|
|
|
|
(What is impressionism? - Edit Wiki)
Videos 1 to 30
Childe Hassam
from YouTube :: Tag // newyork September 28, 2008
Frederick Childe Hassam (b. October 17, 1859, Dorchester, Boston, Massachusetts d. August 27, 1935, East Hampton, New York) was a prominent and prolific American Impressionist painter, noted for his urban and coastal scenes. Along with Mary Cassatt and John Henry Twachtman, Hassam was instrumental in promulgating Impressionism to American collectors, dealers, and the museums. He produced over 3,000 paintings, watercolors, etchings, and lithographs in his career, and was a founding member of The Ten, an influential group of American artists of the early 20th century. His most famous works are the Flag paintings, completed during World War I. More paintings and information at: http://www.allpaintings.org/v/Impressionism/Childe+Hassam/ Author: allpaintings Keywords: painter painting artist american impressionism Added: September 28, 2008
|
Juan Rondon - Its all an illussion
from YouTube :: Videos by scorpi0 September 23, 2008
A poem to the world If its all an illusion Why am I feeling? All this estranged emotion... What if God thinks about me? The same way I think about him. I'm not scared, but insecure... The good and bad doesn't exist. We are all in the middle... Of wars, sorrow, intrigue, mellow, hope I see. Sometimes, we know that we don't know anything... At times, anything is too important to know too. What is better? Acknowledge? Love? Have you ever felt starved? Have you ever feel yourself on the spotlight? Did you embrace the dark once? Someday, I will end upon the soil! or under the land? You think you're not the next... What if God think about me? The same way I feel about him... I'm not mad, but insane? Such, what is your head? Stay aside or ahead? Can't you see? I ain't but you either. http://www.juanrondon.ning.com Author: Scorpi0 Keywords: juan rondon its all an illussion poem to the world language arts communications visual humanities god know film draw paint impressionism Added: September 23, 2008
|
Rose McGown and Van Gogh's Moon
from YouTube :: Videos by MuggleSam September 17, 2008
Rose McGowan (Charmed) says hi to the girls! And Sophia, age 5, paints Vincent van Gogh's moon from his Starry Night painting (1889). This is Sophia's first attempt at painting the moon just like it might be for some of you! All you need is some paint, Sophia uses Acrylic. A brush. A Palette (plate) to put your dabs of paint on. A rag and cup of water to clean your brush when changing colours. And paper. Sophia used paper from her sketchbook which is heavy enough to hold paint. There is no deadline. You can send me your scanned image of your painting whenever you want! sam@mugglesam.com I have not finished working on the art site. Thank you to those who have given me their cheetah drawings. I will have them up on the site soon! http://youtube.com/sequoya http://youtube.com/musicfromblueskies Impasto: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impasto Author: MuggleSam Keywords: art paint painting van gogh artist starry night impasto post impressionism acrylic mugglesam muggle canada sequoya musicfromblueskies Added: September 17, 2008
|
Army of Me Dream Sequence
from Revver - french Videos September 07, 2008
Author: imagauthor Added: Sun, 07 Sep 2008 13:55:21 -0800 Duration: 140excerpt from Broken Sleep glamor girls playing potato hockey produced, shot, edited by yours truly
|
Laurie Pace - RARE Properties Art Gallery Jackson Hole
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta) July 23, 2008
RARE Art Gallery of Jackson Hole Artist Spotlight: Laurie Pace - As splintering light fractions into thousands of colors, Laurie's journey in life has encompassed many careers from runway model to graphic artist, from musician to singer, from teacher to artist. She believes the greatest influence in her life is the beauty God provides daily. A degree in Art, eight years with an advertising agency, and twenty- five years teaching art has come full circle to top honors yearly at international art shows in oil, watercolor and photography. Bold with color and live with movement, Laurie's style uses intense color and a wide brush or a palette knife. She loves working with oils, carving out paint believing energy transfers from her, to the canvas and on to the viewer. The viewer completes the work with their intake of the composition and the thought process that follows. Pace resides in Justin, Texas with her husband Terry, and two Kerry Blue Terriers Annie and Paddy. Summer always finds them on the road collecting files of photos for a year of painting in the studio. A painting by Laurie Pace will be "you-niquely yours."
|
Bluzul (Poem by: Scorpi0)
from YouTube :: Videos by scorpi0 June 18, 2008
Dibujado por: Juan E. Rondon L. STREAM: http://youtube.com/stream?u=Scorpi0 with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. Author: Scorpi0 Keywords: Bluzul Pix Arts Impressionism poetry poem paintings draw performing arts Added: June 18, 2008
|
Sounds from Walden
from Most Recent June 09, 2008
Author: cimafilms Added: Sun, 08 Jun 2008 21:57:06 -0800 Duration: 345A film made while reading part of the 'Sounds' chapter from 'Walden,' by Henry David Thoreau. The film is made up of on-the-spot reactions and impulses to Thoreau's writing. The idea is to read then pick up the camera and film something to go with what you've just read. Then put it all together and see what happens.
|
Introducing Glyptoteket in Copenhagen
from YouTube :: Tag // copenhagen May 22, 2008
Award-winning promotion movie for the 100-year old museum situated in Copenhagen, Denmark, right next to Tivoli. Author: Glyptoteket Keywords: ny carlsberg art museum degas monet copenhagen egypt impressionism post roman sculpture ancient greece Added: May 22, 2008
|
Art by Yuri Kudryavtsev
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta) April 21, 2008
"My aesthetic credo for the 3rd millennium": complicated harmonies of derived color multitudes - "symchromy" - in abstract, realistic and mixed methods of the "color-composition" painting. I have come to the abstract improvisation especially due to my greatest passion for the landscape painting. The example of the Nature that creates so freely an infinite diversity of forms and colors, encourages to follow it and try to compose original color harmonies in their various inner plasticity as well as wonderful combinations of new colorful forms, - without imitating any objects. Thus it could give most human heart to most abstract art. In symchromism I find color and formal joint plasticity innovations, trying to be constructive and expressive in definite and compound color compositions .
|
Claude Monet
from Metacafe - Today's Videos by Metacafe April 21, 2008
http://www.bestshoppingstore.com/Claude-Monet.html Claude Monet was born in Paris on November 14, 1840 but all his impressions as a child and adolescent were linked with Le Havre, the town to which his family moved about 1845. His father had a grocery store there. In his youth he painted caricature portraits and exhibited them in the art supplies store in which Eugène Boudin worked at the time. Eventually Boudin persuaded the young Monet to paint in the open air with him and become a landscape painter
|
Vincent Van Gogh Paintings
from Vimeo / Recent Public Videos April 16, 2008
Vincent Van Gogh Paintings from allpaintings on Vimeo. (1853-1890) Vincent van Gogh was born near Brabant, the son of a minister. In 1869, he got a position at the art dealers, Goupil and Co. in The Hague, through his uncle, and worked with them until he was dismissed from the London office in 1873. He worked as a schoolmaster in England (1876), before training for the ministry at Amsterdam University (1877). After he failed to get a post in the Church, he went to live as an independent missionary among the Borinage miners. He was largely self-taught as an artist, although he received help from his cousin, Mauve. His first works were heavily painted, mud-colored and clumsy attempts to represent the life of the poor (e.g. Potato-Eaters, 1885, Amsterdam), influenced by one of his artistic heroes, Millet. He moved to Paris in 1886, living with his devoted brother, Theo, who as a dealer introduced him to artists like Gauguin, Pissarro, Seurat and Toulouse-Lautrec. In Paris, he discovered color as well as the divisionist ideas which helped to create the distinctive dashed brushstrokes of his later work (e.g. Pere Tanguy, 1887, Paris). He moved to Arles, in the south of France, in 1888, hoping to establish an artists' colony there, and was immediately struck by the hot reds and yellows of the Mediterranean, which he increasingly used symbolically to represent his own moods (e.g. Sunflowers, 1888, London, National Gallery). He was joined briefly by Gauguin in October 1888, and managed in some works to combine his own ideas with the latter's Synthetism (e.g. The Sower, 1888, Amsterdam), but the visit was not a success. A final argument led to the infamous episode in which Van Gogh mutilated his ear. In 1889, he became a voluntary patient at the St. Remy asylum, where he continued to paint, often making copies of artists he admired. His palette softened to mauves and pinks, but his brushwork was increasingly agitated, the dashes constructed into swirling, twisted shapes, often seen as symbolic of his mental state (e.g. Ravine, 1889, Otterlo). He moved to Auvers, to be closer to Theo in 1890 - his last 70 days spent in a hectic program of painting. He died, having sold only one work, following a botched suicide attempt. His life is detailed in a series of letters to his brother (published 1959). Video Provided by Allpaintings Art Portal. Music by Antònia Font Cast: allpaintings
|
Free piano music - The lotus flower
from Revver - music Videos April 07, 2008
Author: isisip Added: Mon, 07 Apr 2008 07:28:35 -0800 Duration: 117Hi, I'm Isisip. Free piano music from me, download your free music track from: http://www.pianomusicdownload.blogspot.com It is a gift for everyone to say thank you for checking out the music and watching the videos. This is another version of the song "The lotus flower", this version is slightly different than the version on the album "My music collection". You will love both versions. Monet painted waterlilies at different times and so did isisip!
|
Free piano music - The lotus flower
from ROCK MUSIC AND PEOPLE VIDEOS April 07, 2008
Author: isisip Added: Mon, 07 Apr 2008 07:28:35 -0800 Duration: 117Hi, I'm Isisip. Free piano music from me, download your free music track from: http://www.pianomusicdownload.blogspot.com It is a gift for everyone to say thank you for checking out the music and watching the videos. This is another version of the song "The lotus flower", this version is slightly different than the version on the album "My music collection". You will love both versions. Monet painted waterlilies at different times and so did isisip!
|
Reinventing Marketing
from KERA's Think February 26, 2008
What can people learn about you on the internet? Does the rise of social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook threaten your privacy and your future reputation? We'll talk this hour with Daniel J. Solove, associate professor at George Washington University Law School and author of "The Future of Reputation: Gossip, Rumor, and Privacy on the Internet" (Yale University Press, 2007).
|
Ipanema
from Dailymotion - channel arts February 15, 2008
somthing a little lighter,for valentines,the flip side to black mountain.Author: cevitts Tags: art painting drawing line creativejazzgetzgilberto drum latin music evitts canada regret expression impressionism avant montreal toronto suzanne Posted: 15 February 2008 Rating: 0.0 Votes: 0
|
Women In Art
from YouTube :: Recently Featured April 22, 2007
500 Years of Female Portraits in Western Art Author: eggman913 Keywords: art renaissance baroque neoclassicism impressionism rococo fauvism surrealism abstract realism romanticism nouveau morph Added: April 22, 2007
|
The Light
from videos January 27, 2007
impressionist styled video graffiti, pharoah monch, udig
|
Un apres-midi dans le Musee d'Orsay
from Vimeo / glynnis's uploaded videos September 04, 2006
Every time I go to an art museum I am as fascinated by the people visiting as the art itself. Camera etiquette, crowd patterns, and the whole spectacle of people shuffling through rooms and staring at walls is something I find very interesting and weird. While snatching a few videos of my favorite paintings, I became amused by how long people would stand in front of one painting, or the way people would jump out of the way of the camera. It's as much a documentary of the paintings I saw as it is a study of people in art museums. Cast: glynnis
|
Parisian street jazz
from Vimeo / glynnis's uploaded videos September 04, 2006
After strolling through the city and walking through the gardens behind Notre Dame, we came across these musicians and decided to sit and listen for a while. This clip makes me miss Paris so much. A few nights after this clip was taken, Dad and I went to a jazz cafe in the Latin Quarter and heard a great group. I got video of it, but somehow it's been deleted from my hard drive, along with all my clips of the Pompidou museum. I don't know when or how it happened, but all those clips are gone, so this is the best Parisian jazz I have to offer. I'm so bummed that I lost those. Cast: glynnis
|
One night in Paris
from Vimeo / glynnis's uploaded videos September 04, 2006
All the music you hear in this video is original to the clips -- no soundtrack added. Clip details, in order of appearance: - My cleaned plate (the yummiest "salade des crevettes et avocats" that you'll ever put in your mouth), my computer, and my parents at my favorite Parisian cafe (yes, the wifi cafe), which is right in front of the Sorbonne - In front of Notre Dame at sunset (9pm?), after we'd taken a leisurely stroll - Walking behind Notre Dame in the gardens (you can hear the rest of that jazz here: http://www.vimeo.com/clip:101317 ) Cast: glynnis
|
Un apres-midi dans le Musee d'Orsay
from Vimeo / glynnis's videos September 04, 2006
From glynnis: Every time I go to an art museum I am as fascinated by the people visiting as the art itself. Camera etiquette, crowd patterns, and the whole spectacle of people shuffling through rooms and staring at walls is something I find very interesting and weird. While snatching a few videos of my favorite paintings, I became amused by how long people would stand in front of one painting, or the way people would jump out of the way of the camera. It's as much a documentary of the paintings I saw as it is a study of people in art museums.
|
Shopping at Carrefour
from Vimeo / glynnis's uploaded videos August 24, 2006
Carrefour is a French chain of stores much like super Walmart, in that they have an enourmous grocery selection, but also sell shoes, clothing, electronics, household items, etc. They're enourmous and there's one for nearly every town. Every year that we're in France we make sure to go. Their selection of foods blows any American grocery chain out of the water, as it's all very very fresh, very diverse, and exquisitely yummy. They also have a lot more on-the-go freezer-type meals, except they're actually delicious and very good for you. France decided not to allow Walmart in to compete with Carrefour, I suppose because they like it so much (it is better, after all), and because Walmart is the devil. Clips in order of appearance: 1. The main aisle 2. The chocolate bar aisle 3. Wine 4. Seeds, nuts, rice 5. "The other meats" as they say in French, including intestines, cow tongue, liver, and pig heart 6. The foie gras selection 7. *One of* the cheese aisles 8. The fish counters (with Augustines!) 9. The yogurt/pudding selection 10. Tarts and desserts from the bakery 11. Bread, croissants, etc. 12. The other yogurt aisle, and my crazy sister Cast: glynnis
|
|
| |