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HENI TALKS - DUCHAMP'S 'READYMADES' AND THE MAKING OF I think that there’s a really strong argument that Duchamp’s ‘readymade’ is the starting place for contemporary art. Duchamp said he wanted to put into doubt or to question the status of the artist, or our definition of what an artist is. The first readymade was probably the Bicycle Wheel in 1913, and he took a bicycle wheeland its
HENI TALKS - DR MARIE-ANNE MANCIO Dr Marie-Anne Mancio trained as an artist before gaining a PhD in Art and Critical Theory from the University of Sussex. She has lectured in art history for City Lit, Tate Modern, the Course, Art in London, London Art Salon, Dulwich Picture Gallery, the Nth Degree Club and many private art societies; she also runs art history study toursabroad.
HENI TALKS - THE MONA LISA: PAINTING BEYOND PORTRAITURE The Mona Lisa is an extraordinary painting; so much so that the small portrait of a bourgeois Florentine woman has been the subject of many myths and conspiracy theories. But Leonardo da Vinci expert Martin Kemp is keen to emphasise the very ordinary circumstances of the HENI TALKS - WILLIAM HOGARTH AND THE FOUNDLING HOSPITAL Thomas Coram was the great philanthropist whose idea the Foundling Hospital had been and it was his 17 year campaign to get this hospital established that was supported by William Hogarth. This painting was the first work of art to be donated to the hospital, which was itself, the UK’s first children’s charity. HENI TALKS - JACKY KLEIN - CÉZANNE: THE FATHER OF MODERN ART Paul Cézanne is one of the best-loved painters of Western art. Yet the popularity of his still life and landscape works has perhaps tamed the radicality of his vision in our own eyes. Jacky Klein discusses how Paul Cezanne, a recluse from the French countryside became the first Modern painter. HENI TALKS - HOMETALKSSPEAKERSABOUT USNEWSLETTERCONTACTPRESS Brian Clarke, Norman Foster and Robert Storr in Conversation 47:21 mins. An online conversation between the foremost practitioner of stained glass, architectural artist Brian Clarke and esteemed architect Sir Norman Foster, chaired by Robert Storr. play_arrow. HENI TALKS - ABOUTPRESSCONTACT About Us. HENI Talks is dedicated to sharing insights about art history on film from leading artists, curators and academics. This growing catalogue of short films aims to open art up to the wider public, and create a platform through which everyone can learn about art history, and can discuss, comment, enjoy and engage with it. HENI TALKS - GODFREY WORSDALE Director, Henry Moore Foundation. Trained as an art historian in London, Godfrey Worsdale’s career began in the early 1990s at the British Museum, where he worked in the department of Prints and Drawings. In 1994 he established Cultural Instructions; an exhibition space in London dedicated to contemporary projects. HENI TALKS - DR JAMES FOX James is the author of B ritish Art and the First World War, 1914-1924 (2015). He is currently editing a volume of essays on C20th Canadian sculpture. In 2012 he signed a two-book deal with Allen Lane (Penguin), for whom he will write a Cultural History of Colour, and a History of Modern British Art. HENI TALKS - THE FEAR OF COLOUR - ARTIST DAVID BATCHELOR Artist David Batchelor discusses the fear of colour which lurks within much Western cultural and intellectual thought. In this film, he traces this fear of colour through 19th century Academic painting through to minimalism, Pop and conceptual art and popular TV andcinema.
HENI TALKS - DUCHAMP'S 'READYMADES' AND THE MAKING OF I think that there’s a really strong argument that Duchamp’s ‘readymade’ is the starting place for contemporary art. Duchamp said he wanted to put into doubt or to question the status of the artist, or our definition of what an artist is. The first readymade was probably the Bicycle Wheel in 1913, and he took a bicycle wheeland its
HENI TALKS - DR MARIE-ANNE MANCIO Dr Marie-Anne Mancio trained as an artist before gaining a PhD in Art and Critical Theory from the University of Sussex. She has lectured in art history for City Lit, Tate Modern, the Course, Art in London, London Art Salon, Dulwich Picture Gallery, the Nth Degree Club and many private art societies; she also runs art history study toursabroad.
HENI TALKS - THE MONA LISA: PAINTING BEYOND PORTRAITURE The Mona Lisa is an extraordinary painting; so much so that the small portrait of a bourgeois Florentine woman has been the subject of many myths and conspiracy theories. But Leonardo da Vinci expert Martin Kemp is keen to emphasise the very ordinary circumstances of the HENI TALKS - WILLIAM HOGARTH AND THE FOUNDLING HOSPITAL Thomas Coram was the great philanthropist whose idea the Foundling Hospital had been and it was his 17 year campaign to get this hospital established that was supported by William Hogarth. This painting was the first work of art to be donated to the hospital, which was itself, the UK’s first children’s charity. HENI TALKS - JACKY KLEIN - CÉZANNE: THE FATHER OF MODERN ART Paul Cézanne is one of the best-loved painters of Western art. Yet the popularity of his still life and landscape works has perhaps tamed the radicality of his vision in our own eyes. Jacky Klein discusses how Paul Cezanne, a recluse from the French countryside became the first Modern painter. HENI TALKS - GRINLING GIBBONS: THE CARVED ROOM AT PETWORTH The Carved Room at Petworth House, West Sussex, is the crowning achievement of the 17 th century Dutch wood carver Grinling Gibbons. Born in Rotterdam to English parents, Gibbons emigrated to the UK after training in the Netherlands. He was ‘discovered’ by diarist John Evelyn carving by candlelight in Deptford, South London. HENI TALKS - DR JAMES FOX James is the author of B ritish Art and the First World War, 1914-1924 (2015). He is currently editing a volume of essays on C20th Canadian sculpture. In 2012 he signed a two-book deal with Allen Lane (Penguin), for whom he will write a Cultural History of Colour, and a History of Modern British Art. HENI TALKS - MASTER OF REALISM: JAN VAN EYCK’S ARNOLFINI Despite being ‘one of the towering figures in the history of art’, Jan van Eyck is a painter ‘about whom the vital facts are almost all missing.’Very little is known about the man himself, his motivations, or indeed the people he painted in his iconic work The Arnolfini Portrait (1434).Although small in size, the painting is rich in detail and is championed as one of ‘the most HENI TALKS - LOUISE BOURGEOIS: ‘A PRISONER OF MY MEMORIES’ Louise Bourgeois is a remarkable anomaly in the history of art, in that she was barely recognised until her later years, but she was in at the beginning, so to speak. But she was a very complicated woman, who was also very, very fearful, capable of fits of terrible jealousy, METAMORPHOSIS OF NARCISSUS: WHEN SALVADOR DALÍ MET SIGMUND The story of Narcissus, most famously told by Ovid, is a tragedy that has fascinated artists for over 2,000 years. Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí set about painting a canvas in homage to the myth in the Spring of 1937, and took the completed work with him to meet the father of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud HENI TALKS - CAROLINE CAMPBELL Caroline Campbell is The Jacob Rothschild Head of the Curatorial Department and Curator of Italian Paintings before 1500 at the National Gallery.Caroline has held curatorial positions at The Courtauld Gallery, London, the National Gallery and the AshmoleanMuseum, Oxford.
HENI TALKS - WILLIAM MORRIS: USEFUL BEAUTY IN THE HOME It was about honesty. They saw factory-made goods as dishonest, as fake, and they wanted to create objects that were truthful, about hand-craftsmanship, and that celebrated the process of actually making art and design. William Morris was celebrated for talking about the importance of beauty in the home. HENI TALKS - SUSSAN BABAIE: LOOKING AT PERSIAN 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. HENI TALKS - WILLIAM HOGARTH AND THE FOUNDLING HOSPITAL Thomas Coram was the great philanthropist whose idea the Foundling Hospital had been and it was his 17 year campaign to get this hospital established that was supported by William Hogarth. This painting was the first work of art to be donated to the hospital, which was itself, the UK’s first children’s charity. HENI TALKS - THE MODERN WOMAN: MANET’S A BAR AT THE FOLIES The Bar at the Folies-Bergère is a painting that raises the question, ‘why would Manet have painted it?’. The general argument is that it’s a painting where he’s trying to work out what is special about modern times in 1882. Paris is this place of radical change. HENI TALKS - HOMETALKSSPEAKERSABOUT USNEWSLETTERCONTACTPRESS Brian Clarke, Norman Foster and Robert Storr in Conversation 47:21 mins. An online conversation between the foremost practitioner of stained glass, architectural artist Brian Clarke and esteemed architect Sir Norman Foster, chaired by Robert Storr. play_arrow. HENI TALKS - ABOUTPRESSCONTACT About Us. HENI Talks is dedicated to sharing insights about art history on film from leading artists, curators and academics. This growing catalogue of short films aims to open art up to the wider public, and create a platform through which everyone can learn about art history, and can discuss, comment, enjoy and engage with it. HENI TALKS - DUCHAMP'S 'READYMADES' AND THE MAKING OF I think that there’s a really strong argument that Duchamp’s ‘readymade’ is the starting place for contemporary art. Duchamp said he wanted to put into doubt or to question the status of the artist, or our definition of what an artist is. The first readymade was probably the Bicycle Wheel in 1913, and he took a bicycle wheeland its
HENI TALKS - MASTER OF REALISM: JAN VAN EYCK’S ARNOLFINI Despite being ‘one of the towering figures in the history of art’, Jan van Eyck is a painter ‘about whom the vital facts are almost all missing.’Very little is known about the man himself, his motivations, or indeed the people he painted in his iconic work The Arnolfini Portrait (1434).Although small in size, the painting is rich in detail and is championed as one of ‘the most HENI TALKS - DR JAMES FOX James is the author of B ritish Art and the First World War, 1914-1924 (2015). He is currently editing a volume of essays on C20th Canadian sculpture. In 2012 he signed a two-book deal with Allen Lane (Penguin), for whom he will write a Cultural History of Colour, and a History of Modern British Art. HENI TALKS - THE FEAR OF COLOUR - ARTIST DAVID BATCHELOR Artist David Batchelor discusses the fear of colour which lurks within much Western cultural and intellectual thought. In this film, he traces this fear of colour through 19th century Academic painting through to minimalism, Pop and conceptual art and popular TV andcinema.
HENI TALKS - SEURAT’S CIRCUS SIDESHOW: A HYPNOTIC WORK Noise, vitality, movement, boisterousnessthese are some of the things that one would expect from a circus scene. But in Georges Seurat’s painting Parade de Cirque, everything is unusually still, almost petrified.Even more strange is the way Seurat painted the work,composed of a
HENI TALKS - DR MARIE-ANNE MANCIO Dr Marie-Anne Mancio trained as an artist before gaining a PhD in Art and Critical Theory from the University of Sussex. She has lectured in art history for City Lit, Tate Modern, the Course, Art in London, London Art Salon, Dulwich Picture Gallery, the Nth Degree Club and many private art societies; she also runs art history study toursabroad.
HENI TALKS - WILLIAM HOGARTH AND THE FOUNDLING HOSPITAL Thomas Coram was the great philanthropist whose idea the Foundling Hospital had been and it was his 17 year campaign to get this hospital established that was supported by William Hogarth. This painting was the first work of art to be donated to the hospital, which was itself, the UK’s first children’s charity. HENI TALKS - JACKY KLEIN - CÉZANNE: THE FATHER OF MODERN ART Paul Cézanne is one of the best-loved painters of Western art. Yet the popularity of his still life and landscape works has perhaps tamed the radicality of his vision in our own eyes. Jacky Klein discusses how Paul Cezanne, a recluse from the French countryside became the first Modern painter. HENI TALKS - HOMETALKSSPEAKERSABOUT USNEWSLETTERCONTACTPRESS Brian Clarke, Norman Foster and Robert Storr in Conversation 47:21 mins. An online conversation between the foremost practitioner of stained glass, architectural artist Brian Clarke and esteemed architect Sir Norman Foster, chaired by Robert Storr. play_arrow. HENI TALKS - ABOUTPRESSCONTACT About Us. HENI Talks is dedicated to sharing insights about art history on film from leading artists, curators and academics. This growing catalogue of short films aims to open art up to the wider public, and create a platform through which everyone can learn about art history, and can discuss, comment, enjoy and engage with it. HENI TALKS - DUCHAMP'S 'READYMADES' AND THE MAKING OF I think that there’s a really strong argument that Duchamp’s ‘readymade’ is the starting place for contemporary art. Duchamp said he wanted to put into doubt or to question the status of the artist, or our definition of what an artist is. The first readymade was probably the Bicycle Wheel in 1913, and he took a bicycle wheeland its
HENI TALKS - MASTER OF REALISM: JAN VAN EYCK’S ARNOLFINI Despite being ‘one of the towering figures in the history of art’, Jan van Eyck is a painter ‘about whom the vital facts are almost all missing.’Very little is known about the man himself, his motivations, or indeed the people he painted in his iconic work The Arnolfini Portrait (1434).Although small in size, the painting is rich in detail and is championed as one of ‘the most HENI TALKS - DR JAMES FOX James is the author of B ritish Art and the First World War, 1914-1924 (2015). He is currently editing a volume of essays on C20th Canadian sculpture. In 2012 he signed a two-book deal with Allen Lane (Penguin), for whom he will write a Cultural History of Colour, and a History of Modern British Art. HENI TALKS - THE FEAR OF COLOUR - ARTIST DAVID BATCHELOR Artist David Batchelor discusses the fear of colour which lurks within much Western cultural and intellectual thought. In this film, he traces this fear of colour through 19th century Academic painting through to minimalism, Pop and conceptual art and popular TV andcinema.
HENI TALKS - SEURAT’S CIRCUS SIDESHOW: A HYPNOTIC WORK Noise, vitality, movement, boisterousnessthese are some of the things that one would expect from a circus scene. But in Georges Seurat’s painting Parade de Cirque, everything is unusually still, almost petrified.Even more strange is the way Seurat painted the work,composed of a
HENI TALKS - DR MARIE-ANNE MANCIO Dr Marie-Anne Mancio trained as an artist before gaining a PhD in Art and Critical Theory from the University of Sussex. She has lectured in art history for City Lit, Tate Modern, the Course, Art in London, London Art Salon, Dulwich Picture Gallery, the Nth Degree Club and many private art societies; she also runs art history study toursabroad.
HENI TALKS - WILLIAM HOGARTH AND THE FOUNDLING HOSPITAL Thomas Coram was the great philanthropist whose idea the Foundling Hospital had been and it was his 17 year campaign to get this hospital established that was supported by William Hogarth. This painting was the first work of art to be donated to the hospital, which was itself, the UK’s first children’s charity. HENI TALKS - JACKY KLEIN - CÉZANNE: THE FATHER OF MODERN ART Paul Cézanne is one of the best-loved painters of Western art. Yet the popularity of his still life and landscape works has perhaps tamed the radicality of his vision in our own eyes. Jacky Klein discusses how Paul Cezanne, a recluse from the French countryside became the first Modern painter. HENI TALKS - GRINLING GIBBONS: THE CARVED ROOM AT PETWORTH The Carved Room at Petworth House, West Sussex, is the crowning achievement of the 17 th century Dutch wood carver Grinling Gibbons. Born in Rotterdam to English parents, Gibbons emigrated to the UK after training in the Netherlands. He was ‘discovered’ by diarist John Evelyn carving by candlelight in Deptford, South London. HENI TALKS - DR JAMES FOX James is the author of B ritish Art and the First World War, 1914-1924 (2015). He is currently editing a volume of essays on C20th Canadian sculpture. In 2012 he signed a two-book deal with Allen Lane (Penguin), for whom he will write a Cultural History of Colour, and a History of Modern British Art. HENI TALKS - GODFREY WORSDALE Director, Henry Moore Foundation. Trained as an art historian in London, Godfrey Worsdale’s career began in the early 1990s at the British Museum, where he worked in the department of Prints and Drawings. In 1994 he established Cultural Instructions; an exhibition space in London dedicated to contemporary projects. HENI TALKS - SEURAT’S CIRCUS SIDESHOW: A HYPNOTIC WORK Noise, vitality, movement, boisterousnessthese are some of the things that one would expect from a circus scene. But in Georges Seurat’s painting Parade de Cirque, everything is unusually still, almost petrified.Even more strange is the way Seurat painted the work,composed of a
HENI TALKS - LOUISE BOURGEOIS: ‘A PRISONER OF MY MEMORIES’ Louise Bourgeois is a remarkable anomaly in the history of art, in that she was barely recognised until her later years, but she was in at the beginning, so to speak. But she was a very complicated woman, who was also very, very fearful, capable of fits of terrible jealousy, METAMORPHOSIS OF NARCISSUS: WHEN SALVADOR DALÍ MET SIGMUND The story of Narcissus, most famously told by Ovid, is a tragedy that has fascinated artists for over 2,000 years. Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí set about painting a canvas in homage to the myth in the Spring of 1937, and took the completed work with him to meet the father of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud HENI TALKS - CAROLINE CAMPBELL Caroline Campbell is The Jacob Rothschild Head of the Curatorial Department and Curator of Italian Paintings before 1500 at the National Gallery.Caroline has held curatorial positions at The Courtauld Gallery, London, the National Gallery and the AshmoleanMuseum, Oxford.
HENI TALKS - WILLIAM MORRIS: USEFUL BEAUTY IN THE HOME It was about honesty. They saw factory-made goods as dishonest, as fake, and they wanted to create objects that were truthful, about hand-craftsmanship, and that celebrated the process of actually making art and design. William Morris was celebrated for talking about the importance of beauty in the home. HENI TALKS - SUSSAN BABAIE: LOOKING AT PERSIAN 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. ZAHA HADID: SKETCHING THE FUTURE (HANS ULRICH OBRIST) Zaha Hadid revolutionised the language of architecture and transformed the way we think about design. An artist who sought to question everything taken for granted, she created some of the most spectacular buildings of the 20th and 21st centuries. Hans Ulrich Obrist, a curator, collaborator and longstanding friend, describes how Hadid’s HENI TALKS - HOMETALKSSPEAKERSABOUT USNEWSLETTERCONTACTPRESS Brian Clarke, Norman Foster and Robert Storr in Conversation 47:21 mins. An online conversation between the foremost practitioner of stained glass, architectural artist Brian Clarke and esteemed architect Sir Norman Foster, chaired by Robert Storr. play_arrow. HENI TALKS - ABOUTPRESSCONTACT About Us. HENI Talks is dedicated to sharing insights about art history on film from leading artists, curators and academics. This growing catalogue of short films aims to open art up to the wider public, and create a platform through which everyone can learn about art history, and can discuss, comment, enjoy and engage with it. HENI TALKS - DUCHAMP'S 'READYMADES' AND THE MAKING OF I think that there’s a really strong argument that Duchamp’s ‘readymade’ is the starting place for contemporary art. Duchamp said he wanted to put into doubt or to question the status of the artist, or our definition of what an artist is. The first readymade was probably the Bicycle Wheel in 1913, and he took a bicycle wheeland its
HENI TALKS - LOUISE BOURGEOIS: ‘A PRISONER OF MY MEMORIES’ Louise Bourgeois is a remarkable anomaly in the history of art, in that she was barely recognised until her later years, but she was in at the beginning, so to speak. But she was a very complicated woman, who was also very, very fearful, capable of fits of terrible jealousy, HENI TALKS - SEURAT’S CIRCUS SIDESHOW: A HYPNOTIC WORK Noise, vitality, movement, boisterousnessthese are some of the things that one would expect from a circus scene. But in Georges Seurat’s painting Parade de Cirque, everything is unusually still, almost petrified.Even more strange is the way Seurat painted the work,composed of a
HENI TALKS - DR JAMES FOX James is the author of B ritish Art and the First World War, 1914-1924 (2015). He is currently editing a volume of essays on C20th Canadian sculpture. In 2012 he signed a two-book deal with Allen Lane (Penguin), for whom he will write a Cultural History of Colour, and a History of Modern British Art. HENI TALKS - MASTER OF REALISM: JAN VAN EYCK’S ARNOLFINI Despite being ‘one of the towering figures in the history of art’, Jan van Eyck is a painter ‘about whom the vital facts are almost all missing.’Very little is known about the man himself, his motivations, or indeed the people he painted in his iconic work The Arnolfini Portrait (1434).Although small in size, the painting is rich in detail and is championed as one of ‘the most HENI TALKS - THE FEAR OF COLOUR - ARTIST DAVID BATCHELOR Artist David Batchelor discusses the fear of colour which lurks within much Western cultural and intellectual thought. In this film, he traces this fear of colour through 19th century Academic painting through to minimalism, Pop and conceptual art and popular TV andcinema.
HENI TALKS - DR MARIE-ANNE MANCIO Dr Marie-Anne Mancio trained as an artist before gaining a PhD in Art and Critical Theory from the University of Sussex. She has lectured in art history for City Lit, Tate Modern, the Course, Art in London, London Art Salon, Dulwich Picture Gallery, the Nth Degree Club and many private art societies; she also runs art history study toursabroad.
HENI TALKS - WILLIAM HOGARTH AND THE FOUNDLING HOSPITAL Thomas Coram was the great philanthropist whose idea the Foundling Hospital had been and it was his 17 year campaign to get this hospital established that was supported by William Hogarth. This painting was the first work of art to be donated to the hospital, which was itself, the UK’s first children’s charity. HENI TALKS - HOMETALKSSPEAKERSABOUT USNEWSLETTERCONTACTPRESS Brian Clarke, Norman Foster and Robert Storr in Conversation 47:21 mins. An online conversation between the foremost practitioner of stained glass, architectural artist Brian Clarke and esteemed architect Sir Norman Foster, chaired by Robert Storr. play_arrow. HENI TALKS - ABOUTPRESSCONTACT About Us. HENI Talks is dedicated to sharing insights about art history on film from leading artists, curators and academics. This growing catalogue of short films aims to open art up to the wider public, and create a platform through which everyone can learn about art history, and can discuss, comment, enjoy and engage with it. HENI TALKS - DUCHAMP'S 'READYMADES' AND THE MAKING OF I think that there’s a really strong argument that Duchamp’s ‘readymade’ is the starting place for contemporary art. Duchamp said he wanted to put into doubt or to question the status of the artist, or our definition of what an artist is. The first readymade was probably the Bicycle Wheel in 1913, and he took a bicycle wheeland its
HENI TALKS - LOUISE BOURGEOIS: ‘A PRISONER OF MY MEMORIES’ Louise Bourgeois is a remarkable anomaly in the history of art, in that she was barely recognised until her later years, but she was in at the beginning, so to speak. But she was a very complicated woman, who was also very, very fearful, capable of fits of terrible jealousy, HENI TALKS - SEURAT’S CIRCUS SIDESHOW: A HYPNOTIC WORK Noise, vitality, movement, boisterousnessthese are some of the things that one would expect from a circus scene. But in Georges Seurat’s painting Parade de Cirque, everything is unusually still, almost petrified.Even more strange is the way Seurat painted the work,composed of a
HENI TALKS - DR JAMES FOX James is the author of B ritish Art and the First World War, 1914-1924 (2015). He is currently editing a volume of essays on C20th Canadian sculpture. In 2012 he signed a two-book deal with Allen Lane (Penguin), for whom he will write a Cultural History of Colour, and a History of Modern British Art. HENI TALKS - MASTER OF REALISM: JAN VAN EYCK’S ARNOLFINI Despite being ‘one of the towering figures in the history of art’, Jan van Eyck is a painter ‘about whom the vital facts are almost all missing.’Very little is known about the man himself, his motivations, or indeed the people he painted in his iconic work The Arnolfini Portrait (1434).Although small in size, the painting is rich in detail and is championed as one of ‘the most HENI TALKS - THE FEAR OF COLOUR - ARTIST DAVID BATCHELOR Artist David Batchelor discusses the fear of colour which lurks within much Western cultural and intellectual thought. In this film, he traces this fear of colour through 19th century Academic painting through to minimalism, Pop and conceptual art and popular TV andcinema.
HENI TALKS - DR MARIE-ANNE MANCIO Dr Marie-Anne Mancio trained as an artist before gaining a PhD in Art and Critical Theory from the University of Sussex. She has lectured in art history for City Lit, Tate Modern, the Course, Art in London, London Art Salon, Dulwich Picture Gallery, the Nth Degree Club and many private art societies; she also runs art history study toursabroad.
HENI TALKS - WILLIAM HOGARTH AND THE FOUNDLING HOSPITAL Thomas Coram was the great philanthropist whose idea the Foundling Hospital had been and it was his 17 year campaign to get this hospital established that was supported by William Hogarth. This painting was the first work of art to be donated to the hospital, which was itself, the UK’s first children’s charity. HENI TALKS - CONTACT HENI TALKS. 2nd Floor. 29 - 35 Lexington Street. London. W1F 9AH. For all enquiries please use the contact form. HENI TALKS - GRINLING GIBBONS: THE CARVED ROOM AT PETWORTH The Carved Room at Petworth House, West Sussex, is the crowning achievement of the 17 th century Dutch wood carver Grinling Gibbons. Born in Rotterdam to English parents, Gibbons emigrated to the UK after training in the Netherlands. He was ‘discovered’ by diarist John Evelyn carving by candlelight in Deptford, South London. HENI TALKS - GODFREY WORSDALE Director, Henry Moore Foundation. Trained as an art historian in London, Godfrey Worsdale’s career began in the early 1990s at the British Museum, where he worked in the department of Prints and Drawings. In 1994 he established Cultural Instructions; an exhibition space in London dedicated to contemporary projects. HENI TALKS - DR JAMES FOX James is the author of B ritish Art and the First World War, 1914-1924 (2015). He is currently editing a volume of essays on C20th Canadian sculpture. In 2012 he signed a two-book deal with Allen Lane (Penguin), for whom he will write a Cultural History of Colour, and a History of Modern British Art. HENI TALKS - LOUISE BOURGEOIS: ‘A PRISONER OF MY MEMORIES’ Louise Bourgeois is a remarkable anomaly in the history of art, in that she was barely recognised until her later years, but she was in at the beginning, so to speak. But she was a very complicated woman, who was also very, very fearful, capable of fits of terrible jealousy, METAMORPHOSIS OF NARCISSUS: WHEN SALVADOR DALÍ MET SIGMUND The story of Narcissus, most famously told by Ovid, is a tragedy that has fascinated artists for over 2,000 years. Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí set about painting a canvas in homage to the myth in the Spring of 1937, and took the completed work with him to meet the father of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud HENI TALKS - WILLIAM MORRIS: USEFUL BEAUTY IN THE HOME Art historian Abigail Harrison-Moore visits the National Trust’s Standen house, one of the most charming examples of William Morris and Arts and Crafts workmanship in the UK, and explores its surprisingly pioneering spirit – from the use of electric lighting to its role in the Suffragette movement. HENI TALKS - WHAT IS: PRE-RAPHAELITISM? The Pre-Raphaelites wanted to create a new kind of art, fit for the purpose of a new world. Their intention was to build on what they admired from the past, not just the Old Masters they were being taught about but a counter-culture of heroes. Their influences ranged from Quattrocento artists to the painters and writers of their own age. HENI TALKS - THE MODERN WOMAN: MANET’S A BAR AT THE FOLIES The Bar at the Folies-Bergère is a painting that raises the question, ‘why would Manet have painted it?’. The general argument is that it’s a painting where he’s trying to work out what is special about modern times in 1882. Paris is this place of radical change. ZAHA HADID: SKETCHING THE FUTURE (HANS ULRICH OBRIST) Zaha Hadid revolutionised the language of architecture and transformed the way we think about design. An artist who sought to question everything taken for granted, she created some of the most spectacular buildings of the 20th and 21st centuries. Hans Ulrich Obrist, a curator, collaborator and longstanding friend, describes how Hadid’s HENI TALKS - HOMETALKSSPEAKERSABOUT USNEWSLETTERCONTACTPRESS Brian Clarke, Norman Foster and Robert Storr in Conversation 47:21 mins. An online conversation between the foremost practitioner of stained glass, architectural artist Brian Clarke and esteemed architect Sir Norman Foster, chaired by Robert Storr. play_arrow. HENI TALKS - ABOUTPRESSCONTACT About Us. HENI Talks is dedicated to sharing insights about art history on film from leading artists, curators and academics. This growing catalogue of short films aims to open art up to the wider public, and create a platform through which everyone can learn about art history, and can discuss, comment, enjoy and engage with it. HENI TALKS - THE FEAR OF COLOUR - ARTIST DAVID BATCHELORCHROMOPHOBIA DAVID BATCHELOR SYNOPSISDAVID BATCHELOR PASTOR Artist David Batchelor discusses the fear of colour which lurks within much Western cultural and intellectual thought. In this film, he traces this fear of colour through 19th century Academic painting through to minimalism, Pop and conceptual art and popular TV andcinema.
HENI TALKS - MASTER OF REALISM: JAN VAN EYCK’S ARNOLFINICHARACTERISTICS OF REALISM ARTELEMENTS OF REALISM IN ARTREALISM ARTS RELATED ARTWORKS Despite being ‘one of the towering figures in the history of art’, Jan van Eyck is a painter ‘about whom the vital facts are almost all missing.’Very little is known about the man himself, his motivations, or indeed the people he painted in his iconic work The Arnolfini Portrait (1434).Although small in size, the painting is rich in detail and is championed as one of ‘the most HENI TALKS - DUCHAMP'S 'READYMADES' AND THE MAKING OF I think that there’s a really strong argument that Duchamp’s ‘readymade’ is the starting place for contemporary art. Duchamp said he wanted to put into doubt or to question the status of the artist, or our definition of what an artist is. The first readymade was probably the Bicycle Wheel in 1913, and he took a bicycle wheeland its
HENI TALKS - WILLIAM MORRIS: USEFUL BEAUTY IN THE HOME It was about honesty. They saw factory-made goods as dishonest, as fake, and they wanted to create objects that were truthful, about hand-craftsmanship, and that celebrated the process of actually making art and design. William Morris was celebrated for talking about the importance of beauty in the home. METAMORPHOSIS OF NARCISSUS: WHEN SALVADOR DALÍ MET SIGMUND The story of Narcissus, most famously told by Ovid, is a tragedy that has fascinated artists for over 2,000 years. Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí set about painting a canvas in homage to the myth in the Spring of 1937, and took the completed work with him to meet the HENI TALKS - DR MARIE-ANNE MANCIO Dr Marie-Anne Mancio trained as an artist before gaining a PhD in Art and Critical Theory from the University of Sussex. She has lectured in art history for City Lit, Tate Modern, the Course, Art in London, London Art Salon, Dulwich Picture Gallery, the Nth Degree Club and many private art societies; she also runs art history study toursabroad.
HENI TALKS - ELY CATHEDRAL'S LADY CHAPEL: DEVOTION ANDTHE LADY CHAPELELY CATHEDRAL ENGLANDELY CATHEDRAL INTERIORELY CATHEDRAL UK This building is a chapel. But the fact is, it’s only one part of one of the greatest building operations conducted in medieval England. A building like this had a specific purpose which was to adorn, celebrate, house the popular devotions to the Virgin Mary that were becoming increasingly common in the 13th and 14th century, the age ofGothic art.
ZAHA HADID: SKETCHING THE FUTURE (HANS ULRICH OBRIST)ZAHA HADID AWARDS AND HONORSZAHA HADID FOR KIDSZAHA HADID GREATEST ACHIEVEMENTSZAHA HADID LIFE STORYZAHA HADID PERSONAL LIFE Zaha Hadid revolutionised the language of architecture and transformed the way we think about design. An artist who sought to question everything taken for granted, she created some of the most spectacular buildings of the 20th and 21st centuries. Hans Ulrich Obrist, a curator, collaborator and longstanding friend, describes how Hadid’s HENI TALKS - HOMETALKSSPEAKERSABOUT USNEWSLETTERCONTACTPRESS Brian Clarke, Norman Foster and Robert Storr in Conversation 47:21 mins. An online conversation between the foremost practitioner of stained glass, architectural artist Brian Clarke and esteemed architect Sir Norman Foster, chaired by Robert Storr. play_arrow. HENI TALKS - ABOUTPRESSCONTACT About Us. HENI Talks is dedicated to sharing insights about art history on film from leading artists, curators and academics. This growing catalogue of short films aims to open art up to the wider public, and create a platform through which everyone can learn about art history, and can discuss, comment, enjoy and engage with it. HENI TALKS - THE FEAR OF COLOUR - ARTIST DAVID BATCHELORCHROMOPHOBIA DAVID BATCHELOR SYNOPSISDAVID BATCHELOR PASTOR Artist David Batchelor discusses the fear of colour which lurks within much Western cultural and intellectual thought. In this film, he traces this fear of colour through 19th century Academic painting through to minimalism, Pop and conceptual art and popular TV andcinema.
HENI TALKS - MASTER OF REALISM: JAN VAN EYCK’S ARNOLFINICHARACTERISTICS OF REALISM ARTELEMENTS OF REALISM IN ARTREALISM ARTS RELATED ARTWORKS Despite being ‘one of the towering figures in the history of art’, Jan van Eyck is a painter ‘about whom the vital facts are almost all missing.’Very little is known about the man himself, his motivations, or indeed the people he painted in his iconic work The Arnolfini Portrait (1434).Although small in size, the painting is rich in detail and is championed as one of ‘the most HENI TALKS - DUCHAMP'S 'READYMADES' AND THE MAKING OF I think that there’s a really strong argument that Duchamp’s ‘readymade’ is the starting place for contemporary art. Duchamp said he wanted to put into doubt or to question the status of the artist, or our definition of what an artist is. The first readymade was probably the Bicycle Wheel in 1913, and he took a bicycle wheeland its
HENI TALKS - WILLIAM MORRIS: USEFUL BEAUTY IN THE HOME It was about honesty. They saw factory-made goods as dishonest, as fake, and they wanted to create objects that were truthful, about hand-craftsmanship, and that celebrated the process of actually making art and design. William Morris was celebrated for talking about the importance of beauty in the home. METAMORPHOSIS OF NARCISSUS: WHEN SALVADOR DALÍ MET SIGMUND The story of Narcissus, most famously told by Ovid, is a tragedy that has fascinated artists for over 2,000 years. Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí set about painting a canvas in homage to the myth in the Spring of 1937, and took the completed work with him to meet the HENI TALKS - DR MARIE-ANNE MANCIO Dr Marie-Anne Mancio trained as an artist before gaining a PhD in Art and Critical Theory from the University of Sussex. She has lectured in art history for City Lit, Tate Modern, the Course, Art in London, London Art Salon, Dulwich Picture Gallery, the Nth Degree Club and many private art societies; she also runs art history study toursabroad.
HENI TALKS - ELY CATHEDRAL'S LADY CHAPEL: DEVOTION ANDTHE LADY CHAPELELY CATHEDRAL ENGLANDELY CATHEDRAL INTERIORELY CATHEDRAL UK This building is a chapel. But the fact is, it’s only one part of one of the greatest building operations conducted in medieval England. A building like this had a specific purpose which was to adorn, celebrate, house the popular devotions to the Virgin Mary that were becoming increasingly common in the 13th and 14th century, the age ofGothic art.
ZAHA HADID: SKETCHING THE FUTURE (HANS ULRICH OBRIST)ZAHA HADID AWARDS AND HONORSZAHA HADID FOR KIDSZAHA HADID GREATEST ACHIEVEMENTSZAHA HADID LIFE STORYZAHA HADID PERSONAL LIFE Zaha Hadid revolutionised the language of architecture and transformed the way we think about design. An artist who sought to question everything taken for granted, she created some of the most spectacular buildings of the 20th and 21st centuries. Hans Ulrich Obrist, a curator, collaborator and longstanding friend, describes how Hadid’s HENI TALKS - SPEAKERS HENI Talks Speakers Find a speaker you would like to follow for more Talks and to know more about their work. HENI TALKS - FRANCIS BACON: REVELATIONS Mark Stevens (MS): Hello, we thought we would begin with a few images of Bacon, just to give everyone a taste of what we would be talking about later. This first image is a charming old photograph of Bacon and his mother. Bacon grew up in extremely privileged circumstances, among the big houses of Anglo-Irish Ireland, just outside Dublin, where nothing was more important than a horse. HENI TALKS - WHAT IS: LAND ART? What is: Land Art? ‘Time, place, relativity, experience. These are the key concepts in Land Art.’. Curator and writer Ben Tufnell maps out a definition of Land Art, a creative practice associated with the broader conceptual art movement of the 1960s and 1970s. Moving away from traditional media and the gallery, land artists set out to make HENI TALKS - LOUISE BOURGEOIS: ‘A PRISONER OF MY MEMORIES’ Louise Bourgeois is a remarkable anomaly in the history of art, in that she was barely recognised until her later years, but she was in at the beginning, so to speak. But she was a very complicated woman, who was also very, very fearful, capable of fits of terrible jealousy, ABSTRACT NO. 2, LEE KRASNER Abstract No. 2, 1947, is a deceptively intricate painting from Lee Krasner’s ‘Little Image’ series. Barbican Curator Eleanor Nairne unpacks some of the ‘rhythms’ of METAMORPHOSIS OF NARCISSUS: WHEN SALVADOR DALÍ MET SIGMUND The story of Narcissus, most famously told by Ovid, is a tragedy that has fascinated artists for over 2,000 years. Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí set about painting a canvas in homage to the myth in the Spring of 1937, and took the completed work with him to meet the father of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud HENI TALKS - GODFREY WORSDALE Director, Henry Moore Foundation. Trained as an art historian in London, Godfrey Worsdale’s career began in the early 1990s at the British Museum, where he worked in the department of Prints and Drawings. In 1994 he established Cultural Instructions; an exhibition space in London dedicated to contemporary projects. HENI TALKS - PAUL NASH: THE LANDSCAPE OF MODERNISM Amidst the unfolding violence of the early twentieth century, British artists struggled to portray modern warfare using any traditional visual style. Curator and writer David Boyd Haycock looks at one of the country’s most famous official war artists, Paul Nash. ZAHA HADID: SKETCHING THE FUTURE (HANS ULRICH OBRIST) Zaha Hadid revolutionised the language of architecture and transformed the way we think about design. An artist who sought to question everything taken for granted, she created some of the most spectacular buildings of the 20th and 21st centuries. Hans Ulrich Obrist, a curator, collaborator and longstanding friend, describes how Hadid’sHENITALKS.COM
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HENI TALKS - HOMETALKSSPEAKERSABOUT USNEWSLETTERCONTACTPRESS Brian Clarke, Norman Foster and Robert Storr in Conversation 47:21 mins. An online conversation between the foremost practitioner of stained glass, architectural artist Brian Clarke and esteemed architect Sir Norman Foster, chaired by Robert Storr. play_arrow. HENI TALKS - ABOUTPRESSCONTACT About Us. HENI Talks is dedicated to sharing insights about art history on film from leading artists, curators and academics. This growing catalogue of short films aims to open art up to the wider public, and create a platform through which everyone can learn about art history, and can discuss, comment, enjoy and engage with it. HENI TALKS - THE FEAR OF COLOUR - ARTIST DAVID BATCHELORCHROMOPHOBIA DAVID BATCHELOR SYNOPSISDAVID BATCHELOR PASTOR Artist David Batchelor discusses the fear of colour which lurks within much Western cultural and intellectual thought. In this film, he traces this fear of colour through 19th century Academic painting through to minimalism, Pop and conceptual art and popular TV andcinema.
HENI TALKS - MASTER OF REALISM: JAN VAN EYCK’S ARNOLFINICHARACTERISTICS OF REALISM ARTELEMENTS OF REALISM IN ARTREALISM ARTS RELATED ARTWORKS Despite being ‘one of the towering figures in the history of art’, Jan van Eyck is a painter ‘about whom the vital facts are almost all missing.’Very little is known about the man himself, his motivations, or indeed the people he painted in his iconic work The Arnolfini Portrait (1434).Although small in size, the painting is rich in detail and is championed as one of ‘the most HENI TALKS - DUCHAMP'S 'READYMADES' AND THE MAKING OF I think that there’s a really strong argument that Duchamp’s ‘readymade’ is the starting place for contemporary art. Duchamp said he wanted to put into doubt or to question the status of the artist, or our definition of what an artist is. The first readymade was probably the Bicycle Wheel in 1913, and he took a bicycle wheeland its
HENI TALKS - WILLIAM MORRIS: USEFUL BEAUTY IN THE HOME It was about honesty. They saw factory-made goods as dishonest, as fake, and they wanted to create objects that were truthful, about hand-craftsmanship, and that celebrated the process of actually making art and design. William Morris was celebrated for talking about the importance of beauty in the home. METAMORPHOSIS OF NARCISSUS: WHEN SALVADOR DALÍ MET SIGMUND The story of Narcissus, most famously told by Ovid, is a tragedy that has fascinated artists for over 2,000 years. Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí set about painting a canvas in homage to the myth in the Spring of 1937, and took the completed work with him to meet the HENI TALKS - DR MARIE-ANNE MANCIO Dr Marie-Anne Mancio trained as an artist before gaining a PhD in Art and Critical Theory from the University of Sussex. She has lectured in art history for City Lit, Tate Modern, the Course, Art in London, London Art Salon, Dulwich Picture Gallery, the Nth Degree Club and many private art societies; she also runs art history study toursabroad.
HENI TALKS - ELY CATHEDRAL'S LADY CHAPEL: DEVOTION ANDTHE LADY CHAPELELY CATHEDRAL ENGLANDELY CATHEDRAL INTERIORELY CATHEDRAL UK This building is a chapel. But the fact is, it’s only one part of one of the greatest building operations conducted in medieval England. A building like this had a specific purpose which was to adorn, celebrate, house the popular devotions to the Virgin Mary that were becoming increasingly common in the 13th and 14th century, the age ofGothic art.
ZAHA HADID: SKETCHING THE FUTURE (HANS ULRICH OBRIST)ZAHA HADID AWARDS AND HONORSZAHA HADID FOR KIDSZAHA HADID GREATEST ACHIEVEMENTSZAHA HADID LIFE STORYZAHA HADID PERSONAL LIFE Zaha Hadid revolutionised the language of architecture and transformed the way we think about design. An artist who sought to question everything taken for granted, she created some of the most spectacular buildings of the 20th and 21st centuries. Hans Ulrich Obrist, a curator, collaborator and longstanding friend, describes how Hadid’s HENI TALKS - HOMETALKSSPEAKERSABOUT USNEWSLETTERCONTACTPRESS Brian Clarke, Norman Foster and Robert Storr in Conversation 47:21 mins. An online conversation between the foremost practitioner of stained glass, architectural artist Brian Clarke and esteemed architect Sir Norman Foster, chaired by Robert Storr. play_arrow. HENI TALKS - ABOUTPRESSCONTACT About Us. HENI Talks is dedicated to sharing insights about art history on film from leading artists, curators and academics. This growing catalogue of short films aims to open art up to the wider public, and create a platform through which everyone can learn about art history, and can discuss, comment, enjoy and engage with it. HENI TALKS - THE FEAR OF COLOUR - ARTIST DAVID BATCHELORCHROMOPHOBIA DAVID BATCHELOR SYNOPSISDAVID BATCHELOR PASTOR Artist David Batchelor discusses the fear of colour which lurks within much Western cultural and intellectual thought. In this film, he traces this fear of colour through 19th century Academic painting through to minimalism, Pop and conceptual art and popular TV andcinema.
HENI TALKS - MASTER OF REALISM: JAN VAN EYCK’S ARNOLFINICHARACTERISTICS OF REALISM ARTELEMENTS OF REALISM IN ARTREALISM ARTS RELATED ARTWORKS Despite being ‘one of the towering figures in the history of art’, Jan van Eyck is a painter ‘about whom the vital facts are almost all missing.’Very little is known about the man himself, his motivations, or indeed the people he painted in his iconic work The Arnolfini Portrait (1434).Although small in size, the painting is rich in detail and is championed as one of ‘the most HENI TALKS - DUCHAMP'S 'READYMADES' AND THE MAKING OF I think that there’s a really strong argument that Duchamp’s ‘readymade’ is the starting place for contemporary art. Duchamp said he wanted to put into doubt or to question the status of the artist, or our definition of what an artist is. The first readymade was probably the Bicycle Wheel in 1913, and he took a bicycle wheeland its
HENI TALKS - WILLIAM MORRIS: USEFUL BEAUTY IN THE HOME It was about honesty. They saw factory-made goods as dishonest, as fake, and they wanted to create objects that were truthful, about hand-craftsmanship, and that celebrated the process of actually making art and design. William Morris was celebrated for talking about the importance of beauty in the home. METAMORPHOSIS OF NARCISSUS: WHEN SALVADOR DALÍ MET SIGMUND The story of Narcissus, most famously told by Ovid, is a tragedy that has fascinated artists for over 2,000 years. Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí set about painting a canvas in homage to the myth in the Spring of 1937, and took the completed work with him to meet the HENI TALKS - DR MARIE-ANNE MANCIO Dr Marie-Anne Mancio trained as an artist before gaining a PhD in Art and Critical Theory from the University of Sussex. She has lectured in art history for City Lit, Tate Modern, the Course, Art in London, London Art Salon, Dulwich Picture Gallery, the Nth Degree Club and many private art societies; she also runs art history study toursabroad.
HENI TALKS - ELY CATHEDRAL'S LADY CHAPEL: DEVOTION ANDTHE LADY CHAPELELY CATHEDRAL ENGLANDELY CATHEDRAL INTERIORELY CATHEDRAL UK This building is a chapel. But the fact is, it’s only one part of one of the greatest building operations conducted in medieval England. A building like this had a specific purpose which was to adorn, celebrate, house the popular devotions to the Virgin Mary that were becoming increasingly common in the 13th and 14th century, the age ofGothic art.
ZAHA HADID: SKETCHING THE FUTURE (HANS ULRICH OBRIST)ZAHA HADID AWARDS AND HONORSZAHA HADID FOR KIDSZAHA HADID GREATEST ACHIEVEMENTSZAHA HADID LIFE STORYZAHA HADID PERSONAL LIFE Zaha Hadid revolutionised the language of architecture and transformed the way we think about design. An artist who sought to question everything taken for granted, she created some of the most spectacular buildings of the 20th and 21st centuries. Hans Ulrich Obrist, a curator, collaborator and longstanding friend, describes how Hadid’s HENI TALKS - SPEAKERS HENI Talks Speakers Find a speaker you would like to follow for more Talks and to know more about their work. HENI TALKS - FRANCIS BACON: REVELATIONS Mark Stevens (MS): Hello, we thought we would begin with a few images of Bacon, just to give everyone a taste of what we would be talking about later. This first image is a charming old photograph of Bacon and his mother. Bacon grew up in extremely privileged circumstances, among the big houses of Anglo-Irish Ireland, just outside Dublin, where nothing was more important than a horse. HENI TALKS - WHAT IS: LAND ART? What is: Land Art? ‘Time, place, relativity, experience. These are the key concepts in Land Art.’. Curator and writer Ben Tufnell maps out a definition of Land Art, a creative practice associated with the broader conceptual art movement of the 1960s and 1970s. Moving away from traditional media and the gallery, land artists set out to make HENI TALKS - LOUISE BOURGEOIS: ‘A PRISONER OF MY MEMORIES’ Louise Bourgeois is a remarkable anomaly in the history of art, in that she was barely recognised until her later years, but she was in at the beginning, so to speak. But she was a very complicated woman, who was also very, very fearful, capable of fits of terrible jealousy, ABSTRACT NO. 2, LEE KRASNER Abstract No. 2, 1947, is a deceptively intricate painting from Lee Krasner’s ‘Little Image’ series. Barbican Curator Eleanor Nairne unpacks some of the ‘rhythms’ of METAMORPHOSIS OF NARCISSUS: WHEN SALVADOR DALÍ MET SIGMUND The story of Narcissus, most famously told by Ovid, is a tragedy that has fascinated artists for over 2,000 years. Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí set about painting a canvas in homage to the myth in the Spring of 1937, and took the completed work with him to meet the father of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud HENI TALKS - GODFREY WORSDALE Director, Henry Moore Foundation. Trained as an art historian in London, Godfrey Worsdale’s career began in the early 1990s at the British Museum, where he worked in the department of Prints and Drawings. In 1994 he established Cultural Instructions; an exhibition space in London dedicated to contemporary projects. HENI TALKS - PAUL NASH: THE LANDSCAPE OF MODERNISM Amidst the unfolding violence of the early twentieth century, British artists struggled to portray modern warfare using any traditional visual style. Curator and writer David Boyd Haycock looks at one of the country’s most famous official war artists, Paul Nash. ZAHA HADID: SKETCHING THE FUTURE (HANS ULRICH OBRIST) Zaha Hadid revolutionised the language of architecture and transformed the way we think about design. An artist who sought to question everything taken for granted, she created some of the most spectacular buildings of the 20th and 21st centuries. Hans Ulrich Obrist, a curator, collaborator and longstanding friend, describes how Hadid’sHENITALKS.COM
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STORIES OF ART FROM THE WORLD’S LEADING EXPERTS 1 MINUTE 1 WORK: BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE Curator Vincent Honoré reflects on David Wojnarowicz's final film, produced at ‘the climax of the aids crisis’. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW WEN ZHENGMING’S WINTRY TREES: MOURNING AND RECIPROCITY Craig Clunas confronts the mysteries of this 16th century Chinesehanging scroll.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW WHAT IS: CERAMIC ART? Paul Greenhalgh celebrates the richness of one of the world’s mostfundamental arts.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW 1 MINUTE 1 WORK: ABSTRACT NO. 2 Barbican Curator Eleanor Nairne traces the rhythms of Lee Krasner’s ‘jewel-like’ painting. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOWWHAT IS: BRUTALISM?
‘To think about Brutalism, is to think about concrete…’ Prof. Richard J. Williams. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW WHAT IS: ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM? What does an Abstract Expressionist painting look like? Eleanor Nairne unpacks some of the aspects of this divergent movement. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW WHAT IS: PRE-RAPHAELITE? Carol Jacobi introduces the work of a nineteenth-century rebel artmovement.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW METAMORPHOSIS OF NARCISSUS: WHEN SALVADOR DALÍ MET SIGMUND FREUD Dawn Adès tells the story of the historic meeting between Salvador Dalí and Sigmund Freud, and unpacks the mind-boggling painting the artist took with him. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW REMBRANDT: FACING THE DARKNESS ARTiculation prize winner Zach Taylor reveals the power of light and dark in Rembrandt’s self-portraits. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW REFLECTING ON GERHARD RICHTER An exploration of the processes of leading artist Gerhard Richter as presented through his glass sculptures and paintings. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOWBROWSE VIDEOS
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1 MINUTE 1 WORK: BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE 01:10 MINS Curator Vincent Honoré reflects on David Wojnarowicz's final film, produced at ‘the climax of the aids crisis’. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW WEN ZHENGMING’S WINTRY TREES: MOURNING AND RECIPROCITY 07:36 MINS Craig Clunas confronts the mysteries of this 16th century Chinesehanging scroll.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW WHAT IS: CERAMIC ART? 04:10 MINS Paul Greenhalgh celebrates the richness of one of the world’s mostfundamental arts.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW 1 MINUTE 1 WORK: ABSTRACT NO. 2 1:07 MINS Barbican Curator Eleanor Nairne traces the rhythms of Lee Krasner’s ‘jewel-like’ painting. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW WHAT IS: BRUTALISM? 03:56 MINS ‘To think about Brutalism, is to think about concrete…’ Prof. Richard J. Williams. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW WHAT IS: ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM? 04:23 MINS What does an Abstract Expressionist painting look like? Eleanor Nairne unpacks some of the aspects of this divergent movement. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW WHAT IS: PRE-RAPHAELITE? 4:05 MINS Carol Jacobi introduces the work of a nineteenth-century rebel artmovement.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW METAMORPHOSIS OF NARCISSUS: WHEN SALVADOR DALÍ MET SIGMUND FREUD15:03 MINS
Dawn Adès tells the story of the historic meeting between Salvador Dalí and Sigmund Freud, and unpacks the mind-boggling painting the artist took with him. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW REMBRANDT: FACING THE DARKNESS 10:56 MINS ARTiculation prize winner Zach Taylor reveals the power of light and dark in Rembrandt’s self-portraits. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW REFLECTING ON GERHARD RICHTER 11:49 MINS An exploration of the processes of leading artist Gerhard Richter as presented through his glass sculptures and paintings. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW FAITH AND DOUBT IN ART 12:13 MINS Julian Spalding discusses the impact of religious belief and spiritual doubt on paintings across time. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW MASTER OF REALISM: JAN VAN EYCK’S ARNOLFINI PORTRAIT 5:20 MINS Martin Gayford presents some of the mysteries behind one of art history’s most recognisable paintings: The Arnolfini Portrait. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW THE AWAKENING CONSCIENCE: THE STORY OF A PRE-RAPHAELITE MUSE 12:27MINS
Discover the ‘psychological drama’ behind William Holman Hunt’s ‘The Awakening Conscience’. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW RACHEL MACLEAN: CUTTING UP THE CANON OF ART HISTORY 13:12 MINS The male gaze, misogyny, porn. Rachel Maclean discusses issues surrounding female identity in the history of art as tackled in her film ‘Make Me Up’. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW THE ART OF LIU XIAODONG: MAN AND MACHINE 07:24 MINS Liu Xiaodong discusses how conflict and urban change influenced his radical new painting method. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW BUILDING BRASÍLIA 15:47 MINS 'To create an entirely new capital, from scratch, in the middle of nowhere, was an extraordinarily ambitious thing to try and do...' Prof. Richard J. Williams. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW GLENN LIGON: ‘I AM A MAN’ 07:56 MINS Gregg Bordowitz explores the work of Glenn Ligon through the lens of his highly charged painting ‘Untitled (I Am A Man)’, 1988. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW PENNY WOOLCOCK: PARALLEL WORLDS 14:48 MINS How can the arts help repair rifts in the community? Penny Woolcock speaks of her art of filmmaking that contributes towards real socialchange.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW GO CRYSTAL TEARS: THE ART OF MELANCHOLY 25:39 MINS A survey into why and how artists have portrayed the melancholic throughout art history, with accompanying lute music. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW COLOURFUL LANGUAGE: RED, WHITE AND BLUE 24:05 MINS Discover the symbolism, significance and spirituality of the colours red, white and blue throughout the history of art. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW THE BED IN ART: FROM TITIAN TO EMIN 20:50 MINS Death, sex, birth, childhood. Uncover how the bed has been represented throughout art history. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW MATHS, ALCHEMY, ART: THE SCULPTURAL PRACTICE OF CONRAD SHAWCROSS10:58 MINS
Discover the mesmerising mathematical phenomenon of moiré in Conrad Shawcross’s monumental works. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW MAKING MAGIC: INSPIRING CHILDREN WITH ART 9.26 MINS See how ‘Magic Matt’ inspires a group of Hackney schoolchildren with the power of art in this dynamic art history workshop on thetheme of 'winter'.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW OMAR VICTOR DIOP: BLACK SUBJECTS IN THE FRAME 14:17 MINS ‘What gets remembered and what doesn’t?’ Mark Sealy examines searing moments in black history through the lens of Omar Victor Diop’s powerful portraits. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW CITY OF FANTASIES: REYNER BANHAM AND THE ARCHITECTURE OF LA 12:30MINS
Prof. Richard Williams explores the lure of Los Angeles. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW PAULA REGO: GIVING FEAR A FACE 12:50 MINS From the personal to the political, every picture tells her story. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW JOSIAH WEDGWOOD: TYCOON OF TASTE 09:08 MINS Tristram Hunt traces how Josiah Wedgwood changed the face of the decorative arts in Britain with his ambitious pottery designs. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW THE OUTSIDER GENIUS: DAVID BOMBERG’S SELF-PORTRAITS 11:53 MINS Art historian Richard Cork examines the psychologically charged self-portraits of this once overlooked artistic master. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW JO SPENCE: THE FEMINIST PHOTOGRAPHY OF A CULTURAL SNIPER 14:37 MINS Learn how a British photographer attempted to take down cultural stereotypes using her own body as a weapon. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW A PORTRAIT OF HUMANITY: THE COMPELLING STORY OF AYUBA SULEIMAN DIALLO07:35 MINS
Discover the unexpected tale that lies behind ‘the face of abolition’, as painted by William Hoare. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW SUBVERSIVE DREAMS UNDER THE SOVIET REGIME: ILYA AND EMILIA KABAKOV12:27 MINS
Robert Storr tells the story of an artist couple born under the SovietRegime.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW THE AMBASSADORS: THE MYSTERIES OF HOLBEIN’S MASTERPIECE 10:41 MINS Discover the astonishing skull hidden in plain sight in Holbein’s masterpiece, The Ambassadors. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW SEURAT’S CIRCUS SIDESHOW: A HYPNOTIC WORK 9:18 MINS Roll up! Roll up! Come and see the strange spectacle that is Seurat’s ‘Circus Sideshow’. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW DAZZLED! HOW A BRITISH ARTIST TRANSFORMED THE SEAS OF WWI 10:22 MINS Dr James Fox tells us how artist Norman Wilkinson came up with a dazzling solution to protect Britain’s navy from the enemy in WWI. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW BUILDING ST PAUL’S: THE NATION’S CHURCH 11:19 MINS Out of the ashes of the Great Fire of 1666, rose a building designed by Sir Christopher Wren which would define the skyline of London. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW MYTH, NATIONAL IDENTITY AND POWER IN THE WORK OF RACHEL MACLEAN 11:13MINS
Rachel Maclean explores the playful ways her video art questions contemporary politics. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW THE SECRETS OF THE WITHAM SHIELD 10:32 MINS Teach your eyes to see the powerful symbols hidden in Celtic designs. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW THE MODERN WOMAN: MANET’S A BAR AT THE FOLIES-BERGÈRE 07:56 MINS Griselda Pollock unpacks some of the questions raised by Manet’s enigmatic last masterpiece. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW WILLIAM MORRIS: USEFUL BEAUTY IN THE HOME 12:20 MINS Discover the radical politics of interior design in the Arts & Craftsmovement.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW ZAHA HADID: SKETCHING THE FUTURE 12:53 MINS Hans Ulrich Obrist traces how Zaha Hadid’s futuristic architecture evolved from ‘superfluid’ sketches. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW THE REVOLUTION OF THE BLACK SQUARE 14:52 MINS How Kazimir Malevich’s painting of a simple Black Square changed the direction of modern art. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW LOUISE BOURGEOIS: ‘A PRISONER OF MY MEMORIES’ 10:58 MINS Robert Storr explores how this influential artist channelled her psychological pain to create some of the most visceral works of thetwentieth century.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT: POST-PUNK PRODIGY 11:57 MINS How did the artist Jean-Michel Basquiat anticipate our experience ofthe digital?
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW PICTURING POWER: ELIZABETH I AND FRIDA KAHLO 10.10 MINS What do Elizabeth I and Frida Kahlo have in common? Penny Huntsman unpacks the portraits of the Tudor Queen and Mexican Surrealist. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW DUCHAMP’S ‘READYMADES’ AND THE MAKING OF CONTEMPORARY ART 08:14MINS
What is contemporary art? Why is it so hard to define? Ralph Rugoff argues that Marcel Duchamp is to thank - or to blame. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW DAVID BATCHELOR: THE FEAR OF COLOUR 11:45 MINS Are you a chromophobe? Artist David Batchelor discusses the fear of colour which lurks within much Western cultural and intellectualthought.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW CÉZANNE: ‘THE FATHER OF MODERN ART’ 14:15 MINS Jacky Klein discusses how a recluse from the French countryside became the first Modern painter. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW ASAFO FLAGS: STITCHES THROUGH TIME 07:04 MINS Gus Casely-Hayford explores the ways in which Asafo Flags play a vital role in defining Fante identity and history. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW ‘A PHYSICAL ESSAY IN POWER’: THE STRIKING STORY OF AN IVORY MASK FROM BENIN 07:23 MINS Gus Casely-Hayford reveals the secrets of a West African ivory mask created over 500 years ago, depicting a 'steely and ruthless' queenmother.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW ELY CATHEDRAL’S LADY CHAPEL: DEVOTION AND DESTRUCTION 09:45 MINS Paul Binski describes how the apotheosis of English medieval decoration fell victim to 'hammer happy' religious reformers. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW PISA PULPIT: ‘JUDGE BY THE CORRECT LAW!’ 09:17 MINS Jules Lubbock solves the puzzle of how to read Giovanni Pisano's PisaPulpit.
_play_arrow_ PLAY NOW TITIAN’S DIANA: POETRY IN PAINT 08:05 MINS Curator Caroline Campbell on the poetic Roman myths behind two of Titian's finest paintings. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW ‘SWINGEING LONDON’: ART, DRUGS AND WORMWOOD SCRUBS 08:37 MINS Harriet Vyner discusses the image which symbolised the establishment's backlash to the 'Summer of Love'. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW ART & SOUL AT ST PAUL’S CATHEDRAL 06:49 MINS Sandy Nairne explores how the art in St Paul's Cathedral captures changing ideas of spirituality. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW DAMIEN HIRST VISITS PETER BLAKE’S STUDIO 16:16 MINS Damien Hirst visits the studio of Sir Peter Blake, one of the leading figures of British Pop art. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW BUILDING FLEET STREET: THE GOLDEN AGE OF NEWSPAPERS 10:30 MINS The golden age of newspapers was also the heyday of Art Deco. Edwin Heathcote tours Fleet Street's iconic press headquarters. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW JONAS MEKAS: THE MAKING OF ANDY WARHOL’S ‘EMPIRE’ 09:10 MINS Experimental filmmaker Jonas Mekas recalls the making of Andy Warhol’s radically sparse film ‘Empire’. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW EMOTIONAL ENIGMA IN THE SCULPTURE OF MICHELANGELO 07:39 MINS Alison Cole discusses the emotional impact of Michelangelo's 'Taddei Tondo' (c.1504-1505) and the enduring power of his art. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW JEREMY DELLER: ‘IT IS WHAT IT IS.’ 11:00 MINS Artist Jeremy Deller examines the art of war and how his own works serve as a kind of 'public inquiry' into the nature of conflict. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW HENI TALKS TRAILER 03:08 MINS Stories of Art from the world’s leading experts _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW WILLIAM HOGARTH AND THE FOUNDLING HOSPITAL 07:33 MINS Discover how William Hogarth's work with the Foundling Hospital laid the foundations for the contemporary British art scene. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW HENRY MOORE’S VISION 10:13 MINS Godfrey Worsdale explores the bucolic epicentre of Moore's creative production: Perry Green. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW THE MONA LISA: PAINTING BEYOND PORTRAITURE 08:53 MINS Who was Mona Lisa? Why is this painting so important? We asked leading Leonardo da Vinci expert, Martin Kemp. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW ASHLEY BICKERTON: ‘LOOKING FOR SOMETHING BEYOND’ 08:44 MINS Join Ashley Bickerton on the Hawaii beach where he first caught a wave to hear how a nomadic lifestyle has influenced his practice. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW CALIFORNIA: DESIGNING FREEDOM 07:58 MINS Deyan Sudjic explores how the spirit of freedom in 1960s California inspired a generation of designers. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW PAUL NASH: THE LANDSCAPE OF MODERNISM 09:13 MINS David Boyd Haycock traces the life and career of Paul Nash, who 're-dreamt the landscape in a Modernist manner'. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW UNDER THE GAZE: THE ART OF CINDY SHERMAN 09:21 MINS Hal Foster discusses how the self-portraits of artist Cindy Sherman presaged the selfie culture of our times. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW VAN GOGH’S OLIVE TREES 07:06 MINS Frances Fowle reassesses the work of one of the world's most popular but misunderstood artists, Van Gogh. _play_arrow_ PLAY NOW This site uses cookies: Find out more. Accept cookie policyDetails
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