The life and paintings of Scottish artist, Ian Fairweather, who adopted Australia as his home.
Жүктеу.....
Пікірлер: 35
@marcusvictor1559 Жыл бұрын
Ian was my friend and mentor. Thank you for this.
@Loneokami
7 ай бұрын
Lies
@marcusvictor1559
Ай бұрын
@@Loneokami Excerpt from a recent email to a query: "Speaking of sequestering oneself from the world: Ian Fairweather, miserable sod that he was, had a place on Bribie Island, but when he wanted to flee from whence came the razoo, it was to the front half of an Australian Navy Coastal Defence Launch that had sunk at her moorings and been chopped up to salvage the engine. Situated beside a semi derelict armaments store in a remote Darwin bay, the chop had been balustraded and looked out to the retired pearling luggers anchored near the crocodile infested Mangrove swamp. And that's where the muse came and he worked through ideas with lots of paint on old newspapers, most of which were flung aside and rarely picked up."
@psychicart5670 Жыл бұрын
I feel sad for this man not have his mother until he was 10, but Artist often like solitude to work in so , I guess his life suited him and his art. Shame some people didn’t get him . If it hadn’t been for this video I would never have known about Ian Fairweather. So thank you .
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it.
@dirtycelinefrenchman8 ай бұрын
Thank you for introducing me to this amazing artist and his fascinating life story
@jennifermoore8805 Жыл бұрын
Words cannot express how much his work effects me … exceptional , beautiful & totally unique … what an amazing man He had a very hard life but it helped create his ability to express images that reach right into your soul … thankfully he left us such inspiring work 🙏🏻❤️
@shenanigans3710 Жыл бұрын
Maybe one of the greatest artists of the 20th Century. Unfortunately, because he lived in Australia and had such a crazy life, few people in the rest of the world have heard of him. I knew a woman who OWNED the painting @ 35.45. I used to go to her house and look at it sometimes. It was a very moving experience.
@kaibab58 Жыл бұрын
At last , something about Fairweather on KZread. Interesting and satisfying.
@raerae64227 ай бұрын
He seemed unique in every possible way!
@garywillis7467 Жыл бұрын
Aside from the slightly stilted AI reading of the text - I think this video offers the ,most comprehensive overview of Fairweathers life and work I’ve come across- thanks to whoever put it together. In 1970- as a zealous art student - I hitchhiked from Canberra to Queensland- in the hope of meeting him. Unfortunately the trip itself was so challenging - after a weeks traveling- sleeping under bridges in the rain etc - not long after Brisbane, I am ashamed to say I felt so poor, lost & disheartened that I eventually gave up, and hitchhiked back to Canberra. Still I have always had a keen interest in his work - and this video has helped fill in the empty spaces. Thanks 🙏
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it. Finding out about him took quite a bit of digging.
@josieemery8093
Жыл бұрын
Fairweather’s work had a profound effect on my thinking in the 1960s. It pointed me towards the East and to Zen. I lived on the beach at Darwin for a while and, of course, worked in the Canberra mountains when I knew you and Chris A. I seem to find a commonality across those Aust. painters of the 50s-60s - Fairweather, Olson, French, Olley (and the music of Sculthorpe).and the synergy between Fairweather and Patrick White. An Australian mysticism that draws its water from many wells. Hope you’re keeping well, Gary. xx J.
@writerman242 Жыл бұрын
I saw that 1994 retrospective. What an extraordinary life Excellent video thank you
@patriciamalt6010 Жыл бұрын
it’s a pretty good voice, clear, good enunciation and quite natural modulation. beautifully written, fantastic research…world class..thanks very much.
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@darylcumming71194 ай бұрын
Thak you for the upload.
@cinemaipswich4636 Жыл бұрын
When I was a boy, my family used to go to Bribie Island for the week end. There was only a ferry from Redcliffe to get there. We would camp on the beach. There were only a few houses there. I remember the huge old gun emplacements, and the impenetrable bush just beyond the beach. There were plentiful fish to catch on the beach. Heaven. I could see why Ian wanted to be there. I have never met him, but his paintings are much sought after.
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
Happy memories!
@mavicityrelayson2924 Жыл бұрын
I’ve been bingeing the full series and finally came to the last video when i saw a new upload. To my surprise, this nomadic artist even came to my country for a bit. Thank you for your posts, it informs my art practice.
@ctaylor146010 ай бұрын
Thanks for highlighting this much underrated and little appreciated artist.
@dianebonneau2350 Жыл бұрын
Thrilling presentation in depth and nuanced with the use of his works
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it.
@outtathyme5679 Жыл бұрын
This channel is pretty amazing tbh
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
Glad you like it. 😀
@melindawakley78595 ай бұрын
He lived 5 lifetimes into one I think. He was a real adventurer. The Australian painter Margaret Olley was friends with him. I read in a biography book about her, that she took on the enormous task of travelling to Bribie Island to stay and paint with him. I think he was drinking a lot if I recall. Margaret Olley was a big drinker too. She eventually gave it up though.
@MsOceanstar Жыл бұрын
Quite the eccentric artist. But i sure like his work!
@joeswampdawghenry10 ай бұрын
This guy was great!!! Lol
@carlkligerman1981 Жыл бұрын
Surely the most important, original and brilliant modernist Australia ever produced. Fairweather stands tall amid the mob of derivative, pretentious and mediocre painters that clutter our early attempts at abstraction. For mine he is the greatest of “Australian” twentieth century painters, with only perhaps Fred Williams even approaching the status of being his peer.
@timtaylor8406 Жыл бұрын
The staccato robot's voice is off putting but an interesting insight into a mysterious man...
@sphinxtheeminx Жыл бұрын
Is this VO made by AI?? It is so weird and uncanny valley - like Yoda.
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
What type of device are you using to watch the video?
@johnburman966 Жыл бұрын
Interesting that his painted faces are abstractions....nothing is personal...like the narrator's voice.
@julyandavis85287 ай бұрын
Such a shame this is unnecessarily spoiled by the AI narration.
Пікірлер: 35
Ian was my friend and mentor. Thank you for this.
@Loneokami
7 ай бұрын
Lies
@marcusvictor1559
Ай бұрын
@@Loneokami Excerpt from a recent email to a query: "Speaking of sequestering oneself from the world: Ian Fairweather, miserable sod that he was, had a place on Bribie Island, but when he wanted to flee from whence came the razoo, it was to the front half of an Australian Navy Coastal Defence Launch that had sunk at her moorings and been chopped up to salvage the engine. Situated beside a semi derelict armaments store in a remote Darwin bay, the chop had been balustraded and looked out to the retired pearling luggers anchored near the crocodile infested Mangrove swamp. And that's where the muse came and he worked through ideas with lots of paint on old newspapers, most of which were flung aside and rarely picked up."
I feel sad for this man not have his mother until he was 10, but Artist often like solitude to work in so , I guess his life suited him and his art. Shame some people didn’t get him . If it hadn’t been for this video I would never have known about Ian Fairweather. So thank you .
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it.
Thank you for introducing me to this amazing artist and his fascinating life story
Words cannot express how much his work effects me … exceptional , beautiful & totally unique … what an amazing man He had a very hard life but it helped create his ability to express images that reach right into your soul … thankfully he left us such inspiring work 🙏🏻❤️
Maybe one of the greatest artists of the 20th Century. Unfortunately, because he lived in Australia and had such a crazy life, few people in the rest of the world have heard of him. I knew a woman who OWNED the painting @ 35.45. I used to go to her house and look at it sometimes. It was a very moving experience.
At last , something about Fairweather on KZread. Interesting and satisfying.
He seemed unique in every possible way!
Aside from the slightly stilted AI reading of the text - I think this video offers the ,most comprehensive overview of Fairweathers life and work I’ve come across- thanks to whoever put it together. In 1970- as a zealous art student - I hitchhiked from Canberra to Queensland- in the hope of meeting him. Unfortunately the trip itself was so challenging - after a weeks traveling- sleeping under bridges in the rain etc - not long after Brisbane, I am ashamed to say I felt so poor, lost & disheartened that I eventually gave up, and hitchhiked back to Canberra. Still I have always had a keen interest in his work - and this video has helped fill in the empty spaces. Thanks 🙏
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it. Finding out about him took quite a bit of digging.
@josieemery8093
Жыл бұрын
Fairweather’s work had a profound effect on my thinking in the 1960s. It pointed me towards the East and to Zen. I lived on the beach at Darwin for a while and, of course, worked in the Canberra mountains when I knew you and Chris A. I seem to find a commonality across those Aust. painters of the 50s-60s - Fairweather, Olson, French, Olley (and the music of Sculthorpe).and the synergy between Fairweather and Patrick White. An Australian mysticism that draws its water from many wells. Hope you’re keeping well, Gary. xx J.
I saw that 1994 retrospective. What an extraordinary life Excellent video thank you
it’s a pretty good voice, clear, good enunciation and quite natural modulation. beautifully written, fantastic research…world class..thanks very much.
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you!
Thak you for the upload.
When I was a boy, my family used to go to Bribie Island for the week end. There was only a ferry from Redcliffe to get there. We would camp on the beach. There were only a few houses there. I remember the huge old gun emplacements, and the impenetrable bush just beyond the beach. There were plentiful fish to catch on the beach. Heaven. I could see why Ian wanted to be there. I have never met him, but his paintings are much sought after.
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
Happy memories!
I’ve been bingeing the full series and finally came to the last video when i saw a new upload. To my surprise, this nomadic artist even came to my country for a bit. Thank you for your posts, it informs my art practice.
Thanks for highlighting this much underrated and little appreciated artist.
Thrilling presentation in depth and nuanced with the use of his works
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it.
This channel is pretty amazing tbh
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
Glad you like it. 😀
He lived 5 lifetimes into one I think. He was a real adventurer. The Australian painter Margaret Olley was friends with him. I read in a biography book about her, that she took on the enormous task of travelling to Bribie Island to stay and paint with him. I think he was drinking a lot if I recall. Margaret Olley was a big drinker too. She eventually gave it up though.
Quite the eccentric artist. But i sure like his work!
This guy was great!!! Lol
Surely the most important, original and brilliant modernist Australia ever produced. Fairweather stands tall amid the mob of derivative, pretentious and mediocre painters that clutter our early attempts at abstraction. For mine he is the greatest of “Australian” twentieth century painters, with only perhaps Fred Williams even approaching the status of being his peer.
The staccato robot's voice is off putting but an interesting insight into a mysterious man...
Is this VO made by AI?? It is so weird and uncanny valley - like Yoda.
@arti-facts-4u
Жыл бұрын
What type of device are you using to watch the video?
Interesting that his painted faces are abstractions....nothing is personal...like the narrator's voice.
Such a shame this is unnecessarily spoiled by the AI narration.
Loving the work but the narration is awful.