Art for everyone. Exciting exhibitions, inspiring events and extraordinary collections, all housed in a spectacular Norman Foster building on the UEA Campus, Norwich.
Today, at 61, I grew-up in the villages of Norfolk and among old characters like that, the accent brings back memories. I can distinctly recall one old guy I used to walk through the village to visit when I was around seven, that day he was milking a cow over a bucket while seated on his three legged stool... squirted me as I approached with a laugh and a grin.
@johnburman966 Жыл бұрын
The end of highly skilled craftsmen capable of this level of skill. After WW1 industrial mass production replaced craftsmen....many killed in the war too. Now with computer tech. it could be done.
@chriskappert1365 Жыл бұрын
This period was called " Le Belle Epoque " as if they knew it would never be bettered ......... So sad that shortly after this , WW1 broke out , the totaly insane madness !
@tadeoguerrero7892 Жыл бұрын
In Buenos Aires the style stayed around a little more. And we can see a bit of its Italian, French, Spanish and Austrian variety in many buildings. It seems to be the city outside of Europe with more art nouveau architecture indeed. I do tours based on that, because I'm fascinated.
@HeronCoyote1234 Жыл бұрын
I love love love Art Nouveau. Trying to figure out how to combine the art nouveau style and (cozy) minimalism in my living room.
@banjopete Жыл бұрын
Polar opposites.
@windowsight_official Жыл бұрын
Indeed, Gaudí greatly contributed to Art Nouveau with his unique vision. Thanks for a great video 👏
@antoinemozart243 Жыл бұрын
Art nouveau has nothing to do with England ! It is a French art like Art deco! The English invented nothing in architecture . ABSOLUTELY NOTHING !
@Ganpignanus Жыл бұрын
gorgeous
@shelleyharris165 Жыл бұрын
So marvelous to see. Inspirational and lovely to 🌍☮️🙏😇😎🤲🕊️🌊🌄🐞💐
@ivanafityoga9641 Жыл бұрын
Really wish to take time back. This is the top of elegance
@violasses2 жыл бұрын
not talking about klimt in a video about art nouveau is simply sinful
@antoinemozart243 Жыл бұрын
Klimt is rubbish . Very decorative but not inspiring...
@violasses Жыл бұрын
@@antoinemozart243 ??? artists don't need to be "inspiring" to be a landmark artist. most of what he does is posters for plays, which is not design to "inspire" but to promote, but he has such a unique and defining style that anyone who sees a work of his would immediately think, Klimt. as well as the fact that all pieces of art are inspiring in their own way to different people, if you don't get inspiration from it doesn't automatically mean "he's shit."
@antoinemozart243 Жыл бұрын
@@violasses Klimt is artistically rubbish and decoratively a genius. Mucha is far more original!
@Game_Hero2 жыл бұрын
Too bad it's gone.
@jennygw18832 жыл бұрын
Love the accent. Love my home county and miss it so much. I lapse into Suffolk more and more as I get older and I'm so pleased I do as it keeps me connected to home. Come onnn towen!!!
@traceyculyer58112 жыл бұрын
EE see i and i see he up on worsle Blackbird tree.
@Eqcte2 жыл бұрын
Ratio
@Krispy10112 жыл бұрын
To me, the artwork of Mucha is the quintessential Art Nouveau master. While others works were indeed exquisite, it was Mucha that has me admiring his works over and over again.
@MountedDragoon2 жыл бұрын
For me it's Aubrey Beardsley. That bold black like, use of negative space, and grotesquerie rendered in beautiful, intricate designs really sets his art apart from others of the period and is possibly the most dreamlike art of the era. His illustrations of famous books like ones by Wilde and Malory cement his place in many media. You can see his influence even today with artists like Alastair, Tim Sale, and Frank Miller.
@rabit8182 жыл бұрын
Art nouveau is simply trippy
@chance57452 жыл бұрын
Aw he reminds me of my late father. Very similar voice - minus the whistle 😊
@mellow51232 жыл бұрын
Gorgeous.
@scrubb12782 жыл бұрын
This is minecraft music
@banjopete Жыл бұрын
Satie.
@gregorsamsa13642 жыл бұрын
I love the whistly ess so much!!
@norman4rd2 жыл бұрын
I spent 10-years in the 80s visiting Norfolk farms. Brings back a lot of memories. A good ol' boy! Not many left now. Thank you for letting us see this.
@Ludifant2 жыл бұрын
Wow, I´d love to have seen that exhibition, too bad travel is limited now. But I am happy to have witnessed it in this way, thank you.
@damianhunt21872 жыл бұрын
Hard times, having to eat Sparrows and Blackbirds.
@traceyculyer58112 жыл бұрын
Did he see you and you see he upon worsle blackbird tree . Dew yew keepa troshin ole bor.
@dianeleeder34382 жыл бұрын
Adorable man.
@jamiewilson56793 жыл бұрын
Keep yew a troshern' bor.🔰💛💚😀👍
@johnbeverley83573 жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed these presentations and the Q&A. Thank you to all involved. It sent me straight back to the book and I re-lived the exhibition.
@wildwoodrunester4 жыл бұрын
Lovely. I am from East Anglia and my Dad is a farmer. I love the accent. Sadly dying out as my accent is not as strong as my dad's - unless I am drunk at which point it seems to get stronger ; )
@CEng-ge6sw4 жыл бұрын
Any date for this film?
@paulhostler78634 жыл бұрын
2009
@SevenDeMagnus5 жыл бұрын
Thanks Megan. You'll be a great actress. You deliver lines well.
@edwardmiessner65025 жыл бұрын
I can see the similarities between the accent depicted here and the Tidewater accent of southeastern Virginis.
@cliffdariff745 жыл бұрын
Do you think we could see the sculpture maybe?
@2207736 жыл бұрын
Why does it sound oddly 'Dixie'??? I knew West Country accents generally sound a lot like 'Dixie English', so what about these guys from the east?
@junctionfilms63482 жыл бұрын
West Country is 'rhotic' ( strong R ) and East Anglian is not. That is one difference. They are at opposite sides of the country also -but there is some similarities.
@tmuxor6 жыл бұрын
We're losing this accent because of all the bloody Irish don't you see?
@macvena6 жыл бұрын
He sounds vaguely like an American from the South. Interesting.
@jaggass6 жыл бұрын
The Norfolk accent is slowly dying out as more cockneys invade the county
@noifurze63975 жыл бұрын
it's changing which is a shame, but the accent is more a hybrid,not old east Anglian but not London either
@jaggass5 жыл бұрын
@@noifurze6397 On the older generation will retain it. I know a guy from Lowestoft who's in his late 50's and my god his accent is strong.
@junctionfilms63482 жыл бұрын
@@noifurze6397 East Anglian is related to south east accents in any case ( like a fossilised version ) . There are a lot of similar pronunciations, as well as the silent 'R' ( non -rhotic ) It is also the education of the last 100 years, were the 'standard' was introduced to education all over Britain ( Oxford English )
@pipesmokingsmudger29276 жыл бұрын
Sadly such Norfolk characters have nearly all but gone .. and taken the Norfolk rural way of life with them..
@michaelwebster62195 ай бұрын
Had 1 in my little vilage harry hawlk we woukd call him and he would chase us pull our hair come after us with his gun lol chase us for miles like u wont get that today with kids n smart phone s but we would gwt old hazza to come after us tooled uo with his shooter back in late 80s 90 91 lol was wild times no cctv no cameras no cops
@philipians16357 жыл бұрын
grand - thank you
@gunillamadegard50487 жыл бұрын
What to me seems very difficult to understand, is in what way mr Douglass Bailey claim that he, better than Gimbutas, with this exhibition should have explained the MEANING of these prehistoric figurines ( as he does in his youtube-video presenting himself) . I can se no such explanation at all. Just a lot of very loose assumptions without any kind of underpinned scientifical rigor at all, neither a quantitative nor a qualitativ methodological such, which by contrast Gimbutas really had.
@colinnice9 жыл бұрын
love the accents. lovely old gentleman of character. they dont make them like he anymore sadly
@sanchiahanson891310 жыл бұрын
R.I.P Eric.
@gordonhall75210 жыл бұрын
And this is the primary derivation of the NEW ENGLAND YANKEE ACCENT in the United States. Wonderful!
@FallenMonk5510 жыл бұрын
Girl of my dreams!
@darreniii507910 жыл бұрын
your boring as batshit and you need to learn how to talk properly!!!!
@fidessieber701010 жыл бұрын
Nice !!!
@4hornes11 жыл бұрын
Why with the visual media of video "Visual Arts", don't you show images of the flowers and artworks you are talking about?
@4hornes11 жыл бұрын
Why with the visual media of video and as the director of the Sainsbury Centre for "Visual Arts", don't you show images of the subject you are talking about?
@kodaiantiguar840112 жыл бұрын
Liked and agreed with all she said, but for the sake of clarity wasn't Ultraman launched in 1966 as a spin-off of the anthology series Ultra Q? She maintained a reference to the 50's.
Пікірлер
This film deserves more likes. It is brilliant.
Sounds VERY kinky
Today, at 61, I grew-up in the villages of Norfolk and among old characters like that, the accent brings back memories. I can distinctly recall one old guy I used to walk through the village to visit when I was around seven, that day he was milking a cow over a bucket while seated on his three legged stool... squirted me as I approached with a laugh and a grin.
The end of highly skilled craftsmen capable of this level of skill. After WW1 industrial mass production replaced craftsmen....many killed in the war too. Now with computer tech. it could be done.
This period was called " Le Belle Epoque " as if they knew it would never be bettered ......... So sad that shortly after this , WW1 broke out , the totaly insane madness !
In Buenos Aires the style stayed around a little more. And we can see a bit of its Italian, French, Spanish and Austrian variety in many buildings. It seems to be the city outside of Europe with more art nouveau architecture indeed. I do tours based on that, because I'm fascinated.
I love love love Art Nouveau. Trying to figure out how to combine the art nouveau style and (cozy) minimalism in my living room.
Polar opposites.
Indeed, Gaudí greatly contributed to Art Nouveau with his unique vision. Thanks for a great video 👏
Art nouveau has nothing to do with England ! It is a French art like Art deco! The English invented nothing in architecture . ABSOLUTELY NOTHING !
gorgeous
So marvelous to see. Inspirational and lovely to 🌍☮️🙏😇😎🤲🕊️🌊🌄🐞💐
Really wish to take time back. This is the top of elegance
not talking about klimt in a video about art nouveau is simply sinful
Klimt is rubbish . Very decorative but not inspiring...
@@antoinemozart243 ??? artists don't need to be "inspiring" to be a landmark artist. most of what he does is posters for plays, which is not design to "inspire" but to promote, but he has such a unique and defining style that anyone who sees a work of his would immediately think, Klimt. as well as the fact that all pieces of art are inspiring in their own way to different people, if you don't get inspiration from it doesn't automatically mean "he's shit."
@@violasses Klimt is artistically rubbish and decoratively a genius. Mucha is far more original!
Too bad it's gone.
Love the accent. Love my home county and miss it so much. I lapse into Suffolk more and more as I get older and I'm so pleased I do as it keeps me connected to home. Come onnn towen!!!
EE see i and i see he up on worsle Blackbird tree.
Ratio
To me, the artwork of Mucha is the quintessential Art Nouveau master. While others works were indeed exquisite, it was Mucha that has me admiring his works over and over again.
For me it's Aubrey Beardsley. That bold black like, use of negative space, and grotesquerie rendered in beautiful, intricate designs really sets his art apart from others of the period and is possibly the most dreamlike art of the era. His illustrations of famous books like ones by Wilde and Malory cement his place in many media. You can see his influence even today with artists like Alastair, Tim Sale, and Frank Miller.
Art nouveau is simply trippy
Aw he reminds me of my late father. Very similar voice - minus the whistle 😊
Gorgeous.
This is minecraft music
Satie.
I love the whistly ess so much!!
I spent 10-years in the 80s visiting Norfolk farms. Brings back a lot of memories. A good ol' boy! Not many left now. Thank you for letting us see this.
Wow, I´d love to have seen that exhibition, too bad travel is limited now. But I am happy to have witnessed it in this way, thank you.
Hard times, having to eat Sparrows and Blackbirds.
Did he see you and you see he upon worsle blackbird tree . Dew yew keepa troshin ole bor.
Adorable man.
Keep yew a troshern' bor.🔰💛💚😀👍
Really enjoyed these presentations and the Q&A. Thank you to all involved. It sent me straight back to the book and I re-lived the exhibition.
Lovely. I am from East Anglia and my Dad is a farmer. I love the accent. Sadly dying out as my accent is not as strong as my dad's - unless I am drunk at which point it seems to get stronger ; )
Any date for this film?
2009
Thanks Megan. You'll be a great actress. You deliver lines well.
I can see the similarities between the accent depicted here and the Tidewater accent of southeastern Virginis.
Do you think we could see the sculpture maybe?
Why does it sound oddly 'Dixie'??? I knew West Country accents generally sound a lot like 'Dixie English', so what about these guys from the east?
West Country is 'rhotic' ( strong R ) and East Anglian is not. That is one difference. They are at opposite sides of the country also -but there is some similarities.
We're losing this accent because of all the bloody Irish don't you see?
He sounds vaguely like an American from the South. Interesting.
The Norfolk accent is slowly dying out as more cockneys invade the county
it's changing which is a shame, but the accent is more a hybrid,not old east Anglian but not London either
@@noifurze6397 On the older generation will retain it. I know a guy from Lowestoft who's in his late 50's and my god his accent is strong.
@@noifurze6397 East Anglian is related to south east accents in any case ( like a fossilised version ) . There are a lot of similar pronunciations, as well as the silent 'R' ( non -rhotic ) It is also the education of the last 100 years, were the 'standard' was introduced to education all over Britain ( Oxford English )
Sadly such Norfolk characters have nearly all but gone .. and taken the Norfolk rural way of life with them..
Had 1 in my little vilage harry hawlk we woukd call him and he would chase us pull our hair come after us with his gun lol chase us for miles like u wont get that today with kids n smart phone s but we would gwt old hazza to come after us tooled uo with his shooter back in late 80s 90 91 lol was wild times no cctv no cameras no cops
grand - thank you
What to me seems very difficult to understand, is in what way mr Douglass Bailey claim that he, better than Gimbutas, with this exhibition should have explained the MEANING of these prehistoric figurines ( as he does in his youtube-video presenting himself) . I can se no such explanation at all. Just a lot of very loose assumptions without any kind of underpinned scientifical rigor at all, neither a quantitative nor a qualitativ methodological such, which by contrast Gimbutas really had.
love the accents. lovely old gentleman of character. they dont make them like he anymore sadly
R.I.P Eric.
And this is the primary derivation of the NEW ENGLAND YANKEE ACCENT in the United States. Wonderful!
Girl of my dreams!
your boring as batshit and you need to learn how to talk properly!!!!
Nice !!!
Why with the visual media of video "Visual Arts", don't you show images of the flowers and artworks you are talking about?
Why with the visual media of video and as the director of the Sainsbury Centre for "Visual Arts", don't you show images of the subject you are talking about?
Liked and agreed with all she said, but for the sake of clarity wasn't Ultraman launched in 1966 as a spin-off of the anthology series Ultra Q? She maintained a reference to the 50's.