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Romantics and Realists Boxed Set / Goya, Whistler, Courbet, Friedrich, Rossetti, Delacroix
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DVD detailsArtist: Artist Not Provided Brand: Kultur DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language) Format: Box set, Color, Dolby, DVD, NTSC Picture Format: 1.33:1 Running Time: 300 minutes DVD Release Date: 2006-09-26 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Studio: Kultur Video
DVD Reviews of Romantics and Realists Boxed Set / Goya, Whistler, Courbet, Friedrich, Rossetti, DelacroixDVD Review: The lives and works of Delacroix, Rossetti, Friedrich, Goya, Whistler and Courbet Summary: 3 Stars
This box-set comprises six DVDs of fifty minutes each in length and in 4:3 (TV format), covering the lives and works of Delacroix, Rossetti, Friedrich, Goya, Whistler and Courbet. They are the kind of documentaries that you would expect on public service or arts-orientated television channels. They are not sumptuous, but they are professionally produced. They are good examples of general introductions to the artists concerned - the fifty minutes length given to each artist allows for some generous detail to be given to their lives and works - but overall there is preciously little imagination used in the production. The quality of the pictures on the screen is generally good.
The DVD set boasts four particular features to persuade you to part with your money: -
1. "All new location footage": Well, barely. For instance, in Paris we have standard shots of the Paris skyline, interiors of cafes, the Tuileries, the Champs Elysees, but no attempt seems to have been made to track down and film the actual buildings in which these artists lived and worked and displayed the fruit of their labours.
2. "Recreations and reconstructions": No, there isn't really - and thankfully too, since in my opinion these have been the bane of documentaries for the last twenty years, turning them into the dreaded and appalling `docu-drama' concept. Instead, what we have is standard footage of events such as Napoleonic troops marching, a lonely man walking through Victorian London, wine being poured into a glass, and brushes being washed in water. Many of these are formatted by applying a watercolour wash to the film.
3. "Studies of the great works": Yes!
4. "Commentary and analysis from leading authorities": Most certainly! And, what is refreshing is that such commentary is clearly enthusiastic and unscripted. These authorities (all British) include three professors of art, four university doctors, and a smattering of artists, art historians, and curators of galleries. It is unfortunate that they are not stood next to the pictures that they refer to when they enthuse about their chosen artists, but are instead filmed in their own homes and offices.
There is no Simon Schama or Andrew Graham-Dixon declaiming before the paintings, pointing out the features of each painting upon which we should focus; there is no Joseph Koerner or Matthew Collings walking in the footsteps of the artists between town and city, house and gallery. Instead, we have Mike Leighton narrating in a somewhat dull, but clear and objective English accent as if reading from a textbook. The narration is often accompanied by extracts from pieces of classical music (Beethoven, Dvorak, Grieg, Holst, Schubert) that are sometimes appropriate and sometime not.
There are a small number of factual errors - for example, William Morris's Kelmscott Manor is in Oxfordshire, not Gloucestershire - and some of the narrative is confusing. For instance, in the programme on Whistler, we are told that on the death of his father in 1849, the family returned to the USA, where Whistler entered the West Point Military Academy for three years before moving to Paris in 1855 and then on to London. There he painted "At the Piano" in 1859, but the `talking head' (a curator at a Scottish gallery) on the DVD describes its melancholy as being due to Whistler's recently deceased father! The talking head then confuses things even further by referring to Whistler's sister as his sister-in-law. But, thankfully, these instances are few-and-far-between. The vast majority of the information relayed to the viewer is factually correct or objectively valid.
Overall, then, this set is a reasonable introduction to the artists concerned. Of course, we can argue until the cows come home whether this series of six DVDs have chosen the right artists to portray in their Romantics and Realists selection. But there is much to learn about those that have been selected, and some good insights are provided. However, do not expect an overly-vigorous analysis or incisive presentation.
More Romantics and Realists Boxed Set / Goya, Whistler, Courbet, Friedrich, Rossetti, Delacroix reviews: 1
Description of Romantics and Realists Boxed Set / Goya, Whistler, Courbet, Friedrich, Rossetti, DelacroixThe Great Artists chronicles the lives, times and works of the men whose genius has captivated the art world for generations. Informative and entertaining, the series highlights important events in each artist?s life, explores their stylistic trademarks, and provides detailed explanations of their techniques. The Great Artists also features expert commentary and analyses from leading authorities, art historians and scholars, new location footage and atmospheric re-creations. For many lovers of Western Art, the 1830 painting Liberty Leading the People remains the ultimate image of the Romantic Age. A contemporary, revolutionary canvas full of color and movement, it remains the masterpiece of the Frenchman Eugene Delacroix ?a painter deeply aware of the Romantic spirit of the times. He was a friend of the composers Chopin and Berlioz, and was also a huge admirer of the tragic figure of Byron. It was Byron?s work that inspired The Death of Sardanapalus, one of the most abandoned and violent images of Romantic Art. His respect for Old Masters like Rubens was strong, and his three decades of Parisian mural work was steeped in the tradition of the Renaissance and the Baroque. One short journey to North Africa also inspired a huge number of memorable canvases that captured the light of the region as no artist had done before. Dante Gabriel Rossetti was one of the most enigmatic of all English painters. Born into a brilliant family of Italian exiles, he announced his ambitions at the age of twenty. As the key member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, Rossetti sought nothing less than a return to the artistic spirit of medieval times, the age before Raphael. Though the Brotherhood failed to last, a romantic medieval flavor continued to infuse Rossetti?s work, including his innovative watercolors and his bold experiments with design. He was also a substantial poet, but it is for his paintings that he is best remembered, and his images of beautiful women are amongst the most compelling created. Rossetti?s often complex female relationships also played a large role in his personal life. Sadly, the strains that often resulted contributed to the artist?s eventual decline. Blighted by illness alcohol and drugs, Rossetti died at the age of just 53. One of the key ideas that underpinned the Romantic Age was the notion of the sublime, and no Romantic painter captured the sublime more effectively than the German landscapist Caspar David Friedrich. A deeply pious, somber man, Friedrich hardly ever left his homeland, and his genius did not reveal itself until his thirties. But when it did, the result was landscape painting like nothing ever seen before. Rich in symbolism, Friedrich?s landscapes capture the spiritual power of nature, and it is easy for the viewer to be both overwhelmed and attracted by his painstakingly detailed scenes of silence. In Friedrich?s sublime natural landscape, humanity is small, and mortal, as painting like Abbey of the Oakwoods confirm. Sadly, Friedrich?s own human life was blighted by bereavement, torment, sickness and obscurity. By the time of his death, he was all but forgotten. But now we can appreciate fully his huge contribution to Romantic painting. In 1792, a famous Spanish portraitist fell victim to an illness that left him permanently deaf. This was the event that proved the turning-point in the career of Francisco Jose Goya y Lucientes. Trapped in his silent world, Goya?s portraiture climbed to new heights of achievement, but it was his increasingly dark images that are most appreciated today. The sheer horror of much of Goya?s later work was unprecedented in Western Art, and it is these paintings and etchings that secure his status as a giant of the Romantic Age. As this fascinating program reveals, Goya?s own time gave him additional inspirational inspiration for his images of terror. The bloody war between his own homeland and Napoleonic France inspired The Third of May, the greatest canvas of his career. The continuing existence of the Spanish Inquisition also provoked Goya to create timeless works. Not even his own persecution by the Inquisition?s officers could prevent Goya from painting masterpieces into the ninth decade of a remarkable life. Renowned for his witty banter, the work of American artist James Abbott McNeill Whistler led many critics to believe him to be the forerunner of abstract art. A talented engraver who produced numerous etchings, lithographs and dry-points, Whistler is best known for his financially ruinous libel suit with the critic John Ruskin. The painting that was at the heart of the case, Nocturne in Black and Gold: The Falling Rocket, was one of his near-abstract nighttime images of the River Thames. It is these nocturnal scenes, along with his highly stylized portraits that secure his reputation today. Whistler?s radical emphasis on composition at the expense of subject matter was typified when he painted his famous portrait of his mother and called it Arrangement in Grey and Black. Gustave Courbet loved to present himself as a hard-drinking, radical-thinking peasant artist in mid-nineteenth century Paris, but his public image was largely a creation on his own, but his public image was largely a creation of his own. But with his greatest paintings his radicalism was for real. Courbet?s famous peasant scenes like his enormous Burial at Ornans were like nothing ever seen before. This was the art of Realism and many critics were outraged. How could a painter make common people the subject of High Art? But Courbet defied the critics to secure the fame that he craved and deserved These six programs in The Great Artists series feature an in-depth look at the Romantics and Realistics
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