John Constable, The Hay Wain (Landscape: Noon), 1821, oil on canvas, 130.2 x 185.4 cm (The National Gallery, London). Speakers: Dr. Steven Zucker and Dr. Beth Harris
Just found out about John Constable through a Windows 11 Login screen and wanted to know more about his style. Love the narration that these two speakers are giving. Its like half analysis and half gushing over the work haha
Can I recommend doing a video on what exactly constitutes an "idealized, Classical landscape?" I find that this is often the most confusing aspect of the landscape discussion for most of my students when we get to the early 19th Century. In the past, I've used Poussin's Landscape with St. John on Patmos as an example, but even that video (on Smart History) doesn't fully spell it out (in my opinion, and as much as I still like it.) So, please consider defining the Academic landscape in a video with multiple examples. And thank you, as always, for your excellent and important work!
To Suffolk I Must Go by Ramnath Subramanian So real, I can feel the water jump As wheels traverse this stream; No rustic mood can ever trump The magic in this dream. I’d love to stand before this land Where Constable did roam; Where paint and brush did understand How nature made her home. And so to Suffolk I must go And catch a glimpse of Stour; And ride a wagon, get to know The meaning of that hour When light adorned with silver play The water’s prosody, And all around the evening lay In whispered majesty.
lol @ "the six footers." Way to be differentiate yourself... That should resonate especially strongly today where people seem to be hyper-fixated on that height. I respect him for having the courage to do what he loved the way he wished to do it. I think this is the first I've seen of Romanticism so far and I like it. "...I've often thought of pictures of them before I ever touched a pencil." Very romantic indeed. 🥰
I've just watched a video about the UK Citizenship exam, and one of the questions was to name this painting, the examiner said it was called "The Cornfield" by Turner. I cringed.