TTC VIDEO A History Of European Art (2005) online free

9dc96c79f3fa241fdabe820a9a54fb9b TTC VIDEO  A History Of European Art (2005) online free


TTC VIDEO A History Of European Art (2005)

DVD-Rip | AVI | XviD MPEG4 @ 1 Mbit/s | 640480 | MP3 Stereo @ 128 Kbit/s 44 KHz | 24 Hours | 11.8 GB
Genre: History Of European Art, Education | Label: The Great Courses | Language: English


A History of European Art is your gateway to this visually stunning story. In 48 beautifully illustrated lectures you will encounter all the landmarks you would expect to find in a comprehensive survey of Western art since the Middle Ages. Works such as Giottos Arena Chapel, Van Eycks Ghent Altarpiece, Leonardos The Last Supper, Michelangelos David, Vermeers View of Delft, Van Goghs The Starry Night, Picassos Guernica, and hundreds more. You will also find works that are completely new to you. Plus youll be introduced to lesser-known artistsperhaps names youve heard but never connected to specific worksand youll understand why they deserve to be classed among the great masters.


 TTC VIDEO  A History Of European Art (2005) online free


 TTC VIDEO  A History Of European Art (2005) online free


The development of the arts in Europe from the Middle Ages to the modern era is an astonishing record of cultural achievement, from the breathtaking architecture of Gothic cathedrals to the daring visual experiments of the Cubist painters.

We all have our favorite artists, periods, or styles from this immensely rich tradition, but how many of us truly know the full sweep of European art? How many of us can connect the dots of influences and inspiration that link the Renaissance with Mannerism, or that tie the paintings of the creator of modern art, Edouard Manet, to masterpieces from centuries earlier?

A History of European Art is your gateway to this visually stunning story. In 48 beautifully illustrated lectures you will encounter all the landmarks you would expect to find in a comprehensive survey of Western art since the Middle Ages. Works such as Giottos Arena Chapel, Van Eycks Ghent Altarpiece, Leonardos The Last Supper, Michelangelos David, Vermeers View of Delft, Van Goghs The Starry Night, Picassos Guernica, and hundreds more.

You will also find works that are completely new to you. Plus youll be introduced to lesser-known artistsperhaps names youve heard but never connected to specific worksand youll understand why they deserve to be classed among the great masters.

An Unrivalled Collection of Masterpieces

Your guide to this unrivalled collection of paintings, sculptures, architecture, drawings, and other media, created over a span of more than a thousand years, is Professor William Kloss, an independent art historian long connected with the seminar and tour programs of the Smithsonian Associates at the Smithsonian Institution.

Praised by Library Journal for his perceptive readings of masterworks in his previous course for The Teaching Company, Great Artists of the Italian Renaissance, Professor Kloss once again gives intriguing insights into great works, including:

Mona Lisa: The famous smile in Leonardos painting may be a pun on the sitters married name, which means joyous in Italian. Renaissance ideals of decorum could also have influenced the expression. A 16th-century Italian writer suggested that a fashionable woman should smile as if you were smiling secretly not in an artificial manner, but as though unconsciously and accompanied by certain movements of the eyes.

Garden of Earthly Delights: Hieronymus Boschs surreal triptych depicting scenes of the Garden of Eden, an earthly bacchanal, and Hell was probably painted for the private enjoyment of a nobleman, as a moralizing commentary on the relations between the sexes. It has been suggested that the work might have been commissioned on the occasion of a wedding. One can only hope that it was a happy marriage, says Professor Kloss.

Sunday Afternoon on the Island of the Grande Jatte: Professor Kloss shows how this celebrated late 19th-century painting by Georges Seurat was influenced by the 15th-century works of Piero della Francesca, who was still relatively unknown in Seurats day. Both artists imbue nearly immobile figures with stoic dignity and hints of otherworldliness. In fact, it is not just Piero but the entire monumental Italian tradition from Giotto to Masaccio to Piero that Seurat has revisited.

What You Will Learn

You begin by exploring the artistic riches of the Middle Ages, from the early architectural monuments of the Carolingian Empire to the massive cathedrals and exquisite sculpture of the French Gothic style. Then you move into the Renaissance by examining Giottos approach to the illusionistic creation of space and tracing this accomplishment through the works of some of the greatest artists in history, from Masaccio and Donatello to the geniuses of the High Renaissance, including Leonardo, Michelangelo, Raphael, Bellini, and Titian. You also study the magnificent architecture of the period, and you address the Renaissance in the north through the art of Jan van Eyck, Drer, Bosch, and Bruegel, among others.

Next, you investigate the evolution of Baroque style in the works of Caravaggio and the Bolognese Carracci family. You focus in particular on the Baroque sculptor and architect Gian Lorenzo Bernini. You continue beyond Italy to Velzquez in Spain, to Rubens and Rembrandt in the Netherlands, and to Versailles and the court of Louis XIV in France. Then you cover reactions to the Baroque in the Rococo style of Watteau, Boucher, and Fragonard.

In the last section of the course, you examine the beginnings of modern European art with the work of David, which defined the Neoclassical style. Then you explore the paintings of the great Romantic artists Goya, Gricault, and Delacroix. These styles gave way to the Realism of Courbet and Manet, which in turn, led to the Impressionist achievements of Degas and Monet. You study the reactions to Impressionism in the work of Gauguin, Van Gogh, and Seurat, and trace the influential contributions of Czanne and Rodin. You conclude with a consideration of the early movements of the 20th century, including Fauvism, Cubism, German Expressionism, Dada, and Surrealism, and the pivotal role of the two towering geniuses of early modern art, Picasso and Matisse.

A Guide to Looking

Professor Kloss wants you to learn to see deeply into a work of art. To achieve this goal, he has designed the course to be more than a recitation of masterpieces and their makers, dates, materials, and history. He has created a guide to lookingan engaging demonstration of how you can view art with understanding and pleasure.

How should you look at art? Professor Kloss recommends that you focus on five elements:

Subject: Every work of art has a subject. Very often this is the story that the work tells, as in Titians great painting Bacchus and Ariadne, which plunges the viewer into a joyous love story drawn from ancient mythology. One can simply revel in the physical beauty of such a work, but a much richer experience is available if one takes the trouble to understand what it is about.

Interpretation: The way a subject is expressed in art is the artists interpretation. Professor Kloss explores this theme by looking at three different versions of St. Matthew writing his gospel: one by an unknown artist from the 9th century, and two radically different interpretations by Caravaggio, painted in the 17th century. Caravaggio had to do a second version because his client was offended by the first!

Style: The artistic means of interpretation is the artists style. This distinction is evident in a comparison between Rogier van der Weydens Deposition from the 15th century and Rubenss treatment of the same subject in the 17th century. Both paintings depict the lowering of the dead Christ from the cross, but in markedly different styles with respect to setting, arrangement of figures, treatment of space, color, and so forth.

Context: The context can be related to a personal moment, to contemporary political events, to a historical period, or to a long-term cultural influence. An appreciation of the great palace at Versailles, for example, requires an understanding of the context from which it emergednamely, the opulent, absolute monarchy of the Sun King, Louis XIV.

Emotion: Emotion is a major factor both in the artists creation of a work and in the viewers response to it. These are not necessarily the same emotion, but sometimes they coincide in a magical way, as in Renoirs festive Luncheon of the Boating Party, which evokes a pleasure that comes from Renoirs joy in the scene and his artistic mastery that convinces us that we, too, are included in this long-ago gathering of friends.

Above all, you must give a work of art time. Savor it. Study it. Try to see it with fresh eyes. You will learn more than you imagine. Professor Klosss gift for pulling you into an artistic work to show you what makes it function at different levels will make you want to give this course more of your own time through repeated viewings. And you will find yourself looking at all art with new appreciation.

Available Exclusively on DVD

Due to the highly visual subject matter, this course is available only on DVD. It contains more than 850 images of drawings, paintings, prints, sculptures, and architecture.


Course Lecture Titles

48 Lectures

30 minutes / lecture

01. Approaches to European Art

02. Carolingian and Ottonian Art

03. Romanesque Sculpture and Architecture

04. Gothic Art in France

05. Gothic Art in Germany and Italy

06. Giotto and the Arena ChapelPart I

07. Giotto and the Arena ChapelPart II

08. Duccio and the Maest

09. Sienese Art in the 14th Century

10. The Black Death and the International Style

11. Early Renaissance Sculpture in Florence

12. Early Renaissance Architecture in Florence

13. Masaccio and Early Renaissance Painting

14. Jan van Eyck and Northern Renaissance Art

15. Northern Renaissance Altarpieces

16. Piero della Francesca in Arezzo

17. Sandro Botticelli

18. Andrea Mantegna and Giovanni Bellini

19. High Renaissance Painting in Venice

20. The High RenaissanceLeonardo da Vinci

21. The High RenaissanceRaphael

22. The High RenaissanceMichelangelo

23. Albrecht Drer and German Renaissance Art

24. Riemenschneider and Grnewald

25. Netherlandish Art in the 16th Century

26. Pieter Bruegel the Elder

27. Mannerism and the Late Work of Michelangelo

28. Annibale Carracci and the Reform of Art

29. Caravaggio

30. Italian Baroque Painting in Rome

31. Gian Lorenzo Bernini

32. Peter Paul Rubens

33. Dutch Painting in the 17th Century

34. Rembrandt

35. Poussin and ClaudeThe Allure of Rome

36. Baroque Painting in Spain

37. Louis XIV and Versailles

38. French Art in the 18th Century

39. Neoclassicism and the Birth of Romanticism

40. Romanticism in the 19th Century

41. RealismFrom Daumier to Courbet

42. Manet and MonetThe Birth of Impressionism

43. Monet and Degas

44. Renoir, Pissarro, and Czanne

45. Beyond ImpressionismFrom Seurat to Matisse

46. Cubism and Early Modern Painting

47. Modern SculptureRodin and Brancusi

48. Art between Two WarsKandinsky to Picasso



0e78f87c6aedac70315a99b69306bf1e TTC VIDEO  A History Of European Art (2005) online free

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