HENI TalksA lifelong exponent of the integration of art and architecture, and celebrated for his paintings, sculpture, ceramics, mosaic, and his radical innovation in stained glass, Brian Clarke has been a major figure in contemporary art for the last four decades.
Distilling the euphoria of form and colour, Clarke’s oeuvre is testament to the fact that ‘artistic practice has the ability to change the shape of things, has the ability to transform the world.’ This film charts his life and career from a modest upbringing in Oldham, through cutting-edge punk years, to producing the single largest pieces of stained glass in the world at this time.
With contributions from Paul Greenhalgh, Director, Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts; photographer Ralph Gibson; Dame Zaha Hadid; Sir Peter Cook; and June Osborne, DL, Bishop of Llandaff.
Brian Clarke: The Art of Light | HENI TalksHENI Talks2020-09-16 | A lifelong exponent of the integration of art and architecture, and celebrated for his paintings, sculpture, ceramics, mosaic, and his radical innovation in stained glass, Brian Clarke has been a major figure in contemporary art for the last four decades.
Distilling the euphoria of form and colour, Clarke’s oeuvre is testament to the fact that ‘artistic practice has the ability to change the shape of things, has the ability to transform the world.’ This film charts his life and career from a modest upbringing in Oldham, through cutting-edge punk years, to producing the single largest pieces of stained glass in the world at this time.
With contributions from Paul Greenhalgh, Director, Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts; photographer Ralph Gibson; Dame Zaha Hadid; Sir Peter Cook; and June Osborne, DL, Bishop of Llandaff.
#Art #BrianClarke #HENITalksFocal Points: Bruce Nauman by Robert Storr | Authors in ConversationHENI Talks2024-05-23 | Robert Storr, acclaimed curator, critic, painter, and writer, asks, ‘How can we interpret the work of contemporary artists?’. In this latest HENI Talks film, Robert Storr shares his illuminating insights, bringing together 30 years of his writing on American artist Bruce Nauman, whose practice encompasses sculpture, photography, neon, drawing, printmaking, and performance.
Robert Storr in conversation with the Art writer Aimee Dawson, discusses the first three books in the new series: Bruce Nauman, Ad Reinhardt and Between a Rock and a Hard Place.
#henitalks #inconversation #author #robertstorrLondons Hidden Mosaics | Public ArtHENI Talks2024-04-24 | Art historian Dr George Bartlett, discovers the hidden Shepherdess Walk Mosaics tucked away from the bustling streets of London.
When you arrive at Shepherdess Walk, you are met with three wall panels and two floor mosaics, with the colours, style, materials, and themes, reminiscent of the style commonly used in Roman Britain.
The medium of mosaics around since the ancient Roman world, are shown to still be capable of harmonising with an ancient tradition to create something approachable in a space for everyone.
CHAPTERS 0:00 Introduction 0:33 Tessa Hunkin and the Westminster Cathedral mosaics 01:26 Introduction to the Shepherdess Walk Mosaics 02:02 Materials, skills and techniques 03:07 Roman influences 05:08 Conclusion
#henitalks #publicart #mosaic #arthistory #romanempireAnya Gallaccios Ghost Tree | Public ArtHENI Talks2024-04-10 | Dr Leanne Green, Curator at The Whitworth, The University of Manchester, explains how inspired by the removal of a decaying tree, Anya Gallaccio's sculptural commission for the Whitworth, led the artist to investigate themes of life, death and nature. Working from digital scans of the removed tree, she reproduced in ribbons of complex stainless steel plates, a monumental and reflective ‘ghost tree’. It's become a haunting response to loss and a timeless monument to nature.
CHAPTERS 00:00 Introduction to the Whitworth 00:35 The Ghost Tree 00:55 Nature in Anya Gallaccio’s work 01:43 The inspiration behind the Ghost Tree 02:03 Analysis of the sculpture 02:36 The positioning of the Ghost Tree 03:02 Significance 03:28 Conclusion ----------------------------------------------------- Follow HENI on: Web — heni.com/talks Instagram — instagram.com/heni TikTok — tiktok.com/@heni X — twitter.com/heni ----------------------------------------------------- Produced by HENI Talks
#henitalks #publicart #sculpture #nature #contemporaryartThe Story of the King Charles I Sculpture | Public ArtHENI Talks2024-03-27 | Timothy Revell, art historian at the National Gallery, London whose research is focussed on Renaissance and Baroque art, explains how the sculpture of Charles I in Trafalgar Square is London’s oldest bronze sculpture and exemplifies the story of the execution of Charles I and the Restoration of the monarchy. The position of the sculpture and where it faces is pivotal to its legacy and its roots in Rome.
CHAPTERS 00:00 Introduction to 17th-century Britain 00:15 The statue of Charles I 00:34 Background: Charles I’s personal rule 00:53 Analysis of the sculpture 01:17 Depicting a monarch 01:48 Accusations of popery 02:27 The Civil War and execution of Charles I 03:09 How the statue survived 03:28 The plinth 04:11 The location 04:42 Influence: an equestrian tradition
#henitalks #publicart #sculpture #monarchy #kingcharlesHarlows Hidden Hepworth Sculpture #art #publicart #sculpture #historyHENI Talks2024-03-21 | Discover a hidden Barbara Hepworth sculpture in the unexpected setting of Harlow, Essex. In this short film, Irena Posner explores the monumental abstract expressionist sculpture "Contrapuntal Forms" and the story of this celebrated British artist's impact on modern sculpture. Learn about her techniques, influences, and the significance of this artwork for the residents and town of Harlow.
SUBSCRIBE for new Public Art videos every other week! – http://tinyurl.com/HENITalksPeter Doig at the Musée dOrsayHENI Talks2024-03-21 | In this HENI Talks, Peter Doig and the Musée d’Orsay have brought together, in one of the museum’s iconic domed rooms, a group of large paintings that were made over the two decades the artist lived in the Caribbean nation of Trinidad and a selection of works he has chosen from the Musée d’Orsay’s collection.
His selection is consistently unpredictable, and include works by Cézanne, Manet, Seurat, Pissarro, Renoir, Gaugin and Monet, represented not by a landscape but by “Camille on Her Death Bed” (1879).
CHAPTERS 00:00 Introducing the exhibition space at the Musée d’Orsay 00:34 The background of the exhibition 01:25 Selecting works from the museum’s collection 02:50 Jean-Léon Gérôme, The Cock Fight 04:26 Henri Rosseau, The War 05:24 Comparing Paul Gauguin, The White Horse and Gustave Courbet, Hunters in the Snow 05:56 Gustave Courbet, Hunters in the Snow 06:42 Claude Monet, Camille Monet on her Deathbed 08:10 Honoré Daumier, Crispin and Scapin 08:40 Paul Cezanne, Christ in Limbo 09:40 A comparison with Gérôme’s The Cock Fight 10:07 Conclusion
#henitalks #peterdoig #arthistory #paintingVictor Pasmores Apollo Pavilion in Durham | Public ArtHENI Talks2024-03-13 | Dr Stephen Parnell, architect, critic, and historian of postwar architecture, visits Apollo Pavilion, designed by one of the leading abstract artists of the day, Victor Pasmore.
Completed in July 1969, Passmore named the construction the Apollo Pavilion coinciding with the first Moon landing by the crew of Apollo 11.
Located in the Sunny Blunts housing estate, The Pavilion was never regarded as a stand alone artwork, but as an integral part of the estate’s design within the landscape.
The Pavilion’s presence proved controversial after it fell into disrepair during the 1980s; though the site was refurbished in 2009, gaining a Grade II* Listed Building and is regarded by some as being one of the most significant works of art in Britain.
CHAPTERS 00:00 The age of wonder 00:46 The bold architecture of the 1960s 01:06 Introduction to the Apollo Pavilion 01:51 Berthold Lubetkin’s designs for Peterlee 02:17 Introduction to Victor Pasmore and his revolutionary art 02:44 Pasmore’s move towards three-dimensional art and ‘an Exhibit’ 03:37 Bringing Pasmore’s compositions to life at the Apollo Pavilion 04:06 Analysis of the structure 04:47 The aim of the Pavilion 04:59 Disrepair and tensions with the community 05:56 Saving and restoring the Pavilion 06:17 New ways of engaging with the Pavilion 07:06 Conclusion
SUBSCRIBE for new Public Art videos every other week! – http://tinyurl.com/HENITalks ----------------------------------------------------- Chapters 00:00 Introduction of Contrapuntal Forms 00:32 Harlow Art Trust and its aims 01:00 Barbara Hepworth and her work 01:32 The commission of Contrapuntal Forms and its location 02:05 Analysis of the sculpture 02:33 Utopian themes 03:27 The holes in the figures 03:55 Hepworth’s sculptures and musicality 04:40 Her technique and the modernisation of carving 05:22 Hepworth’s force of will and legacy as a female sculptor 05:54 Conclusion ----------------------------------------------------- Follow HENI on: Web — heni.com/talks Instagram — instagram.com/heni TikTok — tiktok.com/@heni X — twitter.com/heni ----------------------------------------------------- Produced by HENI Talks
#henitalks #publicart #sculptureA History of the Renaissance with Jonathan Jones | Authors in ConversationHENI Talks2024-02-21 | Esteemed art critic and author Jonathan Jones sits down with Joe Hage to discuss his 2023 publication, Earthly Delights: A History of the Renaissance.
Offering a fresh take on the history of Europe in the 15th and 16th centuries, Jones uses well-known icons of Renaissance art such as Michelangelo’s David alongside surprising works from the period, such as Martin Schongauer’s print, The Temptations of St. Anthony to delve into an entertaining social history of the time. Why was there suddenly so much nudity in art? What made Renaissance artists so special? And how did the theory of perspective change the way art held a mirror up to the world?
----------------------------------------------------- Follow HENI on: Web — heni.com/talks Instagram — instagram.com/heni TikTok — tiktok.com/@heni X — twitter.com/heni ----------------------------------------------------- Produced by HENI TalksArctic Explorer Captain Scott’s London Statue | Public ArtHENI Talks2024-02-14 | Professor Ian Christie FBA brings focus to the bronze sculpture of Arctic explorer Captain Scott and its uniqueness among London’s 1500-plus public monuments. More than a touching memorial by his widow and sculptor Kathleen Scott to her deceased husband, Scott’s statue stands as an example of the Modernist wave that dominated British sculpture at the time while also defying traditional expectations of public monuments to heroic figures.
#publicart #sculpture #publicmonuments #London #henitalksRyan Ganders Scarborough Sculpture | Public ArtHENI Talks2024-01-31 | Dr Jeanine Griffin, curator, and researcher, invites viewers to reflect on the effect of human actions in the present on the planet’s future, through Ryan Gander’s dolos-shaped sculpture, that awaits a covering of snow to achieve its complete form, 'The Modernist Alien’ positioned high on the cliffs of the ancient North Yorkshire coast, Ryan Gander’s ‘We Are Only Human (Incomplete Sculpture for Scarborough to be Finished by Snow)’ (2022) is a poignant subject drawing attention to the urgency of the climate crisis through this public art.
Hans Ulrich Obrist, the Artistic Director of the Serpentine Galleries in London, speaks with Joe Hage, about his endeavour to revive the art of handwriting from within an ever-advancing digital age. The result is one of the most comprehensive looks at the art world from the inside, inclusive of artists, writers, designers, musicians, actors, architects and public figures.
In his open-ended project, Obrist collects an abundance of thoughts for the day dreams, drawings, musings, jokes, quotations, questions, answers, poems and puns from some of the world’s greatest contemporary artists, handwritten on everyday Post-it notes. From the reassuringly philosophical to the inspiringly straightforward, the ingeniously funny to the tenderly posthumous.
The book includes contributions from Virgil Abloh, Marina Abramovic, Jane Fonda, Damien Hirst, David Hockney, George Lucas, Paul McCartney, Steve McQueen, Frank Ocean, Yoko Ono, Pharrell and more! ----------------------------------------------------- Follow HENI on: Web — heni.com/talks Instagram — instagram.com/heni TikTok — tiktok.com/@heni X — twitter.com/heni ----------------------------------------------------- Produced by HENI Talks
#author #handwriting #bookreview #booktubeVenice: City of Pictures by Martin Gayford | Authors in ConversationHENI Talks2024-01-10 | Renowned art critic and writer Martin Gayford talks about the history of Venice through its most important creation: pictures. The talk takes us on a visual journey through the history of the city known as ‘La Serenissima’, the ‘Most Serene’. Contrary to the perception of a decaying city, Venice has consistently reinvented itself as a prominent art hub for over 500 years.
#venice #painting #arthistory #interviewNFT:WTF? | The Rise and Fall of NFTsHENI Talks2023-12-21 | NFT:WTF? is a feature-length documentary that examines the disruptive force of Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs) in the contemporary art scene. The ground-breaking documentary marks one of the first comprehensive explorations of the history of NFTs and provides unparalleled insight into the turbulent NFT market through the eyes of some of its key players.
With unprecedented access to leading artists in the NFT zeitgeist, including Damien Hirst and Beeple, as well as interviews with founders of Art Blocks and The Bored Ape Yacht Club, celebrity collectors, and early adopters like Snoop Dogg. The film explores profound questions about the nature of art, ownership, and community in the digital age.
#HENItalks #NFT #digitalart #documentary #crypto #bitcoin #ethereumCoventry Cathedral: A Journey Through ArtHENI Talks2023-11-14 | Coventry Cathedral, one of the great masterpieces of twentieth century art and architecture continues to inspire with its array of riveting artworks: from sculptures by Jacob Epstein, Elisabeth Frink, and Jeffrey Clark, to Graham Sutherland’s tapestry of Christ in Glory, John Piper’s powerful Baptistry Window and more.
Art historian and BAFTA nominated broadcaster DrJames Fox explores and uncovers the modernist masterpieces.
00:00 Introduction 02:56 St Michael's Victory over the Devil (1958) by Jacob Epstein 04:14 West Screen by John Hutton 05:17 Tablets of the Word by Ralph Beyer 05:52 Nave Stained Glass Windows by Lawrence Lee, Keith New and Geoffrey Clarke 06:24 Lectern Eagle by Elisabeth Frink 07:26 High Altar Cross by Geoffrey Clarke 08:01 Christ in Glory in the Tetramorph (1962) by Graham Sutherland 10:06 Angel of Agony by Steven Sykes 10:39 Crown of Thorns by Geoffrey Clarke 10:58 Chapel of Unity Floor Mosaics by Einar Forseth 11:23 Baptistery Window by John Piper
--------------------------------------------------------- Produced by HENI Talks
With many thanks to the Dean and Chapter of The Cathedral Church of St Michael Coventry.
#HENItalks #arthistory #coventry #artwork #paintingA Great Light: Brian Clarke in Conversation with Damien HirstHENI Talks2023-10-07 | “When it dawns on you that you are being truthful to who you are…you realise that the entire world is a reservoir from which you can dip.” Brian Clarke Two of Britain’s most prominent contemporary artists, Brian Clarke and Damien Hirst, visit Clarke’s 2023 exhibition A Great Light. Taking place among the monumental works in stained glass and lead displayed in Newport Street Gallery, the pair discuss Clarke’s technological innovations, his approach to the medium and his inspirations in a lively and personal interview that leads to an insightful conversation, artist to artist, about the nature of image-making and the place of art in the contemporary time.
#HeniTalks #arthistory #collage #painting #abstractart #art #contemporaryart #damienhirstHow do you make an everyday object surreal? #arthistoryHENI Talks2023-08-10 | Watch the full interview @HENITalks
#design #art
Music
MIDI Sans Frontières Graham Bole, 2017 CC BY-ND 4.0Surrealism and Objects: Expanding the Idea of RealityHENI Talks2023-08-10 | “What are these things, if they no longer have the function that we associate with them?”
From crustaceans on top of telephone receivers, to vision obscuring silk hats, the Surrealists adapted everyday, utilitarian objects as a way to expand the idea of reality.
In this film, art historian Professor Dawn Adès CBE explains the meaning and significance of the Surrealist object by way of 5 extraordinary examples; from key artists associated with the movement: Salvador Dalí, Marcel Duchamp, Artur Cruzeiro Seixas, Eileen Agar, and Joseph Cornell.
SUBSCRIBE for our latest videos – http://bit.ly/YouTube_HENITalks --------------------------------------------------------- Music
MIDI Sans Frontières Graham Bole, 2017 CC BY-ND 4.0
Mystery The Lovely Moon, 2013 CC BY-NC-SA 3.0
Treppe 3 Rod Hamilton, 2014 CC BY-ND 4.0
American Coot Chad Crouch, 2018 CC BY-ND 4.0 --------------------------------------------------------- Produced by HENI Talks
#HeniTalks #arthistory #surrealism #daliCollages: A Discussion Between Brian Clarke and Hans Ulrich ObristHENI Talks2023-07-11 | In this HENI Talk, world-renowned curator Hans Ulrich Obrist talks with British artist Brian Clarke. The film explores Clarke’s relationship with collage through the entire trajectory of his career, and how he often uses the medium as a study for his stained-glass work. He first began working in collage aged 14 at the Burnley School of Art, 1967 and cites his early collage influences by Pop Art and artists such as Richard Hamilton and Andy Warhol. The discussion also examines Clarke’s latest series of work inspired by nature, which began with line drawings of nasturtiums in white pencil on black paper.
#HeniTalks #arthistory #collage #painting #abstractart #art #colours #popart #andywarholThe inspiration Behind the New Serpentine Pavillion? #architectureHENI Talks2023-06-19 | Watch the full interview @HENITalks
#serpentine #natureLina Ghotmeh Reveals Her Inspiration Behind The 2023 Serpentine PavilionHENI Talks2023-06-15 | SUBSCRIBE for art insights — http://tinyurl.com/HENITalks
Architect Lina Ghotmeh discusses, shares and reveals the inspiration, the structure, and design of the Pavilion, titled À table – a French call to sit down together at a table to engage and participate in dialogue while sharing a meal. As such, the interior of the Pavilion features a concentric table along the perimeter, inviting us to convene, sit down, think, share and celebrate exchanges that enable new relationships to form.
#architecture #Serpentine #LondonJean-Michel Basquiat: Post-Punk ProdigyHENI Talks2023-06-06 | Jean-Michel Basquiat was an artist in the most plural sense. Commonly misunderstood as just a 'graffiti artist', or a painter, Basquiat was also a musician, DJ, actor and performance artist.
On the occasion of the Barbican's major Basquiat exhibition, which ran between September 2017 and January 2018, curator Eleanor Nairne exposes how Basquiat's multidisciplinary nature springs from his profound engagement with a broad range of source material, from trashy TV, to philosophy, to media representations of black experience.
Nairne unpicks some of the fertile references which feature in canvases by the pioneering prodigy of the 1980s downtown New York art scene. She discusses how Basquiat could have brought these disparate sources together to critique and shed new light on the world around him.
Could the webs of references which feature in Basquiat's works parallel our contemporary experience of the digital age?
#jeanmichelbasquiat #arthistory #punk #graffiti #basquiat1 Minute 1 Work | Palingenesis (1971) by Lee Krasner #abstractartHENI Talks2023-05-25 | After years of experimenting with biomorphic forms and more gestural abstract expressionism, something different emerged for Lee Krasner. Hard-edged forms and hot colours typify her canvas Palingenesis (1971), the title aptly coming from the Greek for 'rebirth'. But what stimulated the change in style for Krasner? Curator Eleanor Nairne tells us more about this spectacular canvas.
#arthistory #femaleartist #painting1 Minute 1 Work | The Sake-drinking Boy by Hishikawa Moronobu #arthistoryHENI Talks2023-05-19 | In the 17th century, an unseen demand for prints and illustrated books, especially of entertaining character, emerged in Japan. Series like ‘The Sake-drinking Boy’ or ‘Shutendôji’ (ca. 1680) by Hishikawa Moronobu were traded widely and found fervent admirers in the print-hungry audience of the upcoming merchant classes. Today, we still marvel at the accomplished usage of line which artist like Moronobu developed during the early stages of the print movement (Ukiyo-e).
Shantell Martin, best known for her characteristic black-and-white drawings, tells us the legend behind ‘The Sake-drinking Boy’ and how the storytelling qualities of Moronobu’s line inspired her own work.
#japan #drawing #folklore1 Minute 1 Work | Annunciation after Titian (1973) by Gerhard Richter #arthistoryHENI Talks2023-05-04 | In 1972, Gerhard Richter represented West Germany at the Venice Biennale, showcasing one of his most esteemed series of paintings: ’48 Portraits’.
Whilst in Venice, Richter visited the Scuola Grande di San Rocco where he saw Titian’s scintillating ‘Annunciation’, c. 1539. So entranced by the work, he bought a postcard for keepsake. The following year, Richter began to copy the work, not once, not twice, but five times. With each incarnation, Richter’s soft brushstrokes got hazier, the forms of Titian’s canvas descending into a fuzzy near-monochrome of Venetian red.
Learn more about Richter’s ardent commitment to Titian’s canvas — and the impossibility of such a painting for our times — with writer Robert Storr.
#artist #titian #richter1 Minute 1 Work | Beautiful People (1988) by David Wojnarowicz #lgbtqHENI Talks2023-04-27 | David Wojnarowicz believed that drag queens are ‘true revolutionaries’ who colourfully disrupt the ‘visual codes of gender.’ A provocative figure in the New York City art world of the 1980s, Wojnarowicz was a painter, photographer, writer, filmmaker, performance artist and activist.
Curator Vincent Honoré narrates the unfolding of Wojnarowicz’ final film Beautiful People (1988). The film, made in collaboration with Jesse Hultberg, follows Hultberg as he makes himself up, leaves the city and disappears – fully clothed – into a lake, the world erupting into technicolour as he does so. Honoré recognises the beauty and socio-political significance of this work, made ‘at the climax of the aids crisis’.
#arthistory #film #performancePablo Picasso: The Legacy of a Genius #picassoHENI Talks2023-04-20 | Pablo Picasso: The Legacy of a Genius, 1981, directed by Michael Blackwood, produced by Michael Blackwood Productions.1 Minute 1 Artist | Gerhard Richter #artistHENI Talks2023-04-13 | "If you look at the work of Gerhard Richter's, all of them, in a sense, are captioned by a question mark." - Robert Storr on Richter1 Minute 1 Work | Lee Krasner, Abstract No.2 (1947) #arthistoryHENI Talks2023-04-06 | Abstract No. 2, 1947, is a deceptively intricate painting from Lee Krasner’s ‘Little Image’ series. In this HENI Talk, Barbican Curator Eleanor Nairne unpacks the ‘rhythms’ of this small but lively painting.Damien Hirst: Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable | Presented by HENI TalksHENI Talks2023-03-16 | Damien Hirst’s ‘Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable’ reveals the fascinating story of the discovery and excavation of an ancient shipwreck, and the acclaimed exhibition that followed across the Punta della Dogana and Palazzo Grassi in Venice from 9 April – 3 December 2017.
In this video, writer, architect and designer Edwin Heathcote introduces the theories and aesthetics of the Postmodern through a behind-the-scenes look at Jencks’ Cosmic House of 1978. Driven by the idea that great buildings of the past represented coherent worldviews, the structure of Jencks’ house is based on the solar system and replete with references to history, exploring our relationship to the cosmos.
#postmodernism #housetour #arthistory #london #architectureThe Great East Window: Brian Clarke | HENI Talks PerspectivesHENI Talks2023-02-08 | For painter and architectural artist Brian Clarke, seeing the Great East Window of York Minster as a child was a profoundly formative experience. In this HENI Talk, revisiting York Minster, Clarke weaves his personal experience and narrates a history of the 15th century window, an “immense cliff-face of stained glass” and its enduring power in the contemporary age.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Award-winning documentaries which reveal the stories of art and art history.
Be the first to know when our latest talk is ready. http://bit.ly/YouTube_HENITalks -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#TheGreatEastWindow #StainedGlass #HENITalksIsabel Rawsthorne Rediscovered: The Poetry in Things | HENI TalksHENI Talks2022-08-09 | “We think of Isabel as … this incredibly glamourous figure … but she challenged that fundamental divide between the model and artist … in a way, when she was the subject of Giacometti, of Bacon, she was also an artist." – Carol Jacobi
Defying expectations, Isabel Rawsthorne (1912 – 1992) made a place for herself amongst contemporaries in early 20th century visual art, ending up at the centre of the Paris avant-garde. Her ingenuity as an artists' model won her the freedom to paint, a vocation she would pursue for 75 years. A lifelong natural historian, Rawsthorne’s ephemeral images are informed by her observations of the language of gesture and movement, from her poetic depictions of animals to her embattled self-portraits. Guided by curator Carol Jacobi, discover artist Isabel Rawsthorne, “a missing link of 20th century art”.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Award-winning documentaries which reveal the stories of art and art history.
Be the first to know when our latest talk is ready. http://bit.ly/YouTube_HENITalks -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#ArtHistory #Painting #HENITalksSet in Stone: The Story of The British Museums Pediment | HENI TalksHENI Talks2022-05-06 | Sir Richard Westmacott (1775-1856) was the leading British sculptor of his day. Already involved with questions of display of works in the British Museum’s collection, Westmacott was tasked with the design for sculptures to sit in the pediment on the imposing façade of the institution. Surmounting the main entrance, Westmacott’s sculptures dedicate the museum to culture and civilisation.
British Museum Director, Hartwig Fischer, delves into the story and inspiration behind these fascinating sculptures, ‘The Progress of Civilisation’, and uncovers their layered narratives as a gateway to the museum. Filmed in glorious detail via drone, HENI Talks was privileged enough to film the sculptures up close.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Award-winning documentaries which reveal the stories of art and art history.
Be the first to know when our latest talk is ready. http://bit.ly/YouTube_HENITalks -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#BritishMuseum #Sculpture #HENITalksSurrealism: Imagining A New World | HENI TalksHENI Talks2022-03-16 | Why did Surrealism appeal to artists across the world?
Curator Carine Harmand traces how the Surrealist movement was taken up by artists in Egypt, Mexico, and by African American artists in the US, as a way to challenge authority and imagine a new world.
Traditional stories of Surrealism have focused on Paris in the 1920s, but here Harmand demonstrates how artists across the globe have been inspired and united by Surrealism as part of an international network.
Filmed on the occasion of Surrealism Beyond Borders Tate Modern 24 February – 29 August 2022
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SUBSCRIBE - Be the first to know when our latest talk is ready. http://bit.ly/YouTube_HENITalks
Award-winning documentaries which reveal the stories of art and art history.
#Surrealism #SurrealismBeyondBorders #TateHow to Enjoy Art: Ben Street | HENI TalksHENI Talks2022-02-04 | 'Every painting has the potential to have a different meaning depending upon who's looking at it. And that is the joy of looking at art.' — Ben Street
Art historian Ben Street takes us on a tour of The National Gallery, London, looking at masterworks in the collection by Carlo Crivelli, Hans Memling and Édouard Manet.
Rather than using specialist insight to read and decipher the works, Street focuses on a physical encounter with the paintings — arguing that anyone can find value and enjoyment in art without needing to know an abundance of extra historical information.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SUBSCRIBE - Be the first to know when our latest talk is ready. http://bit.ly/YouTube_HENITalks
Award-winning documentaries which reveal the stories of art and art history.
Gerhard Richter is regarded as one of the most important and influential painters working today.
In this HENI Talk, Professor Michael Newman explores Richter’s lesser-known and largely experimental drawing practice. Newman analyses the repertoire of Richter’s mark-making and their connections to his remarkable achievements in painting, looking closely at works in pencil and charcoal, a series of over-painted photographs, and a set of rarely seen painterly works created using coloured inks.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SUBSCRIBE - Be the first to know when our latest talk is ready. http://bit.ly/YouTube_HENITalks
Award-winning documentaries which reveal the stories of art and art history.
#GerhardRichter #Drawing #HENITalksThe Romance of Bricks: Liz Finch | Presented by HENI Talks | Nichola BruceHENI Talks2021-09-23 | A 65-minute portrait of the artist Liz Finch. From her life changing accident and rural solitude, to the mad social whirl of 80s London anarchic performances and the present day – this film by filmmaker Nichola Bruce offers an intriguing glimpse into the artist’s private world.
The film features interviews with some of Finch’s closest friends and family — and stars from the world of art and performance — who share their stories about the artist’s life and work. Contributors include musicians Jools Holland and Richard Strange, artist Brian Clarke, and art historian Martin Harrison.
The Romance of Bricks is a unique record of a remarkable life and Finch’s extensive body of work, from early drawings and surreal paintings to figurative arrangements and riotous performances.
Nichola Bruce is a director, writer and producer who works with moving image, as part of a lifelong archive, which informs her larger works. These include experimental, award-winning dramas and documentaries. Bruce was co-director of The Human Face (1990) featuring Laurie Anderson for BBC Arena as well as director of The Monument (1997) with Rachel Whiteread for BBC Arts and I Could Read the Sky (1999) with poet Dermot Healy.
#Art #Documentary #HENITalksRichard Long, Tame Buzzard Line | HENI Talks | ArticulationHENI Talks2021-08-23 | Cassius Ashcroft and Femi Themen — alumni of the Articulation Prize — explore Richard Long’s site-specific sculpture ‘Tame Buzzard Line’, reflecting on the work’s relationship to the landscape and exploring themes of time, environmentalism and Buddhist philosophy.
This is the third film released in a collaborative series with Articulation celebrating ‘Young Voices’ engaging with art. Articulation is an initiative that provides a platform for students to develop their confidence and ability by expressing their opinions, thoughts and ideas through the arts and public speaking. The initiative seeks to champion young people regardless of background and experience. Articulation began in 2006 at the Roche Court Educational Trust and merged with the National Gallery in 2022. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SUBSCRIBE - Be the first to know when our latest talk is ready. http://bit.ly/YouTube_HENITalks
Award-winning documentaries which reveal the stories of art and art history.
#Art #RichardLong #HENITalksBarbara Hepworth, Family of Man | HENI Talks | ArticulationHENI Talks2021-08-04 | Qabir Alli and Marianne Whiting — alumni of the Articulation Prize — discuss Barbara Hepworth’s ‘Family of Man’, exploring the relationships between the sculptural group, landscape and the viewer, as well as Hepworth’s attention to materials.
This is the second film in a collaborative series with Articulation, celebrating ‘Young Voices’ engaging with art. Articulation is an initiative that provides a platform for students to develop their confidence and ability by expressing their opinions, thoughts and ideas through the arts and public speaking. The initiative seeks to champion young people regardless of background and experience. Articulation began in 2006 at the Roche Court Educational Trust and merged with the National Gallery in 2022.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SUBSCRIBE - Be the first to know when our latest talk is ready. http://bit.ly/YouTube_HENITalks
Award-winning documentaries which reveal the stories of art and art history.
#Art #BarbaraHepworth #HENITalksPeter Randall-Page, Fructus | HENI Talks | ArticulationHENI Talks2021-07-21 | Lucy Miller and Oliver Garland — alumni of the Articulation Prize — reflect on Peter Randall-Page’s sculpture ‘Fructus’ (2009), exploring how the work complements, juxtaposes and transforms the natural landscape in which it is placed.
This film is the first in a collaborative series with Articulation celebrating ‘Young Voices’ engaging with art. Articulation is the Roche Court Educational Trust’s national and international public speaking initiative, championing the appreciation and discussion of art. It enables a wide range of students aged between 14 and 23 to develop their confidence and ability to express their opinions, thoughts and reactions to the visual world.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SUBSCRIBE - Be the first to know when our latest talk is ready. http://bit.ly/YouTube_HENITalks
Award-winning documentaries which reveal the stories of art and art history.
#Sculpture #Art #HENITalksMaurizio Cattelan: Comedian | HENI TalksHENI Talks2021-06-24 | Curator Francesco Bonami unpacks one of the most illustrious artworks of the 21st century, Maurizio Cattelan’s ‘Comedian’.
Consisting of a single banana duct-taped to a wall, ‘Comedian’ is a remarkably simple artwork which created an unprecedented sensation when first debuted at Art Basel Miami Beach in 2019.
Although priced at $120,000, Bonami argues that the work’s real value is in the philosophy that it creates around objects, suggesting the work prompts us to think ‘more about what art is and what art is supposed to do in your life. Is art a commodity that people just acquire as anything else? Or is art a container of a message, and it doesn’t matter what the container is, the important thing is what it says, and what is conveyed to the viewer.’
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SUBSCRIBE - Be the first to know when our latest talk is ready. http://bit.ly/YouTube_HENITalks
Award-winning documentaries which reveal the stories of art and art history.
#BananaArt #MaurizioCattelan #HENITalksFrancis Bacon: Revelations | Authors in ConversationHENI Talks2021-06-03 | Pulitzer Prize-winning authors Mark Stevens and Annalyn Swan chart the life and art of the formidable Francis Bacon, a towering figure in 20th century art. Through 25 choice images, the duo sketch a more varied, nuanced, and surprising character than typically known of the celebrated bon vivant. The conversation is expanded by art critic, curator, and artist Robert Storr, bringing together three luminaries of contemporary art writing.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Award-winning documentaries which reveal the stories of art and art history.
#Documentary #FrancisBacon #HENITalksLooking at Persian Painting: Sussan Babaie | HENI TalksHENI Talks2021-03-18 | Professor Sussan Babaie explores the rich effects of a painting from an illustrated manuscript of the Shahnameh — or ‘Book of Kings’ — the national epic of Iran composed by poet Firdawsi around 1010. But what is so important about this painting?
The artwork has been attributed to the Persian painter Sultan Muhammad, a skilled master at the atelier of the Aqqoyunlu Turkmen in Tabriz. It depicts the hero of the Shahnameh, Rostam, resting unbeknownst that danger lurks nearby… Babaie unpacks the painterly ideas at play in depicting this dramatic moment.
#Persian #Art #HENITalksWhat is: Degenerate Art? | HENI TalksHENI Talks2021-02-15 | ‘When art is condemned, fascism prevails.’ — Dr Brad Evans
Political Philosopher Dr Brad Evans explores the concept of ‘Degenerate Art’, a term adopted by the Nazi Party in 1920s Germany to describe art that did not conform to their ideal vision of the world, culminating in the now infamous Degenerate Art exhibition held in Munich in 1937.
#DegenerateArt #WW2 #HENITalksConversation between Brian Clarke, Norman Foster and Robert Storr | HENI TalksHENI Talks2021-01-01 | A conversation between the foremost practitioner of stained glass, architectural artist Brian Clarke and esteemed architect Sir Norman Foster.
Clarke and Foster are longtime friends and fruitful collaborators, working together on notable architectural art commissions for locations around the world, including London's Stansted Airport, the Al-Faisaliyah Complex in Riyadh, a landmark work in the development of modern stained glass, and the Palace of Peace and Reconciliation in Kazakhstan.
In Foster's words, Clarke “uses buildings as a canvas" and his spectacular stained-glass artworks "impart a wonderful sense of poetry to a space."
The conversation was chaired by art critic, curator, and artist Robert Storr, and was recorded on Nov 13, 2020, to celebrate Clarke’s exhibition at the Museum of Arts and Design, New York.
#BrianClarke #NormanFoster #HENITalksBridget Riley: The Art of Perception | HENI TalksHENI Talks2020-12-22 | Discover the origins and evolution of Bridget Riley’s spectacular practice with Dr Cliff Lauson, Senior Curator at the Hayward Gallery, London.
Lauson charts Riley’s oeuvre from her accomplished early sketches rendering the figure, to the painterly lessons she learned from the works of pointillist Georges Seurat, to her seismic break with representation into dazzling abstraction. Lauson also gives insight into the artist’s working methods, exploring how Riley hones the patterns of her compositions to give precise optical effect, for ultimately ‘perception itself is the medium that she’s working through’.
#Art #BridgetRiley #HENITalksGerhard Richter: Doubt | HENI TalksHENI Talks2020-07-01 | ‘He disturbed my sense of what art should be.’ — Robert Storr on Gerhard Richter
Can we really trust in what we see? Gerhard Richter’s oeuvre makes us cast doubt on the given ‘truth’ before our eyes. The artist has spent much of his sixty-year career confronting the nature of images, questioning their means of representation and their degradation. The result is paintings that do not simply depict the often-charged subject matter at hand — like a painting of the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center in 2011, or of the crematoria at Birkenau — but paintings that depict the mediated circumstances of the representation of that history.
As such, one may feel a sense of unease looking at a work by Richter, but as Robert Storr professes: ‘Doubt is not a negative thing. It's something that pulls the rug out from under certainty. But if certainty is what has brought us any number of ideological and political nightmares, maybe less certainty is a good thing.’