Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art
Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art
  • Видео 412
  • Просмотров 342 820
Rereading Constable: Letters, Life and Art | Session 3
Morna O’Neill (Wake Forest University), John Constable, David Lucas and artistic identity
Katharine Martin (V&A and the University of Sussex), Translations and fraught relations: English landscape and the language of collaboration
Просмотров: 64

Видео

Global Houses of the Efik
Просмотров 5116 часов назад
5 June 2024 Speaker: Louis P. Nelson, Professor of Architectural History at the University of Virginia Respondent: Shaheen Alikhan This talk is part of a series entitled 'Out to Sea', which will focus on the influence of oceans and their coasts, in relation to Britain and its global empire, on visual and architectural imagination and production. Paul Mellon Centre and Online Much of the scholar...
Extractivism/Activism: Art, Activism and Ecological Extraction Day 1 session 4 ECOLOGY POLITICS
Просмотров 1619 часов назад
13 to 14 March 2024 Speakers: Mark Sealy, Wilfred Ukpong A collaboration between the Climate & Colonialism research project at the Paul Mellon Centre and Autograph ABP. The arts have long been concerned with highlighting the ongoing histories of resource extraction and its repercussions. This symposium asks: what next? By bringing together researchers, artists, designers and activists from a ra...
Extractivism/Activism: Art, Activism and Ecological Extraction Day 1 session 3 REPAIR/REPARATIONS
Просмотров 5421 час назад
13 to 14 March 2024 Speakers: Bindi Vora, Gerald Torres, Sasha Huber, Adrian Lahoud A collaboration between the Climate & Colonialism research project at the Paul Mellon Centre and Autograph ABP. The arts have long been concerned with highlighting the ongoing histories of resource extraction and its repercussions. This symposium asks: what next? By bringing together researchers, artists, design...
Extractivism/Activism: Day 2 session 3 LITIGATION / CLIMATE CRIMES
Просмотров 3421 час назад
13 to 14 March 2024 Speakers: Jelena Sofronijevic, Marie Petersmann, Radha D’Souza, Marie Smith A collaboration between the Climate & Colonialism research project at the Paul Mellon Centre and Autograph ABP. The arts have long been concerned with highlighting the ongoing histories of resource extraction and its repercussions. This symposium asks: what next? By bringing together researchers, art...
Extractivism/Activism: Art, Activism and Ecological Extraction - Day 2 session 4 DATA ECOLOGIES
Просмотров 2121 час назад
13 to 14 March 2024 Spaekers: Stephanie Hankey, Mónica Alcázar-Duarte, Julian Posada A collaboration between the Climate & Colonialism research project at the Paul Mellon Centre and Autograph ABP. The arts have long been concerned with highlighting the ongoing histories of resource extraction and its repercussions. This symposium asks: what next? By bringing together researchers, artists, desig...
Extractivism/Activism: Art, Activism and Ecological Extraction Day 2 session 2 ANCESTRAL FUTURES
Просмотров 4421 час назад
13 to 14 March 2024 Speakers: Nina Kolowratnik, Ignacio Acosta, Godofredo Pereira, Gabriela Saenger Silva A collaboration between the Climate & Colonialism research project at the Paul Mellon Centre and Autograph ABP. The arts have long been concerned with highlighting the ongoing histories of resource extraction and its repercussions. This symposium asks: what next? By bringing together resear...
Extractivism/Activism: Art, Activism and Ecological Extraction - Day 2, session 1 FOREST RIGHTS
Просмотров 1621 час назад
13 to 14 March 2024 A collaboration between the Climate & Colonialism research project at the Paul Mellon Centre and Autograph ABP. The arts have long been concerned with highlighting the ongoing histories of resource extraction and its repercussions. This symposium asks: what next? By bringing together researchers, artists, designers and activists from a range of backgrounds, this event will c...
Naval Gazing: Portraiture and the Royal Navy
Просмотров 157День назад
19 June 2024 Research Seminar Speakers - Katherine Gazzard, Sara Caputo This talk is part of a series entitled 'Out to Sea', which focuses on the influence of oceans and their coasts, in relation to Britain and its global empire, on visual and architectural imagination and production. Joshua Reynolds’s portrait of naval officer George Edgcumbe (1749, National Maritime Museum) can be split into ...
Rosetti: In Relation Day 2: Closing Discussion
Просмотров 25День назад
15 to 16 June 2023 Friday 16 June Conversation reflecting on the themes of conference and exhibition with Carol Jacobi, Liz Prettejohn, Tim Barringer, Caitlin Meehye Beach and Sarah Victoria Turner Tate Britain’s "The Rossettis" exhibition suggested a different model for thinking about how artists’ careers and lives are shaped - not as the singular and self-contained subjects often presented by...
Rosetti: In Relation Day 2 Panel 5: International Exchanges
Просмотров 83День назад
15 to 16 June 2023 Friday 16 June, 14:15-15:30 Held at Tate Britain (Clore Auditorium) Speakers: Eduardo De Maio, Helena Cox, Sophie Lynford, Sadbh Kellett Tate Britain’s "The Rossettis" exhibition suggested a different model for thinking about how artists’ careers and lives are shaped - not as the singular and self-contained subjects often presented by a monographic approach - but one that is ...
Rossettis: In Relation - Day 2 - Panel 4: Labour(ing) and Art(work)
Просмотров 4014 дней назад
15 to 16 June 2023 Friday 16 June, 12:00-13:15 Held at Tate Britain (Clore Auditorium) Speakers: Tim Barringer, Deborah Lam, Frances Varley, Tara Contractor Tate Britain’s "The Rossettis" exhibition suggested a different model for thinking about how artists’ careers and lives are shaped - not as the singular and self-contained subjects often presented by a monographic approach - but one that is...
Rossettis: In Relation - Day 2 - Panel 3: Close Reading
Просмотров 6114 дней назад
15 to 16 June 2023 Friday 16 June, 10:30-11:45 Held at Tate Britain (Clore Auditorium) Speakers: Nicholas Dunn-McAfee, Thomas Hughes, Marte Stinis, Roisin Neenan Tate Britain’s "The Rossettis" exhibition suggested a different model for thinking about how artists’ careers and lives are shaped - not as the singular and self-contained subjects often presented by a monographic approach - but one th...
“Not Just for Sailors Any More”: Maritime Tattooing in Context
Просмотров 9214 дней назад
12 June 2024 Research Seminar Speakers: Matt Lodder, Gemma Angel This talk is part of a series entitled Out to Sea which focuses on the influence of oceans and their coasts in relation to Britain and its global empire, on visual and architectural imagination and production. As an opening line for an article in a popular newspaper about tattoos, the suggestion that “tattoos are not just for sail...
Ocean Liners in Interwar London: Art and Performance
Просмотров 9621 день назад
22 May 2024 Speaker: Faye Hammill - Professor of English Literature at the University of Glasgow Respondent: Professor Bruce Peter - Professor of Design History, The Glasgow School of Art. This talk is part of a series entitled 'Out to Sea', which will focus on the influence of oceans and their coasts, in relation to Britain and its global empire, on visual and architectural imagination and pro...
Rossettis: In Relation - Day 1 - Panel 2: Relationships
Просмотров 51Месяц назад
Rossettis: In Relation - Day 1 - Panel 2: Relationships
(M)otherhood: Art and Life: Babs: Re complicating Artist Mother Narratives
Просмотров 32Месяц назад
(M)otherhood: Art and Life: Babs: Re complicating Artist Mother Narratives
Extractivism:Activism Art, Activism and Ecological Extraction - IMAGING EXTRACTION
Просмотров 117Месяц назад
Extractivism:Activism Art, Activism and Ecological Extraction - IMAGING EXTRACTION
Space | Time | Life: a gathering
Просмотров 16Месяц назад
Space | Time | Life: a gathering
Deep Sea Divers Below the City: The Case of Sydney Harbour
Просмотров 342Месяц назад
Deep Sea Divers Below the City: The Case of Sydney Harbour
Extractivism:Activism Art, Activism and Ecological Extraction - LOCATING ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
Просмотров 70Месяц назад
Extractivism:Activism Art, Activism and Ecological Extraction - LOCATING ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
Rossettis: In Relation - Day 1 Panel 1: Methodologies
Просмотров 732 месяца назад
Rossettis: In Relation - Day 1 Panel 1: Methodologies
'Oxfordshire: Oxford and the South-East' Virtual Book Launch (Pevsner)
Просмотров 2092 месяца назад
'Oxfordshire: Oxford and the South-East' Virtual Book Launch (Pevsner)
Enter British Art in Motion 2024
Просмотров 382 месяца назад
Enter British Art in Motion 2024
The Practice of Art History in Britain: 1900-60 Day 1 Sessions 1 & 2
Просмотров 2372 месяца назад
The Practice of Art History in Britain: 1900-60 Day 1 Sessions 1 & 2
The Practice of Art History in Britain: 1900-60: Paul Oppés Art Worlds - Session 3
Просмотров 1122 месяца назад
The Practice of Art History in Britain: 1900-60: Paul Oppés Art Worlds - Session 3
Resist, Persist: Gender, Climate and Colonialism: Introductions, Katherine Fein
Просмотров 743 месяца назад
Resist, Persist: Gender, Climate and Colonialism: Introductions, Katherine Fein
Resist, Persist: Gender, Climate and Colonialism: Greta LaFleur
Просмотров 1203 месяца назад
Resist, Persist: Gender, Climate and Colonialism: Greta LaFleur
Resist, Persist: Gender, Climate and Colonialism: Camila Marambio
Просмотров 773 месяца назад
Resist, Persist: Gender, Climate and Colonialism: Camila Marambio
Cosmetics, Beauty and the Nature of Renaissance Women
Просмотров 1703 месяца назад
Cosmetics, Beauty and the Nature of Renaissance Women

Комментарии

  • @numidianarchers195
    @numidianarchers195 7 дней назад

    Excellent content; truly enjoyable and edifying. Meredith Gamer is superb. Tom Nero's dead or near dead hand is also pointing (as is his club above the horse, the arrow above the dog etc) to the cauldron and the void it represents for skeletal traces of the deceased. I found Hogarth's use of the phrase, "the infant race" curious thinking first that he meant the English but suspecting that he spoke of children and adolescents. Regardless, by this remark Hogarth suggests that cruelty is not the product of well-reasoned thinking. An 18th century crime wave! I'd never have thought such a thing possible but context is everything. Well done. I heard of this work only today as a colleague in History of Humour presented on the Massacre of Cats (~). Found this channel in an internet search.

  • @andrewelliott4436
    @andrewelliott4436 13 дней назад

    2024. People are discovering Deakin now. His time is coming.

  • @Grainnetaggart96
    @Grainnetaggart96 20 дней назад

    Insular vs globalist

  • @aghlalaouladtaouil2128
    @aghlalaouladtaouil2128 Месяц назад

    I have south vien of shrewsbury castre Paul sandby original

  • @Kobiyachi_
    @Kobiyachi_ 2 месяца назад

    Amazing

  • @dustinwatkins7843
    @dustinwatkins7843 2 месяца назад

    @26:58 "There is, of course, not a single phase plan in Summerson's Architecture in Britian." Wrong, sir. There are at least three, so far, that I've come across while reading the book, and I'm not yet finished. In the first Chapter, "Architecture at the Court of Henry VII", the first figure of the book is a phase plan of Hampton Court Palace. So I'm not sure why you would have made the remark, given it you read the book it's so obviously incorrect? There is a second phase plan in the fifteenth Chapter, "The Royal Works 1660-1702", figure 195; another of Hampton Court Palace, this time from Wren's period of construction. It can be compared with the first. Furthermore there is a third phase plan in the eighteenth Chapter, "The Royal Works 1702-26", i.e., figure 235; this one of Greenwich Hospital and The Queen's House. Yes, perhaps these phase plans do not offer as "precise" of an analysis as those from the archeological antiquarian tradition, but nonetheless I believe they would qualify.

  • @dustinwatkins7843
    @dustinwatkins7843 2 месяца назад

    Summerson was right, sorry. They were simply rubbish and "one damned house after another." It's pretty impossible to argue with. This obsession with keeping old buildings for no other sake than they're old, is basically just stupid.

  • @suzansuzan2700
    @suzansuzan2700 2 месяца назад

    Empire amhara ase tedros gonder

  • @Sol-Cutta
    @Sol-Cutta 3 месяца назад

    Brilliant

  • @warrenstutely7151
    @warrenstutely7151 3 месяца назад

    Thanks so very much. Real intelligence. What a lovely change. Warren

  • @phoenixswanson1561
    @phoenixswanson1561 3 месяца назад

    What you're doing is trying to make your angle interesting by adding something unexpected - this is what universities encourage. The art was the taste of the King - ask Henrietta.

  • @Alex0Hamilton
    @Alex0Hamilton 4 месяца назад

    That was informative, and overdue.

  • @ypure3859
    @ypure3859 4 месяца назад

    ABSOLUTELY excellent interview and words from this very important artist. THANK YOU for the upload.

  • @artisworldfaiza3659
    @artisworldfaiza3659 4 месяца назад

    Stunning

  • @mbrombert
    @mbrombert 4 месяца назад

    Absolutely beautiful stuff... I would love to get my hands on that book mentioned at the end!

  • @olivere5497
    @olivere5497 4 месяца назад

    13:29 i've been wondering for years is it possible the plate carrying boy is mix race and the 'servant' is his father and the woman his mother?

  • @recordsmerchant
    @recordsmerchant 6 месяцев назад

    Very interesting. Thanks for that.

  • @freeman.finishccp3221
    @freeman.finishccp3221 7 месяцев назад

    I have found a Wedgwood teapot but its made in 1671. Does it belong to the family before Wedgwood company being funded ? the pot has nothing on it and its just a date(1671)

  • @user-bi8rz5ci1m
    @user-bi8rz5ci1m 7 месяцев назад

    Nothing new, nothing interesting on a deeper learning side. More effort, next time. Thanks.

  • @loonylinda
    @loonylinda 8 месяцев назад

    very interesting.

  • @ReceiveandPlace
    @ReceiveandPlace 8 месяцев назад

    great presentation. Thank you.

  • @kooshanjazayeri
    @kooshanjazayeri 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you

  • @alphaclam
    @alphaclam 9 месяцев назад

    The guy who made these was clearly some sort of rare genius. You did a great job articulating what's so interesting about them and your ending description on the engravings blew me away.

  • @erwinwoodedge4885
    @erwinwoodedge4885 9 месяцев назад

    Picasso all over again.

  • @ruthsherman2507
    @ruthsherman2507 Год назад

    Benevolent!? Wow. Benevolent.🤔 I could not fathom this treatment as benevolent. Benevolent would have been leaving Prince Alamayou among his people. Instead his life was stolen to satisfy the curiousity of those who abducted him 👍💯⭐.

    • @aklilmesele5083
      @aklilmesele5083 Год назад

      His saftey would have been compromised had he stayed in Ethiopia. There were arch rivals and opponents against his father, Emperor Tewodros. Btw..i'm an Ethiopian.

  • @randydandy8840
    @randydandy8840 Год назад

    This series on Hogarth's intriguing works is wonderful, can't stop watching. Thank you so much.

  • @curtisloftis6003
    @curtisloftis6003 Год назад

    Thanks for an informative video. It was excellent.

  • @Brewskin78
    @Brewskin78 Год назад

    Too bad this "expository" video on the rood/choir screen has not a jot of materially relevant information regarding the craft and construction of the actual screen.

    • @PaulMellonCentr
      @PaulMellonCentr Год назад

      Hi @Brewskin78 This video was part of a series of features exploring the Hereford Screen from different perspectives. You might find what you’re looking for in one of the other contributions: www.britishartstudies.ac.uk/issues/issue-index/issue-5

  • @JayneRussellPhotography
    @JayneRussellPhotography Год назад

    so worth a listen but a hard listen. Hope your later ones are better otherwise DM me for advice

  • @99thehighstreet69
    @99thehighstreet69 Год назад

    Nice guy.Knows his stuff.Massive cross checker.Errors eradicated.Exciting journey.

  • @tallmikbcroft6937
    @tallmikbcroft6937 Год назад

    Wonderful. Thank you

  • @kevintroy4329
    @kevintroy4329 Год назад

    There was a bloody bullet hole ridden frock of a Lakota 1 yr old child murdered at wounded knee that was being auctioned off at Sotheby's. This just shows the depravity of the European mind.

  • @MelchorMoore
    @MelchorMoore Год назад

    Thanks. I’ve been looking for a video that explains the thought process of an art dealer rather than just the client acquisition side of the business

  • @danthiel8623
    @danthiel8623 Год назад

    This is amazing!😁

  • @startpage717
    @startpage717 Год назад

    Why not wear Gloves?

    • @MsDaem0n
      @MsDaem0n 9 месяцев назад

      Because it's not necessary to maintain the integrity of the items. Whenever you see an archivist use gloves, it's usually because of they don't, they get inundated with comments about how they should wear gloves. Clean hands don't harm most objects, no matter how old

    • @startpage717
      @startpage717 9 месяцев назад

      @@MsDaem0n OK. With everything flying around...each to their own. Thanks

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

    "Actually matters" is a highly subjective matter. What "actually matters" to an academic may not matter much to many other people.

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

    A bit of defiance and resistance to the new Orthodoxy in academic Art History is quite appropriate. Much of what passes for "Social Art History" is not actually ART history -- or even much HISTORY -- but rather the use of works of art to illustrate axiomatically derived "theories", usually with a clear left tilt. And it often is indeed an Orthodoxy. Challenging the academic axioms can provoke truly ferocious attacks. The Revolutionaries of yesteryear inevitably turn into today's Establishment. What is ironic about today's Art Historical academic Establishment is that they often think of the themselves as revolutionary, progressive -- and socially relevant, when they usually are none of it. And in practice that "intellectual rigour" is often conspicuous by its absence.

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

    The exclusivity club: The fact that connoisseurship requires actually looking at actual works of art will restrict connoisseurship to those who can actually get to looking at the actual works of art. There is not substitution for that, however unfair it may feel. But then, that's how it is will all skill and knowledge.

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

    Bucklow's various points on craft are well taken. They should be heeded.

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

    There is no formal authority to determine truth. The truth is the truth. Formal authority does come into play for specific purposes and in relation to specific rules.

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

    Risk is difficult. Usually there is no 0-risk default option. You can take risks without deliberately doing so.

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

    The question of what public money shout be spent on is a completely different question from what connoisseurship is, whether it exists and how it's done.

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

    Myrone's point about that other aspects than attribution are important is completely banal. It is no criticism of conoisseurship that it isn't something else. Any amount of Foucault will help you in attribution.

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

    The Darwinian mechanism of the market is a point well made. There is nothing quite like it in the public sector.

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

    "At the end of the day" is always a warning sign. It's usually a sign of argumentative desperation. It is also pretty strange to suggest that legal requirements for disinterest actually achieves that. I think all the evidence we can come up with will show that it does no such thing. There can be no problem that private sector connoisseurs have more time to spend on a picture. If they do, that's good, because then they can do something someone else can't. It is no valid criticism of connoissers that they are not civil servants; and vice versa.

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 Год назад

    One of the challenges for conoisseurs to explain the light bulb is that looking at art is akin to making it: it's largely based on tacit knowledge. Tacit knowledge, what is more, that will always remain tacit. It is an academic misunderstanding that everything can be explained in text.

  • @wflack
    @wflack Год назад

    I learnt a lot from this. Thank you very much for producing it.

  • @samuelmunoz7652
    @samuelmunoz7652 Год назад

    Never heard of Tuke before having to do an assignment on the Uranians. His paintings are very beautiful and unless youre aware of his friendships not really that lustful

  • @dannyisrael9210
    @dannyisrael9210 Год назад

    I don't know if there's anyone around today who was working in photography pre-digital, but if so they will know that these 'double exposures', especially in 35mm film with mechanical shutters, are always involuntary, and are typically caused by inadvertent long exposure settings on the shutter, where the sitter hears the first click, and, assuming the photo has been taken, moves, only to be captured again on the same piece of film a second time as the shutter closes, or by the shutter being obstructed as it closes. Otherwise, they can come from the photographer forgetting to advance the film, and re-exposing the previous exposure. If Deakin was intentionally double-exposing we would expect every image on the contact sheet to be double-exposed. The fact that only the occasional image is double-exposed suggests mechanical failure, and that there is little point in attaching any particular creative significance to these double-exposed images.

    • @bharris6821
      @bharris6821 Год назад

      Long exposure motion blur and double exposing are two very visually distinct effects; and these are inarguably double exposures (let alone a double exposure creates a much visibly denser negative, so I'm certain you can trust the art historians) Furthermore to achieve a properly exposed double exposure on film you have to adjust your exposure triangle essentially dropping one stop per exposure. Given Deakins double exposures are masterfully exposed its very evident they were purposeful. further evidence would be Deakin has published triple exposures also notably well exposed, suggesting he knew exactly how to adjust his exposure given the number of exposures he had planned per frame. and its silly to argue there isn't creative significance with such clear context to his earlier work with creating double images with reflections. I suggest you work in the process before making such entirely incorrect claims.

    • @dannyisrael9210
      @dannyisrael9210 Год назад

      @@bharris6821 Well after twenty years in photography photographing everything from fashion and models, via international weddings, corporate events and business leaders, members of parliament, the Royal Family (by appointment), to products, interiors and food on cameras ranging from 35mm to 10X8 plate cameras, plus ten years as an art college lecturer, what do I know? 'Trust the art historians'? Maybe, maybe not. What's the difference between a 'masterful exposure' and a 'correct exposure'. How about nothing at all. And what is a 'correct exposure'? Does anybody know? I don't think so. I don't. The only 'correct exposure' that I know of is the one that I intend, as the photographer, in camera. I then have to ensure consistent times and temperature in the dark room, in itself not easy. As far as black and white is concerned all I am looking for is a medium density negative which will give me choices in the enlarger. Too thin and I have one set of problems. Too dense and I have another, but the truth is that a b/w negative is very forgiving in the darkroom, so extreme precision is not essential, in my experience.

    • @bharris6821
      @bharris6821 Год назад

      @@dannyisrael9210chill I didn’t ask for your LinkedIn. All I’m saying is clearly these were intended and more over clearly they’re significant to John deakins work as a whole. I say “masterful exposure” in context to multiple exposures. Working in multiple exposures your window to hit a properly exposed frame (or atleast proper in the extent of actually exposing your subject matter) without entirely over powering your previous frame is a skill of its own; but being able to actively decide how you want each frame exposed in context to a multiple exposure composition is a craft. and a craft deakin has clearly mastered. Again if you worked in multiple exposures this would be apparent to you.

  • @MegaRoche1
    @MegaRoche1 Год назад

    Can you do them same analysis of Hieronmy Bocsh?

    • @PaulMellonCentr
      @PaulMellonCentr Год назад

      Sorry Siobhan but we only concentrate on British Art but a great idea for another organisation.