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Colnaghi Foundation
United Kingdom
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 26 เม.ย. 2020
Colnaghi Foundation is a UK-based charity promoting pre-20th century art and antiquities to a 21st century audience.
Through our various online platforms, podcasts, short films, publications and live events, we tell stories about art and artists, new discoveries, exhibitions, and conservation projects around the world.
Subscribe to our channel for Stories about Art, Stories about Discoveries, and Stories for Today.
Through our various online platforms, podcasts, short films, publications and live events, we tell stories about art and artists, new discoveries, exhibitions, and conservation projects around the world.
Subscribe to our channel for Stories about Art, Stories about Discoveries, and Stories for Today.
What are Museums for trailer
What are museums for? Whose stories do they tell? How do they decide which aspects of the past to preserve and represent? Join Luke Syson, Director of the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, and Nicola Jennings, Director of the Athena Art Foundation, over the next few months for six conversations with curators, museum directors, activists and writers about the role of the museum in the 21st century.
มุมมอง: 511
วีดีโอ
Podcast Griff Mann & Andrea Achi
มุมมอง 2793 ปีที่แล้ว
Griffith Mann and Andrea Achi of the Metropolitan Museum in New York discuss the Crossroads installations in three areas of the museum which explore connections between different cultures and time periods. They focus on Power and Piety, a display of objects from the medieval period in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Islamic World, and Europe which they co-curated in the central Sculpture Hall .
Podcast with Donatella Fratini on Zuccari & Dante's Divine Comedy
มุมมอง 3333 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr Donatella Fratini, curator of the Uffizi Museum's current online exhibition of illustrations of the Divine Comedy by Federico Zuccari, talks to Nicola Jennings about about Dante's great poem and the stories represented in some of the drawings.
Velázquez, El Greco and Modern Painting, Part 2
มุมมอง 4573 ปีที่แล้ว
Part 2 of the 2019 ARTES Nigel Glendinning Lecture by Dr Javier Barón, Senior Curator of 19th Century Painting at the Museo del Prado in Madrid, recorded at the Instituto Cervantes in London. In his vivid account of the impact Velázquez and El Greco had on modern art, we see how 19th and 20th century artists from Goya and Manet to Picasso, Pollock and Bacon looked to the extraordinary works of ...
Velázquez, El Greco and Modern Painting, Part 1
มุมมอง 7493 ปีที่แล้ว
Part 1 of the 2019 ARTES Nigel Glendinning Lecture by Dr Javier Barón, Senior Curator of 19th Century Painting at the Museo del Prado in Madrid, recorded at the Instituto Cervantes in London. In his vivid account of the impact Velázquez and El Greco had on modern art, we see how 19th and 20th century artists from Goya and Manet to Picasso, Pollock and Bacon looked to the extraordinary works of ...
Highlights from Part 1 of a lecture on Velázquez, El Greco and Modern Painting by Dr Javier Barón
มุมมอง 2743 ปีที่แล้ว
Highlights from a recent lecture by Dr Javier Barón, Senior Curator of 19th Century Painting at the Museo del Prado in Madrid, providing a vivid account of the impact Velázquez and El Greco had on 19th and early 20th century modernizers such as Goya, Manet and Picasso.
Livestream with Alayo Akinkugbe
มุมมอง 1143 ปีที่แล้ว
Isabelle Kent talks to Alayo Akinkugbe whose Instagram account @ablackhistoryofart highlights often overlooked Black artists, sitters, curators and art historians,
Podcast with Earnestine Jenkins
มุมมอง 2093 ปีที่แล้ว
Professor Earnestine Jenkins discusses the portrait of 19th century African American actor Ira Aldridge as Othello, in which the painter James Northcote captures the outsider status of both the actor and Shakespeare's character.
Podcast with Wendelien van Welie
มุมมอง 3103 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr Wendelien van Welie talks about Body Language, a surprising exhibition in Utrecht about images of the body in the medieval period when Christ's wounds, the hair and decapitated heads of saints, and the Virgin Mary's breasts became the subjects of extraordinary devotional cults.
Livestream with Simon Schama
มุมมอง 2.1K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Historian Simon Schama talks to Isabelle Kent about his new TV series (available on BBC I-Player) exploring the enduring and powerful legacy the Romantics have had on the modern world.
Podcast with Adrienne Childs
มุมมอง 2323 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr Adrienne Childs, guest curator of the exhibition 'Riffs and Relations: African American Artists and the European Modernist Tradition' at the Phillips Collection in Washington D.C., talks about responses to paintings by Manet, Monet, Cezanne, Picasso and Matisse by African American artists from the mid 19th century to the present day.
Podcast with Volker Hermes
มุมมอง 7253 ปีที่แล้ว
Volker Hermes talks about his photo-collages based on historic portraits, removing facial features to make us look at these works in new ways, and newfound fame at a time when we all have to wear masks of our own.
Podcast with Olivia Kemp and James Freeman
มุมมอง 8604 ปีที่แล้ว
Artist Olivia Kemp and gallerist James Freeman talk to Nicola Jennings about Olivia's recent show in London, her drawing technique and the inspiration she derived from a residency at the Prado in Madrid.
Podcast with Babette Bohn
มุมมอง 4654 ปีที่แล้ว
Prof Babette Bohn talks about the significant community of women artists in 17th century Bologna, focusing in particular on Lavinia Fontana and Elisabetta Sirani.
Babajide Olatunji livestream with Isabelle Kent
มุมมอง 1854 ปีที่แล้ว
Isabelle Kent talks to Nigerian painter Babajide Olatunji about his 'History of the Yorubas' volume I, inspired by 'Apollo in the Forge of Vulcan' by Diego Velázquez, and other works which reflect his interest in pre-20th century Western European painting techniques and iconography.
Christy Lee Rogers livestream with Isabelle Kent
มุมมอง 1014 ปีที่แล้ว
Christy Lee Rogers livestream with Isabelle Kent
Kent Monkman livestream with Isabelle Kent
มุมมอง 1764 ปีที่แล้ว
Kent Monkman livestream with Isabelle Kent
Podcast with Toto Bergamo Rossi, Venetian Heritage
มุมมอง 5414 ปีที่แล้ว
Podcast with Toto Bergamo Rossi, Venetian Heritage
James Putnam on "Inspiration: Iconic Works" and the enduring appeal of Old Masters for artists today
มุมมอง 1844 ปีที่แล้ว
James Putnam on "Inspiration: Iconic Works" and the enduring appeal of Old Masters for artists today
Roxana Halls discusses her work and the art of Judith Leyster, Rembrandt, Goya, Dürer and Bellini
มุมมอง 6994 ปีที่แล้ว
Roxana Halls discusses her work and the art of Judith Leyster, Rembrandt, Goya, Dürer and Bellini
Stephanie Archangel and Nicola Jennings discuss the exhibition "Black in Rembrandt's Time"
มุมมอง 1.6K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Stephanie Archangel and Nicola Jennings discuss the exhibition "Black in Rembrandt's Time"
Ronald E. Bornstein and Nicola Jennings on French Impressions: From Manet to Cézanne
มุมมอง 6094 ปีที่แล้ว
Ronald E. Bornstein and Nicola Jennings on French Impressions: From Manet to Cézanne
Mindfulness and Art | Thomas Cole 'The Oxbow'
มุมมอง 3034 ปีที่แล้ว
Mindfulness and Art | Thomas Cole 'The Oxbow'
The Beauty Room at Petworth: Jeremy Howard and James Rothwell in Conversation.
มุมมอง 9364 ปีที่แล้ว
The Beauty Room at Petworth: Jeremy Howard and James Rothwell in Conversation.
Impasto and paint mixing in the manner of the Old Masters
มุมมอง 1.1K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Impasto and paint mixing in the manner of the Old Masters
Artist Tom Richards explores the materials of the Old Masters
มุมมอง 5334 ปีที่แล้ว
Artist Tom Richards explores the materials of the Old Masters
Am I the only one who hates the doodling music underneath? I find it distracting
Dame Savill is a treasure too.
Jeuyuuytffilrteffgrteytffrhtfygeyfrjrutfititkzyddyddygrjfytruytuutfdrggrtfhrryzufsiivfvhfiy
This is awsome. ❤
The two Africans are Dutch men
Chris Columbus was a black jew
The black folks where allways there.. lol Charles The V was black ..the Spanish were black ... Portuguese ect ..
Sounds interesting but can't sit through it without seeing the drawings
Oh my, breathtaking, love the whole video!!!
Extremely well presented and beautiful porcelain collection.
Toby Capwell is a national treasure.
Calling the wood stained is a poor description. Dyed is far more appropriate. The truth I know is we have all the colors we need in natural wood. These guys doing this work back then were not ordinary humans. Spiritual beings? Aliens? Definitely not humans like you and me.
1:55 '...Girls working under Mme. GROVEL...' Indeed, we have heard all we need.
Very enlightening - I will have to return again to the Wallace collection as there's always something new to be seen
What educational tour is this?! Oh man I want to be there… It’s this kind of informational stuff I want & crave! My knowledge on antiques and the arts is so foreign based since everything American must be behind a paywall or something, or just doesn’t exist. Thank you for sharing this for us to see, so we can continue to learn and be simply fascinated to appreciate these rare beauties.
I was stood next to a Sebastiano yesterday. This masterclass was just fascinating, thank you so much
More please !
Very beautiful!!
These things were meant to be worn ONCE? That’s nuts.
Excellent - but too short! I think good bits got edited out. Please post a full hour version.
A superb talk, thank you!
very wonderful
Fabulous video. Totally fascinating. Thank you
Love Remy Renzullo there ❤
Need more of this, absolutely brilliant ❤
Next time show the drawings. Thank you.
Gran conocedora sobre el tema de Sevres Porcelain. El libro qe escribió es fabuloso.
Looks fake
THE BACKGROUND PIANO MUSIC IS MOST ANNOYING.
WHY DOES NO ONE COPY THE ANCIENT GREEK DALYX CHAIR. THE MOST ELEGANT FURNITURE EVER MADE? IT´S ALL ABOUT LINES LIKE THE HUMAN BODY. ELEGANCE DOESN´T REQUIRE MYRIAD DECORATION IN ALL CASES.
Fantastic lectures ruined by not being able to see what they are talking about. Please show full images of the paintings being spoken about rather than a rare cropped mid section that moves ever so slightly it’s distracting.
You are not rich unless you have a suit of armour in your house.
Son jollas maravillosas para admirar al detalle y el extraordinario lujo
De veras!
This is amazing thank you.
Мы с Вами однофамильцы...
All the turtles are extinct because they were turned into furniture. It's barbaric and shameful. I can't keep watching
Perhaps if you consider that those making the furniture had no knowledge of what was happening to the turtles?
@@christianfrommuslim They knew, they just.didnt care.
Beest Beest Beest 💙💙💙💙💙💙💙
Thank you
Brilliant, since I stumbled across Toby’s output, I can’t stop watching. I’ve loved the Wallace Collection since a school trip in the 1950s and visit periodically, knowing little detail but bathing in the magnificence of the armour and arms exhibits. To have experienced (albeit second hand via TH-cam) Toby explain, share his knowledge and passion has re-lit that little schoolboy’s wonder and awe. So much so that I’ve pre-ordered his latest book on English armour. At a very young age I collected a few beautifully detailed and decorated model knights, probably 1/30th scale, die cast metal. I recall they were ridiculously expensive and weeks of pocket money’s worth for each model, the mounted knights being the most costly. When I went my first school (I must have been coming up to 5 years old) we called that ‘infant school’ in London, no nursery schools or pre-school for the working class in the immediate post-war England, I soon brought three of the small Collection to school to show them off. It was my first experience of heart break to discover at the close of play that somebody had stolen them, I was distraught. They were recovered days later after a bit of a hue and cry and the miscreant chastised by teacher but this varmint had snapped off arms, lost helmets and generally ruined these exquisite apples of my eyes, I never replaced them or asked for birthday presents of these wonderful pieces again and concentrated on Dinky Toys until “I grew out of toys”. Later, I did have an Airfix (or was it Revel?) plastic kit of the ‘Black Knight of Nuremberg’, which I painstakingly glued and assembled and my fascination with the subject has remained to this day but I do miss those wonderful little models which in the schoolboy world of post-war Britain touched me more than the recent military conflict material which obsessed schoolboys and filled our TV screens and cinemas, though being partial to models, naturally I had a large fleet of army vehicles (still got them all in the collection). Phew, apologies for,that long winded dribble, all I actually intended to say was “Thanks Toby, you’ve fanned that dim flame of a 5 year old’s interest in this amazing world”.
Just wonderful ☺️
Is there a print version or an online version of Sir Samuel Meyrick's three volume text on armor?
Vundevah
So much more regarding the "Copying of Antique Sculptures": th-cam.com/video/EsViHU8e8Gw/w-d-xo.html
more showing of the Raphael's drawings and less of the presenter and the audience would have been good
Fascinating
Georges IV est l'un de mes Rois Britanniques préféré.
Absolutely wonderful, made me buy the book🙏🏻
If it's true 3 pieces of English porcelain predate Boettger's by about 100 years - apparently, the piece in Buck House mysteriously disappeared - I'd hazard a guess Ehrenfried Walter von Tschirnhaus purchased the process on one of his visits. Like Leibniz, whom he knew at the Royal Society, this gentleman was also a sneaky type & as early as 1704 he showed "porcelan" to Leibniz's secretary & so one naturally asks: where did it come from?
Source please?
Just bought her magnificent volumes on Madame de Pompadour > wonderful.
Dr. Catherine Whistler is a magnificent lecturer and communicator. A wonderful insight into the mind of a genius who effortlessly portrayed the complex compass of the "motions of the mind".