Thanks so much to you, Leonardo de Frenza and Sarah Gaspari for taking the time for the translation and upload of this historical footage of Chirico, this is amazing in so many levels. Im sure this is will inspire a lot of people to pick up the brushes and paint throught the eyes of the dreams. It is really an privilege to see a master of this magnitude work on a painting from zero. I find it hilarious the interaction between the interviewer and his constant questions (sometimes border on the annoying, certantly) and the deadpan humour of the Chirico. But it all works well in the end, thankfully.
In realtà l'intervistatore è stato molto molto bravo, perchè intervista un genio mentre crea l'opera e non credo esista contesto più complicato e rapporto intervistatore/intervistato più sbilanciato. Ma con domande banali riesce a far risaltare il sarcasmo pungente di De Chirico e a farlo conversare, ma appena ne ha l'occasione approfondisce con domande molto più puntuali e profonde. Un grande giornalista.
His pictures has a very specific athmosphere. Really like them. And the 'dialogue' is so nicly different. It's like the interviewer is a child. So different from a lot of uninteresting empty talk. Thankyou for the uplod. It is really appreciated!
He was one of the very few serious masters. Thank you so much for letting us enjoy him! Apart from that I think it is remarkable that the two most important greek masters of modern art made it in Italy, the other one is Jannis Kounellis.
Thank you so much for uploading this interview, it was very insightful. I liked how De Chirico explained that there wasn’t any special meaning behind this painting, that he just painted something he wanted to draw. It’s so rare to see this kind of behind the scenes stuff, De Chirico’s atelier, all the process behind the final painting and catch a glimpse of the artist’s technique and personality.
The way I see it de Chirico had unusual thoughts and rather than try to explain them, because they are quirky or surreal, he says there is no special meaning. He put great value in his thoughts and then he can paint them confidently and make it look natural.
@@DavidPeacockChannel Yes, that might also be the case, I like your interpretation. My comment was based on my limited understanding of surrealism. Since it was a movement that put emphasis on the unconscious and automatism, I thought that Giorgio De Chirico used the same process to make his paintings.
@@ZowiChan de Chirico would call it Metaphysical thinking. The Surrealists admired Chirico's paintings and he attempted to join their group but after a few years he moved beyond the piazza paintings and the Surrealists disliked his new work and he exited the group.
He was probably nervous and intimidated, but I thought that the interviewer did a bad job. I wanted to know how Schopenhauer and Nietzsche influenced his work, what specifically in their philosophies roused his artistic spirit, a deeper conversation on their views on any aspect of life.
Lamentablemente el entrevistador No supo sacar partido de lo que De Chirico le dijo sobre sus gustos filosóficos y estéticos, sino que insistió en lo de los recuerdos infantiles, etc. Afortunadamente el documento existe y podemos ver a un maestro hablar de su forma de vivir, de trabajar, de entender su ciudad, el lugar en su familia, entre otros puntos preciosos.
artists really were anti bullshit back then. You could not get thru them. He sensed very well that the interviewer was "idolizing" him with those evocative questions and he found it irritating, and rightly so, only low level actors agree with the fake complimenting questions " why are you so amazing?!" De chirico sensed it wasn't a true interview but more a "show" .
yes exactly, and is absurd when they continue to ask question that obviously they dont wont to answer, no respect at all, the modern italy is all bulshit and no content, and you are a loser if you dont do main stream stuff as the other people, mostly like soccer n pussy, haha is absurd
He's roasting the interviewer the whole time haha. Great artist with a sense of humor
They were friends, it’s a semi-ironic interview, they play with eachother
Thanks so much to you, Leonardo de Frenza and Sarah Gaspari for taking the time for the translation and upload of this historical footage of Chirico, this is amazing in so many levels. Im sure this is will inspire a lot of people to pick up the brushes and paint throught the eyes of the dreams. It is really an privilege to see a master of this magnitude work on a painting from zero.
I find it hilarious the interaction between the interviewer and his constant questions (sometimes border on the annoying, certantly) and the deadpan humour of the Chirico. But it all works well in the end, thankfully.
This was hilarious. The way the artist plays with the interviewer.
In realtà l'intervistatore è stato molto molto bravo, perchè intervista un genio mentre crea l'opera e non credo esista contesto più complicato e rapporto intervistatore/intervistato più sbilanciato. Ma con domande banali riesce a far risaltare il sarcasmo pungente di De Chirico e a farlo conversare, ma appena ne ha l'occasione approfondisce con domande molto più puntuali e profonde. Un grande giornalista.
That’s a very good critique. I agree.
one of the funniest interviews I've seen.
I can sense the interviewer going 😑 at de Chirico's laconic, sardonic answers. It's hilarious :D
His pictures has a very specific athmosphere. Really like them.
And the 'dialogue' is so nicly different. It's like the interviewer is a child. So different from a lot of uninteresting empty talk.
Thankyou for the uplod. It is really appreciated!
He was one of the very few serious masters. Thank you so much for letting us enjoy him! Apart from that I think it is remarkable that the two most important greek masters of modern art made it in Italy, the other one is Jannis Kounellis.
Thanks for watching and for sharing info about Kounellis.
Many thanks for this wonderful and rare opportunity of seeing one of the most important artists of the 20th century at work.
learnt plenty just in this short time,a sincere painter.
He's candid about what he is doing. As opposed to Picasso who was secretive and never explained what he was doing with Cubism.
@@DavidPeacockChannel 👌🏼👌🏼👌🏼
Il pittore più profondamente filosofico che sia mai esistito. Il maestro più grande del 900! 🌀🌀🌀
thank you for this video, one of the best on the whole internet
Glad you liked it
It really is. With scandalously few views, of course.
A true master! This interview cracked me up!
I love everything about this. What a bad ass.
It is indeed history at its most insightful. Thank you.
Great work, much appreciated.
Thank you so much for uploading this!!!!! AMAZING!!!
bellissimo. Vorrei avere avuto un maestro così
Artista ineguagliabile, unico nel suo genere, a mio avviso il migliore in assoluto!
His work is interesting after repeated views.
Thank you so much for uploading this interview, it was very insightful.
I liked how De Chirico explained that there wasn’t any special meaning behind this painting, that he just painted something he wanted to draw. It’s so rare to see this kind of behind the scenes stuff, De Chirico’s atelier, all the process behind the final painting and catch a glimpse of the artist’s technique and personality.
The way I see it de Chirico had unusual thoughts and rather than try to explain them, because they are quirky or surreal, he says there is no special meaning. He put great value in his thoughts and then he can paint them confidently and make it look natural.
@@DavidPeacockChannel Yes, that might also be the case, I like your interpretation.
My comment was based on my limited understanding of surrealism. Since it was a movement that put emphasis on the unconscious and automatism, I thought that Giorgio De Chirico used the same process to make his paintings.
@@ZowiChan de Chirico would call it Metaphysical thinking. The Surrealists admired Chirico's paintings and he attempted to join their group but after a few years he moved beyond the piazza paintings and the Surrealists disliked his new work and he exited the group.
Thanks a lot for this video! De Chirico is a Genius!
Molto grazie Maestro!
Great share, a day in the life of De Chirico.
Di una simpatia unica!!!!
Loved this, thanks!
Glad you enjoyed it
Inspirational, really enjoyed it.
Sometimes that interviewer was really irritating. But wow, I never knew he did sculptures! They are amazing!
My master artist.
Fantastic exchange! He lets his work do the talking
Yes it does!
This is the guy that influenced the Surrealists. Amazing.
Alweys good to see artist at work videos. :)
Intervista pazzesca, mi sono divertita, ho riso quanto mai nella vita, ho trovato troppo ironico uomo che intervistava De Chirico....!!!!!!
Bravo!!!!
Io ho trovato più ironico De Chirico.
muito bene, gracias!
lovely job, thanks for uploading
Giorgio sei il numero 1
He was probably nervous and intimidated, but I thought that the interviewer did a bad job. I wanted to know how Schopenhauer and Nietzsche influenced his work, what specifically in their philosophies roused his artistic spirit, a deeper conversation on their views on any aspect of life.
I am interested in the details of this influence. All I've read is that de Chirico was influenced by Schopenhauer and Nietzsche's concept of enigma.
I love that he likes Schopenhauer. I can’t get along with Nietzsche at all, it’s just too intellectual for me. Schopenhauer is another case.
Muito bom. Estou adorando as respostas de morandi ao entrevistador.
De Chirico, not Morandi.
@@martinbroz3072 yes. Thanks. When I realized I stopped see it. I'm fan morandi not so much of de chirico.
@@brunosipavicius7867 Haha I see
Wow!
Maestro indeed.
I wish they’d kept the camera mainly on the canvas as he worked.
Lamentablemente el entrevistador No supo sacar partido de lo que De Chirico le dijo sobre sus gustos filosóficos y estéticos, sino que insistió en lo de los recuerdos infantiles, etc. Afortunadamente el documento existe y podemos ver a un maestro hablar de su forma de vivir, de trabajar, de entender su ciudad, el lugar en su familia, entre otros puntos preciosos.
my name is Giorgio de Chirico but everybody calls me Giorgio✍
Nice 😮
He is so ironic with the interviewer. He isn’t enjoying it being filmed in his privacy.
This feels like a grandpa with is nosey grandson bothering him from whatever he's trying to do to relax on a Sunday afternoon lol
L'ultimo grande Pictor Optimus 🖼️🎨🖌️🔝
Yip, think you’re right there.
Wow! This guy doesn't suffer fools gladly, he means business! Haha!
artists really were anti bullshit back then. You could not get thru them. He sensed very well that the interviewer was "idolizing" him with those evocative questions and he found it irritating, and rightly so, only low level actors agree with the fake complimenting questions " why are you so amazing?!" De chirico sensed it wasn't a true interview but more a "show" .
yes exactly, and is absurd when they continue to ask question that obviously they dont wont to answer, no respect at all, the modern italy is all bulshit and no content, and you are a loser if you dont do main stream stuff as the other people, mostly like soccer n pussy, haha is absurd
What an idiotic take. The interviewer was excellent, he pushed for answers. I thought he was very smart in his tactics.
@@David-cm4ok what was his best question? 🤣🤣
@@MyDenis0 🙄
I miei rispetti al giornalista che ha fatto la nota
genius
e comunque ad ogni domanda dell’intervistatore il suo mood era troppo “e non me rompe’ più i coioni però” AHAHA idolo indiscussso❤️❤️❤️
They are contentious and playful at the same time.
This has to be the most akward professional interview ever lol
❤
Does anyone know where that painting is today?
That would be truly interesting!
The Old Masters were always right...W. H. Auden. Same feelings
31:37
35:37
19:55
12:27
22:43
Grande eredità genetica! 💎
Jjj ....ma cuanto rompe questo con le sue domande al master.
..jjjjj
Albergo del sole 2
Old guys know how to play with young guys... But without being too nasty... Without them being aware of it.
Jjj... un poco mas y lo hace enojar con tanta preguntadera al master...jjjj
there are some major trad errors
?
18:30 non hai visto il lavoro nei campi? Ed io dovrei credergli?
Translation of this video is 70% incorrect!
Thanks for letting me know.
@@DavidPeacockChannel maybe less, sorry for the random approach on this, said for help! love to see DeChirico translated in any case! 🔥
The interviewer is really annoying.
I kinda feel sorry for him. De Chirico's in a mood.