of the 1920s decade. Note that the Julian day for 1922 is 13 calendar days difference, which continued to be used from 1582 until the complete conversion of the Gregorian calendar was entirely done in 1929.
The Art (sometimes stylised as THEART) are an Australian Alternative Rock band based in Sydney. They began performing under the name The Follow in 2004. Tasmanian band leader Azaria Byrne was known as an unsuccessful contestant on the reality television series Popstars.
Early highlights for the band's career have been supporting successful bands such as the Pixies, Marilyn Manson, Nine Inch Nails, Sonic Youth and Thirty Seconds to Mars as late as 2010, however this was marred by the crowd booing and calls to "get off the stage".
As band leader Azaria Byrne enters middle age success has so far eluded him despite media attention resulting from his being cuckolded by the even older fading celebrity Bill Corgan.
The other band members have all been described as "dull" but this could also be a result of the attention seeking behavior of their singer.
The 16th World Championships in Athletics are scheduled to be held in 2017 in London, United Kingdom. London was officially awarded the Championships by the IAAF, in Monaco on 11 November 2011.
When the seeking deadline passed on 1 September 2011, two candidate cities (London and Doha) had confirmed their candidatures. Barcelona, which investigated a bid, withdrew citing a lack of support from the local population and financial difficulties. IAAF Evaluation Commission will evaluate the bids of the two cities. The commission visited London on 2 October before departing for Doha on 4 October and staying there until 6 October with the final announcement of the winner on 11 November 2011. On 11 November 2011, the winner was officially announced as London.
On 5 September 2011 Doha launched its marketing bid for the 2017 World Championships. The slogan of the bid was "The RIGHT PARTNER for a stronger World Championships." The bid was led by Abdullah Al Zaini and Aphrodite Moschoudi. Moschoudi successfully led Qatar's bid for the 2015 Handball World Championships. Doha also brought in Brian Roe, a member of the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) Technical Committee. The bid was for the championships to be held in the renovated, climate-controlled Khalifa Stadium. The Corniche prominade was to hold the road races, with the committee proposing to hold the marathon at night after the opening ceremony.
The famous theatrical scenic artist Mr Joseph Harker displays a large painted canvas backdrop. Mr Harker is shown painting a "model" - a small scale painting of the finished subject matter. Several artists then use this as a guide for the forty-foot version. Mr Harker smokes a pipe whilst he paints a tree on the large canvas. Includes a nice C/U of the artist. Was item in Pathe Pictorial issue 231. FILM ID:764.04 A VIDEO FROM BRITISH PATHÉ. EXPLORE OUR ONLINE CHANNEL, BRITISH PATHÉ TV. IT'S FULL OF GREAT DOCUMENTARIES, FASCINATING INTERVIEWS, AND CLASSIC MOVIES. http://www.britishpathe.tv/ FOR LICENSING ENQUIRIES VISIT http://www.britishpathe.com/
Filmed in 1982. Jack Tripp (February 4, 1922 - July 10, 2005) was a British comic actor best known for his many performances as a pantomime dame. He was one of the most popular pantomime dames of the post-war period; a master of drollery and pathos, and a stylish, if eccentric, dancer, he was once described by the Stage as "the John Gielgud of pantomime dames". Tripp's talents as a comic actor were not confined to the pantomime, but he will forever be associated with turning the role of dame into an art form. He played the part some 35 times, in the tradition of such classic dames as George Lacy and Douglas Byng. Never crude or over made-up, and always daintily dressed in lace-trimmed gingham, bloomers and immaculate white pinafores, he had a range of comic expressions - from a wide gri...
Dick Kerr's famous women's football team boxes as part of its training. Introductory intertitle reads: "We've heard a lot lately that certain sports are injurious to Eve. What about these boxing girls from Dick Kerr's famous sports team...?" We see two girls in football kit boxing with each other whilst others look on and laugh. Slow motion footage of the scrap. The girls watching jump up and down with excitement. Intertitle reads: "If the spectators at the Carpentier-Lewis fight had got as excited as these, Olympia would require a new roof". FILM ID:834.12 A VIDEO FROM BRITISH PATHÉ. EXPLORE OUR ONLINE CHANNEL, BRITISH PATHÉ TV. IT'S FULL OF GREAT DOCUMENTARIES, FASCINATING INTERVIEWS, AND CLASSIC MOVIES. http://www.britishpathe.tv/ FOR LICENSING ENQUIRIES VISIT http://www....
Miss Josephine Earle - the well known stage and film star proposes a way of keeping the chill away when wearing "to-days sleeveless frocks". Josephine sits at a table with an artist - Mr May - and he paints a design on her wrist. The design is of a snake winding its way around her arm. He then paints an elaborate design on her shoulder and arm. "Intertitle reads: "Funny how ideas recur" remarked Mr May. "Probably our ancestors tried the same thing a couple of thousand years ago ----". Miss Earle admires her designs. Mr May then paints a cockerel on her shoulder (the Pathe cockerel perhaps?!). Miss Earle poses for the camera displaying her body paint. She walks off and the artist cleans his brushes. Was originally an item in Eve's Film Review issue number 62. Safety prin...
Semana de Arte Moderna São Paulo 1922 Week of Modern Art 1922
1921年にフランスで創刊されたファッション雑誌"ART GOUT BEAUTE(芸術・趣味・美)"、1922年2月号(スペイン語版)。
Beginning in 1922, archaeologist Charles Leonard Woolley, co-sponsored by the University of Pennsylvania and the British Museum, led a monumental excavation at Ur. Predating ancient Egypt and its famed pyramids by thousands of years, this southern Mesopotamian city-state possessed its own rich culture and architectural monuments, notably the ziggurat, a stepped structure topped by a temple. In extensive excavations undergone from 1927-1934, Woolley uncovered 16 royal tombs filled with precious royal artifacts, remains, and indications of human sacrifice.
LUTZ EHRENBERGER E LA BELLE ÉPOQUE: Libro illustrato originale d'epoca, con 20 tavole a colori.
Zaczyna bić od 52 sekundy.
John T. Axton, American Artist (1922 -- 2009) Selections from his work from the Farhat Art Museum Collection مختارات من أعمال الفنان الأميركي جون أكستون من مجموعة متحف فرحات Farhat Art Museum facebook.com/farhatartmuseum farhatartmuseum.info farhatculturalcenter.info John T. Axton johnaxton.wordpress.com Music: Instrumental - Only Hope
tonykwk39@gmail.com Corneille – Guillaume Cornelis van Beverloo (3 July 1922 – 5 September 2010), better known under his pseudonym Corneille, was a Dutch artist. Corneille was born in Liege, Belgium, although his parents were Dutch and moved back to the Netherlands when he was 12. He studied art at the Academy of Art in Amsterdam, in the Netherlands. He was one of the founders of the REFLEX movement in 1948 and in 1949 he was also one of the founders of the COBRA movement, which has had great influence on Scandinavian art. He was active within the group from the beginning, not only painting but also publishing poetry in the Cobra magazine. He was a cofounder of the Experimentele Groep in Holland (nl). The poetic Corneille was strongly influenced by Miró and Klee. After the group dissol...
Before Edgar Wright and Wes Anderson, before Chuck Jones and Jackie Chan, there was Buster Keaton, one of the founding fathers of visual comedy. And nearly 100 years after he first appeared onscreen, we’re still learning from him. Today, I’d like to talk about the artistry (and the thinking) behind his gags. Press the CC button to see the names of the films. For educational purposes only. You can donate to support the channel at Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/everyframeapainting And follow me on: Twitter: https://twitter.com/tonyszhou Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/everyframeapainting Music: Alexandre Desplat - Escape Concerto Paul Simon - Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard Mark Mothersbaugh - Piranhas Are a Very Tricky Species Mark Mothersbaugh - Bookstore Robbery Alexandre Despl...
more at http://scitech.quickfound.net/aviation_news_and_search.html "How skywriting works -- and the making of an aerial Chevrolet advertisement." Reupload of a previously uploaded film with improved video & sound. Public domain film from the Library of Congress Prelinger Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and one-pass brightness-contrast-color correction & mild video noise reduction applied. The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skywriting Skywriting is the process of using a small aircraft, able to expe...
tonykwk39@gmail.com Bury Pol (比利.波爾) Best known for his kinetic sculptures, Belgian artist Pol Bury began his career as a Surrealist painter heavily influenced by the work of René Magritte and Yves Tanguy. After turning to geometric abstraction and associating briefly with the CoBrA group, an avant-garde movement that espoused the complete freedom of color and form, Bury discovered Alexander Calder’s work and began making mobiles of painted shapes and sculptures in which movement was emphasized. The movements he assigned to these sometimes-monumental works were often slow and almost imperceptible to the naked eye. “Speed limits space; slowness increases it,” he once said. Over the course of his career, Bury created a number of fountains that incorporated water into their kinetic workings,...
Is it by Hepworth or Hokusai? Is it a painting or a sculpture? More blue than red? Does it have a cat in it? These questions and more were put to eight individuals in a focus group at Dulwich Picture Gallery. With a National Art Pass you don't need to choose. See art across the UK with free entry to 240 museums and galleries and 50% off entry to major exhibitions. https://www.artfund.org/national-art-... Directed by Fred Rowson through production company Colonel Blimp Image credits: Barbara Hepworth, Wave, 1943 - 1944, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Art Funded 1999, © Bowness.; Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849), Under the Wave off Kanagawa, c. 1831, The British Museum, Art Funded 2008, © Trustees of the British Museum.; William Morris, Original design for Fruit wallpaper, c. 1865...
Vídeo aula sobre a Semana de Arte Moderna de 1922
“That was the beginning of my film and photography career – my first image ended up under the Russian soldier’s boot.” Watch Jonas Mekas, Laurie Anderson, Paul Auster, Gerhard Richter and 7 other acclaimed artists on how they began their career. Avant-garde filmmaker and poet Jonas Mekas (b. 1922 in Lithuania) got his first still camera the very same week that the Russian tanks began rolling in, and his first picture was thus of Russian tanks – until a lieutenant took his camera and smashed it. Swiss video artist Pipilotti Rist (b. 1962) really just wanted to get hold of a free ticket for a film festival when she submitted her video ‘I’m Not The Girl Who Misses Much’ (1986), which she now considers “the only good work I ever did.” American visual artist George Condo (b. 1957) reflects on ...
Toshiko Takaezu (1922-2011) lived most of her life in rural New Jersey, where she made pots, gardened, and taught ceramics at nearby Princeton University. But she was born in Hawaii to Japanese parents, and the landscapes and traditions of the world she grew up in had a profound influence on her art. In the early 1990s, producer Susan Wallner spent time talking to Toshiko about her life and work. They travelled to Hawaii to see the "devastation forest" and the sunrise at Haleakala. The film includes some of Toshiko's last Princeton students, who were invited to do a raku firing at her home studio. "Toshiko Takaezu: Portrait of an Artist" won a CINE Golden Eagle, and the New York Emmy for Outstanding Original Music went to composer John Hodian for its score.
Nancy Boas, the foremost scholar on David Park and an accomplished art historian, author, and curator, will discuss Park, his influence on Bay Area artists and on figuration in art, and the Bay Area milieu in which the artist thrived. Boas’s lecture will be followed by a conversation with Jock Reynolds, the Gallery’s Henry J. Heinz II Director, himself an artist schooled in the Bay Area. Presented in conjunction with the exhibition Five West Coast Artists: Bischoff, Diebenkorn, Neri, Park, and Thiebaud.
Find out more about this film, featured in "Media Matters," the National Archives blog of the Special Media Archives Services Division: http://blogs.archives.gov/mediamatters/2013/05/21/harmon-foundation-film-we-are-all-artists/ We Are All Artists, 1936 Silent Film Moving Images from the Harmon Foundation National Archives at College Park - Motion Pictures, College Park, MD Item from Collection H: Harmon Foundation Collection, 1922 - 1967 ARC Identifier 94970 / Local Identifier H-HF-232 Creator: Harmon Foundation Series: Motion Picture Films on Community and Family Life, Education, Religious Beliefs, and the Art and Culture of Minority and Ethnic Groups, compiled ca. 1930 ca.1953 Documentary: On art and functional design. Reel 1: Shows natural scenes and movement, including waterfall, ...
Richard Diebenkorn American Painter Movement: Abstract Expressionism (1922–1993) merican painter and printmaker. He was most widely recognised for his large-scale, luminous abstractions known as the Ocean Park paintings. Diebenkorn was brought up in San Francisco. Diebenkorn's study was interrupted by service in the Marine Corps during World War II. In 1946 Diebenkorn returned to California to continue his education. His abstract paintings of this period were stylistically rooted in the New York school; they were characterised by linear planes, which gave the impression of aerial landscape views, and by a fluid line that defined a type of biomorphic abstraction. The small studio still-lifes of 1955–6, such as Still-life with Orange Peel (1955), signalled a new era. Diebenkorn became known ...
Documentary exploring the gravitational shift of art influence from Europe to America, beginning with Abstract Expressionism, moving on to Pop Art and later, Minimalism. With Willem de Kooning, Jasper Johns, Andy Warhol, Jackson Pollock, Robert Rauschenberg and others. This video is solely for educational purposes.
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Liz Rideal (UCL Slade School of Fine Art) discusses the language of painting and how to read specific artworks, for the exact titles and locations of these please click "Show More". Slide titles: 1. Pere Borrell del Caso, Escaping Criticism, 1874 © Collection of the Bank of Spain 2. A. Liz Rideal, Ghost Sari, monotype print, 450 cm. 2001. Installation view Royal Academy Summer Exhibition 2014 B. Liz Rideal, Mummy and Me in the Garden, c.1959 3. A. Unknown artist, British School, William Style, 1636 © Tate B. Liz Rideal, Mummy and Me in the Garden, c.1959 4. A. Peter Davies, The Fun One Hundred (Pink Top Version), 2000 © The British Council Collection B. Helen Frankenthaler, Trojan Gates, 1955 © Museum of Modern Art, New York 5. A. Rembrandt van Rijn, Self-portrait with two circles, c.166...
NEW VERSION OF THIS VIDEO (with better points and no mouth noises): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l1QvXHasIh4&feature;=youtu.be -------------------------------- EDIT: OK this is coming up a lot in comments because this video got popular somehow? I had a bad speaking day and just wanted to get the video done, hence all the awful mouth noises. --------------------- A lot of art - particularly manga and anime art - gets hit with "same face syndrome" as a criticism of its character design. But is it as good and relevant a criticism as we'd like? TOPICS: - What is Same Face Syndrome? - Same face syndrome in anime - in Disney - in video games - in classical art - as a cost-saving / risk-management measure - as a character design tool
Music by Ennio Morricone from the film "Cinema Paradiso" Επιμέλεια βίντεο : Ν.Τ. (I don't own the rights of the films or the music and I don't intend to earn money from the use of this video) In order of appearance : Charlie Chaplin (00:11) Lilian Gish (00:17) Douglas Fairbanks (00:25) Gloria Swanson (00:32) Buster Keaton (00:41) Mary Pickford (00:48) Rudolph Valentino (00:55) Jean Harlow (01:05) Norma Shearer (01:14) Fred Astaire (01:22) Ginger Rogers (01:37) Gary Cooper ((01:44) Greta garbo (01:57) James Cagney (02:14) Marlen Dietrich (02:23) Spencer tracy (02:32) Katharine Hepburn (02:41) Clark Gable (02:59) Vivian Leigh (03:16) Lawrence Olivier (03:31) Joan Fontaine (03:46) Errol Flynn (03:57) Olivia de Havilland (04:09) Cary Grant (04:19) Bing Crosby (04:30) Ingrid Bergman (04:42) H...
Gretchen Diebenkorn Grant, daughter of Richard Diebenkorn, shares her insights and thoughts on the life and art of her father. Her lecture is introduced by Timothy Anglin Burgard, the Ednah Root Curator in Charge of American Art at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and co-curator of the exhibition Richard Diebenkorn: The Berkeley Years, 1953--1966. Learn more online at: http://diebenkorn.famsf.org/
ABC1 12 29 2013 13 57 45 --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Documentary that follows the struggle for control of Dr. Albert C. Barnes' 25 billion dollar collection of modern and post-impressionist art. Director: Don Argott Stars: Julian Bond, David D'Arcy, Richard Feigen DON ARGOTT was never one of those Philadelphians besotted with the Barnes Foundation, the museum of late-19th- and early-20th-century art tucked away in the suburbs. A 37-year-old documentary filmmaker, Mr. Argott had previously trained his cameras on disparate subjects like a rock-music school and the experiences of four football players entering the N.F.L. draft. And though Mr. Argott attended the Art Institute of Philadelphia and has lived in the city for 13 ...
We had the unique pleasure of meeting the great avant-garde filmmaker Jonas Mekas, who never goes anywhere without his camera. Mekas here shares his fascinating personal story and shows us around his workspace in Brooklyn, New York. Mekas feels that he grew up in Paradise until the Soviets came: “… they brought hell, and my paradise ended.” The Russian tanks began rolling in the very same week that Mekas got his first still camera, and his first picture was thus of these Russian tanks - until a lieutenant took his camera and smashed it: “That was the beginning of my film and photography career – my first image ended up under the Russian soldier’s boot in the dust of my village.” Even though Mekas has experienced ten years of hell during and following World War II, he does not want his mo...
David Park produced a late body of work extraordinary for its focus and direction. In a sharp shift from abstraction to figuration. Park’s move stands out as a re-orientation of radical proportion. Yet it is as a teacher and mentor that Park presides as the cornerstone of an entire art movement and perspective, which came to be known as Bay Area Figurative Art in the 1950s. This talk, given by his daughter Helen Park Bigelow, took place at the Richmond Art Center on April 3, 2015, in conjunction with the exhibit "David Park: Personal Perspectives."
Focusing on one Hopper painting, Ground Swell of 1939, this lecture by Alexander Nemerov tries to provide a thicker, denser, more surprising story of what it meant for Hopper to make a painting, especially in the year 1939.
Gertrud Sandqvist -" When Spirits are guiding Your Hand" Evening Lecture at the 23 Augut 2010 @ Salzburg International Summer Academy of Fine Arts 2010; ©2010 Laura Kokoshka, Salzburg International Summer Academy of Fine Arts, Gertrud Sandqvist; Art and the unconscious as specific categories were formed at the same time, in late the 18th century. They have haunted each other since then. Something in art seems to be wide open, even conditioned by the unconscious, no matter how often artists and art critics try to keep art in place as perfectly intelligible. And the unconscious seems to be best understood throught art - even Sigmund Freud admitted that. Between 1906 and 1922, the Swedish artist Hilma af Klint made over one thousand secret paintings. According to her, spirits werde guid...
tonykwk39@gmail.com Marc Chagall (1887 - 1985) 馬克·夏卡爾 was born in Vitebsk, Byelorussia to a poor Hassidic family. The eldest of nine children, he studied first in a heder before moving to a secular Russian school, where he began to display his artistic talent. With his mother's support, and despite his father's disapproval, Chagall pursued his interest in art, going to St. Petersburg in 1907 to study art with Leon Bakst. Influenced by contemporary Russian painting, Chagall's distinctive, child-like style, often centering on images from his childhood, began to emerge. From 1910 to 1914, Chagall lived in Paris, and there absorbed the works of the leading cubist, surrealist, and fauvist painters. It was during this period that Chagall painted some of his most famous paintings of the Jewish ...
Amedeo Modigliani, (born July 12, 1884, Livorno, Italy—died January 24, 1920, Paris, France) Italian painter and sculptor whose portraits and nudes—characterized by asymmetrical compositions, elongated figures, and a simple but monumental use of line—are among the most-important portraits of the 20th century. Modigliani was born into a Jewish family of merchants. As a child, he suffered from pleurisy and typhus, which prevented him from receiving a conventional education. In 1898 he began to study painting. After a brief stay in Florence in 1902, he continued his artistic studies in Venice, remaining there until the winter of 1906, when he left for Paris. His early admiration for Italian Renaissance painting—especially that of Siena—was to last throughout his life. In Paris Modigliani beca...
Max Ernst (1891-1976) German Painter, Editor, Sculptor and collage Dadaist and Surrealist art movements Max Ernst, in full Maximilian Maria Ernst (born April 2, 1891, Brühl, Germany—died April 1, 1976, Paris, France) German painter and sculptor who was one of the leading advocates of irrationality in art and an originator of the Automatism movement of Surrealism. He became a naturalized citizen of both the United States (1948) and France (1958). Ernst’s early interests were psychiatry and philosophy, but he abandoned his studies at the University of Bonn for painting. After serving in the German army during World War I, Ernst was converted to Dada, a nihilistic art movement, and formed a group of Dada artists in Cologne. With the artist-poet Jean Arp, he edited journals and created a scand...
Times were tough for African Americans in the South. Many were sharecroppers living a hard scrabble life in shacks and working endless hours in the fields. The Harmon Foundation was established in 1922 by William E. Harmon. It served as a large-scale patron of African-American art and helped gain recognition for African-American artists who otherwise would have remained largely unknown. Mary B. Brady was the director of the foundation from 1922 until its cessation in 1967. The William E. Harmon Foundation award for distinguished achievement among Negroes was created in 1926.[1] It was known as an award for excellence in the visual arts, but was offered for distinguished achievement in many different fields among Negroes or in the cause of race relations. This helped art education prog...
Promise me you'll remember
This love together today
We may not have tomorrow
It's not for us to say
Fate isn't kind to lovers
It breaks the hardest hearts
Promise you'll remember
How good we are
Why do I find the sadness
Under your sweetest kiss
Destiny seems to whisper
It won't stay like this
Whenever we're together
I feel time standing still
I only know I love you
And I always will
If we should lose each other
Somewhere inside the dark
Promise me you'll remember
How good we are
Whenever we're together
I feel time standing still
I only know I love you
And I always will
If we should lose each other
Somewhere inside the dark
Promise me you'll remember
How good we are
Time isn't kind to lovers
It breaks the hardest hearts
Promise me you'll remember