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14-01 The Dutch Golden Age

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Dr Laurence Shafe

Dr Laurence Shafe

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 19
@amberdong7295
@amberdong7295 2 жыл бұрын
Hello Dr. Shafe, thanks for this lecture of the Dutch art. I find your lecture very comprehensive . I have been studying Dutch Golden Age art for a while, I am enticing by the artworks of that period. I am also an emerging artist, many of my still life paintings are inspired by Dutch artists during that time. I do appreciate your videos.
@EarnerSaverInvestor
@EarnerSaverInvestor 5 ай бұрын
Excellent documentary
@YP-kd4es
@YP-kd4es 7 ай бұрын
I hope this feedback finds you well. I wanted to take a moment to express my sincere gratitude for the thorough and enlightening lecture you delivered on Dutch art. It was an incredibly insightful and engaging session that left a lasting impression on me. Your extensive knowledge and passion for the subject matter truly shone through during the lecture. The way you effortlessly weaved historical context, and cultural significance together made the topic come alive. I greatly appreciated your ability to interpret and convey complex ideas in a clear and accessible manner, which made it easier for me to understand and appreciate the beauty and depth of Dutch art.
@deborahscotland8819
@deborahscotland8819 2 жыл бұрын
I love Dutch Genre paintings and found this very insightful - thank you.
@humzaanwar1703
@humzaanwar1703 2 жыл бұрын
I enjoy your lectures very much if you ever have time to make one on Picasso I would quite enjoy that. Thank you for the great lectures
@ilpezkato
@ilpezkato Жыл бұрын
Superb lecture, sir. My kudos to you.🌈
@adamcampbell-jones7621
@adamcampbell-jones7621 Жыл бұрын
Hello Dr Shafe Loved the lecture but just wondering why you never mentioned that Rembrandts "The night watch" as we know it is not the original painting, as i recall it was cannibalized at some stage in order to fit into a hall in Amsterdam to be viewed. In my humble opinion Vermeers The view of Delft was painted with the aid of a camera obscura {a portable one unlike the one in Vermeers studio as was set up in the Tim Jenison doc} from the room ,as you pointed out in the house across the river.As you said it is photographic.I hope you get to view the Tim Jenisons documentary on Vermeers "The music Lesson" which in my opinion proves beyond doubt the use of a booth type obscura in Vermeers studio. Thankyou so much for the discussion
@LaurenceShafe
@LaurenceShafe Жыл бұрын
You are right, the painting was cut down to fit a space in the town hall in Amsterdam. The pieces cut off have never been found and one piece had three figures on it. I agree that he probably used a camera obscura which was known about in the ancient world and described by Leonardo da Vinci. However, this only takes the artist so far as it merely provides a rough sketch and one of the wonders of Vermeer's technique is his facture or paint surface.
@adamcampbell-jones7621
@adamcampbell-jones7621 Жыл бұрын
I agree with you a box type obscura as Canaletto used could only take you so far but in the Tim Jenison doc {using the whole studio as the obscura & sitting in the booth looking down via the circular mirror to the surface & recording what you are seeing is far more advanced especially with the improved lenses of that era than a box type}.Is the the size of the early works compared to later due to the confines of the booth ?@@LaurenceShafe
@LaurenceShafe
@LaurenceShafe Жыл бұрын
Constantijn Huygens (1596-1687) bought a portable camera obscura in London and knew Rubens, Van Dyck and Rembrandt and possibly Vermeer. He wrote is was "now-a-days familiar to everyone ...". He calls it “a picture-making invention with which one can paint by means of reflections in a closed and darkened room everything which is outside.” By the seventeenth century most camera obscuras, portable and in a room or tent, would be using a lens. However, it only enabled an outline sketch of a scene to be drawn and it was of limited help as an aid to painting. It is interesting but just a variation of the way many artists take measurements using an outstretched pencil or some other mechanism. John Constable, for example, would sometimes attach a pane of glass to his easel and trace the outline of a landscape then transfer it to a squared-up sheet of paper. Many artists use squaring-up to transfer a small sketch onto a larger canvas. I think a camera obscura would be an advantage for transferring complex objects onto a drawing, for example, a chandelier.
@DenUitvreter
@DenUitvreter 7 ай бұрын
The Netherlands were already very wealthy, mainly because of the Hanseatic League and fishery and textile production. When the Northern Netherlands split off in 1581 from today's Belgium and the Luxemburg they developped modern capitalism and industrialized shipbuilding, up to 30 times faster because of the invention of the wind mill powered saw in 1592. The combination of advanced financial institutions, low interests, lots of ships and especially real merchant ships with small crews and often just one antipirate gun, made them outcompete everybody and doing more than half of all European trade, especially the Baltic Sea trade got completely dominated by the Dutch. They had more merchant ships than the rest of Europe combined for most of the 17th century. The global trade outside Europe was far smaller, and they initially got in that take the war for independence against Spain and Portugal over the oceans. The Dutch East India company only started paying ROI in 1633 and the West India Company was only founded in 1620 and mostly a financial failure. The Dutch were already filthy rich by then from shipping wheat, wood, beer, rye, textiles, just European bulk goods.
@LaurenceShafe
@LaurenceShafe 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for going to so much trouble to explain how the Dutch acquired their wealth to fund the Dutch Golden Age.
@DenUitvreter
@DenUitvreter 7 ай бұрын
@@LaurenceShafe I think it's also reflected in a relatively broad middle class as subject of many 17th century paintings, while the earnings of the small intercontinental trade tended to end up with the filthy rich more. It has also to do with the Dutch self image of that time and the place of the exotic in Dutch 17th century art, more as a matter of interest and amazement than business.
@dutcharmypainter8160
@dutcharmypainter8160 Жыл бұрын
Quakers a ducks sound is kwak kwak in Dutch or quak quak
@scottsaleff8848
@scottsaleff8848 Жыл бұрын
I believe Charles the first was 5 ft 3 not under 5 ft
@LaurenceShafe
@LaurenceShafe Жыл бұрын
Estimates of Charles's height before his execution vary between 4ft 8in and 5ft 4in. Historic Royal Palaces gives his height as 1.5 metres or 4ft 11in but I have heard documentaries that give his height as 5ft 3in.
@maxlinder5262
@maxlinder5262 Жыл бұрын
The man with the violin ..has his pants Open ???
@LaurenceShafe
@LaurenceShafe Жыл бұрын
The painting by Jan Steen at 49:30 is intended to be salacious and comic. In the sixteenth century men wore hose which were two separate pieces, one for each leg with the front and back exposed but covered by a long tunic. However, as tunics got shorter in 1463 in England, Edward IV’s parliament made it compulsory for a man to cover “his privy Members and Buttokes” and this led to the development of the codpiece. In the seventeenth century, when this was painted, men had switched to wearing one-piece breeches. Possibly Steen has dressed the fiddler in hose without a codpiece as an amusing addition to the picture. Maybe an expert on seventeenth-century fashion will have a better suggestion.
@maxlinder5262
@maxlinder5262 Жыл бұрын
@@LaurenceShafe ..I did research the codpiece...it really only mentioned th 15 & 16 the Century & it started to go out of fashion by the 17 the Century ....need to do some more research .. thanks
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