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This Tragic Painting Is Painfully Beautiful 

Art Deco
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This piece is called Anguish by August Friedrich Schenck. A mother sheep cries out in despair over the death of her lamb, as a group of crows wait patiently to feast on it.
This painting is gut wrenching. But I think the most interesting and potentially disturbing part about it is the crows. They could pester and peck but they don’t, they simply wait. Because that’s all they really need to do. Worst case scenario for them, the mother sheep eventually moves on, best case scenario, she becomes weak and falls from exhaustion and the birds get to feast on both of them. Looking at it this way, the crows seem to embody the cruelty and selfishness that exists in our world.
When Anguish was first exhibited in the Paris salon of 1878, it really resonated with people. There are a couple of reasons for this. First of all, in the 19th century, death was at the forefront of everyone's minds. Diseases like tuberculosis were rampant and took many people when they were young. And also because Queen Victoria was mourning her late husband, Prince Albert, at the time which made death weirdly fashionable.
But also because a few years before this painting was created, Charles Darwin released his book, The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals. This book introduced the idea that animals share some of the same emotions like joy, sadness and pain that humans do. These were groundbreaking ideas and shifted people’s mindsets from thinking about animals as purely existing for our consumption and pleasure to thinking of them as more like us. Dr. Ted Gott, the National Gallery of Victoria Senior Curator in International Art suggested that this painting may have been inspired by Darwin’s groundbreaking ideas.
Although this piece sits among paintings from much more popular artists such as Rembrandt and Monet, it’s consistently ranked as a crowd favorite. This piece is currently hanging in the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne. The gallery has around 75,000 works in its permanent collection, but Anguish has been voted twice as one of the museum's most popular works. I think the success of this painting speaks to the fact that no matter the time, the feeling of pain and loss resonates with almost everyone. Thank you for watching!
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African Drums (Sting) by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommon...
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30 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 341   
@icarusbinns3156
@icarusbinns3156 9 месяцев назад
Honestly, I love crows. I have seen a pair, tending to a baby squirrel that fell from its nest. One crow kept trying to bring the squirrel water, one was grooming its fur. And when the baby died, both crows flew in frantic circles, cawing in a way that sounded like they’d spotted danger. After that… they didn’t touch the squirrel. Instead, wasps got to the pitiful body. The squirrel parents never showed up. It was just the crows trying to nurse the squirrel
@sewmuchjoy
@sewmuchjoy 9 месяцев назад
Really?! Wow, that is so amazing yet heartbreaking to see! Proof that animals have feelings too.
@heckyeahponyscans
@heckyeahponyscans 9 месяцев назад
That's amazing! There is a RU-vid video showing a crow who cared for a stray kitten, feeding it. A couple adopted the kitten and the wild crow visited every day. Either the crow or the kitten was named Moses.
@sewmuchjoy
@sewmuchjoy 9 месяцев назад
Wow...@@heckyeahponyscans
@icarusbinns3156
@icarusbinns3156 9 месяцев назад
@@heckyeahponyscans the crow actually chased the humans away from his kitten. He was determined to raise this week-old kitten by himself A followup video shows the cat walking up to the crow, and clearly asking him to preen her fur. So he does! He stepped right into the dad role
@momof3chis291
@momof3chis291 8 месяцев назад
I’m with you, I absolutely love crows. They are in fact, my very favorite bird. They are so SUPER intelligent, and have long memories. They will learn to trust, if you show yourself trustworthy. They’ll bring gifts for you, if you consistently leave gifts for them. I don’t know what it is about them, perhaps maybe just the fact that they are black (like black cats), that silly folks are so superstitious about. ✨
@KAYEscl0sed
@KAYEscl0sed 9 месяцев назад
"the only cruel thing about this is.. the winter" Damn.
@haughton4832
@haughton4832 9 месяцев назад
Damn. This piece is absolutely gorgeous and heart-wrenching at the same time. With that being said, I love all the different interpretations and questions it poses. Great video.
@carabatzis25
@carabatzis25 9 месяцев назад
I've seen this painting, I liked it but didn't know it was famous. Thanks for sharing!
@ryanlutes9833
@ryanlutes9833 9 месяцев назад
I lean more towards the lighter interpretation of this piece. The crows seem curious or even respectful rather than needlessly cruel. If they are waiting for a meal, it is only because that is their nature, not because they take joy in the mother's suffering.
@AugustRx
@AugustRx 9 месяцев назад
Realism doesn't matter if the artist's intent was to depict them as such. But this doesn't look like the artist drew them to look malicious so i guess you're right.
@VenusFlyHands
@VenusFlyHands 9 месяцев назад
I know what it is! The only animal here with its mouth open is the sheep. The crows are all silent. I live in a city with a Lot of crows. They're noisy af. A murder of dead quiet crows would be a creepy sight, but I agree that it comes off as respectful here, like a funeral.
@AirQuotes
@AirQuotes 9 месяцев назад
Crows are very intelligent, so I think they're being respectful
@siwelify
@siwelify 9 месяцев назад
I feel like if the crows were showing respect their attention would be on the mother and their heads would be held higher. They instead are focused on the dead lamb and their heads are low and stretched toward the lamb . They are likely slowly getting closer and closer. Not necessarily with evil intent but with natural intentions and paying decreasing regard for the mother.
@kaloarepo288
@kaloarepo288 5 месяцев назад
Nonsense - crows are hideously cruel birds though very intelligent - if a mother ewe has 2 lambs they will distract the ewe allowing the other crows to peck out the eyes and kill the other lamb. A farmer has told me this as he has witnessed this scenario on his farm. Nature is red in both tooth and claw!
@fmor2779
@fmor2779 9 месяцев назад
"The only cruel thing here is the winter" Solid. They call the crows the "cruelty and selfishness of the world", the symbolism is interesting and good, yes. In nature? It's just the circle of life and winter is the obstacle every character in the painting faces, no good no bad, just the harsh reality. But what meant for people back then, that is what is important in this piece, in many actually. But some forget that what people saw back then is very important when analyzing an old piece of art. And despite how harsh it is, this piece is beautiful for what it evokes as time passes. And a lot of us need pieces like this to humble us in many ways.
@ecurewitz
@ecurewitz 9 месяцев назад
Winter is always cruel
@fmor2779
@fmor2779 9 месяцев назад
​@@ecurewitz "Winter is a merciless killer! We must procure enough firewood to keep us warm through the long, dark nights"
@realrebelli0n
@realrebelli0n 7 месяцев назад
Without death there can’t be new life and without winter there can‘t be any blossoming spring. It’s two sides of the same medal.
@clearcutter74
@clearcutter74 9 месяцев назад
"Animals don't behave like men, If they have to fight, they fight; and if they have to kill they kill. But they don't sit down and set their wits to work to devise ways of spoiling other creatures' lives and hurting them. They have dignity and animality.” - Richard Adams, Watership Down
@MarcosElMalo2
@MarcosElMalo2 9 месяцев назад
(Except cats)
@mommachupacabra
@mommachupacabra 9 месяцев назад
@@MarcosElMalo2 and orcas.
@stephenpmurphy591
@stephenpmurphy591 9 месяцев назад
​@@mommachupacabraYes, how interesting those oddly specific sailboat attacks and ripping off rudders.
@mommachupacabra
@mommachupacabra 9 месяцев назад
@@stephenpmurphy591 I was thinking more about how orcas like to play seal Frisbee. But the boat attacks, that's just putting out the "no trespassing" sign.
@João-u8b
@João-u8b 4 месяца назад
I wanna be like an animal. Being pragmatic. Being direct, objective.
@Drew791
@Drew791 9 месяцев назад
Thank you for bringing this painting to our attention. I rarely get the chance to travel to any art museums so it’s always a treat to view your uploads. This was a beautiful to-the-point analysis and quick history on this piece. I’ll be honest and say the very first thing that crossed my mind was that it felt almost religious in nature. Like the baby lamb was an unfortunate but necessary sacrifice for the circle of life, especially in these harsh winter conditions. And the very first point that caught my eye was dead center in the painting that shows just how cold the air is with that mother lamb’s breath. Just dead center.
@Sarah_Grant
@Sarah_Grant 9 месяцев назад
It definitely could give religious vibes.
@tjyb1502
@tjyb1502 9 месяцев назад
Yes indeed! Well said! Mind blowing... New top favourite painting!! I personally Love the emotion and layers of interpretation!
@carpaltunneler286
@carpaltunneler286 9 месяцев назад
I love the lack of distant landmarks in the background. With the suggestion of wind in the ewe's wool it drives hone the desolate, lonely feeling. There is no farm, no fences, no pastures, no mountains. There is only the cold there and then. That which is in front of the subjects of the painting, nothing else matters to be focused on
@kimberlypatton205
@kimberlypatton205 9 месяцев назад
It reeks if futility, emotional upheaval and heartbreak overall. The crows motives are irrelevant at this point, it is the mother sheep’s anguish and lack of any recourse of her dead baby.
@scatterbug
@scatterbug 8 месяцев назад
Interpretation of the painting aside, I have to say that I'm blown away by the detail. The sheep's fur, the messed up snow, the crow's EVERYTHING. It's truly an amazing example of a master's devotion to detail.
@studiotwo24
@studiotwo24 3 месяца назад
💯
@mommachupacabra
@mommachupacabra 9 месяцев назад
As someone who's raised goats in the past, my first thought was "either unseasonably late storm caught the dam right after lambing (February/March) or she got pregnant too early in the year, and lambed too early for the season." I also pondered as another commenter did, the symbolism of the crows being those who stand to benefit from the decedent's estate.
@StargazerLily82
@StargazerLily82 9 месяцев назад
Oh wow... the crows mourning alongside the mama. I never would have even considered that.
@AirQuotes
@AirQuotes 9 месяцев назад
That was my first, though, but I like crows
@sewmuchjoy
@sewmuchjoy 9 месяцев назад
As someone who adores my own flock of sheep (we live in the country), this painting was so heartbreaking to see! I have never seen this before! It is actually quite beautiful. I love this channel, have learned so so so much! Thanks Art Deco!
@kristajones7202
@kristajones7202 9 месяцев назад
I grew up with sheep, and this captures the tragedy out-of-season lambing can be.
@Sarah_Grant
@Sarah_Grant 9 месяцев назад
He has other paintings that feature sheep/livestock you may want to check out. The way he paints fur/wool/hooves is amazing! So detailed!
@sewmuchjoy
@sewmuchjoy 9 месяцев назад
Definitely. One year we had one of our ewes lamb out in the pasture in the late evening. We weren't expecting her to lamb yet so that was a shock. She had twins and the littlest one was shaking really hard from the cold. We dried her (and her sister) quickly and brought them and their mama to the barn. It was so cold that night and we didn't think the little one was going to make it. But morning came and she was up nursing fine! Blessing is now a healthy ewe due to lamb in the spring! @@kristajones7202
@maydayace5651
@maydayace5651 9 месяцев назад
Thank you for showing this painting to us. "Human emotions" on animals seems to be a type of painting that, I think, is not as commonly looked at nowadays. It really gave me some things to think about today. A great way to start my Saturday 😊
@Nylak-Otter
@Nylak-Otter 9 месяцев назад
It's a mother mourning the death of her child, and protesting the scavengers that already want to remove the still-warm body literally from her care in the height of her mourning, knowing she can't keep them at bay forever. This is exactly as emotional as depicted. I feel like the only reason some folks might find it extreme is because they don't generally empathize with an animal as they would with a person.
@singingstars5006
@singingstars5006 5 месяцев назад
Which is sad because it's very easy to tune into the emotions of animals. One has to lack empathy and spirituality to not perceive their emotions. It's a blindness the culture taught us. It's not Darwin, known for survival of the fittest, whom I would have expected to acknowledge the soul the Bible clearly says animals were given.
@LostPeopleOfEarth158
@LostPeopleOfEarth158 9 месяцев назад
If something like this was painted today the crows could represent the extended family waiting to get their piece of inheritance. That's what I thought of. The mother lamb being the close friends and family that are actually mourning. The crows being the vultures waiting for their piece of the pie. The lamb being the actual person who died.
@kellyd4221
@kellyd4221 9 месяцев назад
Ha! An amazing interpretation I had not thought of.
@shellymills8105
@shellymills8105 9 месяцев назад
You could also argue the crows could represent things like taxes and other fees the government collect on upon death…
@samnelson7428
@samnelson7428 9 месяцев назад
I do feel like this might go against the theme of the "mother lamb." Unless the child has their own fortune
@LostPeopleOfEarth158
@LostPeopleOfEarth158 9 месяцев назад
@@samnelson7428 maybe so but that was just one of the ways I saw it. I've heard stories about kids having college funds that get fought over.
@AirQuotes
@AirQuotes 9 месяцев назад
If they're meant to represent that, why not use actual vultures instead of crows. And it's rare that a child would leave anyone an inheritance. Your interpretation doesn't make sense, dude. But it's good to think deeper, keep going
@NotAFanOfHandles
@NotAFanOfHandles 9 месяцев назад
Crows are highly intelligent creatures. They remember faces and form bonds outside their species. If you gain the loyalty of a crow, you've got a friend for life. One of my favorite recent stories about crows was a woman who befriended a murder. First they started to bring her gifts, little shiny trinkets they found. They also started to "protect" her, which made trouble for her elderly neighbors, so she helped them befriend the crows. In turn, the crows helped save a neighbor who fell by getting the attention of other neighbors, who were able to help them in time. Such lovely birds.
@ramonzapato5528
@ramonzapato5528 9 месяцев назад
I watch ALL your videos...this is the first one that made this 57 year old man cry." Anguish" is such an appropriate title...it hurts, yet it's beautiful
@antoniocasias5545
@antoniocasias5545 7 месяцев назад
Meh
@ramonzapato5528
@ramonzapato5528 7 месяцев назад
@@antoniocasias5545 🤣🤣🤣
@antoniocasias5545
@antoniocasias5545 7 месяцев назад
@@ramonzapato5528 🤭😁
@arthurjeremypearson
@arthurjeremypearson 9 месяцев назад
As a big fan of anthropomorphism and science, this painting really struck me as you showed it to me.
@LissyPoulose-wc9tp
@LissyPoulose-wc9tp 2 месяца назад
😢
@linphillips8331
@linphillips8331 9 месяцев назад
Wow, I can barely look at this painting, it's so painful.
@keroknight2989
@keroknight2989 9 месяцев назад
I had the honor to see this painting in the National Art Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne back in 2019, I instantly fell in love with it but the same time felt sad and chills all over my body. Truly a masterpiece, the best thing I saw in the whole art gallery!
@DarlingStudent
@DarlingStudent 9 месяцев назад
Mary mourning the loss of her son Jesus. It's a beautiful and haunting painting.
@melanies.6030
@melanies.6030 9 месяцев назад
You always do a top-notch exploration of the social zeitgeist during the painting's creation. It adds so much to see the painting in the context of its era. This one was especially fascinating to imagine all those forces going on in its day.
@SapphireLite87
@SapphireLite87 9 месяцев назад
I love this painting but it hurts me to look at it. You can feel the pain of a mother losing her child, the loneliness, the cold, the threat of crows wanting to eat her lamb. Yet there is beauty too, for all the emotions it envokes and the stunning way it was painted. An absolute masterpiece in multiple ways.
@rustyhowe3907
@rustyhowe3907 6 месяцев назад
Having worked with sheep it's often heartbreaking how they'll call out for you to help their lamb when the little tyke is done for and her watchful eyes pleading for you save her unwell baby. The crying and agonized bleats never erase from memory. But then if you can help the lamb the whole herd changes their demeanor toward you and you become their personal hero with the mother constantly coming up to you and nuzzling.
@originalmothman1
@originalmothman1 3 месяца назад
I also think the crows are taken aback. Instead of giving into their nature of swarming and picking off the little lamb with guerilla tactics, the anguish of the mother calls on the birds feelings of empathy.
@aseretbrown
@aseretbrown 9 месяцев назад
I love this paining. Many paintings depict different emotions with different symbols. This one is straight to the point, but with hidden layers underneath it. Thank you for showing us this!
@Cameron-c2p
@Cameron-c2p 9 месяцев назад
still waiting 4 the fall of icarus, garden of earthly delights, the nightmare, aurora Triumphans, ivan the terrible and his son and death of marat ii
@daveseddon5227
@daveseddon5227 9 месяцев назад
Thanks for the cheery-uppy bits at the end! ☺
@Art_Deco
@Art_Deco 9 месяцев назад
Thank you for your support Dave! I’m glad you liked the cute paintings!
@tashuntka
@tashuntka 9 месяцев назад
If I was to be struck blind and deaf but offered to hear one sound forever, I would choose to hear you describing the world around us.. And.... another Stellar video 👍🏻⚡️⚡️✨️✨️👍🏻
@sunniedunbar6889
@sunniedunbar6889 9 месяцев назад
The dead lamb appears to be smiling; life might be Anguish, but for the sweet release of death.
@LunaiCarmen
@LunaiCarmen 5 месяцев назад
Sad yet freeing
@RonnieRocket55
@RonnieRocket55 9 месяцев назад
Could you please do a video on Solomon J Solomon’s Samson? I have no idea what that painting is about, and I think you are the PERFECT person to break it down.
@maloryj7165
@maloryj7165 9 месяцев назад
Ive seen cows guard their dead and near dear calves from vultures. It looks exactly like this. In the winter, if theyre unable to get on foot and nurse quickly, they can easily die. We once had a mother cow die, calf was old enough to wean but hadnt yet. I had to wait a few hours till i had help to move her and the vultures started picking at her while calf watched. Its very upsetting but thats farming sometimes. Scavengers are super important and just doing their thing.
@flowersforthedead5182
@flowersforthedead5182 9 месяцев назад
The crows faces look more like they are mourning along with her. Like they would've rather eaten the predator than the lamb. Corvids will replace humans one day. They are in their stone age.
@JustJessee
@JustJessee 9 месяцев назад
Absolutely love your content. I took one look at this painting, which I never had seen before, and noped out. I respect the effort you went to diving into this but...its already heartbreaking. I actually feel it in my chest. I could listen to a breakdown of this if the figures were human, but animals? I've got that gene that makes that impossible. I'm sure I'm not the only one here, and I'm sure a lot more have no idea what I'm talking about. And that's OK.
@JB6802
@JB6802 9 месяцев назад
I'm the same way, and it's because animals are so innocent.
@charliekezza
@charliekezza 8 месяцев назад
Its probably kept its popularity in Australia as we "grew up on the sheeps back"
@hymnbos
@hymnbos 9 месяцев назад
this piece is so heartbreaking. i remembered this piece when i lost my dog, though it is not even comparable to the sheep's all too real anguish. i was heartbroken, and i only remembered the painting for the few months. but it was beautiful, and i still loved these paintings ( along with the lunatic of étretat, ) because they were so profound. i think to me, at that time - it was them being outwardly emotional, whether in grief or madness, where i couldn't be - that was the most intimate part. i love these paintings :) keep doing what you do!!!
@lucybrown1804
@lucybrown1804 7 месяцев назад
I'm not surprised it was voted as most popular more than once. It's much bigger than you'd expect and really dominant among the pieces that it shares a room with. It took my breath away the first time I saw it in person.
@geralyn-mm
@geralyn-mm 9 месяцев назад
I think the crows are totally affected by the suffering of the mother, as they are affected by death of Their Own. And then in the end nature will be nature and it is indeed survival I can feel the heartache and it is truly one of the saddest things I've ever seen
@christiancupcake8310
@christiancupcake8310 9 месяцев назад
I'm so glad you make these videos! I get to learn about paintings and their stories that I wouldn't have known about anywhere else
@bexfisch80
@bexfisch80 9 месяцев назад
I love how I learn about works and artists that I've never heard of through your channel! Easily one of my favorites here.
@lanasinapayen3354
@lanasinapayen3354 9 месяцев назад
My first impression was your last interpretation. While death is sad and painful, it's also not wasted. The tiny lamb will feed a lot of crows, in a frozen world with no plants, where only death can sustain life
@graphite2786
@graphite2786 9 месяцев назад
Ha! When i was a child visting the National Gallery of Victoria and I hated this painting because it was so devastating. Here in Melbourne it's known as "Sad Sheep" and sheepfarmers get triggered by it because apparently if a sheep were to open it's mouth as wide as the ewe in the artwork, its tongue would be visible. Others have said it's racist and some unhinged people reckon that its an ovine version of Leonardo's "Pieta" ( guess who the crows are?). I haven't seen this artwork since the Covid lockdowns and for some reason i remembered the sheep having horns and a chestnut coloured fleece! Shades of the "Mandela Effect" 😅
@Vicky-fl7pv
@Vicky-fl7pv 9 месяцев назад
Don't you think it kinda looks like the sculpture "la pieta" by Michelangelo??
@Undydamon
@Undydamon 9 месяцев назад
"We're all human, unless you're a sheep, then you're a sheep" True words of wisdom
@Objective-Observer
@Objective-Observer 9 месяцев назад
Oh my goodness. This painting is so... I don't have the words. Relateable... but that makes it so easy to see metaphors in the images. Is Diana the lamb, and the Crows the paparazi? Is this filled with Religious metaphors? Does this portray the Vultures of society waiting to feast on the innocent? I think I would be less disturbed, if this were any other animal, than a lamb. As a Christian that carries soooo much symbolism, that it is difflicult to look at this piece without, extreme emotion. Which could have been Schenck's point.
@MagdaleneDivine
@MagdaleneDivine 9 месяцев назад
I know when I've been at my saddest I would flip through my father's art coffee table books and just seeing that others have also been able to create beauty from , well, dead things , or ashes, it's something positive to focus on than self pity.
@GINGIVITISSS
@GINGIVITISSS 9 месяцев назад
The original "Loss"
@lFathomEmotion
@lFathomEmotion 9 месяцев назад
I interpret it as if the crows do not understand, they are curious and slightly afraid. Like the people who do not mourn a dead person they are taken aback by a strong expression of grief
@Feoshyt
@Feoshyt 6 месяцев назад
I always thought of it as the crows participating in a funeral. Crows seem to have more empathy than people thought. In previous centuries, crows had much darker representations and signs of death. This painting has always made me think that crows are mourning. I honestly never thought of them as waiting to eat. Being in winter, it does make it so much darker.
@copat149
@copat149 9 месяцев назад
Wake up! A new Art Deco video is up!!!
@Ava-oc1dg
@Ava-oc1dg 9 месяцев назад
Blessed Virgin mourning the lamb of God ,Jesus. The Pieta. The crows does it matter. The body and blood of the lamb communion. The last supper.
@sewmuchjoy
@sewmuchjoy 9 месяцев назад
I had the same thought!
@katherinegraham3803
@katherinegraham3803 9 месяцев назад
I'm not religious, but I also thought of La Pieta. The lamb. The grieving mother. The salvation that is now possible because of the sacrifice of the innocent.
@Cent4man
@Cent4man 9 месяцев назад
I’ve always believed a work of art should make you feel. It’s should be a catalyst that evokes your emotions. This painting truly is one that demands an emotional response.
@MagdaleneDivine
@MagdaleneDivine 9 месяцев назад
It's because it's the first time someone was able to create, show and illustrated emotion while on an animals face. Notice how creepy babies and animals faces were up until the very late Renaissance or early baroque period. Here the animal is shown the face in proportion and scale that are correct for that species, not as a representation of an ideal or admirable characteristic being extoled by way of an example, here the ewe is shown as itself but we emphasize because of the emotion. * Empathize is what I meant but the emphasis is also placed upon the common shared experience of life both the good AND the bad and the futility of trying to control the world around us, because what will be will be
@Lafeolamom
@Lafeolamom 7 месяцев назад
This makes me think of today’s society where people are suffering injustices and there is always a crowd of people (crows) who stand around and watch or record for social media.
@manuelka15
@manuelka15 9 месяцев назад
My interpretation is: the crows are waiting to eat the lamb. But they are not guilty of its death. Maybe they didn't help save it, but they just follow their natural instinct, which is not violent, they just take what can no longer serve other purpose.
@Roberto-REME
@Roberto-REME 9 месяцев назад
I love your uploads and I'm so happy to have found this one. I had not seen your work in a while and I'm so very grateful you are still uploading. Great narration as always and excellent analysis and interpretation of the painting's theme.
@ErsatzMcGuffin
@ErsatzMcGuffin 9 месяцев назад
Crows are very intelligent creatures and make friends (and enemies) with others (not just humans) often. "Death, is a rumor started by life" G.Corso We are all shocked when it happens. Anyone who ever got to know a lamb knows how quickly love happens. It's the lesson of the Passover Lamb. Right? Live with a lamb for 3 days and nights and then try to butcher it for Seder. It's always hardest for children. Heart breaking.
@SarahGreen523
@SarahGreen523 5 месяцев назад
Perhaps it should have always been 'a funeral of crows' rather than 'a murder of crows'. Seems far more appropriate to me. But, I love crows; they're very smart, have an extensive vocabulary of calls, and they remember the people who helped them or harmed them. They also communicate this information to all the other crows, so be nice to crows or they'll exact their revenge upon you. Maybe that's why they are called 'a murder of crows'. One wonders about the fellow who came up with that saying.
@alpyki2588
@alpyki2588 9 месяцев назад
I'm pretty sure it is the first interpretation judging from its sequel, The Orphan. Anguish the crows might be waiting to move on, but The Orphan is clear: the lamb will die without its mother, and the crows will have their bodies.
@averycheesypotato
@averycheesypotato 6 месяцев назад
The crows do not seem ominous so much as watchful, curious. Perhaps they are merely fascinated outsiders to the ewe’s pain, morbidly fascinated as the Victorians themselves? Both crows and Victorian men in their tailored dark coats, dress much the same.
@HeronCoyote1234
@HeronCoyote1234 9 месяцев назад
This video reminds me of a short animation (I forget the name). An eagle descends on a coyote pup, out for a frolic in the grass. Mother coyote sees this and attacks, then kills the eagle, providing food for her pups. The next scene is of the nest of eagle chicks waiting for their mother to bring back food. 😳😥
@13_13k
@13_13k 9 месяцев назад
I'd like to add this second comment and another thought for people who have never viewed this painting before and for those who have in recent times. Imagine being alive back in the times when people didn't read, very rarely viewed any art except what was in their local church or possibly in the town square as an artist painted various items to sell in the market. And then you come upon a painting like this one. There were no televisions or photos or movies or picture books. So unless you were a shepherd you've most likely never even imagined anything like this painting. Of course you'd be familiar with sheep and lambs as well as crows and the harshness of winter but if you were raised with nobility or some family with money, that painting would or could be seen as the scariest thing you've ever seen. Like a modern horror movie that gave you nightmares.
@tiozzo.
@tiozzo. 9 месяцев назад
babe wake up, a new Art Deco video just dropped
@knotzed
@knotzed 7 месяцев назад
1:41 crows are known to hold funerals for their friends which looks alot like this they gather in a large number are silent for a wile and all fly off at the same time they can recognize and remember a human face for at least 7 years maybe they know the lamb and are sad for her they are scavengers but unlike a condore they don't sit and wait for prey to die Edit I should have let u say it lol
@suzannemomma
@suzannemomma 9 месяцев назад
This is such an exceptional channel. You’ve brought out an interest in art that I didn’t know I have! Keep them coming.
@Dayvit78
@Dayvit78 9 месяцев назад
I'm just upset that a single sheep is called a sheep. Shouldn't it be shoop or something? (Goose - geese)
@LEart2
@LEart2 9 месяцев назад
Hi iam an artist and i would like for you to explore or make a video on the painting Rebecca et Eliezer created 1883 by Alexandre Cannabel please thank you and also could you also do after exploring that painting i would like for you to make a video on cleopatra testing poison on condemmend poiseners please thank iam a huge fan ❤
@fanfaxforever
@fanfaxforever 9 месяцев назад
Now here's a video that will get us into the Holiday Spirits 💀.
@ginoongboyong
@ginoongboyong 9 месяцев назад
Wow!! That was great!!
@ospididious
@ospididious 9 месяцев назад
Thank you again for your great perspectives. Keep it up.
@emzyLovelyxoxo
@emzyLovelyxoxo 9 месяцев назад
I binge watched all your videos and i want more
@plainegrace5712
@plainegrace5712 9 месяцев назад
What a beautiful painting. My favorite painting is held at a local museum. It, too, is about death. It is by Charles Sprague Pearce and is called A Village Funeral at Brittany.
@MinnieTricks
@MinnieTricks 9 месяцев назад
Ewe did well describing the painting and some possible interpretations. I always enjoy the thought and humour in your presentations.
@learning2live_brokeninchro157
@learning2live_brokeninchro157 8 месяцев назад
I have to say, as someone that grew up on a sheep farm I’m impressed. I helped my family care for and raise a flock of approximately 400 sheep during my childhood. As someone that has spent much time with sheep, I can honestly saw the artist captures this Ewe so well that I feel like I can hear her “Baa”.
@13_13k
@13_13k 9 месяцев назад
Thank You for reviewing this painting. It is a painting that has pulled so many feelings from my mind not just the initial thought of the Murder of Crows waiting to scavenge on the carcass of the lamb and the absolute distraught and anguish of the sheep. Is she more upset that her lamb has died or that the Murder of Crows are so heartless and only care about filling their bellies? Crows are a very extremely smart creature. They have emotions, they have memories that are passed on to their offspring and they pass on to theirs. They remember people's faces and attribute actions of individuals to that person forever. They even have special calls for certain people if they are safe or if they are dangerous. Whether the Crows are depicted as a funeral of morners or as the feeders of carrion, their presence is dark and cold like the winter day of the painting. As you pointed out, one has to wonder the future of the sheep. Will she eventually move on and abandon her lambs body to rejoin the flock? Or will she remain by the side of the lamb protecting it from all predators until she becomes so weak from lack of sleep and fending off foes, and from starvation that she eventually succumbing to all the trauma and collapses only to become the larger part of a free banquet? Such an amazing painting.
@SusanHopkinson
@SusanHopkinson 9 месяцев назад
What a lovely video as always. It’s a pity this generation seems to assume such emotional fragility that questions of Life and Death are considered too “heavy”. The more we live with what is real and inevitable the more we fully appreciate and live our lives without being neurotic 🙏🏻
@carrant4581
@carrant4581 9 месяцев назад
Wow what a cool painting! That's what I like about this channel because I learn about things I would have never heard of.
@LuluJinx1111
@LuluJinx1111 9 месяцев назад
I’ve always viewed this as the crows waiting for a meal but now I prefer the funeral concept.
@buttercxpdraws8101
@buttercxpdraws8101 9 месяцев назад
Haunting painting 😢
@jonnynice8366
@jonnynice8366 9 месяцев назад
There is a 0% chance in my mind that it had never dawned on people, who had pets like cats and dogs, that animals also have emotions. Get tf out of here with that. People's aren't that stupid.
@stephenpmurphy591
@stephenpmurphy591 9 месяцев назад
Sadly many people are that stupid whether it be willful ignorance or just plain stupidity....It always results in the same outcome. Shocking cruelty.
@Adamant_Adam
@Adamant_Adam 9 месяцев назад
Ohh, people's ARE that stupid... You'd be surprised the lack of empathy and well, humanity us humans have. I mean, we used to perform surgery on our own babies without pain medication because we thought they were incapable of experiencing/remembering the pain. This occurred until like, the 1970's? (IIRC) We're very much still learning to look at the world and see it doesn't exist for or revolve around us. That others experience life the same way we do. Doesn't help that many are explicitly taught that animals were "put here for our pleasure," ; even I was scolded as a child by elders for having "too many feelings" about animals and mistreatment towards them. I know it's controversial to say but- Religion stunted our progression with this, and ironically only ever made us more cruel...
@maloryj7165
@maloryj7165 9 месяцев назад
Calm down. Just because an individual believes something to be true does not mean that it's widely accepted. You're talking about a time where even "pets" were used for work. It was not generally accepted that they experienced a wide range of emotion. People weren't even convinced that non white humans had real feelings. Get tf out of here.
@rolandoscar1696
@rolandoscar1696 9 месяцев назад
Love your videos.❤️
@linxn.1386
@linxn.1386 9 месяцев назад
Can you please do a video about The Wedding at Cana by Paolo Veronese?
@johnsigwald4214
@johnsigwald4214 5 месяцев назад
Thanks! Your empathy for this painting encouraged me to buy a reproduction that is mounted right here on the wall next to my computer.
@Art_Deco
@Art_Deco 5 месяцев назад
Thank you so much for your generosity, John! I glad you enjoyed the video. It's a very powerful piece!
@davidwillits9246
@davidwillits9246 9 месяцев назад
The birds are not crows. They're ravens. Crows are omnivores, known for eating farmer's crops. Ravens are carnivores known for being scavengers. They are the first to show up after battles to eat the dead so they are thought of as omens. Crows are smaller birds that are usually seen as pests. Oddly, the two birds are not even closely related.
@jc3drums916
@jc3drums916 9 месяцев назад
Ravens are also omnivores, and crows are also scavengers. And both are of the genus Corvus, so they are quite closely related. Also, not knowing the painter's intent, but going strictly by appearance, everything in their depiction in the painting suggests they are crows, from the shape of the bill to the shape of the tail, to the fact that there are so many of them (ravens aren't nearly as social as crows). Ravens also are not jet black, but have shinier feathers with a slight blue or purple tint.
@heckyeahponyscans
@heckyeahponyscans 9 месяцев назад
What an amazing painting. So much emotion and so much skill. Animals look so funky in a lot of paintings, but Schenck nailed them. Compared to crows in most paintings these ones are portrayed in a very neutral / sympathetic way imo. The crow in the foreground is leaning forward in a way that looks more inquisitive than aggressive.
@AllHailTheAnimeLover
@AllHailTheAnimeLover 9 месяцев назад
I love hearing you talk about art in ways i wish my teachers had Would you ever cover the painting Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan by Ilya Repin?
@lipingrahman6648
@lipingrahman6648 9 часов назад
It’s such a touching painting puts me in the mood for lamb chops in remembrance.
@Jackie777
@Jackie777 9 месяцев назад
Thank you for that ending, it was greatly needed :D
@Lukecash2
@Lukecash2 9 месяцев назад
This is why I love the channel: educational and entertaining
@marlaseegerstein3158
@marlaseegerstein3158 6 месяцев назад
You could have said ewe
@rgibson7305
@rgibson7305 9 месяцев назад
It also looks like a Pietà.
@peterjeffery8495
@peterjeffery8495 5 месяцев назад
Why not paint worms slithering through the corpse of a deceased child? Its the same "beautiful" life happens dogma at work. It's the real live slitting of the healthy eyeball of a beautiful young woman on film or deliberately starving a dog to death in an art gallery, in the name of "Art". Yuck Art Deco YUCK!
@ameliemydn
@ameliemydn 3 месяца назад
This painting always reminded me of the crucifixion of Jesus. The lamb being the lamb of God himself. The mother being the Virgin Mary. The crows being normal romans who jeered at Jesus and allowed for his death - not knowing what they'd done. Maybe one of them is even Pontius Pilate - who knows killing Jesus (eating the lamb) is wrong as he is innocent but still does it anyway. Just a thought. Great video - love your analysis of paintings.
@ADITYARAJ-x8k5w
@ADITYARAJ-x8k5w 5 месяцев назад
Another interpretation maybe that the lamb represents Christ (as Jesus is often referred as the 'Lamb of God') and the sheep represents Mary. And the crows represents... I donno....maybe Jews ? (as orthodox jews mostly wear black)
@indigenousserpant7779
@indigenousserpant7779 7 месяцев назад
At first I thought it was a metaphor for Jesus, interesting that it was not
@averycheesypotato
@averycheesypotato 6 месяцев назад
Same. The association between religious followers and sheep, the “lamb of god,” etc.
@lindanorris2455
@lindanorris2455 9 месяцев назад
I had written a short story that very nearly resembles this very painting only with human ghosts and wolves..wow! and I have never, ever seen this paiting before December 23, 2023 @ 3:21 am....weird! THis same situation in real life also appeared on the internet with a ;ive but abandoned Pit Bull surrounded by buzzards down in the Southern USA. The starved dog is locked in a dog crate, thrown out into the woods surrounded by birds waitinfg patiently for the dog to die. WOW!
@cosmosblue772
@cosmosblue772 9 месяцев назад
I remember seeing this on a post online for the first time and it was a gut punch. You see such raw emotion and conveyance of harsh cislrcumstance and yet its so simple. The Pompeii piece discussed months earlier is harsh and striking but this one makes me cry.
@agorachills
@agorachills 9 месяцев назад
Hi I’m not sure if you take recommendations but I was wondering if you could review Her Favourite by Nikolai Kornilievich c. 1905! Thank you I love your videos ❤🥰
@VerseNaberrie
@VerseNaberrie 9 месяцев назад
this kind of art should be banned !!! (I need a box of tissues T_T ) But thank you for the vid , I actually was not aware that this painting existed :)
@kelleymaxwell3875
@kelleymaxwell3875 9 месяцев назад
Am I actually tearing up over a dead lamb? Yes, yes I am. As a mother, I always tell my kids that they are supposed to bury me, not the other way around. The crows give off a false respect to me. A family member dies, others gather around, acting like they're mourning, but as soon as the person is in the ground, the others stand with their hands out for whatever they can. (Sorry, I've seen it too many times. The sheep represents the family member who actually loved the deceased-the lamb. The crows are the selfish family members who, if they don't get what THEY want, "kill" the family. How smart to use a murder of crows?!) Okay, I'm gonna go watch some cat videos because, just...oof! Amazing how different people translate the same piece of art.
@tessiepinkman
@tessiepinkman 9 месяцев назад
So incredibly beautiful. I have nothing more to say, just that. Beautiful.
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