Gericault's Last Portrait

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The Canvas

The Canvas

Күн бұрын

Théodore Géricault, known for his Raft of the Medusa and for pioneering Romanticism, tragically died at the age of 32. His short life would end with heartbreaking portraits of him dying.
Evidence of the authorship of this work:
www.pop.culture.gouv.fr/notic...
Support us on Patreon: / thecanvas
#arthistory #art

Пікірлер: 457
@lorenzniel4149
@lorenzniel4149 Жыл бұрын
I tried looking, but the only somewhat trustworthy source I found said that the painting was made by Gericault. Not saying it was, I´d just like to have a reliable source to base my opinion on, if anyone has one
@TheCanvasArtHistory
@TheCanvasArtHistory Жыл бұрын
Hey there, I should have absolutely provide sources, especially if I'm going to contradict a lot of the information provided on the internet about this painting. www.pop.culture.gouv.fr/notice/joconde/000PE029857 This is a link to the portrait on the website of France's Ministry of Culture. I'll also include it in the description of the video. Thank you!
@fjfjjsjfjjejsjdfkejjs
@fjfjjsjfjjejsjdfkejjs Жыл бұрын
@@TheCanvasArtHistory I saw this painting in person at the art museum of the city of Rouen, France. I didn't know much about it, actually I didn't even know it existed but seeing it right in front of me was incredibly powerful and unnerving. It's probably one of my most powerful experience. I truly recommend to go to Rouen (a very beautiful city btw) to see it for real, it's incredible.
@vggglat6424
@vggglat6424 Жыл бұрын
I farted
@Username-1939t9
@Username-1939t9 Жыл бұрын
@@vggglat6424 epic
@altmithi4525
@altmithi4525 Жыл бұрын
@@vggglat6424 epic
@wellesradio
@wellesradio Жыл бұрын
These paintings say one very important thing, “This man was loved.”
@kimsherlock8969
@kimsherlock8969 Жыл бұрын
Yes so not much in Love , What it means to each lover. Knowing what each other means. A Love between friends brothers artists lovers
@aniquinstark4347
@aniquinstark4347 Жыл бұрын
And that he was understood. His peers chose to depict his final days in similar styles to his own. For anyone else it would have been more appropriate to paint him looking more healthy but he was always striving for a realistic depiction of death, even when it was unpleasant.
@ekatasatya2995
@ekatasatya2995 Жыл бұрын
it may have been painted to his own request.
@THICCTHICCTHICC
@THICCTHICCTHICC Жыл бұрын
To me it seems much darker knowing it was painted by someone else. A close friend painting your sunken face seems much more difficult than painting yourself - at least in my opinion.
@wellesradio
@wellesradio Жыл бұрын
I don’t see it as dark at all. I see it as lovely.
@Sydney-Casket-Base
@Sydney-Casket-Base Жыл бұрын
Ur username & profile got me feeling emotions
@goodmorning7358
@goodmorning7358 Жыл бұрын
Well said, Thicc Thicc Thicc Ass. Well said.
@Padraigp
@Padraigp Жыл бұрын
How can somone else doing something be more difficult for you? Lol!
@prestonak
@prestonak Жыл бұрын
@@Padraigp🗿
@memr5690
@memr5690 Жыл бұрын
This painting stands out to me because of how jarring and uncomfortable the depiction of Gericault is. Reading deeper it serves as a reminder that our lives can be tragically cut short, no matter how great we are.
@theodour8617
@theodour8617 Жыл бұрын
Looks like AI generated art.
@paulwoodford1984
@paulwoodford1984 Жыл бұрын
@@theodour8617 it is, that’s why
@theodour8617
@theodour8617 Жыл бұрын
@@paulwoodford1984 yes!
@JoeFlamenco
@JoeFlamenco Жыл бұрын
@@paulwoodford1984 so you’re saying AI was painting pictures in 1820? Because that’s when the picture was made.
@paulwoodford1984
@paulwoodford1984 Жыл бұрын
@@JoeFlamenco The copy they have is fake
@Crossark1
@Crossark1 Жыл бұрын
Personally, I find it quite profound that Corréard chose to depict what was almost certainly a bedridden Géricault in a sitting posture, and even in an outfit that almost appears to be regalia. I think it shows profound respect for the man who once depicted his own physical, mental, and emotional trials abord the raft so faithfully. It feels as if he painted Géricault in such a way that he would appear dignified and commanding even while wearing the telltale signs of illness. In effect, it feels to me that Corréard was projecting that defiance of death that people love about the erroneous self-portrait tale onto Géricault in this work, and it reveals a great deal about how he viewed him.
@wyattdetherow6853
@wyattdetherow6853 Жыл бұрын
bro you took these words straight from my head i swear lol i came into the comments to see if anyone else was gonna mention his attire, or his posture. i 100% agree with you on this
@midnightmosesuk
@midnightmosesuk Жыл бұрын
The fact that Géricault's friend painted it lends it a satisfying cyclical quality, that his association with Correard started and ended with a remarkable work of art. And the portrait of the dying Géricault is remarkable in a way that only a man who has been close to death can achieve and, with his experiences on the raft, Correard was very familiar with death indeed. I doubt he felt any hope for his friend, he'd know too well what a dying man looked like. In a previous job, a long time ago, I was privileged enough to share the last moments of life with a number of individuals. The look of dying has been captured perfectly. The tissue paper thin skin, sunken cheeks, hollow eyes and almost fleshless face. Despite this, he looks defiant to my eyes, he almost glares at us from the painting. The Raft of the Medusa was painted to launch Géricault's career and was made to be confrontational and dramatic. This last portrait is no less confrontational but it is a far more sombre affair. It is a momento mori. Correard, no doubt with some encouragement and guidance from his friend, is confronting us with as stark an image of death and dying as you're ever likely to see anywhere. "Here is the great artist, look how low death has laid him, in time it will have you too." But his eyes remain defiant, the Windows to his soul. Death has his body and it will take its due in time but it doesn't have HIM. For me, that's where the hope lies. At the risk of sounding more pretentious than I've made myself sound already, I'm going to quote Shakespeare. "We are such stuff as dreams are made of, and our little life is rounded with a sleep." I'd like to think that there is some trace of us after we pass on, some vestige in the aether of the person we once were. And maybe that's the portion we see in Géricault's eyes, that part of us that death does not hold dominion over. And maybe that's the bit that slips into our last sleep, the distilled essence of who we were, waiting for who knows what?
@louisbajard6750
@louisbajard6750 Жыл бұрын
Pretentious art people are people who try to lower other people or other cultural stuff, like "honhon my hobby is so sophisticated not like your vulgar action videos". You are never pretentious for looking even "too much" into it, and you just gave extra trivia + your point, not pretentious nice comment, thanks
@midnightmosesuk
@midnightmosesuk Жыл бұрын
@@louisbajard6750 Thanks. That's very kind of you.
@bryevans7176
@bryevans7176 Жыл бұрын
You're interpretation is amazing!
@midnightmosesuk
@midnightmosesuk Жыл бұрын
@@bryevans7176 It's just an opinion really, your milage may differ. Thanks for saying that though, always nice to have a positive affirmation.
@spicytuna769
@spicytuna769 Жыл бұрын
Really appreciate this interpretation! Thank you for sharing it.
@DrsArtistRX
@DrsArtistRX Жыл бұрын
I feel like we are all drawn to his eyes. They look at though they are hollowed out and sad. His nose, which is crooked, seems to stretch onwards. His mouth looks nonexistent. His face, in general, looks pale and like it’s shrunken into itself. Although, he looks terrifying, he also looks a bit nostalgic. Like he is death. But his eyes, the thing that sticks out to me particularly, are warm colored. Almost like honey. It’s almost as if the portrait isn’t looking at the viewer but, his friend. This isn’t a painting of a monster nor a man who will haunt your nightmares. This is a man turning to look at his friend one last time, almost as if to say, “Even in death, I will find you. My friend, this may be my end, but it’s not our end. Till we see each other again, goodbye.” He isn’t scary, he’s just looking at someone he cares about for a final time. The reason that he looks hollowed and scary is because death is. But, hey, that’s just a theory, a painting theory. Thanks for reading!
@xX_swagger_Xx
@xX_swagger_Xx Жыл бұрын
i love that they painted each other's tragedies, it's sort of poetic
@haphuongnguyen3358
@haphuongnguyen3358 Жыл бұрын
I don't know why, but I don't feel absolute horrid looking at this painting. It's strangely... calming, soothing even. As I look into the sunken, tired eyes of the subject, it's like time slowed down for him. At the time of painting, he probably didn't have much life left to live. His time is passing soon. Maybe it's the colors that were used? They're not pastel, fluffy or adorable, but there's a tenderness, an appreciation for something so fragile. There is grief, there is pain, but ultimately, there's appreciation. Somehow, I'm reassured that the moment he breathe his last breath and those sunken eyes close forever, he would be wrap in clean and warm fabric, that he will be taken care of with all the emphasis on the "care".
@pulvenberg1709
@pulvenberg1709 Жыл бұрын
I feel that way with death playing the fiddle. It's slightly threatening, but I've never seen death as something that terrifying. I think being aware of your own mortality is important and getting to know and, as said appreciate it. I know it's not really what I think my response it will be, but I'd like to imagine that when it all comes to the end for me, I can say I've lived nicely and be able to open my arms for it too.
@antoinepetrov
@antoinepetrov Жыл бұрын
There is another layer to this portrait which is the incredibly daring expressiveness of the brushstrokes and the overall modernist look of it. For a painting in 1824, when academicism with all its strictness was at its height, such a painting, both loaded with emotion and realised with emotion by Corréard, is a masterpiece. We can only imagine what pain Corréard was going through while seeing his friend, to whom he was so greatful, fade out of existence.
@kitwillihnganz5972
@kitwillihnganz5972 Жыл бұрын
I wonder if we have any other paintings of Correard's.
@commimixcreate4198
@commimixcreate4198 Жыл бұрын
I remember my grandma had a disease that made her bruise really easily. I once had a nightmare that she had those bruises for eyes and I'm frightened at how similar it looks to the painting on the thumbnail so I just had to check this out.
@katiemutschler6040
@katiemutschler6040 Жыл бұрын
Makes me think of mozart's requiem. He wrote a mass for the dead while he was dying, and his students had to finish it for him. I believe the Lacrimosa only had a skeleton of it written before he passed, which makes it even more haunting because it was completed by the people who missed him most.
@JamesKingsilentlife
@JamesKingsilentlife Жыл бұрын
The images you show of the paintings are considerably enhanced. I work as a tour guide in Paris, and can report that the real works in the Louvre are sadly mired by a dirty yellow film of old varnish. The museum has just unveiled a freshly cleaned Delacroix, "The Massacre at Chios", which reveals the original colours. It has to be seen to be believed. It is simply astonishing! They are currently working on "The Death of Sardanapalos". Gericault's "Medusa" and Delacroix's "Liberty Leading the People" are patiently waiting their turn!
@Find-Your-Bliss-
@Find-Your-Bliss- Жыл бұрын
Wonderful! For the generations. Respect to all involved.
@lifewriter7455
@lifewriter7455 Жыл бұрын
It's a magnificent work of art. The portrait shows a man facing death; and still his eyes are filled wit immanent light: We can see his soul through the artist's painting.
@deeranfoxworthy6069
@deeranfoxworthy6069 Жыл бұрын
Maybe it's because of my colourblindness and I'm seeing the shadows a bit differently, but he looks quite resolute and resilient in the face of death. Almost standing tall. And knowing it was painted by a friend feels like it solidifies this as how they perceived him even as his life drained away.
@PotatoPatatoVonSpudsworth
@PotatoPatatoVonSpudsworth Жыл бұрын
I'm not so sure... there is an ever-so-slight sag to the eyes, which when coupled with the soul-piercing stare makes me feel that Gericault is studying my face, because he knows it is the last time he will see it.
@gluesandwhich3371
@gluesandwhich3371 Жыл бұрын
he just looks, indifferent to me..tired, emotionless. to me he looks at death and thinks, "i'm waiting." and nothing more
@marlonbryanmunoznunez3179
@marlonbryanmunoznunez3179 Жыл бұрын
The real story is even more impressive than the internet popularized one, in my opinion. I think that Géricault being painted by Correard has an astonishing symmetry and the fact they were friends it's quite heartwarming.
@SuperDynakin
@SuperDynakin Жыл бұрын
Knowing it was done by his friend, makes it more special to me. Awesome video. This channel is my favorite place to learn about art history. The way it's presented, the music used, the narration are all very captivating.
@yassamineminou1380
@yassamineminou1380 Жыл бұрын
Got chills when you said who actually painted it. I find that much more grim than a self portrait but as you said there is companionship in tragedy between the two
@Hemitheon
@Hemitheon Жыл бұрын
Brilliant! When I first saw this painting, I always assumed it was about Gericault confronting death in his last days, but now knowing who the true artist was, my opinion has completely changed. It's about memory and grief and surviving. Having watching my own best friend pass away, I can understand the desire to paint the memory. The image of those last moments and the passing are burned in my memory. I can only assume that it was the same for Correard.
@powdereyes2210
@powdereyes2210 Жыл бұрын
That someone else drew it makes it even more meaningful He didn’t die alone in his paintings
@Angayasse
@Angayasse Жыл бұрын
This is absolutely terrifying. Thank you for broadening my mind!
@Leenzzz
@Leenzzz Жыл бұрын
PLOT TWIST... Love it. Everything about the story behind this painting is just... Wow
@borko8325
@borko8325 Жыл бұрын
i really like how much it looks like a skull, like hes decomposing but hes clearly still alive
@4nnd711
@4nnd711 Жыл бұрын
the skill these artists had is genuinely crazy
@lemoncherry9614
@lemoncherry9614 Жыл бұрын
i really owe so much to your vids, i’m a starting art student, right now i’m still studying medieval arts (help it’s kinda boring to me 😭), but with your videos i’ve learnt so much on how to research and truly look at art with a critical eye. i really love getting to know such in depth stories behind some more specific works of art instead of having to rush through huge and long eras (like i do in school) thank you so much for your videos, they truly are art
@Eveseptir
@Eveseptir Жыл бұрын
The painting for me, as harrowing and intense as it is, is made vivid and beautiful with your video commentary.
@Moccason
@Moccason Жыл бұрын
This is so interesting. I wrote an essay on the Romantic movement - specifically it’s unusual and interesting approach to the depiction of mental illness - last year, and I’m very surprised that I never came across this haunting portrait. It’s an unusual work, and it’s been very exciting to grasp a deeper insight on it. Wonderful video as per usual!
@antoniodamoura631
@antoniodamoura631 Жыл бұрын
As a self portrait i appreciated it for its sense of self reflection but as a portrait from a friend i can now appreciate it as a monument.
@jude-kingsleyduckmanton8340
@jude-kingsleyduckmanton8340 Жыл бұрын
the fact its a self portrait at first glance is terrifying. How brilliant context is, as i for one wouldn't of came to the same level of empathy & understanding without it.
@garcybarcy9337
@garcybarcy9337 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for posting this video🙏
@silke4913
@silke4913 Жыл бұрын
Wow this takes me back! I used an exposition of Gericaults work for my entrance exam in college, and especially the paintings of the decapitated limbs were gorgeous in person. The last portrait of Gericault especially was very striking because you couldn't help but feel distraught and emotional at the same time. Thanks for the video, more peeps should look into this wonderful artist!
@asimplepoet1057
@asimplepoet1057 Жыл бұрын
Wonderful video. Thank you for such informational art channel!
@anniestumpy9918
@anniestumpy9918 Жыл бұрын
thank you for your very good pronunciation of the french names. That's something most youtubers don't really give much consideration. So, thumbs up for that!
@mediumvibesonly7974
@mediumvibesonly7974 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for telling his story, I never would've known such brilliance if not for you.
@carpenterhillstudios8327
@carpenterhillstudios8327 Жыл бұрын
Every art work has a story. The story certainly informs the work and is embedded in it. But great art work gives the viewer a place to stand. Gericault was glossed over in my early art history survey courses. This is revelatory. Thank you. As disturbing as "The Raft" is, what you have been able to do is to broaden the space of time surrounding it and this is huge. Thanks again.
@donnadees1971
@donnadees1971 Жыл бұрын
It is so good to get info - just love finding out good things and truths. Kudos.
@EmpyrionBlackthorn
@EmpyrionBlackthorn Жыл бұрын
This is quite possibly the most instantly fascinating channel I've ever come upon.
@dgsdgs7413
@dgsdgs7413 Жыл бұрын
thank you for this! Stories like this bring the past's humanity, and life struggle and compassion into the present. Living breathing people who were just as passionate about their days as we are of ours, brought to life.
@UdumbaraMusic
@UdumbaraMusic Жыл бұрын
You apparently uploaded this video at the exact time I was trying to remember what the painting "The Raft of Medusa" was called... And then this turns up in my recommended the next day and you mention it! Thanks, although now I'm slightly terrified of you!
@domeatown
@domeatown Жыл бұрын
I'm just impressed that the art community was friendly, did research, cared for each other, and boosted each other's works and careers. I've known so many artists that are choatic and competative and rarely put in that level of effort and it's been leading to this cyclical cynicism in art that's so yucky. but these guys were really invested in each other and took that time to just be human in each other's spaces and I'm knid of just amazed by that in a world post Warhol where everything just has this dark, half-done and touched-out feeling where the most innovative works actually sort of feel like a compulsive backlash at that. but then everything ultimately gets reabsorbed into the machine bc no one can escape the creeping dark cloud, even people like Banksy and AI can't seem to shake away. All innovation is a backlash to a backlash and no longer to document, explore, and reach accross the narrative divide
@mediumvibesonly7974
@mediumvibesonly7974 Жыл бұрын
Well spoken.
@011CJ
@011CJ Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the vid
@loutrepoutre49.3
@loutrepoutre49.3 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your work and time! Hi from a french otter.
@sprod6737
@sprod6737 Жыл бұрын
Merci pour les bonne prononciations ! Et pour l'excellent travaille de documentation. Un vrai mini-cours :D
@rururoze7197
@rururoze7197 Жыл бұрын
How calming listening to his voice...! Amazing channel and great work!, i don't get why it doesn't gain many followers.
@LUCIDARIAN
@LUCIDARIAN Жыл бұрын
this painting has always fascinated me in that there was very little reputable information about it online so im glad to see someone gave it some better documentation! also thrilled to now know what museum its located at as I would love to see it in person some day.
@mr.sandman3619
@mr.sandman3619 Жыл бұрын
"There's nothing darker than an artist depicting themselves dead" When i was like 12 i liked editing realistic gory pictures of myself beheaded or without my eyes on Ibispaint X and my parents said i shouldn't do that I didn't understand what was the problem at the time but now i realise that your own son showing you a picture of himself dead would be really disturbing
@foxliam10
@foxliam10 Жыл бұрын
Good video but theres massive audio issues
@antoinepetrov
@antoinepetrov Жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting this. I thought it came from me.
@CharlieQuartz
@CharlieQuartz Жыл бұрын
I thought it was a feature (horror quality) for half the video
@jav689
@jav689 Жыл бұрын
I love the story and the common mistake. It's those nuances that make art so fun. Love the friends clubs throughout history too, like the impressionist in the salon or the preraphaelites, painting, chatting, teaching eachother, smoking cigarettes and drinking brandy. It's great.
@yaa63
@yaa63 Жыл бұрын
In my humble opinion I think it makes it MUCH more interesting that it was NOT a self portrait. Thank you I enjoyed this video very much and instructive
@grooselegacy
@grooselegacy Жыл бұрын
Love your videos and this one was no exception, thank you for bringing so many amazing artworks to my attention that I never would have seen otherwise. I hadn't seen this painting before but I think that the fact it was painted by a friend of Géricault and not himself makes it even more interesting than if it were a self portrait. The fact that Correard was willing to paint his friend like this is somewhat telling about the character of the two men and the friendship they had. Surely Correard wouldn't have made so ghastly a painting if he hadn't known that Géricault appreciated the macabre. Because he did know what his friend would or wouldn't appreciate, we get this amazing work of art. Unrelated but what is that music you use in a lot of your videos about darker topics? It's kind of a droning tune with what almost sounds like an "ohm" chant in the background
@nechdaught3412
@nechdaught3412 Жыл бұрын
Liking and replying for an algorithmic boost, as I, too, would like to know the name of the music in the background.
@jonnie13black
@jonnie13black Жыл бұрын
that was very interesting. thank you.
@garybacongrease
@garybacongrease Жыл бұрын
I couldn’t stop staring at those sunken eyes, a very haunting painting indeed.
@lucideandre
@lucideandre Жыл бұрын
When I thought it was a self portrait, I thought of it in terms of how art immortalizes something in a way. And how a self-portrait is a way for an artist to immortalize a vision of themselves. And that in choosing to paint something like this, an artist would be choosing to immortalize their own mortality, which is interesting. Had this been really a self-portrait of Gericault, it would be especially poignant considering his dedication to painting death. But any artist depicting their own death or mortality still carries that aspect. I wouldn’t say knowing it wasn’t that after all adds nuance, but rather that it just radically changes the nuance. In a way, going back to the idea of immortalizing something with art, it was someone, I’d imagine, trying to immortalize and memorialize his friend, in spite of his death, almost pulling him out of death and into immortality. And just as it would have been if it were a self-portrait, the fact that it immortalizes the morbidity of someone dedicated to depicting and, well, immortalizing, mortality and decay, is still incredibly fitting.
@sebastiansolis6486
@sebastiansolis6486 Жыл бұрын
Really interesting, thank you for sharing.
@fredychicano654
@fredychicano654 Жыл бұрын
New Subscriber the Gallows enlightened my soul and it yearns for more.
@magicalforestcreatures6594
@magicalforestcreatures6594 Жыл бұрын
You just made me cry so much, i dont care that it wasnt a self portrait, its amazing, and heck, super sad 😢
@allenvoss7977
@allenvoss7977 Жыл бұрын
Love your videos just wish they were a lot longer
@oliveryt7168
@oliveryt7168 Жыл бұрын
0:46 I really enjoy that brush work with that colouring... Very vivid!
@curiousworld7912
@curiousworld7912 Жыл бұрын
I think this makes the portrait even more moving. I see it as a painting from a heart-broken friend, and by painting his friend in this manner; refutes death as eternal. Just my opinion. :)
@Unusederas
@Unusederas Жыл бұрын
Great video, but the audio's messed up.
@HootHinge
@HootHinge Жыл бұрын
👂👂
@feralbluee
@feralbluee Жыл бұрын
this is a deeply meaningful and beautiful painting. that it was done by a bosom friend makes it all the more poignant. what a loss. :’ 🥀
@rinamichalopoulos2372
@rinamichalopoulos2372 Жыл бұрын
Perception changes based on knowledge, and one of those paintings made me feel astoundingly more attached to Portrait style painting.
@johnmitchelljr
@johnmitchelljr Жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@Skullc00kie
@Skullc00kie Жыл бұрын
I've always loved this painting, when I was in College, a classmate and I had a debate on that, they said it was a portrait of Van Gogh, where I said, I could easily see why thats seen, still wasn't true though I almost wish it was. They had a fairly good argument that they saw Van Gogh painted in a way where he was depicted in a state of total despair and the lack of a visible mouth was a representation of him not being able to fully express his feelings, though the eyes looking directly at the viewer, seem to burrow into your soul in trying to get something across that is just not spoken about... I truly loved the idea, and actually told them to do a portrait of Van Gogh in a style like this or mix this style with Van Goghs, even our painting instructor wanted to see that, but they decided against it, thinking we were being patronizing. Any wanted to share the story. Thank you for the video
@DailyDoseOfFootballYT
@DailyDoseOfFootballYT Жыл бұрын
Best channel on youtube
@theinventiveidiot
@theinventiveidiot Жыл бұрын
Honestly, hearing that makes the painting so much more beautiful
@monto39
@monto39 Жыл бұрын
For someone who is recently discovering their love of art these videos are full of revelations
@markbarrera6807
@markbarrera6807 Жыл бұрын
The Raft of Medusa hangs in the Louve, and coming upon it in the gallery I was overwhelmed by it and its story.
@hakansundberg5105
@hakansundberg5105 Жыл бұрын
Heartbreaking story and works ...
@nightmare_eyes430
@nightmare_eyes430 Жыл бұрын
I think it's even more powerful that is was his friend, whose tragedy he depicted first through art, who returned the favor and did the same for him. There's something tragic, yet kind and healing it this.
@gvd72
@gvd72 Жыл бұрын
How lucky that the survivor was also a talented artist as well
@glasslicker2829
@glasslicker2829 Жыл бұрын
This painting is very interesting, you see the features of the skull underneath, the eyes, so extremely sunken but bright like gold, the skin..thin and pale. A very interesting composition indeed. There is a certain darkness to how Gericault is looking in the image, how he is looking towards the viewer. Overall I rate it a “Great” on the creepy scale.
@PaulPictures
@PaulPictures Жыл бұрын
I love this channel
@bacicinvatteneaca
@bacicinvatteneaca Жыл бұрын
Is it me or is the audio severely clipping?
@PrimeCircuit
@PrimeCircuit Жыл бұрын
It makes me appreciate the portrait more, knowing that it was created by a friend.
@jtg7496
@jtg7496 Жыл бұрын
amazing video
@BlueCometDude
@BlueCometDude Жыл бұрын
You need to fix the audio levels, I could hear some peeking in certain areas of the video
@aleksandramachura9411
@aleksandramachura9411 Жыл бұрын
Fr, I was so scared my phone speaker was broken lol
@jaegermeister1968
@jaegermeister1968 Жыл бұрын
I actually don't care if it's a self-portrait or not. The painting speaks for itself and to me it has a very dark and possessive aura about it. I also want to thank you for your work, in a virtual sea of ​​irrelevance and self-expression your YT channel is a beacon of quality.
@highestsettings
@highestsettings Жыл бұрын
Why does the low end of your audio sound like the 12" subwoofer in the back of my mate's Vauxhall Corsa with the EQ set to bass boost?
@cortnhehamilton3713
@cortnhehamilton3713 Жыл бұрын
The Westside Gunn album remake is amazing. Using the painting to add another level to the album and then learning the history behind this piece amazing.
@beatrizbalderasramirez8678
@beatrizbalderasramirez8678 Жыл бұрын
Wait what... what album?
@cortnhehamilton3713
@cortnhehamilton3713 Жыл бұрын
@@beatrizbalderasramirez8678 Pray for Paris.
@Zurin_Arctus_
@Zurin_Arctus_ Жыл бұрын
Très intéressant! On voit vraiment la ressemblance du portrait avec des traits cadavériques; c'est à la fois glauque et captivant
@BobbyBlackhearts666
@BobbyBlackhearts666 11 ай бұрын
Only looking at the thumbnail before, only when watching did I realise that the portrait did not lack eyes. I'd always look at it and be reminded of the haunting painting of Alexander from Amnesia The Dark Descent. I think it's possible that this portrait could have inspired that, especially since I also thought that there was no mouth, whereas in the case of Gericault it is concealed by his beard, but in the case of Alexander, there is only a gaping hole. I think that it's very touching that Corréard would paint this portrait, it is quite the tale, to survive and be depicted on the raft, and then paint Gericault when he himself wasn't a painter. I also think that painting someone at Death's Door can be more difficult and intense than the ill individual painting himself. To me it also shows that they felt comfortable in each others company even at this point in Gericault's life - though I don't know how much time they would have had to spend together for the painting to be made. Thank you for this video! It's been on my Watch Later list and I appreciate your work making this!
@andrzejmaranda3699
@andrzejmaranda3699 Жыл бұрын
The Canvas: REALLY INTERESTING!
@Kayla-nz4rn
@Kayla-nz4rn Жыл бұрын
awww that’s so saddd! It’s so beautiful though
@lentil2971
@lentil2971 Жыл бұрын
I had a feeling this would come back to the raft and the relationships that came out of it. For further reading on scene of a shipwreck (including examples of the preliminary studies of decay) see lorenz eitner's gericault's 'raft of the medusa' and Albert Alhadeff's 'the raft of the medusa: gericault art and race'. Both can be found in the university of Salford library (strangely), and are worth combining for a fuller picture.
@inajansson2543
@inajansson2543 Жыл бұрын
It is a very strong piece for me and I find myself mooved by it. It reminds me of the jarring "deathportrait" series by the finnish-swedish painter Helene Schjerfbeck. The series was the last paintings she ever produced before her deth and show her slow decay. The exhibition is one of my strongest art memories to date and is one that I come back to in my mind of reference again and again.
@GHST-zs7ez
@GHST-zs7ez Жыл бұрын
you are the first english speaking youtuber I've to almost perfectly prononce french names
@condocord7544
@condocord7544 Жыл бұрын
Superb!
@emaciatedFlower
@emaciatedFlower Жыл бұрын
As beautiful painting a friend who was lost, the Pain and Mourning when painting the peace would've been dreadful
@ImpartiallySpeaking
@ImpartiallySpeaking Жыл бұрын
Corréard later went on to publish Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. Ironic given that Corréard was himself abandoned and treated like a monster and went on to develop feelings of revenge all of which was reflective of the protagonist in Shelley’s novel which Corréard brought to a European audience in 1821. Corréard’s publication of Frankenstein followed the eerily similar gathering of body parts in Gericault’s studio which might well have been the catalyst for Corréard establishing linkage between his life and the story of Victor Frankenstein
@ericanderson1593
@ericanderson1593 Жыл бұрын
A very touching document regarding a deep painter.If you want to look at further examples of final portraits I suggest Picasso.
@gorob4609
@gorob4609 Жыл бұрын
Спасибо большое!
@Ahitizaza
@Ahitizaza Жыл бұрын
Do you have any information as to where this painting is at the moment or any references for what is shown in the video? I’m really interested in learning more about it, it’s haunting
@jeanbon442
@jeanbon442 Жыл бұрын
Really good french accent! And great video, it was fascinating
@lindanorris2455
@lindanorris2455 3 ай бұрын
gorgeous!
@melian413
@melian413 Жыл бұрын
The fact that this video ended in my recommendation literally the day after we started studying Géricault in my Art History class is both funny and unsettling. I’m interested by this specific topic, and also by the moment where he started painting mentally ill people (because the theories that maybe we can recognize mental illnesses by comparing faces of mentally ill and mentally healthy people. It was around 20 years before the invention of photography, which they started to use to continue this theory instead of painting). My next Art History class is tomorrow, I’ll talk about this video with my teacher !
@saul_k
@saul_k Жыл бұрын
Wow, i'm french and i have to say the accent on french words is remarquable, good job :)
@CookingChicken-yt7ed
@CookingChicken-yt7ed Жыл бұрын
After watching this my friend (let’s call them X) and I had a long talk about the painting. We think the eyes are a massive part of this. More specifically, their direction. In the painting Géricault is looking directly at the viewer, which X and I think makes a lot of sense. X pointed out that this painting seems to be a depiction of Géricault that’s as honest as possible. If this truly was made by Corréard, then one would imagine this kind of painting had a lot of care for detail. X and I talked about the tragedy of what happened on that raft, and how Géricault took great care in the accuracy of what had happened. This probably meant a lot to Corréard as a victim of that tragedy. His situation was taken seriously by the painter. X and I think that the portrait is Corréards way of saying thank you. Just like the painting of The Medusa, he wants this portrait of his friend to be as accurate as possible. X and I think that this strive to say thank you to Géricault and to make a tribute to him is why the eyes are looking at the viewer. Corréard wants the viewer to have a feeling that Géricault is looking at them. That he’s acknowledging them. Whenever Corréard looked at the painting Géricault could see him. Just like how he saw him and the other victims of The raft of The Medusa five years ago. That was his personal accurate depiction of Géricault. He was the kind of man who could see you. This is just our personal depiction of the painting if Corréard really was the one who made the portrait. The eyes caught our attention a lot so we theorised that it must be important and we tried to put ourselves in Corréards shoes.
@levimendes1441
@levimendes1441 Жыл бұрын
Hey dude great video. Your channel has some great content. It might just be me, but it seems like your audio is distorting at times. My guess is that it's clipping. This is the process of the combined volume of your voiceover and background sounds going over the software's limit, so the sound wave is kind of chopped off. This creates some crunchy, crackly distortion which doesn't sound that good. If you want to get rid of it, you would just have to turn down the background drone, like in the beginning when you say "gericault's first major work". The reason it's clipping even though it might not seem that loud is because low frequencies are perceived more quietly by the human ear than higher/more harsh ones. So even though it's not that loud to us, the computer is processing this massive wave of barely audible low frequencies, which causes the clipping.
@_luckicharms
@_luckicharms Жыл бұрын
That's a beautiful turn of events
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