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HOW ARTISTS SEE - Kandinsky (Lecture 4 of 5) Prof Ian Aaronson 

UCT Summer School
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HOW ARTISTS SEE (Lecture 4 of 5)
Distinguished Emeritus Professor Ian Aaronson, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, USA
LECTURE TITLES
1. Claude Monet and the world of the Impressionists
2. Pablo Picasso and the Cubist experiment
3. The surreal world of Salvador Dali
4. Wassily Kandinsky and the road to abstraction
5. George Grosz, Otto Dix and the chaos of Weimar Germany
The last decades of the nineteenth century saw the liberation of Western art from the constraints of classical painting. With the birth of the new century, an explosion of art movements reflected the differing ways in which artists viewed the world. This course will explore the inner forces which compelled these artists to paint the way they did.
The towering figure among the Impressionists was Claude Monet. Evidence will be presented to suggest he was endowed with hyper­sensitive visual pathways which made him uniquely capable of capturing the ripple of water, a gathering mist and the subtle tonal effects of the passing day.
Pablo Picasso’s restless, inventive mind enabled him to see objects in a fractured, multifaceted way which freed the representation of the human body from its tethers to ancient Greece. The theories of Sigmund Freud resonated within the mind of Salvador Dali, allowing him to create the surreal images which have become icons of twentieth century painting.
The intellectual Wassily Kandinsky also looked inwards: he saw no need to represent the objective world. While the imagery of Kandinsky’s early abstract paintings recalls the interior of a Russian Orthodox church, Mark Rothko’s art reflects the simpler aesthetic of an Orthodox Jewish upbringing. The horrors of World War One compelled George Grosz and Otto Dix to reflect a society reeling from defeat during the early years of the Weimar Republic.
Each lecture will place an artistic movement within the narrative of Western art, as well as providing insights into the lives and personalities of the artists.
Course page: www.summerschool.uct.ac.za/how...
DISCLAIMER: The opinions expressed in the lecture are those of the lecturer and do not necessarily reflect those of the Summer School organisers. These recordings are unedited.
UCT Summer School 2016
www.summerschool.uct.ac.za
Twitter: @UCTSummerSchool
Facebook: UCT Summer School

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7 мар 2016

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Комментарии : 20   
@annebutt4507
@annebutt4507 9 месяцев назад
Great lecture. Did Kandinsky reach the soul? Yes, for me, he did. When I first saw some of his art in person I heard a chamber orchestra but couldn't see it. I walked into the room and looked for the musicians. The beautiful music - music of the spheres ? filled the room. I asked my companion if they could hear the music. It seemed I was the only one hearing it. There was no orchestra - only Kadinsky's art reaching my soul.
@emanuelramalheira301
@emanuelramalheira301 3 года назад
A very good explation about the art of Wassily Kandinsky. A great painter of the Twenty Century
@TheScreamingFrog916
@TheScreamingFrog916 3 года назад
Kandinsky, for me.
@jojojo8835
@jojojo8835 2 года назад
55:00 it’s just occurred to me that’s pretty close to the proportions of the average Torah scroll. 20 years of staring at Rothkos, 40 years staring at Torah scrolls, and Suddenly... 🤣. Now I’m seeing bookish proportions in some of his other stuff. Great lecture.
@georgeflutey838
@georgeflutey838 Год назад
Excellent video, thanks
@deepshah1882
@deepshah1882 6 лет назад
Simply amazing ! Prof. Ian is just brilliant in the way he has put it all together !
@williamgorden3422
@williamgorden3422 6 лет назад
A great presentation, well worth time.
@lnbartstudio2713
@lnbartstudio2713 7 лет назад
Quite a wonderful lecture. Thank you very much. If you can ever see it, the Rothko Chapel is worth the time and is truly magical.
@jmpsthrufyre
@jmpsthrufyre 5 лет назад
Heartbreaking.
@pasquino0733
@pasquino0733 4 года назад
'...we have said to ourselves that in the greatest works of art there is always a quality of abstraction, and have invoked the Platonic endorsement of a geometrical beauty; we have said, Go to, let us also make use of abstract formulae. It was overlooked here that the abstract formulae of ancient art were its natural vehicle, and not a personal or even local invention but the common language of the world... personal symbolisms have been evolved which are not based on any natural correspondence of things to principles, but rather on private associations of ideas. The consequence is that every abstract artist must be individually "explained" : the art is not communication of ideas, but like the remainder of contemporary art, only serves to provoke reactions.' Ananda K. Coomwaraswamy, Curator of Inidan Art at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts - from a 1937 lecture given at the MET.
@royboyx2
@royboyx2 6 лет назад
Quelle surprise, Kandinsky managed to develop his style, through Post-Impressionist Fauvism and Pointillism to eventual Abstraction, without the influence of avant-garde French contemporaries. What a coincidence.
@bohemianslouch3749
@bohemianslouch3749 3 года назад
he did live in paris from 1906 to 1907 and went to many Fauves exhibits.
@leastexpectedbeauty
@leastexpectedbeauty Год назад
Thank you for this lecture!! It's so much to chew on. But I have to say, I cannot understand how you can't see Notre Dame in the Matisse painting if it is even called like this. To me this is clearly the shape of Notre Dame from the front - like a horseshoe magnet - much more than a window.. But still, the painting can draw you in anyway.
@BattleRappaMC
@BattleRappaMC 4 года назад
At 23 minutes that painting represents the Caterpillar and the Explosion of the Transformation into the Butterfly ...
@psmith2112
@psmith2112 4 года назад
I would like the Prof to sit and read to me in my living room instead of having a television. please...
@AnaLuizaHella
@AnaLuizaHella 3 года назад
Good approach although the title should be "On How Rothko Achieved Spirituality while Kandinsky was an Apprentice" or "The winner is... Rothko" (he committed suicide after all). Sorry but this kind of comparation is quite strange. Kandinsky was interested in other spiritual realms. Read his "Spiritual in Art" and take a look at this and witness each painter being analyzed according to his work without any competition* ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-riunLgPcpBI.html Just like the impressionists. By now it's clear how each artist has a world of his own. Or "The winner is... Van Gogh" (He committed suicide after all) Otto Dix.. Name the suiciders... It's a joke (the suicide part) but please, don't compare.
@lawrencealtaffer1813
@lawrencealtaffer1813 4 года назад
Because Rothko used crappy materials for his paintings, they are now falling apart.
@theeaselrider4032
@theeaselrider4032 3 года назад
Love Kandinsky. Can't stand Rothko.
@Nomo_Popo
@Nomo_Popo 2 года назад
Seems to me Kandinsky portrayed the soul and Rothko portrayed the soul in depression. Kandinskys work has more life in it, Rothko's is more of a void. Kandinsky seemed to have more of a consistent direction, always evolving. Rothko didn't seem to really know what to do, except go forth from advice and stay where it was that made him 'successful'. The only thing that seemed to change were the choice of colors to his 'portals'. Also imo it seems much more understandable to think of Rothko as overrated while Kandinsky not so much.
@bohemianslouch3749
@bohemianslouch3749 3 года назад
This lecturer is in his own world. He really thinks that Rothko achieved the spiritual in art more than Kandinsky?! LOL.
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