Bravo, bravo, bravo!!! Dear Mr. Andrew Lloyd Weber, I am on my way...can I please come work for you? This is absolutely FABULOUS and has my heart soaring because I GET it...our surroundings effect us and art defines a society. So glad I stumbled on this. Thank you and I will bring sandwiches...so we can have a picnic on your lawn and discuss the PRB.
Oh dear, Port Sunlight is not in Liverpool but across the Mersey in Cheshire! My great aunt lived in one of the houses, she was a Sunlight factory worker.
I appreciate him and this documentary, but I wish sometimes that rich people would donate their amazing and edifying art collections to the public galleries, so that many more people could see and benefit from them, Art is meant to be seen.
Not at all. Usually people who buy these masterpieces, really love art and care about their collection (except for those who buy only to show off theit wealth, of course). in museums, the masterpieces become a number, a part of the collection, rows and rows of uninterested people go about and glance at them between two likes on facebook, some bored caretaker dusts them now and then before going home. Yes, i am the type that loves museums and monumental curches. i spent almost a day in Notre Dame last summer, gazing at statues and majestic columns, but my friends toured the cathedral in 10 minutes. so, no. those who have art collections, good for them! keep them in the family!
@@petetube99, well, I am a person who is grateful that museums exist so everyone of us can have access to those masterpieces. Still, you must admit there's something definitely cold and impersonal about museums. I believe private collectors cherish those works of art much much more. And usually look after them properly. And people can sometimes see those masterpieces when private collectors lend their works of art to museums for temporary exhibitions or if they open their house to the public occasionally. Of course it'd be nice if they did that more often.