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[BBC系列]:艺术的力量Power of Art-1080P高清迅雷网盘下载
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??由西蒙·沙玛(Simon Schama)讲述的艺术纪录片,由英国广播公司(BBC)??于2006年发行-英语叙事Arts Documentary narrated by Simon Schamapublished by BBC in 2006 - English narration
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最伟大的艺术的力量在于将我们震撼到启示之中并使我们摆脱默认的观看方式的力量。遇到这种力量后,我们不再以完全相同的方式看着脸,颜色,天空,身体。我们有了新的视野:视野开阔。美丽的景象或奔波的愉悦是这一过程的一部分,但震惊,痛苦,欲望,怜悯甚至是反感也是如此。那种艺术似乎重新改变了我们的感官。我们以不同的方式来理解世界。无论是通过卡拉瓦乔,梵高还是毕加索的创作,旨在达到如此高境界的艺术品并非没有麻烦和纷争。当然,有许多伟大的艺术作品是由宁静创造的,但是流行的观念是,一些杰作是在强烈的压力下制作的,而艺术家则为观念的完整性及其实现而苦苦挣扎。我们系列中的所有艺术家-以及我们网站上的一些当代艺术家,都本着这种精神来反思他们-感到了这种令人振奋的技巧的一部分。我希望,当您观看节目时,也能感受到热情。[编辑] CaravaggioCaravaggio的绘画方法是非常规的。他避免了制作旧雕塑作品的标准方法,而是采取了更直接的绘画方法,直接在画布上绘画而无需先绘画。他还以街上的人为榜样。激烈的舞台灯光增强了他的戏剧性绘画。卡拉瓦乔的命运在1606年决斗中杀死一名男子时被封印。他逃到那不勒斯,试图画出摆脱困境的路,成为一名骑士,但后来被囚禁在马耳他,最后他搬到了西西里岛。他于1610年因谋杀而被赦免,但死于一次发烧回到罗马的死。QUOTE(Schama)对我来说,卡拉瓦乔的艺术力量是真理的力量,尤其是关于我们自己。如果我们希望获得赎回,我们必须首先认识到,歌利亚人在我们所有人中都与大卫竞争。” [编辑]贝尔尼尼(Bernini)生于那不勒斯,从小就极有才华,并继续统治着17世纪罗马的艺术世界,他的作品体现了巴洛克风格,他的雕塑,教堂的内部和外部以及城市规划无处不在。最好的朋友。他一直受到尊敬,直到嫉妒的愤怒使他在发现情妇与哥哥的恋情之后就割下了情妇的脸。在1641年圣彼得大教堂的钟楼开始倒塌之后,他的声誉进一步下降。他赎回了自己,并踢起了可以说是他最著名的职业,重新开始了他的职业生涯The power of the greatest art is the power to shake us into revelation and rip us from our default mode of seeing. After an encounter with that force, we don't look at a face, a colour, a sky, a body, in quite the same way again. We get fitted with new sight: in-sight. Visions of beauty or a rush of intense pleasure are part of that process, but so too may be shock, pain, desire, pity, even revulsion. That kind of art seems to have rewired our senses. We apprehend the world differently.Art that aims that high - whether by the hand of Caravaggio, Van Gogh or Picasso - was not made without trouble and strife. Of course there has been plenty of great art created in serenity, but the popular idea that some masterpieces were made under acute stress with the artist struggling for the integrity of the conception and its realisation is not a "romantic myth" at all. A glance at how some of the most transforming works got made by human hands is an encounter with "moments of commotion".It's those hot spots in which great risks were taken that The Power of Art brings you. Instead of trying to reproduce the un-reproducible feeling you have when you are face to face with those works in the hush of the gallery or a church, the series (and the book) drops you instead into those difficult places and unforgiving dramas when the artists managed, against the odds, to astound. "Every artist thinks he's Rembrandt", Picasso once joked, but there would come a time when he thought so himself!All the artists in our series - and some of the contemporary artists on our website who have joined in its spirit to reflect on them - have felt part of this craft of exhilarating trouble. I hope, when you watch the programmes, you too get to feel the heat.[edit] CaravaggioCaravaggio's approach to painting was unconventional. He avoided the standard method of making copies of old sculptures and instead took the more direct approach of painting directly onto canvas without drawing first. He also used people from the street as his models. His dramatic painting was enhanced with intense and theatrical lighting.Caravaggio's fate was sealed when in 1606 he killed a man in a duel. He fled to Naples where he attempted to paint his way out of trouble, he became a Knight, but was then imprisoned in Malta and then finally he moved to Sicily. He was pardoned for murder in 1610, but he died of a fever attempting to return to Rome.QUOTE(Schama)For me the power of Caravaggio's art is the power of truth, not least about ourselves. If we are ever to hope for redemption we have to begin with the recognition that in all of us the Goliath competes with the David."[edit] BerniniBorn in Naples, Bernini was an exceptional talent from an early age and went on to dominate the art world of 17th century Rome. His work epitomised the Baroque style and his sculpture, church interiors and exteriors and town planning could be seen everywhere.Bernini worked under successive Popes; Pope Gregory XV made him a knight and Pope Urban VIII took him as his best friend. He was revered in his time until a jealous rage caused him to have the face of his mistress slashed after discovering her romance with his brother. His reputation fell further after his bell towers for the Cathedral of St Peter's started cracking in 1641. He redeemed himself and kick started his career again with arguably his most famous work, The Ecstasy of St Theresa, in 1652.[edit] RembrandtRembrandt's success in his early years was as a portrait painter to the rich denizens of Amsterdam at a time when the city was being transformed from a small nondescript port into the economic capital of the world. His historical and religious paintings also gave him wide acclaim.Despite being known as a portrait painter Rembrandt used his talent to push the boundaries of painting. This direction made him unpopular in the later years of his career as he shifted from being the talk of the town to becoming adrift in the Amsterdam art scene and criticised by his peers.[edit] DavidPainting became an important means of communication for David since his face was slashed during a sword fight and his speech became impeded by a benign tumour that developed from the wound, leading him to stammer. He was interested in painting in a new classical style that departed from the frivolity of the Rococo period and reflected the moral and austere climate before the French Revolution.David became closely aligned with the republican government and his work was increasingly used as propaganda with the Death of Marat proving his most controversial work.[edit] TurnerOne of Britain's most celebrated artists, Turner showed exceptional artistic talent from an early age and entered the Royal Academy aged fourteen. His English landscapes made his name but there was a darker side to his paintings that was difficult for the critics to swallow, both in the increasingly informal use of paint and the subject matter that was critical of the romanticised vision of Britain in the late nineteenth century.[edit] Van GoghBorn in Groot-Zundert, The Netherlands, Van Gogh spent his early life as an art dealer, teacher and preacher in England, Holland and Belgium. His period as an artist began in 1881 when he chose to study art in Brussels, starting with watercolours and moving quickly on to oils. The French countryside was a major influence on his life and his early work was dominated by sombre, earthy colours depicting peasant workers, the most famous of which is The Potato Eaters, 1885.It was during Van Gogh's studies in Paris (1886-8) that he developed the individual style of brushwork and use of colour that made his name. In 1888 he moved to Arles where the Proven?al landscape provided his best-known subject matter. However, it also marked the start of his mental crisis following an argument with his contemporary Paul Gauguin. Van Gogh was committed to a mental asylum in 1889 where he continued to paint, but he committed suicide in 1890.[edit] PicassoGuernica (1937) was created during Picasso's Surrealist period and captures the horror of the bombing of the Basque town of Guernica during the Spanish Civil War. By the end of World War II, Picasso had become an internationally known artist and celebrity.[edit] RothkoRothko is known for his abstract expressionism paintings, but he moved through more traditional styles in his early career, including Surrealist paintings in the 1940s. In 1947 he embarked on the first of his large abstract 'colour-field' paintings, formalising their structure further in the 1950s.Rothko had huge success with largescale solo shows, but committed suicide in 1970.
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【技术参数】——
视频编码: Xvid
比特率: ~1570
Video 分辨率: 640x352
Video 帧速率: 25
音频编码: AC3
音频比特率: 192 kbps 48Khz
Audio 声道数: 2
分集时长: 60 minutes
分集数: 8 + 1 extra
体积: 743 mb + extra is 243mb
发布人:: Corax【Technical Specs】——
Video Codec: Xvid
Video Bitrate: ~1570
Video Resolution: 640x352
Video Framerate: 25
Audio Codec: AC3
Audio Bitrate: 192 kbps 48Khz
Audio Channels: 2
Runtime per Part: 60 minutes
Number of Parts: 8 + 1 extra
Part Size: 743 mb + extra is 243mb
Ripped by: Corax
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Official Website
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