This is something that should be taught in every art class around the world
@StroggoiiАй бұрын
It's first semester Graphic Desing.
@Visigoth_20 күн бұрын
At least "it was when I was in school" 😅.
@matthew_thefallen17 күн бұрын
Absolutely yes!
@republicacoesАй бұрын
I'm an comic book artist but I graduated into social communication and I felt the need to say that I really appreciate the integration of semiotics into the overall analysis. This is a video to watch over and over again and keep for future reference.
@pinkajou656Ай бұрын
i saw the thumbnail and title and immediately thought “is that the understanding comics words/pictures chart?” And it WAS
@yaranaikaexecute3196Ай бұрын
Insane video, I'm studying at an art academy rn and that way of systematizing art is something that never was even mentioned at any lecture.
@NedwАй бұрын
I deeply recommend you read "Understanding Comics". Snobbery stops many art teachers from seriously imagining this is relevant to their lessons, and yet it is extremely useful to catch fundamental concepts.
@ender7278Ай бұрын
It might be that given art is inherently subjective there's a fear of trying to impose any kind of system on it, not to mention a disinterest from artists given systemization is a scientific concept.
@gregthesalad495Ай бұрын
@@ender7278well even within science there is no inherent method itself, science is a dynamic form of inquiry and discussion, the method will change based on what is discussed and studied. In art as you mentioned, the subjectiveness is it's basis, to systematize art into a mechanical production is to inherently miss the point of why it's created. I made a comment about this myself, but I do find videos and approaches like this interesting, I just approach them warily because it really makes art not fun to make
@r65a1114 күн бұрын
@@gregthesalad495 I think it is a trend in visual art these days to branch out beyond a single approach. A body of work can contain multiple approaches but still all maintain an artists intent. Many are held back by feeling they must adhere to a "consistent" body of work. In reality, consistency stretches far beyond the surface appearance / categorization of a work of art. For instance, one can both create formally realistic or representational work that refers to and reenforces other works by the same artist that are not. These types of categorizations are handy for allowing art creator and appreciator understand the territory they are in. They can be used as a map if you will. But the map can never actually be the territory it represents.
@JH-pe3roАй бұрын
In my younger years I attempted to tackle "definition of game" and wandered somewhat in this direction of looking for a formalism. I had read McCloud as a kid and was probably influenced by it. These days, I've internalized information theory and digital encoding as my starting point for structure. There's a fundamental relationship between "I can represent data as sequences of symbols" and McLuhan's "the medium is the message"; once established, symbolic language can build on top of itself to express original meanings. This development enabled language, literacy, telegraphy, and then modern computing and telecommunications. Transmission of words and pictures and animations and interactive experiences. The "knowledge hierarchy" resulting from practical use of symbol can be layered without bound and branch in infinite directions, and therefore is n-dimensional in what it can express. From this perspective, most art is based around coherent knowledge tailored to the audience's context: adding specific terms over that is a notation for which contexts are in use, but the project of nomenclature is forever going to be running behind the actual state of the art, for the same reason that music theory's attempts to turn musical structure into legible language struggles to keep up with musical innovations. Simultaneously, much of the knowledge of picture-making is tacit: attempt a master study, and you learn something about how they see that doesn't appear in a book or a lecture: the wave of generative AI has created a vast project to assign labels to styles that had none. Our view of art is a fractal zoom: the boundaries cannot be linearized, but rather, become more detailed as you zoom in further and develop more awareness of what is distinctive. In my own practice I utilize Venn diagrams to identify what contexts I am aiming to explore within a work, since the result will be within the overlap of each. The initial distinction of realistic/stylized remains relevant to me because it attaches meaning near to correspondent knowledge, and developments that break with correspondence are perceivable more readily than those at higher layers(as in English, vs French, vs German - to a baby, they are all "talking").
@click9871Ай бұрын
Genuinely the most interesting video I’ve watched in a while
@NedwАй бұрын
The diamond was an excellent improvement, but the extension into a square made it even more powerful. Great work, and certainly future reference material
@NoidstalgiaАй бұрын
This is the best video tackling art styles and representation I've ever watched. You perfectly summarised what usually takes an intoductory class to visual theory in over half an hour, the production is super clean and your examples are great. I was genuinely surprised to see that you don't already have at least 100k subs, hope my subscription helps you get there. Looking forward to more videos!
@lyxthen28 күн бұрын
This video feels like an academic text. I like it a lot, even if I had to pull out all all my dormant semiotics/aesthetics knowledge from art school, and still didn't quite get it. Worth a re-watch.
@warcuff_kenjiАй бұрын
I didn't pay for KZbin premium, yet I still got it for some reason. Great lecture!!!
@GabiepaaaАй бұрын
I'm absolutely flabbergasted at the quality of the video. Lucky to find it so early.
@katekiler18 күн бұрын
i like how art books/youtube authors resemble ancient philosophers that yapped with no clear or reasonable ground, eventually ending up arguing and rambling about very obscure and confused words or notions, not seeing the core of the thing that would actually solve something
@friend_trilobotАй бұрын
Amazingly good video! As an artist who also has a Masters in linguistics, my only critique is that the way you use the term language, in this video, should be referring to writing systems. Speech also represents reality sumbolically and can be a medium in art. But even more than that, historically languages are seen by linguists as primarily spoken (or signed with hands for deaf communities). And writing systems have historically always tried to represent speech on some level (though the internet is the biggest change in that trend, bc digitally mediated text behaves more like speech historically has). But even if you view writing as an equal but distinct modality of language as speech, it shouldn't just be called language or be mistaken for the primary or fundamental form of language. With all natural language at least, speech exists almost inevitably among any community of humans, with or without a writing system and any writing system, when added, is typically based on the speech thar predates it (though it can influence speech in a reverse effect). Most languages, even today (we're talking thousands of isolated minority languages not the major ones used in global trade or as official languages of nation states) don't have a writing system, and writing systems vary wildly in form and how they represent speech in image form. You could completely change the writing system without changing the speech it encodes. You could create an iconic writing system to represent English. You can use the international phonetic alphabet to write out any language on earth (that's what it is designed for). In contrast, all spoken language follows the same broad fundamental laws of language despite tremendous diversity. In particular, they all use sounds as "arbitrary" (i.e. non-iconic) symbols. Bc of this, Languages that use an iconic writing system still use non-iconic sounds in the actual language. I'm mostly explaining all this for the sake of education, and bc it adds more nuance to your chart - I think it works well enough to incorporate spoken language as an artistic medium effectively and is a good tool!
@echo_truth832819 күн бұрын
I've been waiting my whole life for this video
@HoangHuyHa19 күн бұрын
Amazing video, very interesting analysis. This applies especially well to my line of work as an animation artist since I have to work with a wide range of drawing styles everyday. This is very helpful. Also, side note, at 22:04, the black and white still life painting you used was my painting that I did when I was in college in Vietnam, probably around 2007, 2008 or something. I did it with Chinese ink. It's a really funny and delightful surprise to see it appear here in a random video that youtube recommended to me today, so thank you!
@andrewsfa442016 күн бұрын
really? 😮
@HoangHuyHa15 күн бұрын
@@andrewsfa4420 yeah
@pr1me8403 күн бұрын
Same signature for all this time... hhhhhh, very cool.
@duynam658828 күн бұрын
This video is absolute cinema! From the way you expand on an already good model, to the simple explanation of such difficult concepts, to the effort to put each example art piece to the model. It's like witnessing the chaotic visual art world comes together, each art style has a connection to each other and together form a beautiful unifying whole.
@somerandomnerd2729Ай бұрын
Never an original thought! I was thinking of a triangle (or maybe a gradient?) for artstyle between realist(representing features)--stylistic(accentuating features to convey concepts/ideas)--simplistic (representing concepts/ideas). Maybe I should get some Scott McCloud books. Subbed and will be coming back soon!
@khashayarrАй бұрын
You should 100% write a paper on this! An incredible contribution
@mushroomboy7209Ай бұрын
As an art student, i cant believe i found this video
@pissqueendanniella468829 күн бұрын
same, im sending this to my painting teacher
@KrishnaSinghRaoАй бұрын
Bro this is a masterpiece 😭✨♥️
@leetruman6753Ай бұрын
What a fantastic video. It's a rarity to get a recommendation this good. Saving for my inevitable 8000 rewatches later
@jugbrewer25 күн бұрын
This is a great video, I just have one comment I hope will be constructive. 15:33 "Primitive art starts out as being iconic. Cave paintings are iconic representations of objects..." - I see some potential problems in this assertion. First, cave painting is a medium, not a style. Many cave paintings were made by people who were culturally/geographically disconnected from each other, and some were even made by beings who were separate species from us (Neanderthals). Many examples of very ancient art are not at all representational, but are markings like spirals, zig-zags, circles, etc., and many of these coexist on the same cave walls as the representational forms of animals. Also, how do any of us know for sure what is iconic? We look at a drawing of a person whose arm ends with a long thin line and assume it represents a spear; that's a fair assumption, but how do we test that? We have no way of knowing that that marking isn't symbolic.
@duppyshuman24 күн бұрын
Very constructive comment which the presenter is ignoring.
@TheZatrahcАй бұрын
I'd love to hear a follow up to this, or just your thoughts, on how this relates to photgraphy. How much of Serano's Piss Christ is formal? Maplethorpe's Cock and Gun? Where do these fall on specifically the formal axis when the medium as a whole implies the existence of a definitive object to be photographed?
@ryan_neinАй бұрын
Photography, like sculpture, tends to be formal because it inherently involves accurately capturing light values. Photographs can be used as design elements which makes them more iconic and they can be edited to remove realistic lighting. I think the pieces you mentioned could either be placed in the sub-real or the hyper-real depending on how you interpret them. I think shock value might be symbolic in nature because it requires a cultural sense of shame and pride.
@DigitalLife3000Ай бұрын
Absolute banger of a video mate
@themelancholyofgay3543Ай бұрын
1.9K subscribers with this level of quality, you're really underrated.
@corasundae25 күн бұрын
Excuse you. It's 1.3k.
@williamtang2024Ай бұрын
This is good, you can go even further and extend this analysis to any representation of reality/meaning, not just visual art.
@KaosNoKamisama17 күн бұрын
Wow. This is incredibly well put together. You should seriously consider turning this into a formal paper and submitting it to any of the important semiotics, arts, or aesthetics magazines out there. If you whish, you could even build a doctoral thesis around this. I think your improvement uppon McCloud's initial proposal needs to get to more people. I can immagine this beign a huge help for those who struggle to understand or approach art beyond the comfortable and relatively sterile narratives of "canonical dogma vs modern garbage".
@thethinker2688Ай бұрын
Hey Ryan, I wanted to thank you for putting out such a clear and concise explanation, this is a tough topic for me to wrap my head around.
@cactus2260Ай бұрын
Damn this is so good. Im glad i got it in my reccomended page
@yesnobabu28 күн бұрын
A must learning guide for performing artists .........Wow what a visual text book this video is........Hatsoff....For your contribution of this study to art students
@cynaracypresteАй бұрын
jesus christ this has academic quality!! i used mccloud's framework in my grad's thesis and boy o boy would i have wished to come across your video by then... if you ever chose to turn your video into a proper paper, i think it definitely will make waves!!
@AB-wf8ekАй бұрын
What you are defining are single dimensions and then combining them to create various hyperdimensional spaces. Many people think hyperdimensions (more than 3 dimensions) is some mystical esoteric concept, but this video is essentially an example of how we process things hyperdimensionally all the time. This is also a good example of how machine learning works. Essentially mapping out the relationship between tokens to create a hyperdimensional model of a dataset that can be explored through inference (calculating what exists between points)
@ryan_neinАй бұрын
I understand the computer science analogy, but what makes the graph hyperdimensional rather than two-dimensional? I don't fully get how the graph reflects higher dimensions other than being non-spaciotemporal.
@AB-wf8ekАй бұрын
Well, not the graph specifically, but you listed close to a dozen different dichotomies: Linear Lateral Formal Abstract Symbol Icon Order Chaos Lexemic Non-Lexemic Old New Representational Non-Representational Complex Simple Objective Subjective Specific Universal Each one of those are a single dimension, and if you hold more than 3-4 at a time, it's a hyperdimensional space. At least, that's how I think of it.
@necro-claud637028 күн бұрын
@@AB-wf8ek I also thought of that, but the trick here that he talks about art _styles_ not art _pieces_ . So groups, not units. So you can't really position the group of abstract paintings at the graph of complexity, because every unit of this group has a different value. Now the problem is that he himself constructed and assigned those groups, and then says, that these groups won't fit in other characteristics, by which the groups are formed. To put units collectively on other dimensions, you need to create new groups, corresponding to the values we estimate. So imo, first step should be the definition of every possible characteristic, prominent in every art piece, and so we eliminate invalid ones (like stylization, that doesn't suit abstract art) and add new valid dimensions (every art piece can be estimated by it's complexity) to the multidimensional graph. Still, imo the criteria he presented in the video are the most objectively estimable from what I can think of rn. I was writing that on fly so don't know if my point changed during the comment :D Hope you find something interesting here.
@kikivoorburg16 күн бұрын
It depends what you mean by "dimension". Geometric dimension refers to the dimensionality of a "physical" space (how many numbers do I need to specify location?), while "abstract dimension" or "degrees of freedom" refers to the dimensionality of an abstracted "state space" (how many numbers do I need to describe all objects of this type?) Say I have a ball and I want to describe it. It has a position defined by a location in our 3D space, so it's a "3D object". However, if I am programming a simulation, I might need to know both its position (3 numbers) and orientation / rotation (2 numbers). That's 5 degrees of freedom for a "3D object". Throw in colour, texture maps, material properties, etc. and suddenly you can have a state space with billions of degrees of freedom all to describe "a 3D object". The same thing happens in machine learning algorithms. They're "multidimensional" in the sense that they have many degrees of freedom, but not (necessarily) multidimensional in a geometric sense. Many, such as the language models becoming so famous now, don't even relate to geometric objects. When people say "it's hard to conceive of higher-dimensional objects", I doubt they mean to say that they're confused by anything requiring more than 3 numbers to comprehend. They are using "dimension" in a geometric sense, and indicating the challenge in attempting to comprehend multi-dimensional geometry. Something that our minds are indeed ill-equipped for given that we have evolved in a 3 (spatial) dimensional universe and can only see 2D images + some limited depth information. Our minds can conceive of higher dimensional geometry in an abstract, "degrees of freedom" sense, and perhaps even a little bit of intuitive understanding can be gained via analogy to 3D geometry, but it is unlikely that a human mind could ever interpret 4+ dimensions as naturally as we do 3D. Thus I'd consider it a bit reductive to say "ah but you think multi-dimensionally all the time!" - being able to comprehend a shopping basket containing 4 different items doesn't make me any more capable of visualising a 4D rotation, just as understanding a shopping basket with 3 different items isn't enough to pass a normal geometry test!
@AB-wf8ek16 күн бұрын
@@kikivoorburg I'm talking about dimension in the most abstract form. Anything that can be expressed as existing on a single diametric line that you can assign a value between is a dimension. In the video they're defining individual dimensions, and then combining them in different ways in order to create multidimensional spaces. So even though we may have a hard time visualizing hyperdimensional geometry, we in fact navigate hyperdimensional spaces all the time.
@NOOB-ps8km23 күн бұрын
This reminds me of a video by Elie Ramussen where she expands on the player alignment type in games. It's called The Player Type Alignment Tessaract. It's a really good watch and has a similar topic and prensentation to this video. Also i subbed❤.
@fizzyinsanityАй бұрын
if youre interested in the nature of representation/depiction, i really recommend "mimesis as make-believe" by walton. even if you don't buy its central thesis, its full of weird novel insights about how we relate to art
@gipmar3737Ай бұрын
Hey Ryan, all my attempts at semiotics studies have finally lead me to your video. YT actually DOES know what I need. I want to thank you for helping me to put all these concepts together. You have done an outstanding job.
@ginyoagoldie19 күн бұрын
I absolute love this video and how the information is presented! by far the most interesting representation of the range of artstyles ive come across
@adg826919 күн бұрын
I’m trying to apply this framework to photography and filmmaking… incredibly interesting. Thanks for such an amazing contribution!!
@davidvarnaАй бұрын
This is such a deep cut. I read Understanding Comics way back in 2017, back when I barely knew how to draw. I don’t know why I read it, but regardless, it stuck with me, especially this random visualization of art styles graph he did. I’m so pleasantly surprised to see someone else talk about it 7 years later.
@corasundae25 күн бұрын
I read it maybe 14 years ago or so. More people should talk about it.
@lukaseckart8583Ай бұрын
What do you mean this has 11 likes oh my god! Literally better and more comprehensive than any lecture I have had on the topic.
@kenkenken778913 күн бұрын
@22:07 Hello from Vietnam! The drawing you used at this timestamp is by a Vietnamese art student-such a fun trivia for me, haha. I really appreciate how thoughtfully and systematically you organized this knowledge in such a compressed timeframe.
@TarsilaSantana20 күн бұрын
Congratulations! Excellent, illuminating work. Suggestion #1: Make a poster! If it had mini-reproductions of the works you give as examples and an explanation of the structure and logic of the axes/quadrants, I'd buy it in the blink of an eye. Suggestion #2: A third (z-)axis?... (Could that be a way to "smooth out" the phenomenological curlicue at 24:02? Dunno... Can't wrap my brain around it.) Thank you for this piece!!
@olkris2666Ай бұрын
Legitimately the best video I have ever seen on KZbin up to this point. It formalises art with a similar rigour to mathematics. Thank you for your work.
@OpticalIllusionsUntold-sq8ru10 күн бұрын
This was so well done. This guy is a great teacher. I have a color-shape association with each musical note, but I developed this more intensely as I started studying art and color-theory, and later, sacred geometry. // I sort of ran-off into music, but I realized that my optical illusion that I was doing for many years prior do reflect my story and my music work; so, I started this channel here (Optical Illusions Untold). Thanks so much for your work Mr. Ryan Nein!
@mc9ingerАй бұрын
Excellent video. Provides an easy, yet comprehensive way to categorize artwork. I will be interested to see how well I am able to use the system to categorize artwork next time I visit an art museum.
@roamorayАй бұрын
finally a good art style video 😭
@UliTroyo17 күн бұрын
I love Scott McCloud, and this is a great expansion of the ideas in his books. Good stuff!
@surrcramАй бұрын
Reading Scott McCloud was such a game changer to how I approached visual storytelling. Goated video
@КекКок-м9б17 күн бұрын
01:56 Плоскость изображения и язык 02:54 Различие между визуальным искусством и языком 03:46 Проблемы существующей схемы 05:44 Улучшение схемы Маклеода 07:40 Иконический и символический язык 08:32 Примеры символов и икон • Крест и знак буддизма - примеры символов и икон. • Крест символизирует христианство, а знак буддизма - дхарму и восьмеричный путь. 09:26 Семиотика и язык • Означаемое - это то, что превращается в знак, а означающее - символический знак, кодирующий значение. • Восприятие движется вверх по графику, а понимание - вниз. • Алфавитные языки, такие как английский, находятся в верхней части символической области, так как буквы заменяют фонетические звуки. 10:22 Пиктографический и идеографический языки • Пиктограммы передают смысл визуально, как китайский иероглиф, обозначающий человека. • Идеограммы находятся между буквенным и пиктографическим языками, как китайский иероглиф, обозначающий заключенного. • Графический дизайн использует горизонтальную часть графика для стилизации символов. 11:16 Форма и содержание в искусстве • Горизонтальное движение соответствует изменению формы произведения искусства. • Вертикальное измерение соответствует содержанию произведения, которое меняется от абстрактного к символическому. • Обе оси, содержание и форма, необходимы для полного понимания визуального искусства. 12:16 Язык искусства и его неоднозначность • Реалистичный и стилизованный язык не всегда точен для описания абстрактного и символического искусства. • Знаковое искусство не всегда простое, а абстрактное и символическое искусство может быть сложным. • Порядок и хаос, линейность и латеральность мышления также не всегда соответствуют различию между формальным и знаковым искусством. 14:11 Лексическое и нелексическое искусство • Лексическое искусство использует дискретные единицы значения, закодированные в языке. • Символическое искусство является наиболее лексическим, так как использует визуальные символические единицы. • Абстрактное искусство не представляет никакого значения и является нелексическим. 15:09 История искусства и репрезентативность • Первобытное искусство - это символизм, затем появляется символическое искусство, связанное с религиозными системами. • Формальное искусство использует светотень и перспективу, а абстрактное искусство нарушает правила формального искусства. • Абстрактное искусство - самая нерепрезентативная категория, так как не пытается изобразить мир. 16:58 Объективное и субъективное восприятие • Объективное и субъективное относятся к относительным истинным значениям утверждений. • Объективный означает относящийся к объектам, а субъективный - относящийся к субъектам. • Изобразительное искусство изображает объекты, но эти объекты не существуют независимо от субъективного восприятия. 18:53 Восприятие и искусство • Восприятие объекта как инструмента, а не как набора сенсорных данных. • Искусство по своей сути абстрактно, и восприятие делает его символическим. • Без контекста искусство остается абстрактным. 19:49 Субъективность и восприятие • Искусство требует субъективного восприятия для придания смысла. • Абстрактное искусство подавляет потребность в объективизации мира. • Абстрактное искусство учит ценить основы создания изображений. 20:40 Формальная реальность • Формальная реальность преобразует абстрактное содержание в объекты. • Объекты требуют субъективного восприятия для понимания. • Формальное искусство объективирует субъективность через светотень. 21:37 Иконическое искусство • Иконическое искусство стилизует реальность для субъективного восприятия. • Иконическое искусство использует субъективность для создания объектов. • Иконическое искусство можно понять как субъективированную объективность. 22:31 Символическое искусство • Символическое искусство завершает процесс восприятия. • Символы происходят от иконок и приобретают значение через человеческое понимание. • Символическое искусство объективирует субъективность через лексическое содержание. 23:30 Поэтапный подход к искусству • Искусство развивается через стадии субъективности и объективности. • Поэтапный подход позволяет понять искусство как процесс. • Искусство следует через стадии разделения субъекта и объекта. 24:27 Примеры искусства • Абстрактное искусство становится формальным через репрезентацию. • Формальное искусство становится иконическим через упрощение. • Иконическое искусство становится символическим через символизацию. 25:18 Применение теории к произведениям • Примеры искусства на графике: Джексон Поллок, импрессионизм, Мие "Жнецы". • Искусство становится более знаковым по мере движения вправо. • Поп-арт и графический дизайн достигают крайних знаковых форм. 27:14 Заключение • График показывает органическую связь между разными видами искусства. • Художественные стили многогранны и неконкретны. • График помогает представить логичную схему восприятия искусства. 28:12 Расширение графика • График решает проблему пунктирной линии в системе Скотта Маклеода. • Добавлены символическое измерение и переименованы ярлыки для теоретической точности. • Новый квадратный график охватывает абстрактные, формальные, знаковые и символические стили. 29:10 Проблемы оригинального графика 30:07 Субреальное искусство 31:07 Идеальное искусство 32:06 Гиперреалистичное искусство 32:56 Метаполевое искусство 33:54 Стилистические области
@thr333stars15 күн бұрын
Классная таблица офигеть
@locochavo4560Ай бұрын
This rocks! I appreciate you covering different types of mediums
@sirdaniel_Ай бұрын
Cool but now I'm confused, it's gonna take me a while to understand it all i think.
@ibrahim7255Ай бұрын
OMG this was one of the best video i saw in a while. Normally i never comment, but i have to so the algorithm recommend this video too as many people as possible
@safegourd8 күн бұрын
This needs to be published in an academic journal
@StudioHannah25 күн бұрын
This is an excellent expansion of McCloud’s triangle! Great job on that concept and in explaining it so well in this video.
@antje9275Ай бұрын
Wow thank you so much. I am still processing, but at tis moment you already gave me much more clarity! Can't wait until everything settles.
@connercarpenter219822 күн бұрын
Best video this year and I’ve only read the title, very excited for this topic
@ScubaSteve9erАй бұрын
Stuff like this is hard to find, especially at such a high quality. Well done.
@bunburried64Ай бұрын
Huh? In all seriousness great video, never even heard of the triangle before this and this did a great job explaining and then expanding on it
@doylesaylor9 күн бұрын
Secondly, while I like Scott McCloud's works, he struggles with going from what a comic does and what a movie does. He focuses very closely on the boundary between comic book frames. The move from one boundary to the next however powerful such graphics tend to be are just that flipping the page of the comic. So we are bound to 'pages' and printing historical traditions and habits to explain what we see. Once off the page what connects the comic pages? Mostly words though there are almost wordless comics out there. Even more, wordless, are photo books. The most wordless might have page numbers, or just photo prints. So why do words lift off the paper of photo books? What is that detachment all about? There is always a whole of consciousness brought to even the least wordy of such projects. Or said another way we know consciousness has limits such as illusions or psychosis, etc., what is going on that we mainly know the world scene as a whole? So pages that break up a whole like books how does that compare to vast databanks of digital maps. A global satellite map is one big whole. We use in a fragmentary sense yes, but what does the whole mean? I mean use the logic to address the ambiguity of what is present in surrealist art?
@cansueceklc7745Ай бұрын
scratched every itch in my brain plz make more videos i beg
@Nyorane28 күн бұрын
Omg, one of my fav books having one of its theories expanded upon in an epic video format?!! Sign me up! Thanks for making this! ❤
@vince-133729 күн бұрын
Wonderful video and perfeclty explained with graphic and illustrations. Hope to see more of this type of stuff, but for the moment, need to digest this one, Keep it up !
@SunspotSolarbird17 күн бұрын
This was a lovely video. And also gives me a great ideas for discussing Aphantasia!
@robertterrell3065Ай бұрын
This is a tremendous video for an "abstract" artist like me. Well, as you point out in this video so thoroughly, aren't we all? I am so glad YT added your video to my feed. I'm definitely subscribing. It will take a while to understand everything I heard and saw here, today, but worth it :)
@lightningninja690525 күн бұрын
I have to give Scott McCloud huge props, just by the title and thumbnail, I knew this video would cover his system. It's just that recognizable, despite only being a triangle with a dotted line through it.
@corasundae25 күн бұрын
I just recognized the similar art style.
@juva_duva811920 күн бұрын
I literally love this book and this concept so much I gasped when I saw the thumbnail
@rubymerry24 күн бұрын
This will probably be one of my favorite KZbin videos ever. Thank you
@828burkeАй бұрын
Absolutely awesome video. I feel like my mind has been opened up to a new axis of seeing the world.
@sunfleck979818 күн бұрын
Wow amazing video. Intellectual crack. I really loved this and intend to watch it many times over. Very well done.❤
@KalebPeters9916 күн бұрын
Holy shit, dude.. what an incredible video 🤯 This may have snuck in at the last possible second to top my list of favourite videos all year!! Just astoundingly dense with rich info, intuitive examples, and genuinely novel insights. This could have EASILY been a whole academic paper, even a PhD thesis! (But I'm glad that it wasn't or I never would have seen it 😅😅) I will definitely be sharing with many and rewatching several times, thank you for this masterpiece 🙏🙏 (P.S. as a *musical* artist myself, the big question I was left with was "what if this framework were applied to AUDIO instead of visuals?"... I think it would turn out be incredibly illustrative of the deep links between music and speech which are often neglected. And it may also then open up the affordance for some kind of 3 dimensional structure linking the sound and sight matrices together??? Perhaps along some axis of which you could then re-integrate the visual-symbolic representations of sound like sheet music and writing (the latter of which seems to have somewhat dropped off of your version?) Anyway, just some thoughts that this sparked for me lol. Tysm again!!)
@PurpialАй бұрын
I see understanding comics, I click
@gavinm2159Ай бұрын
dude… insane work 👏👏👏👏
@Averagemoowie19 күн бұрын
I cant believe im consuming this media for free. Its so informative and concise. Thank you!
@LkortStickman26 күн бұрын
I never thought art like this. Learn a lot! Thank you!!!
@stephanste1nАй бұрын
GREAT hecking stuff bro, very valuable and interesting information put into concise and clean presentation, incredible job.
@debprado17 күн бұрын
Thank you for making this, amazing video
@thijmstickman8349Ай бұрын
Wow this explains why I love symbolic art like beat the reds but never really understood "other" abstract art
@IanGm22 күн бұрын
This is genius. I cannot believe how many answers I got out of this. Thanks a lot Ryan, I'm sure this was a lot of work to put together.
@porky111817 күн бұрын
0:30 I saw a similar categorization: Realism-Abstract-Stylized Abstract means removing detail from realism (the right drawings) Stylized means changing it to something different (the upper axis here)
@claudiaborges840622 күн бұрын
I wonder where those “try to name a single item in this image” AI generated images fall
@ciabox284k18 күн бұрын
ok thats interesting
@principal_optimismАй бұрын
So... I'm not crazy. The whole world is a fortune cookie!
@maokai09Ай бұрын
Bless your existence for this. Truly.
@bruce-le-smith18 күн бұрын
wow, I'm quite convinced by your arguments, well done
@thespacenoodle9786Ай бұрын
When they don't know the complex history of the heart symbol j/
@unstablejamil17 күн бұрын
what a great video, bro. 25:25 but will you consider a 3d chart (so there is no need to collapse the axis) where symbolism find it's own position in the y axis and abstract in z axis? like a triangular pyramid (or maybe other shape could work lol idk) because I don't really think it's fair to put expressionism down there when they're often heavy on symbolism, and put the alexander mosaic right in the middle of abstract and symb because imo it doesn't even belong to that axis (vertically). btw with this high of a quality, I'm sure a lot more people hope it appears on their recommendations, haha
@unstablejamil17 күн бұрын
I made the comment before finish the video, the square graph fits everything so perfectly (except the expressionism lol, I still think symbolism deserve another dimension)
@copperweave20 күн бұрын
I'm surprised how coherent this is - art theory has often eluded me in the formal sense, but this is... really cogent? Well done.
@DephlatedАй бұрын
What a recommendation well done KZbin. Also well done Ryan this is an incredible video. My dad would get me to read Scott’s book as a child and I completely forgot it existed
@porky111817 күн бұрын
7:55 Programmer here. We don't make this distinction. Every program has an icon, not a symbol.
@jojogapeАй бұрын
Outstanding analysis here. I think I'm more sure than ever that impressionism is my favorite. But also, I think the "Everyhere at the End of Time" album art symbolizes this very well. As the "main character's" condition progresses, the art seems to move from surrealism to formalism to pure abstraction, more or less, as if regressing to a mental state where nothing really makes sense.
@alirezaakhavi99439 күн бұрын
I really amazing, thank you for sharing this great content! subbed! :)
@kateloble604527 күн бұрын
I never comment but you have to know that this video is going to be life changing for my art, life, and view of the world
@zacharynguyen7286Ай бұрын
Incredible video, please continue to make more
@claudiaborges840622 күн бұрын
The center point of the last one could be “narrative”, because moving away from it is the art that is static and either is highly dependent to be interpreted or has nothing to be interpreted and therefore has no “movement” on its own
@TheHyGuy0o023 күн бұрын
I was waiting for the graph to become a square the whole time. Why was it not used from the beginning? It makes no sense that an increase on the iconic axis would necessitate a decrease on the symbolic axis. Was there a reason for this?
@Aras14Ай бұрын
I am not an art student, not even much of an artist (create art too rarely), but I have to praise this. Both the Graph and the Video have been made very easy to understand, while effectively keeping my interest without overcramming it. I can't speak much of the accuracy of your model other than, that it makes sense to me. Great job, and may this spread even further!
@PersonManManManManАй бұрын
What a video, great detail
@harambcmbk6083Ай бұрын
such a good video, thanks
@aMitocondriaАй бұрын
Dude, you should also publish this as papper, please do! I'm a painting teacher in Brazil and I would to be able to translate it to portuguese so my students would be able to acces this content
@drdca826325 күн бұрын
20:08 : hm, I feel like there’s perhaps a way to make a principled distinction based on like, conditional Kolmogorov complexity or something like that? … hm, though I suppose maybe from that perspective, in the way in which the Mona Lisa is a depiction of a person, various abstract works (like the splattering ink on canvas) are “depictions” of the process by which they were produced?
@drdca826325 күн бұрын
21:32 : “but objectified subjectivity” : uhhh…? “For the marks on the page to become objects they must be objectified by the mind based on the initial subjective content” : ergh, I feel like these terms must be being overloaded somehow here? By “overloaded” I mean like, being used in multiple distinct ways depending on context, like how one might say both 1+3=4 and “abcd”+”efg”=“abcdefg”, overloading “+”. This is not my wheelhouse.
@drdca826325 күн бұрын
21:56 : “value from darkness to lightness is what allows the mind to perceive objects as three dimensional” : surely this is not true in all cases? Like, wireframe representations are perceived as 3D, right? I would think that if one had like, a camera+screen for each eye like those pass through things on VR headsets, where you set the lightness value to the same thing for every pixel, only allowing saturation and hue to vary, things would still appear with depth?
@drdca826325 күн бұрын
[Edit: uh, I don’t mean to be rude here, I just, am not used to this kind of analysis, and also should *really* be asleep. Sorry if this comment is possibly a bit insulting?] 23:04 : “subjected objectified subjectivity” oh come on now, Really? Surely this is not the plainest way to say this? Right??? Are you just phrasing this this way as a bit of wordplay?
@purpleboy4949Ай бұрын
Bro this video is so interesting, only 4 minutes in but I already love this