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Welcome to episode 28 of the Self-taught Illustrator Podcast where we learn from art history's greatest masters! In this video, we break down timeless illustration tips and creative lessons from Leonardo da Vinci, Picasso, Georgia O'Keeffe, Rembrandt, Hilma af Klint, Henri Rousseau, and Amrita Sher-Gil.These legendary artists have shaped the world of art, and their wisdom is more relevant than ever for modern illustrators.Links:Listener Spotlight: https://www.instagram.com/itssnadraws_/Book: https://a.co/d/iRVr4db#illustration #artadvice #Leonardodavinci #Picasso #GeorgiaOKeeffe #Rembrandt #HilmaafKlint #AmritaSherGil #artinspiration #drawingtips #artmasters #creativeprocess
本期节目,我们也聊聊我们所了解的“彩礼”。 好像跟某些人希望得到的“彩礼”不太一样?各位想要的,真的是中国传统意义上的“彩礼”么? ■ 主播 杨老师 实验性的人生 · ■ Cover art 中作品 La Noce (The Wedding Party)局部, Henri Rousseau, Circa 1905, oil on canvas, height: 1,630 mm, width: 1,140 mm · ■ Song List STUTS×SIKK-O×鈴木真海子 - 愛をさわれたら · ■ 延伸内容 绝对是个妞儿Alex:Most debated questions among Chinese feminists, debated all at once https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Da-B6WKN4tI · ■ sns 感谢你的收听!关于节目和主播的动态,欢迎关注我们的社交号: 「一画一话」微博 「一画一话」豆瓣 杨老师微博 另一位主播微博 Instagram上也可以找到我们。 如果你喜欢我们的节目请在你常用的平台留下好评,将节目分享给你的朋友。 · ■ 进入听友群 添加小助手微信号:tvtproject · ■ 付费订阅 patreon 订阅 爱发电 订阅 · ■ say hi info(at)theviewtalk.com
Today I'm talking to Briony Brickell, the director of Magic Lantern, an educational charity delivering interactive art history workshops in schools across the UK. We chat about the organisation's work, its values, and the interactive art history sessions they conduct in primary schools for children aged 4 to 11.We explore Magic Lantern's unique cross-curricular approach, incorporating art history into various subjects like science, geography, history, English, maths, and more. We discuss a variety of specific strategies used in sessions, such as inviting students to step into artworks, creating soundscapes, exploring colours and patterns, and engaging students in the making process through dry painting. Briony also details a session involving Henri Rousseau's painting "Surprised" and shares how information is shared in the sessions. Briony concludes with tips for engaging children with art, emphasising the importance of cultivating a culture of looking, letting paintings speak for themselves initially, and gradually introducing historical and narrative context.Hope you enjoy our chat!LinksHenri Rousseau Surprised (1891)Hans Holbein The Ambassadors (1533)The Townley Discobolus statueMagic Lantern is an award winning charity that has been turning primary school classrooms into pop-up art galleries for nearly 30 years. Children are given the opportunity to explore, discuss and bring to life famous artworks, and discover the world of art from cave paintings to Cubism, Gothic to Graffiti, and Turner to the Turner Prize. These unique art history workshops are designed to support classroom topics across the whole curriculum and incorporate elements of drama, soundscape, writing and dialogue. Magic Lantern websiteFollow Magic Lantern on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook
What is this world we live in, and how did we get here? One of the finest thinkers on this subject is in the house. Santosh Desai joins Amit Varma in episode 356 of The Seen and the Unseen to discuss Indian society and this changing world. (FOR FULL LINKED SHOW NOTES, GO TO SEENUNSEEN.IN.) Also check out: 1. Santosh Desai on Twitter, the Times of India, LinkedIn, Futurebrands and his own website. 2. Mother Pious Lady: Making Sense Of Everyday India -- Santosh Desai. 3. Indian Society: The Last 30 Years — Episode 137 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Santosh Desai). 4. The Slimfit Conspiracy -- Santosh Desai. 5. Pushpesh Pant Feasts on the Buffet of Life — Episode 326 of The Seen and the Unseen. 6. The Great Indian Rope Trick? -- Santosh Desai. 7. We Are All Amits From Africa — Episode 343 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Krish Ashok and Naren Shenoy). 8. Subhashish Bhadra on Our Dysfunctional State — Episode 333 of The Seen and the Unseen. 9. Nothing is Indian! Everything is Indian! — Episode 12 of Everything is Everything. 10. Nick Carter, PG Wodehouse and Arthur Hailey on Amazon. 11. Roland Barthes and Umberto Eco on Amazon. 12. The Wisden Book of Test Cricket (1877-1977) — Compiled & edited by Bill Frindall. 13. Lessons from an Ankhon Dekhi Prime Minister — Amit Varma's column on reading. 14. Dom Moraes on Amazon, Wikipedia, Britannica and Poem Hunter. 15. The Indianness of Indian Food — Episode 95 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Vikram Doctor). 16. Films, Feminism, Paromita — Episode 155 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Paromita Vohra). 17. The Poetic Feminism of Paromita Vohra — Episode 339 of The Seen and the Unseen. 18. Episodes of The Seen and the Unseen with Ramachandra Guha: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 19. A Meditation on Form — Amit Varma. 20. Dreamers: How Indians are Changing the World -- Snigdha Poonam. 21. Young India — Episode 83 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Snigdha Poonam). 22. The Loneliness of the Indian Man — Episode 303 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Nikhil Taneja). 23. India Moving — Chinmay Tumbe. 24. India = Migration — Episode 128 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Chinmay Tumbe). 25. The Guilty Pleasures of Digital Dawdling -- Santosh Desai. 26. 30 years on, you can get what you want but don't know what you need -- Santosh Desai. 27. How traditions give meaning to our lives -- Santosh Desai. 28. The Median Voter Theorem. 29. Mohammad Zubair's Twitter thread on the Dharam Sansad. 30. Inverting the Behaviour Change Paradigm? -- Santosh Desai. 31. A Life in Indian Politics — Episode 149 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Jayaprakash Narayan). 32. Jayaprakash Narayan Wants to Mend Our Democracy -- Episode 334 of The Seen and the Unseen. 33. India's Lost Decade — Episode 116 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Puja Mehra). 34. Living Two Lives in Digital India -- Santosh Desai. 35. Kashi Ka Assi — Kashinath Singh. 36. The Experience Machine. 37. Anarchy, State and Utopia — Robert Nozick. 38. Song of Myself — Walt Whitman. 39. Baaba Maal and Advaita on Spotify.. 40. Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri Rousseau, Paul Cézanne, Krishen Khanna, Jayasri Burman and Gogi Saroj Pal. 41. Sudhir Kakar, Ashis Nandy, Roland Barthes, Marshall McLuhan, Walter Ong and John Berger on Amazon. 42. Ways of Seeing -- John Berger. Amit Varma and Ajay Shah have launched a new video podcast. Check out Everything is Everything on YouTube. Check out Amit's online course, The Art of Clear Writing. And subscribe to The India Uncut Newsletter. It's free! Episode art: ‘He Sees Everything' by Simahina.
Episode 111 Before and After Ambient, Part 2 Playlist Midori Takada, “Mr. Henri Rousseau's Dream” from Through The Looking Glass (1983 RCA Red Seal). 高田みどり (Midori Takada) is a Japanese composer and percussionist. She was a key figure in the Japanese ambient movement of the 1980s. Composed, performed, produced, Marimba, Gong, Cowbell, Recorder, Wood Bell, Ocarina, Tam-tam, Midori Takada. She performed all of the instruments on this album. The album was not immediately popular but seeded the nascent ambient movement that was growing in Japan at the time. Midori Takada, “Trompe-l'œil” from Through The Looking Glass (1983 RCA Red Seal). 高田みどり (Midori Takada) is a Japanese composer and percussionist. She was a key figure in the Japanese ambient movement of the 1980s. Composed, performed, produced, Marimba, Gong, Cowbell, Recorder, Wood and clay Bells, Ocarina, Tam-tam, Cola Bottle, Reed Organ, Midori Takada. She performed all of the instruments on this album. Brian Eno and Harold Budd, “Their Memories” from The Pearl (1984 Editions EG). Composed by Brian Eno, Harold Budd; produced by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois. David Behrman, “Interspecies Smalltalk Scene 2” (1984) from Leapday Night (1987 Lovely Music). Composed, produced, and computers by David Behrman; violin, Takehisa Kosugi. "Interspecies Smalltalk" (1984) is an interactive piece originally commissioned by the Cunningham Dance Company. Yutaka Hirose, “Light Which Shakes Quietly” from Nova+4 (2019 WRWTFWW Records). Bonus track on this reissued album that dates from 1986. Composed , Arranged and Computer by, Yutaka Hirose; Synthesizer, Jun Tohyama. Takashi Kokubo, “A Dream Sails Out To Sea - Scene 3” (2019 Light In The Attic). Originally released in 1987, this track was part of the new wave of Japanese ambient music. By that time, Kokubo was already reknown for his synthesizer skills on a part with Isao Tomita. He turned to sound design and ambient music and has been instrumental in addition to creating such sounds as the nationally-used mobile phone earthquake alert and credit card payment jingles. Yoichiro Yoshikawa, “Nube” from Cyprus (1988 Eastworld). Original sound track of Japanese TV program. Yoshikawa was already a reliable session musician when he acquired one of the first Phophet-5 synthesizers in Japan. He quickly became a go-to composer for television and other purposes, such as soundscapes for museum exhibitions. Tetsu Inoue, “Low of Vibration” from Ambiant Otaku (1994 Fax +49-69/450464). Before I met Tetsu around the year 2000, I was fascinated by music such as this which had all of the elements of ambient music—slow and forming harmonies, spatial rhythms rather than beats, and a sustained energy throughout—without sounding at all like something out of an Eno production. Produced and performed by Tetsu Inoue. Kenji Kawai, “Ghostdive” from Ghost in the Shell (Original Soundtrack) (1995 RCA). An ambient work from the popular movie soundtrack.Composed, Performed, Produced, Arranged, Keyboards, Instruments, Kenji Kawai; synthesizer, Hironori Houki. Waveform Transmission, “V 1.3” from V 1.0-1.9 (1996 Silent). Analog Tone Engineering and Realization, Recordings Of The Dead, Shortwave, Field Recordings Made During Periods Of Highly-charged Paranormal Activity, Korg MS 10, Korg MS 20, Korg MS 50, Roland System 100 Synthesizers, Home Built Analog Synthesizers, Tape, Loops, Chris Troy; Digital Audio Graphs, Granular Synthesis, Microwave Communications, Psycho-acoustics, Tape, Loops Otari MX 5050 loops, Rod Modell. Experimental Audio Research, “Automatic Music (For Oscillator, Ring Modulator & Filter Clusters)” from Pestrepeller (1999 Ochre Records). UK release, limited to 1000 copies. Engineer, Serge Modular Music System, Sonic Boom (Pete Kember). Some interesting modular synthesizer ambience. John Foxx and Harold Budd, “Raindust” from Translucence + Drift Music (2003 Edsel Records). Composed, produced, and performed by Harold Budd, John Foxx. John Foxx and Harold Budd, “Some Way Through All the Cities” from Translucence + Drift Music (2003 Edsel Records). Composed, produced, and performed by Harold Budd, John Foxx. Pete Namlook, Tetsu Inoue, “Ethereal Being” from 2350 Broadway 4 (2007 Fax +49-69/450464). Composed, produced, and performed by Pete Namlook, Tetsu Inoue. Recorded at Bretton Hall, New York and Klanglobor Hödeshof. Tetsu was an endless collaborator. Here he and the wondrous Pete Namlook wove some ambient magic. Tetsu Inoue, “Kaze” from Inland (2007 Fax +49-69/450464). Written, performed and produced by Tetsu Inoue. This was his post-glitch faze, which brought together, strangely enough, element so his earlier ambient work and glitch music for computers. Masuko Shinji, “Woven Music for Blue Steppe” from Woven Music (2011 Jagjaguwar). All music, vocals and guitar, 増子真二 (Shinji Masuko). This is a project by Masuko, who sometimes works with the Boredoms. It has a characteristic high but sustained energy level that flirts with the outer reaches of the ambient music concept. Caroline Park, “Grain 5” from Grain (2011 Private Chronology). This is a cassette release by Park, often known her for generative composition work and electronic improvisations based on parameters that she defines. Recorded, performed, and mixed between May 2010 and January 2011 in Los Angeles and Boston. Sarah Davachi, “First Cadence” from Antiphonals (2021 Late Music). Composed, Recorded, Performed, Mellotron (bass flute, recorder, oboe), Tape Echo, Sarah Davachi. A recent ambient work by this contemporary experimenter. In the background: An example of ambient music from the program Droneo by Henry Lowengard, which produces self-generating ambient music on a smart phone. “Droneo 1.5 vanDelay and Ape,” (5:25). Opening and closing sequences voiced by Anne Benkovitz. Additional opening, closing, and other incidental music by Thom Holmes. See my companion blog that I write for the Bob Moog Foundation. For additional notes, please see my blog, Noise and Notations.
I denne episoden går vi til kunsten som vi kaller moderne, dvs kunsten som kommer etter impresjonistene, hvor reglene løser seg opp, hvor kunstnerne kan gjøre det de vil. Begynnelsen av 1900-tallet er preget av at kunstnerne våget å eksperimentere, leke, utfordre og irritere omverdenen, og de måtte tåle mye skarp kritikk. Vi blir litt kjent med Henri Rousseau og Henri Matisse. Har du noe du ønsker jeg snakker om i podcasten? Har du et spørsmål du ønsker jeg svarer på? Send meg en email på info@kristinetghardeberg.no HER kan du kjøpe signert utgave av min bok Kunsthistorie for alle. Og HER kan du lære mer om kunst sammen med meg: KUNSTHISTORIER.NO
In FMV's first-ever Spotlight episode, Joanna and Joey go in-depth with Vanessa Fusco, Co-Head of Christie's 20th Century Evening Sale, on Henri Rousseau's jungle masterpiece “Les Flamants” (The Flamingos). To view this masterpiece while enjoying the episode, visit Christies.com/flamingos
Rebeca Kung considera que el arte es un lenguaje universal con un poder increíble para difundir ideas, crear conciencia e inspirar el cambio social. Ella es la fundadora y directora de Reku Art, una galería de arte desde la que promueven la diversidad en el arte emergente, y ARVIVID, una galería online donde se pueden encontrar obras de artistas internacionales, enfocadas especialmente en los espacios urbanos atemporales, la fotografía contemporánea y el arte abstracto. La misión de Reku Art es representar el arte que se distingue por sus elementos sociales, culturales, de género o de identidad, con el objetivo de concienciar, involucrar e inspirar a todos aquellos que aman, disfrutan o crean arte. Te va a encantar conocerla... este es un episodio que te va a enganchar! Ah, también hemos hablado de Refik Anadol, que nos encanta a ambas, de Henri Rousseau (y en concreto de su obra El Sueño), del MoMa, la fundación Joan Miró, El Thyssen de Madrid y el museo Dalí de Figueras. Que lo disfrutes. Un abrazo Ana Kai Visita los perfiles de instagram de Reku Art y ARVIVID: https://www.instagram.com/rekuart.gallery/ https://www.instagram.com/arvivid.art/ Y a mí me puedes encontrar aquí: https://www.instagram.com/ana_kai_art/ Y aquí: https://www.anakaiart.com
Annemieke Bosman praat met conservator Marieke Jooren over de tentoonstelling Naïef RealismeVan Rousseau tot Grandma Moses die momenteel te zien is in Museum More. Onbevangen, fantasievol en ontroerend eenvoudig. Dat lijkt de onweerstaanbare aantrekkingskracht van naïef realisme. Maar onder dit schijnbaar simpele oppervlak schuilt een rijk artistiek spectrum. En de ongeschoolde makers ervan stonden aan de wieg van de moderne kunst.Museum MORE brengt 80 schilderijen van grote maar ook onbekende naïef realisten uit deVerenigde Staten en Europa samen. Een unieke trans-Atlantische ontmoeting van eigenzinnige kunstwerken en meeslepende levensverhalen. Geïnspireerd op de baanbrekende tentoonstellingMasters of Popular Painting van het New Yorkse Museum of Modern Art, laat Museum MORE na 85 jaar veel kunstenaars van toen weer in elkaars gezelschap zien. Met topkunst van autodidacten zoals Henri Rousseau, Camille Bombois, Séraphine Louis, Nikifor, Grandma Moses, John Kane, Horace Pippin en Morris Hirshfield. Te zien t/m 25 juni 2023 in Museum More.
En el 50º aniversario de la muerte de Picasso, en Documentos RNE hemos querido mirar al tiempo en el que el universal pintor malagueño aún no había desarrollado su genio creativo y todavía estaba por trazar su camino artístico. Lo más importante estaba por suceder cuando un jovencito Pablo Ruiz Picasso llega a París en el comienzo del siglo XX y se termina instalando, junto a amigos artistas, en el Bateau Lavoir (Barco Lavadero). Un edificio cochambroso en la colina de Montmartre donde va a suceder un episodio clave de la historia del arte moderno. El documental, con la firma de Antonio Delgado desde París, recrea los años en el que el genio andaluz convivió en el Bateau Lavoir –ente 1904 y 1912- con otros creadores fundamentales del arte que acabaría llamándose vanguardista: Apollinaire, Braque, Max Jacob, Juan Gris, Manolo Hugué, Pablo Gargallo, Modigliani o Henri Rousseau el Aduanero. En el taller del Barco Lavadero Picasso creó, de espaldas al mundo y entre miseria, polvo y suciedad, obras que cambiarán el curso de la pintura del siglo XX como Los saltimbanquis, El retrato de Gertrude Stein o Las señoritas de Aviñón. En esos años Picasso se desarrolló artísticamente y vivirá una evolución que le hará pasar de su etapa azul a la rosa hasta desembocar en lo que se conocerá como cubismo. Documentos RNE ha conseguido entrevistar en exclusiva a Jeannine Warnod, crítica de arte de 102 años, que guarda memoria directa de los protagonistas de esta epopeya artística, porque nació en Montmartre y su padre, el también crítico de arte André Warnod, formó parte de la llamada Banda de Picasso. Sus recuerdos recrean aquel Montmartre, un suburbio rural de París, bohemio y sórdido, en donde la genialidad artística se mezclaba con la droga y la delincuencia. Además, exploramos en las memorias de Fernande Olivier, el primer gran amor parisino de Picasso, que compartió miseria y hambre con él en aquellos años, y que nos permiten entrar en el taller y la intimidad del malagueño. Para completar el documental contamos con los testimonios de la historiadora Annie Cohen Solal; el director de cine Luis Revenga; Juan Manuel Bonet, ex director del Museo Reina Sofía; y Brigitte Leal, ex directora del Museo Pompidou. El resultado de Picasso, el capitán del Barco Lavadero, es un fresco sobre el París de principios del siglo XX y sus movimientos artísticos, y también un relato biográfico de Pablo Ruiz Picasso antes de ser Picasso, el icono mundial de la pintura contemporánea. Escuchar audio
Our beloved guest host and artist, Elisabeth Condon, and her series "Elisabeth Condon Describes a Painting!" are back for a new installment! This time Elisabeth chose to describe Joseph Stella's oil on canvas painting "Tree of My Life" from 1919 that she saw at The Norton Museum in "Joseph Stella: Visionary Nature." The show is traveling next to the High Museum and to the Brandywine Museum. It was an honor to have Elisabeth's wild and wonderful way of looking at painting again on the pod. See "Joseph Stella: Visionary Nature" in person/online: Norton Museum (since closed): https://tinyurl.com/yhv3paaw High Museum (Feb-May 2023): https://tinyurl.com/szewk7f8 Brandywine Museum of Art (June-Sept 2023): https://tinyurl.com/yry6cry4 Barbara Rose's 1997 Essay "Flora" on Joseph Stella: https://www.tfaoi.org/aa/7aa/7aa792.htm Joseph Stella works mentioned: "Tree of My Life," "The Voice of the City of New York Interpreted," "Brooklyn Bridge," "Battle of Lights, Coney Island" More About Elisabeth Condon: Web: https://www.elisabethcondon.com/ | IG: @elisabethcondon Solo at Emerson Dorsch Gallery late 2023: https://emersondorsch.com/artist/elisabeth-condon/ Florida Art in State Buildings/Univ of South Fla, May 2023: https://tinyurl.com/5n8ycr8m Painting at Freight & Volume Gallery: http://www.freightandvolume.com/ Artists Mentioned: Philip Guston, 4 Gentlemen of the Orchid, Bamboo, Chrysanthemum & Plum, Chinese Scroll Painting, Charles Burchfield, Odilon Redon, Paul Gauguin's "Vision and the Sermon," Hieronymus Bosch, Dziga Vertov's "Man with a Movie Camera," Marcel Duchamp's "Fountain," Agnes Pelton, Henri Rousseau's Paris paintings, Umberto Boccioni & the Italian Futurists, Precisionists: Sheeler, Demuth & Schamberg, Patrick Henry Bruce, Diego Velázquez, Rembrandt, William Merritt Chase, Robert Henri, Alfred Stieglitz, Georgia O'Keeffe, Marsden Hartley Writers mentioned: Barbara Rose, Immanuel Kant, Gaston Bachelard's "Poetics of Space," Henri-Louis Bergson, Lewis Mumford, Walter Conrad Arensberg, Gertrude Stein, Maurice Tuchman Eps mentioned: #38 (Elisabeth Condon Describes a Painting #1) and #15 (Review of "Spiritual in Art: Abstract Painting 1890-1985") ---------------------------- Pep Talks on IG: @peptalksforartists Pep Talks on Art Spiel as written essays: https://tinyurl.com/7k82vd8s Amy's Interview on Two Coats of Paint: https://tinyurl.com/2v2ywnb3 Amy's website: https://www.amytalluto.com/ Amy on IG: @talluts Buy Me a Coffee Donations appreciated! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/peptalksforartistspod/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/peptalksforartistspod/support
Amy Hill grew up in Elizabeth, New Jersey. She studied commercial art at Carnegie Mellon University. After graduating, she moved to New York City and worked as an illustrator for such publications as Rolling Stone, The New York Times and Penguin Books. The first solo exhibition of her paintings took place in the East Village in 1989. Abridged text below by Reilly Davidson. Amy Hill works in conjunction with historical frameworks, invoking Botticellian strangeness alongside the naïveté of Henri Rousseau. She also infuses her portraits with a hint of "Boterismo,” as inflated features and distorted realism recur throughout these compositions. Hill time travels with ease, intent upon picking up themes and conceits from each era of interest. Her collection of antiques are adapted to serve contemporary demands in an effort to clean out older generations and make room for new ones. The artistic conceits of the Renaissance have been a constant touchstone for Hill, as she pursues this particular beauty via her own reinterpretations of form and content. What do the symbols of this bygone genre represent today? How can these images be improved upon? Hill's secular figures worship consumer goods rather than the religious icons that were prominent during Europe's “rebirth.” The desire to possess motivates Hill's ongoing fascination with the conceits of Renaissance masterpieces. Beauty is also a compelling force by way of inspiration and pursuit. These paintings are a continuation of what Hill has been pursuing since 2015, when she transitioned to a new mode of image making. She has always been interested in updating historical precedents in an effort to sustain a dialogue with painters past, however, she updated this endeavor by introducing new source material into the mix. By observing artists from the early American folk art tradition, she absorbed their consistent portrayal of families and the presupposed innocence of childhood. In accordance with her findings, she came to focus on the promise of youth, the imagined futures that children could occupy. Amy Hill Family Breakfast, 2022 Oil on canvas 26 x 27 in 68.6 x 71.1 cm, courtesy of the artist and Fortnight Institute. Amy Hill Young Woman with Strange Object, 2022 Oil on canvas 25 x 26 in 63.5 x 66 cm, courtesy of the artist and Fortnight Institute. Amy Hill Tea, 2022 Oil on canvas 25 x 26 in 63.5 x 66 cm,courtesy of the artist and Fortnight Institute.
“Fernande Olivier et Pablo Picasso“ dans l'intimité du Bateau-Lavoirau Musée de Montmartre, Parisdu 14 octobre 2022 au 19 février 2023Interview de Nathalie Bondil, directrice du musée et des expositions de l'Institut du monde arabe et de Saskia Ooms, responsable de la conservation du musée de Montmartre, commissaires de l'exposition,par Anne-Frédérique Fer, à Paris, le 24 octobre 2022, durée 26'16.© FranceFineArt.https://francefineart.com/2022/10/26/3334_fernande-olivier_musee-de-montmartre/Communiqué de presse Commissariat :Nathalie Bondil, directrice du musée et des expositions de l'Institut du monde arabe Saskia Ooms, responsable de la conservation du musée de Montmartre Assistées de Clémence PinquierFernande Olivier (1881-1966), femme moderne, modèle, artiste et écrivain, compagne et modèle du jeune Picasso de 1904 à 1912, est à l'honneur au musée de Montmartre. Cette personnalité́ du Bateau-Lavoir et de la vie montmartroise au début du XXe siècle est le sujet d'une première exposition qui lui est entièrement consacrée.Cette exposition raconte Fernande Olivier et illustre grâce à des archives familiales et de nombreux prêts publics et privés, les épisodes phares des avant-gardes. Le point-de-vue adopté est celui de Fernande à travers ses écrits, ses correspondances et même ses oeuvres. Deux livres forment le fil rouge de l'exposition : « Souvenirs Intimes, écrits pour Picasso » et « Picasso et ses amis ».Le premier ouvrage publié de manière posthume raconte sa jeunesse difficile, enfant non reconnue, épouse violentée lors d'un premier mariage dont elle s‘échappe, sa quête d'émancipation comme modèle professionnelle, enfin sa rencontre avec Pablo.Le second, publié de son vivant, compile ses observations originales, parfois tranchantes, sur les personnalités du Bateau-Lavoir, artistes et mécènes, dont elle partage la vie quotidienne. Louangé par Paul Léautaud, c'est « le tableau le plus authentique de cette époque » dira Picasso à l'instar d'André Salmon et de Max Jacob.Fernande Olivier et Pablo Picasso, dans l'intimité du Bateau-Lavoir propose donc un dialogue entre les mots de Fernande et un ensemble de soixante-seize oeuvres (peintures, sculptures, dessins, lithographies, manuscrits, éditions et correspondances originales) outre un riche corpus photographique et vidéographique présentés en regard de ses écrits. Elle illustre les épisodes marquants de sa vie de femme, modèle, écrivain et artiste. Son point-de-vue unique de témoin des avant-gardes est donné à voir à travers les oeuvres des artistes qu'elle côtoie parmi lesquels Georges Braque, André Derain, Otto Freundlich, Juan Gris, Auguste Herbin, Marie Laurencin, Henri Matisse, Henri Rousseau, Suzanne Valadon, Kees Van Dongen, et bien-sûr Pablo Picasso. Une installation contemporaine d'Agnès Thurnauer, rappelle dans le parcours combien les violences conjugales vécues dans son premier mariage restent d'actualité.Ces témoignages précieux décrivent les membres du cercle artistique du Bateau-Lavoir et les marchands comme Vollard et Kahnweiler avec intelligence et humour. L'exposition éclaire d'autres figures de ce cercle : artistes femmes, mécènes et compagnes aux rôles multiples et majeurs telles que Gertrude Stein, Marie Laurencin, Guus van Dongen, et Suzanne Valadon… Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
An episode on why Jeffrey Sachs has been making the news recently. The head of the recently completed report "The Lancet Commission on lessons for the future from the COVID-19 pandemic" has raised eyebrows in the last couple of months by simply voicing his findings, calling out wilful obfuscations by the NIH and others, and reaching conclusions about events in Europe, such as the sabotaging of the Nordstream pipelines, that should be obvious but as disappointingly lacking in mainstream media outlets. You can hear him talk at length on Steve Hsu's Manifold podcast. Music: "Stop Believing" by Hi Tiger, from the album Bad Panda #29, used thanks to a CC license. Music: "Yedao" by Imperial Tiger Orchestra, from the album Ethio Event #1, used thanks to a CC license. Episode art background: Surpris! ou Tigre dans une tempête tropicale by Henri Rousseau
CRITICAL LISTENING: TO DISSECT RECORDED AUDIO AND MUSIC FROM BOTH A TECHNICAL AND MUSICAL EAR-TRAINING PERSPECTIVE FOR THE SAKE OF ASKING THE SIMPLE QUESTION: WHY? SEMINARS TAKE PLACE LIVE EVERY OTHER SUNDAY AT LAMEMEYOUNG.COM Today's tracks: Oneohtrix Point Never - Inside World Lazer Hawk - Space Trash Midori Takada - Mr. Henri Rousseau's Dream Autechre - Gelk --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lamemeyoung/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lamemeyoung/support
Episode 13: Primitivism & Its Legacies This episode looks at the emergence of the concept of Primitivism in the 19th century and examines how it was used in the 20th century. We cover different kinds of historical Primitivism, and problematize this Euro-centric term. After considering historical artists, we turn towards contemporary artists who interact with this legacy. Artists covered include Paul Gauguin, Pablo Picasso, Wifredo Lam, Fatu Feu'u, Zak Ové, and Romuald Hazoumé. Sources + further reading: Aesthetica Magazine. “Romuald Hazoumé.” https://aestheticamagazine.com/romuald-hazoume/ Brick Bay Sculpture Trail. “Fatu Feu'u - Orongo on Exhibition at Brick Bay.” https://www.brickbaysculpture.co.nz/fatu-feuu-orongo “Henri Rousseau.” National Gallery of Art. https://www.nga.gov/features/slideshows/henri-rousseau.html. Higgins, Katherine. “About the Artist: Fatu Feu'u.” The Contemporary Pacific 27, no. 1 (2015): VII. Kramer, Charles, and Grant, Kim. “Primitivism and Modern Art.” Smarthistory. https://smarthistory.org/primitivism-and-modern-art/. LACMA. “The Invisible Man and the Masque of Blackness.” http://www.lacma.org/art/exhibition/invisible-man-and-masque-blackness. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. “Surrealism Beyond Borders.” https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2021/surrealism-beyond-borders. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. “Reconfiguring an African Icon.” https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2011/reconfiguring-an-african-icon. Mitter, Partha. “Extract - Surrealism's Tricky Global Transformation.” The Art Newspaper, February 8, 2022. https://www.theartnewspaper.com/2022/02/08/extract-or-surrealisms-tricky-global-transformation. Obuobi, Sharon. “British Museum's First Commissioned Caribbean Sculptures Tower Over Its Great Court.” Hyperallergic, September 8, 2015. http://hyperallergic.com/235163/british-museums-first-commissioned-caribbean-sculptures-tower-over-its-great-court/. Tate Modern. “Modernism.” https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms/m/modernism. Tate Modern. “Who Is Wifredo Lam?” https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/wifredo-lam/who-is. Tuuhia, Tiare. “The Tahitian Woman behind Paul Gauguin's Paintings.” Art UK, September 2021. https://artuk.org/discover/stories/the-tahitian-woman-behind-paul-gauguins-paintings. Music Credits: Igor Stravinsky. “L'Adoration de la Terre” from The Rite of Spring, 1927. National Orchestra of France. Entretiens d'André Breton avec André Parinaud. 1952. Ubuweb. https://ubu.com/sound/breton.html “A New Day in Samoa” -- Audio from a Documentary, n.d. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:A_New_Day_in_Samoa.webm soundskeep. Recording of Motorcycles, 2014. https://freesound.org/people/soundskeep/sounds/236986/ Credits: Season 2 of Unboxing the Canon is produced by Professor Linda Steer for her course “Introduction to the History of Western Art” in the Department of Visual Arts at Brock University. Our sound designer, co-host and contributing researcher is Madeline Collins. Brock University is located on the traditional lands of the Haudenosaunee and Anishinaabe peoples, many of whom continue to live and work here today. This territory is covered by the Upper Canada Treaties and is within the land protected by the Dish with One Spoon Wampum Agreement. Today this gathering place is home to many First Nations, Métis and Inuit peoples and acknowledging reminds us that our great standard of living is directly related to the resources and friendship of Indigenous people. Our logo was created by Cherie Michels. The theme song has been adapted from “Night in Venice” Kevin MacLeod and is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0. Grants from the Humanities Research Institute and from Match of Minds at Brock University support the production of this podcast, which is produced as an open educational resource. Unboxing the Canon is archived in the Brock Digital Repository. Find it at https://dr.library.brocku.ca/handle/10464/14929 You can also find Unboxing the Canon on any of the main podcast apps. Please subscribe and rate our podcast. You can also find us on Twitter @CanonUnboxing and Instagram @unboxingthecanon or you can write to unboxingthecanon@gmail.com
Mysteries of the Deep Podcast, Chapter CXXXV by @o-utlier Tracklist: 1. Michel Redolfi - Effractions (la nouvelle Atlantide) 2. Jorge Reyes - Web of Dreams 3. Midori Takada - Mr. Henri Rousseau's Dream 4. Ambienti Coassiali - Stanza 5 5. Ulla - Hilde 6. Unknown 7. Clearlight - Inner Trip 8. Marja Ahti - Coastal Inversion 9. Rapoon - From Sleep Awake 10. mu tate - _ 5 11. Corell - Anything Worthless 12. Atoloi - Fioritura 13. URA - Entertainment 14. Scott Gailey - Curtain With Wind 15. Marc Leclair - 33e jour 16. Gathering - Version 1 17. The Caretaker - Long decline is over / A Confusion So Thick You Forget Forgetting 18. Mystic AM - The Dervish 19. Chris Abrahams - The Sleepings And The Drifts
To było coś niespotykanego! Na ścianach, murach, w tunelach metra i na samych wagonach zaczęły pojawiać się intrygujące hasła. „SAMO© jest końcem burżuazji”, lub „SAMO© jest alternatywą dla Boga”, bądź „SAMO© zadzwoń do domu! Matka cię potrzebuje!”. Te żartobliwe, sarkastyczne, a niekiedy i poetyckie slogany kreślone sprayem na nowojorskich ulicach, w inteligentny sposób wyszydzały konsumpcyjny styl życia, piętnowały nadużywanie władzy czy nierówności społeczne. Wszystkie podpisane w ten sam sposób: SAMO, często z dołączonym ironicznie symbolem praw autorskich – na znak oryginalności – oraz trójzębną koroną, żeby nie było wątpliwości kto tu rządzi. Oj, dużo się o tym mówiło. Wszyscy chcieli wiedzieć, kim jest SAMO. ZAPRASZAM NA NAJNOWSZY PODCAST! Tym razem przybliżę Ci życiorys Jeana-Michela Basquiata. I jeszcze jedno. Koniecznie zaobserwuj mój kanał, ponieważ dzięki temu nie przegapisz kolejnych podcastów.
“It's never too late to have a happy childhood,” wrote Tom Robbins, the novelist. He could have been referring to Henri Rousseau, the fin de siècle autodidact who begins painting seriously in retirement: storybook-style scenes of exotic animals and jungles that eventually catch the eye of Picasso and Matisse. A story worth remembering as you contemplate a new year, same as the old year—or not. You can see a print of Rousseau's “War,” a possible inspiration for Picasso's “Guernica,” in the collection of the Minneapolis Institute of Art: https://collections.artsmia.org/art/7859/la-guerre-henri-rousseau You can see one of Rousseau's most iconic works, “The Dream,” in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art: https://www.moma.org/collection/works/79277 A new season of The Object starts soon. Subscribe now and be among the first to hear it.
Henri Rousseau n'est jamais sorti de Paris. Son inspiration il la puise au Jardin des Plantes.Cliquez ici pour voir le tableauAuteure des textes : Anne SchmauchDirection Editoriale: Pénélope BoeufVoix : Pénélope BoeufProduction : La Toile Sur Écoute Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Ben and comedian/art expert Anna Bianco (@annacainbianco) review the unique personality and paintings of 19th-20th century French artist, Henri Rousseau. Paintings (time discussed) Myself: Portrait-Landscape (18:00) - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Henri_Rousseau_-_Myself-_Portrait_%E2%80%93_Landscape_-_Google_Art_Project.jpg Surprised! or Tiger in a Tropical Storm (22:38) - https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/henri-rousseau-surprised The Repast of the Lion (25:53) - https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/438822 War (26:35) - https://www.wikiart.org/en/henri-rousseau/war-or-the-ride-of-discord-1894 Night by Ferdinand Hodler (29:04) - https://arthistoryproject.com/artists/ferdinand-hodler/night/ The Past and the Present (30:55) - https://collection.barnesfoundation.org/objects/5695/The-Past-and-the-Present-or-Philosophical-Thought-(Le-Passe-et-le-present-ou-Pensee-philosophique)/ The Hungry Lion Throws Itself on the Antelope (33:47) - https://www.art.com/products/p14617501738-sa-i6777216/henri-rousseau-the-hungry-lion-throws-itself-on-the-antelope.htm The Football Players (35:43) - https://www.guggenheim.org/artwork/3542 Apes in the Orange Grove (37:57) - https://www.wikiart.org/en/henri-rousseau/apes-in-the-orange-grove The Dream (44:54) - https://www.moma.org/collection/works/79277 The Persistence of Memory by Salvador Dali (47:30) - https://www.moma.org/collection/works/79018
Today is the 177th birthday of the artist Henri Rousseau. The world is a better place because he was in it still feels the loss that he has left. This episode is also available as a blog post. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/waldina/message
This podcast on Rousseau’s The Fight of a Tiger and a Buffalo includes: Bottoms up bananas – reality is overrated Fight? What Fight? Rousseau’s self esteem Flowers and animals paired in The Fight of a Tiger and a Buffalo Jungle mystery Henri Rousseau creates a sense of play – not battle – in The Fight of a Tiger and a Buffalo. His singular style suits this particular fancy. That’s because Rousseau brings us into his world without much regard for the “real” one. He paints fantasy. But one that only he could imagine. There’s nobody quite like Rousseau. His vision includes upside down banana bunches. So, we know it’s unlikely he ever saw a banana tree in person. In fact, Rousseau claimed to have visited the jungle. But we now know he’d only ever been to zoos and botanical gardens. Given his bananas, he likely went to the farmer’s market as well. Learn more about this and other masterpieces with a click through to LadyKflo's Art Blog. https://www.ladykflo.com/the-fight-of-a-tiger-and-a-buffalo-by-henri-rousseau/
This podcast on Rousseau’s The Fight of a Tiger and a Buffalo includes the following topics: Bottoms up bananas – reality is overrated Fight? What Fight? Rousseau’s self esteem Flowers and animals paired in The Fight of a Tiger and a Buffalo Jungle mystery Henri Rousseau creates a sense of play – not battle – in The Fight of a Tiger and a Buffalo. His singular style suits this particular fancy. That’s because Rousseau brings us into his world without much regard for the “real” one. He paints fantasy. But one that only he could imagine. There’s nobody quite like Rousseau. His vision includes upside down banana bunches. So, we know it’s unlikely he ever saw a banana tree in person. In fact, Rousseau claimed to have visited the jungle. But we now know he’d only ever been to zoos and botanical gardens. Given his bananas, he likely went to the farmer’s market as well. Learn more about this and other masterpieces with a click to LadyKflo's Art Blog. https://www.ladykflo.com/the-fight-of-a-tiger-and-a-buffalo-by-henri-rousseau/
#52 Henri Rousseau - Historia del arte con Kenza El mundo increíble de Henri Rousseau, el pintor post-impresionista francés, donde la imaginación y la libertad de crear culminan. Historia del arte con Kenza - Obras que encienden el asombro. Una serie sobre el arte a través del la historia y las culturas. Se presentarán obras que transcienden el tiempo por su belleza y por lo que nos cuenta. Nos puedes seguir a través de la cuenta Instagram Historia.del.arte.con.kenza, para descubrir las obras del podcast y muchas más. Producido por @RojoVenado
#52 Henri Rousseau - Historia del arte con Kenza El mundo increíble de Henri Rousseau, el pintor post-impresionista francés, donde la imaginación y la libertad de crear culminan. Historia del arte con Kenza - Obras que encienden el asombro. Una serie sobre el arte a través del la historia y las culturas. Se presentarán obras que transcienden el tiempo por su belleza y por lo que nos cuenta. Nos puedes seguir a través de la cuenta Instagram Historia.del.arte.con.kenza, para descubrir las obras del podcast y muchas más. Producido por @RojoVenado
I Like Your Work: Conversations with Artists, Curators & Collectors
Adrienne Elise Tarver is an artist who makes hard work look easy. From her expansive studio practice, to her position as the Associate Chair of Fine Arts at Savannah College of Art and Design’s Atlanta Campus, Adrienne is able to gracefully accomplish making insightful, challenging work while also organizing a great spreadsheet. In this episode, we talk about how she balances art making and organization to achieve success. With a practice that spans painting, sculpture, installation, photography, and video, Tarver’s work addresses the complexity and invisibility of black female identity in the Western landscape, from the history within domestic spaces to the fantasy of the tropical seductress. “I often use the tropics as a starting point to look at the complexity of origin stories and histories of displacement. Using this familiar imagery, I confront artists like Paul Gauguin and Henri Rousseau and their imaginations of the tropics, considering the problematic perspective from which they were creating, and challenging the ideas they have perpetuated. Recent work seeks to go beyond the origin story and investigate the future. Pulling from nearly forgotten histories and exploiting the inability to create a true or accurate representation of an ancestral home, I collect imagery and ideas that resonate internally. Throughout my practice, I wonder: if mythologies from an imperialistic past can so thoroughly permeate our present identities, can we re-configure the narrative to create new realities? If our current struggles are indeed a sign of progress, can we look forward and claim our space for a better reality in the future?” -Adrienne Tarver She has exhibited nationally and abroad, including museum shows at the Bronx Museum of the Arts and Children’s Museum of Manhattan, as well as solo exhibitions at Ochi Projects in Los Angeles; Wave Hill in the Bronx, NY; Victori+Mo in New York; BRIC Project Room in Brooklyn; and A-M Gallery in Sydney, Australia. She has been commissioned for an upcoming New York MTA project, received the inaugural artist commission prize for Art Aspen in 2019 and was selected by ArtNet as one of “14 Emerging Female Artists to watch in 2017.” She has been featured in online and print publications including the New York Times, Brooklyn Magazine, ArtNet, Blouin Art Info, Whitewall Magazine, Hyperallergic, Ingenue Magazine, among others. She is currently the Associate Chair of Fine Arts at Savannah College of Art and Design’s Atlanta Campus (SCAD Atlanta). She received her MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and BFA from Boston University. Sponsors: Sunlight Tax: SAVE $25 on Money BootCamp- Sunlight Tax w code ILIKEYOURWORK25 NYC Crit Club: NYC Crit Club is now accepting applications for Spring 2021 semester. Now in its fourth year, NYC Crit Club is offering 9 new courses this Spring via zoom with 8 new faculty and 30 guest speakers and critics from around the country. TAKEAWAYS: -Experimenting with every aspect of the art world -Job tips for artists-Framing jobs to get started with when you move someplace new -How admin experience can help you in your career -Relocating with the arts and while being an artist - Her Nonprofit work teaching at Harlem School for the Arts-NYC - Working across media - How to loosen up in the studio with watercolors -Being ok with uncertainty - Ignore the trends and go with what interests you. LINKS: http://www.adriennetarver.com/ http://instagram.com/adrienne__elise https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/20/arts/design/art-galleries-new-york.html ArtNet Article -14 Women to Watch I Like Your Work Links: Creative Goal Setting 2021 I Like Your Work Podcast Studio Planner Instagram Submit Work Observations on Applying to Juried Shows
L'Ensemble Fractales, présent dans nos studios, est venu nous présenter un extrait de l'Erotique lancinante composée par Claude Ledoux spéicalement pour eux. Une partition inspirée par un tableau du peintre Henri Rousseau (alias le Douanier Rousseau), et qui soulève cette réjouissante question : est-ce que la musique érotique, ça existe ?
Playlist: JASSS - Every Single Fish In The PondStellaria Nemorum - The moon in your deep mouthXosar - A Heart Enrcircled by a SerpentSunalta - Whistle WhineIreen Amnes - Life Will Tear You ApartYunjin Claire Lee - Underwater ArcadeStellaria Nemorum - Into the Electric FieldsEEJUNGMI - EffortWish Lash - Iridescenttrigger warning - Waste SimulationEvicshen - Fever PitchLola de le Mata - (self) portraitSkin - familiar sceneEartheater - Burning FeatherEartheater - Goodbye DiamondAda Rook - N19Ingrid Laubrock - Twice DreamtXia Lang - AnglesXia Lang - CodexAna Roxanne - A Study in VastnessMidori Takada - Mr. Henri Rousseau's Dream
Hi, I am DJ Scooby and I present a World Music Podcast. On my world music podcast, The Sound Of Wonder, I play a selection of down-tempo, contemporary world music - presenting it with my own unique take on things. My shows are quite eclectic & I get to play music that I do not think you would have heard before. Featuring - Ala Fekra / Ala Fekra Khusugtun / Chinggis Khaan The HU / The Legend Of Mother Swan Azimuth / The Tunnel DAM / Prozac DAM / Ha'e'e Kfaye Daria Kulesh / The Hazel Tree Ilaria Graziano, Francesco Forni / Lastrada Midori Takada / Mr. Henri Rousseau's Dream This show is syndicated & distributed exclusively by Syndicast. If you are a radio station interested in airing the show or would like to distribute your podcast / radio show please register here: https://syndicast.co.uk/distribution/registration
Hi, I am DJ Scooby and I present a World Music Podcast. On my world music podcast, The Sound Of Wonder, I play a selection of down-tempo, contemporary world music - presenting it with my own unique take on things. My shows are quite eclectic & I get to play music that I do not think you would have heard before. Featuring - Ala Fekra / Ala Fekra Khusugtun / Chinggis Khaan The HU / The Legend Of Mother Swan Azimuth / The Tunnel DAM / Prozac DAM / Ha'e'e Kfaye Daria Kulesh / The Hazel Tree Ilaria Graziano, Francesco Forni / Lastrada Midori Takada / Mr. Henri Rousseau's Dream This show is syndicated & distributed exclusively by Syndicast. If you are a radio station interested in airing the show or would like to distribute your podcast / radio show please register here: https://syndicast.co.uk/distribution/registration
"Francisco de Goya, Henri Rousseau y Van Gogh. Del lienzo al cómic" (Eitorial Saure, 2020) es un divertido cómic que combina aspectos lúdicos y didácticos en tres historietas protagonizadas por los genios de la pintura mencionados en el título (y alguno más, que se pasea por sus viñetas). Hemos hablado con sus autores, el dibujante Moratha y la guionista Inge Eguiluz, de este interesante proyecto ideal para que lectores de todas las edades despierten su interés hacia la historia del arte a través de sus originales relatos repletos de humor y realizados desde el más sincero respeto hacia los célebres pintores. Escuchar audio
Henri Rousseau ma sześćdziesiąt cztery lata. Jest niewysoki, szczupły, z siwą brodą, a przy tym dość nieśmiały. Nie przeszkadza mu to jednak odezwać się do Pabla Picassa tymi słowami: ”My dwaj jesteśmy największymi malarzami naszych czasów, ja w stylu nowoczesnym, ty w stylu egipskim”. Co robi Pablo? Wydaję bankiet na cześć Rousseau i trzeba przyznać, że ta impreza zapisała się wielkimi literami w antologii zdarzeń artystycznych XX wieku. Zgłoszenia tematów do kolejnych audycji przyjmuję na moim facebookowym fanpageu dawno temu w sztuce. Zatem, odwiedzajcie go śmiało - będzie mi bardzo miło. Jestem też na YOU TUBE. MUZYKA: Na końcu podcastu - tradycyjnie - zagra dla nas młoda i zdolna kompozytorka - Hania Derej. Zainteresowanym polecam stronę Hani oraz koncert online Na początku audycji (intro) wykorzystano fragment utworu "Party" w wykonaniu zespołu ODDZIAŁ ZAMKNIĘTY z 1984 roku. Słowa: Krzysztof Jaryczewski/ Muzyka: W. Łuczaj Udostępnienie odbyło się na mocy prawa cytatu. Muzyka w tle: Utwór: Bumbling, Wykonawca: Pictures of the Floating World. Posiada licencję "Uznanie autorstwa-Użycie niekomercyjne" --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dawnotemuwsztuce/message
Russell and Robert meet Noel Fielding, legendary comedian, writer, actor, artist, musician, and TV presenter - back on screens this week in The Great British Bake Off! Known for his use of surreal humour and black comedy, Noel first came to prominence in The Mighty Boosh comedy troupe, starring as lead character Vince Noir but also creating many of the costumes, make-up designs and animated segments.In recent years he's also become celebrated for his colourful figurative paintings and his lockdown Art Club online classes. Having trained at Croydon Art College tutored by Dexter Dalwood, he drew inspiration from artists including Jean Michel Basquiat, Henri Rousseau, Jean Dubuffet, David Shrigley, Salvador Dali, Roy Lichtenstein, Karel Appel and the Cobra art movement. Noel's visual practice includes drawing, painting, collage and multimedia installation. His exhibition titles have included "Psychedelic Dreams of The Jelly Fox".This special episode was recorded in London on Monday 16th December 2019. Follow Noel's artworks on Instagram @Noel_Fielding or Twitter @NoelFielding11 and visit his galleries Don't Walk Gallery in Deal, Kent and Jealous Gallery in London. Special thanks to Tania Wade.For images of all artworks discussed in this episode visit @TalkArt. Talk Art theme music by Jack Northover @JackNorthoverMusic courtesy of HowlTown.com We've just joined Twitter too @TalkArt. If you've enjoyed this episode PLEASE leave us your feedback and maybe 5 stars if we're worthy in the Apple Podcast store. Thank you for listening to Talk Art, we will be back very soon. For all requests, please email talkart@independenttalent.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Un día como 2 de septiembre: 1661, nace el organista y compositor Georg Böhm. 1944, AnNa Frank es enviada al campo de concentración en Auschwitz. 1397, fallece el compositor Francesco Landini. 1652, fallece José Ribera, pintor español. 1910, fallece el pintor francés Henri Rousseau. 1973, fallece el escritor R.R. Tolkien. 1997, fallece el psiquiatra Viktor Frankl. Una producción de Sala Prisma Podcast. 2020
Henri Rousseau également connu sous le nom de Douanier Rousseau a une imagination luxuriante, à l'image des jungle qu'il peint, et immagine. Il a son propre style, et c'est d'ailleurs avec lui qu'apparaît l'art naïf ! Peintre atypique, peu connu il sera admiré par de grands artistes comme Pablo Picasso ou Vassily Kandinsky. Découvrez ce que cet artiste a de si particulier, en écoutant ce nouvel épisode d'une petite pause de culture générale avec Marie et Lilia.
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What exciting topic have we envisioned for you this week? Well, after sleeping on it, we knew that we had to do an episode on Dreams. Artists and composers alike have been inspired by the ephemeral world of dreams, and we're excited to showcase a few examples of this topic! ----more---- Art: Giotto di Bondone (ca.1266/76-1337): Dream of the Palace (1297-1299) William Blake (1757-1827): Job's Evil Dreams (1825) Henri Rousseau (1844-1910): The Dream (1910) ----more---- Music: Richard Wagner (1813-83): Lohengrin (1846-48) Edward Elgar (1857-1934): The Dream of Gerontius (1899-1900)
Jesteśmy w samym sercu egzotycznej dżungli. Tam, gdzie ryczy lew, a księżyc świeci przedziwnym, złotym blaskiem. To właśnie tu, wśród niespotykanej i bujnej roślinności, można natknąć się na zaklinaczkę węży, bądź czarownika wygrywającego cicha melodię. Tak wygląda dżungla Henriego Rousseau - malarza, który był celnikiem... --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dawnotemuwsztuce/message
Art critic Alastair Sooke, in the company of some of the leading creatives of our age, continues his deep dive into the stunning works in the Museum of Modern Art's collection, whilst exploring what it really means “to see” art. Today's edition is the choice of award-winning chef, Ruth Rogers: The Dream, by Henri Rousseau. Producer: Tom Alban Main Image: Henri Rousseau, The Dream, 1910. Oil on canvas, 6' 8 1/2" x 9' 9 1/2" (204.5 x 298.5 cm). Gift of Nelson A. Rockefeller. Museum of Modern Art, NY, 252.1954
Sección del programa de Rpa "La radio es mía" que demuestra que la modernidad es algo que viene de antiguo. Emisión del 25/11/2019, décima de la quinta temporada, dedicada al pintor Henri Rousseau, más conocido como el Aduanero Rousseau. Autodidacta y de vocación tardía, el Aduanero consiguió crear un estilo completamente original, primitivo, onírico y poético que no recordaba a nada de lo que se había pintado anteriormente. Se adelantó más de tres décadas al surrealismo y su figura, que en su tiempo había sido objeto de chanzas, fue creciendo tras su muerte. Hoy, su escasa obra figura en los principales museos del mundo. ¡Viva el aduanero Rousseau!
Sección del programa de Rpa "La radio es mía" que demuestra que la modernidad es algo que viene de antiguo. Emisión del 25/11/2019, décima de la quinta temporada, dedicada al pintor Henri Rousseau, más conocido como el Aduanero Rousseau. Autodidacta y de vocación tardía, el Aduanero consiguió crear un estilo completamente original, primitivo, onírico y poético que no recordaba a nada de lo que se había pintado anteriormente. Se adelantó más de tres décadas al surrealismo y su figura, que en su tiempo había sido objeto de chanzas, fue creciendo tras su muerte. Hoy, su escasa obra figura en los principales museos del mundo. ¡Viva el aduanero Rousseau!
Au XIXème siècle, un peintre autodidacte se met à peindre des paysages de jungle… Sans avoir mis un seul pied hors de France. Son nom : Henri Rousseau dit Le Douanier Rousseau. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
HENRI ROUSSEAU raccontato da Costantino D'Orazio
Is your rhubarb bolting already? When your rhubarb seems to be bolting too early, ask yourself these questions... Is your rhubarb an heirloom or a new variety? Older varieties tend to bolt sooner. Try planting a newer variety. Is your rhubarb very established? The older your rhubarb, the quicker it bolts. If you divide your established rhubarb, it revitalizes your plant and can thwart flowering. Has it been super cold, hot, or is your rhubarb otherwise stressed? These threatening conditions can cause rhubarb to bolt. Make sure to mulch around your rhubarb to keep it cool as a cucumber. Unlike other bolting edibles, bolting rhubarb does not affect the taste of the stems. So you can chillax about that. Now, for what to do with that rhubarb flower... well, I have a friend who cuts them and puts them in a vase and treats them like a cut flower. Brevities #OTD It's the birthday of Alexander Pope, a gardener poet who helped inspire the English landscape garden. Born to a Catholic family, Pope was an only child. He was exceptionally bright, self-taught in numerous languages and the classics. When Pope was twelve he contracted Potts disease (a form of tuberculosis); the illness impacted his spine - he was a hunchback- and he was only four and a half feet tall. He had a passion for gardens and garden design. Little details from Pope's garden plans show his regard for ancient Rome as he had incorporated both a vineyard and a kitchen garden. Pope's Palladian villa and garden were separated by a road. Pope cleverly used a tunnel to go under the road in order to create private access to the garden from his home. The tunnel became his grotto; a masterpiece of mirrors, candles, shells, minerals and fossils. He described the thrill of finishing the grotto in a letter to his friend Edward Blount in 1725: "I have put the last hand to my works... happily finishing the subterraneous Way and Grotto: I then found a spring of the clearest water, which falls in a perpetual Rill, that echoes thru' the Cavern day and night. ...When you shut the Doors of this Grotto, it becomes on the instant, from a luminous Room, a Camera Obscura, on the walls of which all the objects of the River, Hills, Woods, and Boats, are forming a moving Picture... And when you have a mind to light it up, it affords you a very different Scene: it is finished with Shells interspersed with Pieces of Looking-glass in angular Forms... at which when a Lamp ...is hung in the Middle, a thousand pointed Rays glitter and are reflected over the place." Pope's villa and grotto became a tourist destination. After he died, new owners of his property were so annoyed by the attention that they destroyed both the garden and the villa. Today, plans are underway to restore the grotto to its former glory. #OTD It's the birthday of Henri Rousseau was born on this day in 1844. Rousseau didn't start painting until he was 40 years old. He submitted his work to the Salon in 1886 and was ridiculed. Nonetheless, he returned every year for the rest of his life with new pieces. One harsh critic said that Rousseau painted with his feet. Rousseau became famous for his jungle paintings. Although he had never been to the jungle, he had been to the botanical garden at Paris. The place was his muse. Rousseau said, "When I step into the hothouses and see the plants from exotic lands, it seems to me that I am in a dream.” Unearthed Words Alexander Pope on His Grotto at Twickenham Thou who shalt stop, where Thames' translucent wave Shines a broad Mirror thro' the shadowy Cave; Where ling'ring drops from min'ral Roofs distill, And pointed Crystals break the sparkling Rill, Unpolish'd Gems no ray on Pride bestow, And latent Metals innocently glow. Approach! Great Nature studiously behold; And eye the Mine without a wish for Gold. Approach; but awful! Lo! th' Egerian Grot, Where, nobly-pensive, St. John sate and thought; Where British sighs from dying Wyndham stole, And the bright flame was shot thro' Marchmont's Soul. Let such, such only tread this sacred Floor, Who dare to love their Country, and be poor. Today's book recommendation: The Land of the Blue Poppies by Frank Kingdon Ward During the first years of the twentieth century, the British plant collector and explorer Frank Kingdon Ward went on 24 impossibly daring expeditions throughout Tibet, China, and Southeast Asia, in search of rare and elusive species of plants. Ward discovered the legendary Tibetan blue poppy and thanks to Ward, the seeds were introduced into the world’s gardens. Ward’s accounts capture all the romance of his wildly adventurous expeditions, whether he was swinging across a bottomless gorge on a cable of twisted bamboo strands or clambering across a rocky scree in fear of an impending avalanche. Today's Garden Chore Take a cue from Alexander Pope and connect your house to your garden with a path. This is especially lovely if you have a kitchen garden or if you grow edibles. By uniting these two areas, you're conveying the significance of the garden - as part of your home. With a series of paths and steps, you can also create offshoots to garden rooms or other distinct spaces. If your garden is feeling disjoint or too much like an island, a passage way could be the perfect way to achieve connection and harmony. Something Sweet Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart #OTD It's the birthday of Richard Walter Pohl born today in 1916. Pohl was an expert on the grasses of temperate and tropical America. He was an avid gardener, growing fruits, vegetables and ornamentals at his home garden. One of the most impactful experiences in Pohl's career was the chance to teach an agrostology course in Costa Rica. He lost his heart to the plants and people there. Pohl made over 20 field expeditions to Costa Rica, Central and South America after 1966. He botanized in the region, collecting bamboos and grasses, amassing over 15,800 plants in his lifetime. When Pohl died in 1993, one of his former graduate students observed something uncanny. All the Costa Rican bamboo Pohl had brought to the University Greenhouse was in bloom. The bamboo had grown for years without ever flowering and like Pohl, they were at the end their life cycle. Once bamboo flowers, it dies. Thanks for listening to the daily gardener, and remember: "For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."
I think this is the clearest case of Betsy pulling out a book for Kate that is well-known amongst children's librarians and is pretty obscure when you talk to your average layperson on the street. If for no other reason, you should listen to this episode of our podcast to hear Kate's exclamation of pure confusion and tiny squeaks of bafflement when Betsy mentions how well it did on the Top 100 Picture Books Poll (it was #14). So sit back and enjoy as the sisters discuss the logistics of how exactly one would get a blue cap off of this guy, where his fingers suddenly emerge from, how exactly you pronounce, "Tsz, tsz, tsz," and why anyone, anywhere would put on a hat previously worn by a monkey. Show Notes: - Gentle listeners and readers, we really do want to know. How do you pronounce, "Tsz, tsz, tsz"? - Since this book was influenced by the work of Henri Rousseau, why not check out this picture book biography of him, The Fantastic Jungles of Henri Rousseau? http://blogs.slj.com/afuse8production/2012/11/06/review-of-the-day-the-fantastic-jungles-of-henri-rousseau-by-michelle-markel/ - Why Mathematicians are Hoarding This Special Type of Japanese Chalk: https://gizmodo.com/why-mathematicians-are-hoarding-this-special-type-of-ja-1711008881 - And last but by far not least, a new podcast! The Newbery Tart podcast has much to recommend it, not least of which is a list of living Newbery Authors. If you enjoy podcasts that take deep dives into subjects pertaining to children's literature, this is a can't miss listen: https://www.newberytart.com/podcast/ For full Show Notes please visit http://blogs.slj.com/afuse8production/2018/08/27/fuse-8-n-kate-caps-for-sale-by-esphyr-slobodkina
"All of us can take fright, but it requires greatness of soul to laugh at the moment when not merely life, but humanity itself is endangered." In my ongoing celebration of all things France I am reading a book called 'The Banquet Years' by Roger Shattuck. It is about the origins of the avant-garde in France from 1885 - World War I. From this book I regal you with the story of Henri Rousseau and the ridicule he faced while keeping his childlike innocence intact. Then our July fireworks reach their crescendo with the spectacular story of Alfred Jarry and his groundbreaking play Ubu Roi that created a scandalous riot when it premiered at Theatre L'Oeuvre in Paris in 1896. Alfred Jarry was the precursor to the Dada art movement, surrealism and the Theater Of The Absurd. Learn all about this man who rode his bicycle around Paris with a rifle over his shoulder, two pistols in his belt and tried to make his life a living hallucination. I talk about the triumph of France at the World Cup and how they did what Napoleon failed to do and that is to be victorious in Russia. I talk about how Vladimir Putin and the good people of Russia are the real winners of the World cup and how we could all learn to conduct our lives in victory and defeat the way the team of Japan does. The opposite of Japanese politeness and concern for others is President Trump, who I am now calling the Urine Pawn. Just this week he called Canada and the European Union the enemies of America and stood with Vladimir Putin in Helsinki never mentioning the Russian influence on the 2016 election. When asked directly by a reporter if he had anything to say to Putin about this or the 12 Russians indicted days ago for hacking our election he said that he takes Putin's word for it when he said he didn't do it and asked why no one has found Hillary Clinton e-mail server yet. This is theater of the absurd on the world stage, which makes me think that this video of Trump with Russian prostitutes urinating must be worse than we could ever imagine. Where is the outcry from the American people over this treasonous act at the highest level? Thanks to the Urine Pawn we are now living in a world where our allies are now our enemies and our enemies are now our allies. The tough bully president of America acted like a neutered cat in the lap of the ultimate chess master Putin. And yet, this is somehow Hillary's fault? Back to reasons to be cheerful... TRR Smart Camp * Become our patron and receive podcast goodies! www.patreon.com/tomrhodesradiosmartcamp * Sign up for a conversation with Tom! www.patreon.com/tomrhodesradiosmartcamp * Buy my newest double album All Hail Laughter www.tomrhodes.net
As 2017 was another strong year for Electronic music with a strong focus on the Ambient side of things , @philipp-demankowski picked up the thread from 2014's and last year's “Merry Ambient Christmas Special”. He compiled some of the most exiting sonic adventures in Experimental world with new music and some almost forgotten but now re-released Ambient classics. Including a glimpse at shtum's 2018 release schedule. Anyway, have a merry Christmas everybody! Tracklist 1. Pauline Anna Strom - Cruising Altitude 36,000 Feet [Rvng Intl.] 2. Qnete – Stomach [forthcoming 777] 3. Pauline Anna Strom - Energies [Rvng Intl.] 4. S.O.N.S - Yamanote Underground Beach [S.O.N.S] 5. X.Y.R. - False Angel Lullaby [Not Not Fun] 6. Umfang - Path [Technicolour] 7. Blind Observatory - Yonder [Gravitational] 8. Leif Müller - Unreleased 9. Leibniz - Unreleased 10. Kutmah - Healing [Big Dada] 11. Fernando Falcão - Amanhecer Tabajara (À Alceu Valença) [Music From Memory] 12. Gigi Masin - La Giara Di Gesturi [Modern Classics] 13. Visible Cloaks - Wheel [Rvng Intl.] 14. Akis - Erotica [Into The Light] 15. Jefre Cantu-Ledesma - Echoing Green [Mexican Summer] 16. Krikor Kouchian - Armas Y Heroina [L.I.E.S.] 17. Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith - In The World [Western Vinyl] 18. Kastrierte Philosophen - Heroina [Emotional Rescure 19. Midori Takada - Mr. Henri Rousseau's Dream [We Release Whatever The Fuck We Want] UV Funk is a radio show which is broadcasted every third Friday from 9:30 pm to 11:00 pm on Dresden based community radio station coloRadio. Radio listeners in Dresden can tune in to the program on 98,3 or 99,4 MHz. Any other listeners can recall it here. The show is hosted by @philipp-demankowski. It's all about stories, interviews and tracks out of the world of Cosmic Electronic Music. The show was aired on 15th December 2017.
Shock World Service 071: Mix for Milarepa (ELLLL) 20/9/17 Cork, Ireland http://www.shockworldservice.com/ Apple Podcasts: goo.gl/xyxuCh 1. Eliane Radigue - Mila's Song in the Rain Queen of meditative drone. 2. Black Merlin - Somewhere in Ubud Taken from ‘Hipnotik Tradisi'. Washes of Gamelan and field recordings with sinister and broody hues. 3. Dickie Landry - Fifteen Saxophones An intense densely layered, free flowing study using tape delays. 4. Minced Oath - Quelle Décalotage Soft, warm, shimmering pools of sound. 5. Holger Czukay - Longing for Daydreams Apt title for clever use of sampling to lull the listener into a trance like state. 6. Midori Takada - Mr. Henri Rousseau's Dream Percussionist and composer Takada melds traditional African and Asian motifs to form a delicate, airy narrative in homage to post-impressionist painter Henri Rousseau. 7. Haruomi Hosono - Growth Slightly uneasy yet stoic extract taken from ‘Watering a Flower', a series of compositions commissioned to be played as background music in household goods store, Muji in 1983. 8. Andrea Belfi - Statico An abstract composition for drums, percussion and synthesiser. From the 2017 record ‘Alveare'. 9. ASDA - Bells Noise by Sebastian Gainsborough (Vessel) and words Chester Giles. 10. Holger Czukay - Floatspace An ethereal cloud to carry you away. 11. Patricia Escudero - Gymnopedie I Unique interpretation of Erik Satie's ‘Gymnopedie I'. 12. Giusto Pio - Motore Immobile Stunning piece of 1970's Italian minimalist composition. 13. Nadia Khan - Milky Sweat Taken from ‘Open Interior' on Where to Now? 14. Johann Johannsson - Melodia (III) Distant piano solo vignette from the album ‘Fordlandia' https://twitter.com/__ellll__ http://gashcoll.com/
Podcast tratto dal Radiodramma "Voglio Solo che mi Ascolti", storie di un viaggio interdimensionale. Guarda il video "L'eroe che è dentro ognuno di noi » #PLAY" su IsoladelleroseTV: https://youtu.be/xTLwg8ztRuI
Whenever I find myself stuck for inspiration, I always turn to books. Picture books are a secret passion of mine. I love looking at the exquisite illustrations as it puts me back in touch with why art is important. Children learn much about the world through books and as educators we can use books to help children understand what we are teaching. This episode shares my list of favorite art books not just for the art room but for everyday inspiration. LISTEN TO THE SHOW Subscribe to Art Made Easy and receive new episodes directly on your phone via your podcast App. Note: If you have an iPhone, subscribe in iTunes. If you have an Android phone, subscribe in Stitcher. Books Referenced in Show Laurence Anholt's Art Series Illustrator Veroniqué Massenot Website and Instagram Octavia Monaco's Website The Fantastic Jungles of Henri Rousseau by Michelle Markel and Amanda Hall Child's Introduction to Art: The World's Greatest Paintings and Sculptures by Heather Alexander and Meredith Hamilton Modern Art Adventures: 36 Creative, Hands-On Projects Inspired by Artists from Monet to Banksy by Maja Pitamic and Jill Laidlaw The Museum by Susan Verde and Peter H Reynolds Dianna Hutts Aston Books/website A Rock Is Lively A Nest Is Noisy Over and Under the Pond by Kate Messner and Christopher Silas Neal Over and Under the Snow plus project on Deep Space Sparkle Botanicum: Welcome to the Museum curated by Katie Scott and Kathy Willis The Artist Who Painted a Blue Horse by Eric Carle Ladies Drawing Night: Make Art, Get Inspired, Join the Party by Julia Rothman, Leah Goren, Rachael Cole A Field Guide to Coastal Fishes: From Alaska to California Not discussed in the podcast, but this book is a new discovery! Above and Below by Hanako Clulow Charley Harper: An Illustrated Life by Todd Oldham NOTE: these links contain affiliate links SHOW NOTES Deep Space Sparkle Summer Art Workshop (June 23-24, 2107) Become a Sparkler! Click to sign up for a free lesson and waitlist for The Members Club Todd Oldham's Product line at Target
Mysteries of the Deep Podcast, Chapter LXV. In The Dry Sand Of The Arroyo Floor by Gunnar Haslam. Cover photo courtesy of Candace Price. Tracklist: 1. Pauline Oliveros - A Little Noise In The System - 1966 2. Ellen Fullman - Woven Processional - 1985 3. Micheline Coulombe Saint-Marcoux - Moustières - 1973 4. Else Marie Pade - Faust & Mefisto - 1962 5. Grouper - Close Cloak - 2005 6. Sarah Davachi - Olson - 2015 7. Mireille Chamass-Kyrou - Étude 1 - 1960 8. Kara-Lis Coverdale - Touch Me & Die - 2015 9. Jenny Hval - Untamed Region - 2016 10. Jo Johnson - Ancestral Footsteps - 2014 11. Midori Takada - Mr. Henri Rousseau’s Dream - 1983 12. Christina Kubisch - Circles III - 1986 13. Éliane Radigue - Jetsun Mila (Meeting the Guru/Ordeals) - 1986 14. Alice Coltrane - Journey In Satchidananda - 1971 https://soundcloud.com/gunnar_haslam
Erst mit über fünfzig Jahren entwickelte der Amerikaner Alfred Jensen sein eigenwilliges malerisches Werk, das ihn zu einem wichtigen Vorläufer der seriellen Malerei der 1960er Jahre machen sollte. 1903 in Guatemala geboren, verlebte Jensen seine Jugendjahre in dem mittelamerikanischen Land, von dem er die Erinnerung an die reinen leuchtenden Farben der Maya-Kultur mitnahm. Nach ersten Versuchen in der abstrakt-expressionistischen Malerei fand Jensen 1957 zu den einfachen geometrischen Grundformen, die er nach eigenen Gesetzen anordnete. Jensen war fasziniert von Ordnungssystemen, mit denen sich Zahlen und Farben in rhythmische Abläufe bringen liessen, und dafür griff er auf mannigfaltige Quellen zurück – auf die Kalender der Maya und Inka, auf die Baupläne der Pyramiden, auf die Lehren der Pythagoräer, die Schriften Leonardo da Vincis, auf Goethes Farbenlehre und viele andere Theorien. Es gelang Jensen, daraus eine eigene Bildsprache zu formen und mit dem pastosen Farbauftrag der Spektralfarben eine malerische Entsprechung für seinen Ausdruckswillen zu finden. Seine Zeitgenossen nannten Jensen den Henri Rousseau der Abstraktion, um seinen unbekümmerten schöpferischen Umgang mit den überlieferten Theorien zu charakterisieren. Durch seinen Malerfreund Sam Francis kam Jensen Anfang der 1960er Jahre zu Eberhard Kornfeld in Bern, der ihn von da an vertrat und sein Werk in Europa durchsetzte. Deshalb befinden sich viele von Jensens wichtigsten Werken nicht in den USA, sondern in Schweizer Sammlungen.
La exuberancia de las selvas del pintor francés Henri Rousseau fue incomprendida por la crítica de su tiempo. Hoy es uno de los primeros vanguardistas de principios del siglo XX mejor valorado. 'El sueño' (1910) y Solange aderezan el podcast.
This portrait of a child by Henri Rousseau is supposed to have been a contracted picture. From early on, both the picture and its artist were surrounded by myths.
Das Kinderbild von Henri Rousseau soll ein Auftragsbild gewesen sein. Früh schon rankten sich Mythen um das Bild und seinen Schöpfer.