Looking For Meaning : Whistler’s Mother

2024 ж. 3 Ақп.
20 087 Рет қаралды

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  • This definitely changes my viewing of this piece. I can engage it on the black- white tonal beauty but also for seeing the feelings of his family & culture, which I DO NOT SHARE. The irony of beautiful art created by a painter with ugly feelings & ideas.

    @barbaranowak-cuthel3548@barbaranowak-cuthel35483 ай бұрын
  • Not gonna lie, my first thought was "is that the painting from the Mr Bean movie?"

    @hongquiao@hongquiao3 ай бұрын
  • I saw his paintings when they were at the Clark about 10yrs ago. The book in the gift shop mentioned that he had a relationship with Oscar Wilde. Since it did not end well it is suspect that Whistler was a loose inspiration for Dorian Gray. Interesting Wilde would name his character Gray.

    @carolyncasner4806@carolyncasner48063 ай бұрын
  • Mr. Bean

    @In.New.York.I.Milly.Rock.@In.New.York.I.Milly.Rock.3 ай бұрын
    • I agree 👍

      @bexz5042@bexz50423 ай бұрын
    • Bean, 1997.

      @maxgregorycompositions6216@maxgregorycompositions62163 ай бұрын
  • I believe most people viewing this with no knowledge of Whistler, his racist idiocy (which I will never forget going forward) or his mother (let's feel great sympathy for this woman who was served by slaves and seemingly enjoyed every moment) thought this- what a dour and uninteresting old woman. Knowing what I do now, what a portrait of banal evil.

    @debrabarnhardt1103@debrabarnhardt11033 ай бұрын
  • The Canvas: We must always remember that the apolitical is the weapon of supremacists. Us: Heh heh, Mr. Bean.

    @ronoc9@ronoc93 ай бұрын
  • Unfortunately, the Mr Bean film and thus modern culture's memory of this painting, omits the original title and intent of the artist

    @antoinepetrov@antoinepetrov3 ай бұрын
    • 1. It's quite big 2. It's a picture of Whistler's Mother

      @fokkusuh4425@fokkusuh44253 ай бұрын
    • Mr. Bean = modern culture

      @ronoc9@ronoc93 ай бұрын
    • No, the film enhanced the cultural impact of this painting.

      @maxgregorycompositions6216@maxgregorycompositions62163 ай бұрын
    • “… The identity of the sitter isn’t important. Let yourself be moved by the shades. …”

      @whatyoulookinat965@whatyoulookinat9653 ай бұрын
    • Nonsense. Mr. Bean elevated this piece.

      @bananas8779@bananas87793 ай бұрын
  • The information you present is august and I always love to listen to it when I'm either painting on my easel or sketching on my drawing board. Keep up your fine work!

    @CHM0419@CHM041917 күн бұрын
  • It can be hard separating the art from the artist. I think specifically of Kevin Spacey, who's films I love.

    @cgautz@cgautz3 ай бұрын
    • He was found not guilty at the end of the trial. Plenty of reprehensible people in "Tinseltown"

      @zetectic7968@zetectic79683 ай бұрын
    • @@zetectic7968Interesting take. Sounds like the FBI needs to check your hard drive.

      @b.jr.7816@b.jr.78163 ай бұрын
    • It is. When I see something with Kevin Spacey in it, I can't help looking at him in the light of his crimes.

      @cardinalgin@cardinalgin3 ай бұрын
  • B E A N

    @halogenzawgi9410@halogenzawgi94103 ай бұрын
  • I thought I was gonna be clever and reference Mr. bean, turns out all the comments are bout Mr. Bean

    @alec187@alec1873 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for finally making this painting interesting to me

    @gaskoart-tm5bv@gaskoart-tm5bv3 ай бұрын
  • So perhaps the painting was a silent admission of the grief the Whistler family felt over the fall of the Southern Secession. A mother in Black, with Confederate Grey (or West Point Grey) behind her. Created by a man who conveniently found himself otherwise engaged during the conflict and then later spoke with flowery, insipid prose over the tragedy. Set against the background of the family history, this reads as an artistic representation of America’s “Lost Cause” movement. Whatever Whistler titled it, no artist ever creates art without infusing something of their world view into the work. Maybe he was unaware of his personal biases; or maybe he was intentional in his symbolic representation but hesitant to openly flaunt what amounted to Treason after the reunion of the States. Either way, I don’t know if he really belongs to the ranks of American artists, both due to his fleeing the nation and due to his loyalty to a Confederacy that directly opposed the central government.

    @merrillsunderland8662@merrillsunderland86623 ай бұрын
  • I appreciate the research you pour into your videos, the composition, the thoughtfulness… I just discovered your channel last night, and I subscribed this morning ❤ I want to make one point that some might not agree with. It was the norm for white Americans to be racist in the 1880s. Not believing slavery should be legal is NOT the same as seeing black people as equal, and it’s helpful to contemporary people to make that distinction clear, especially since people still conflate the two.

    @MorrowLanguageLounge@MorrowLanguageLounge2 ай бұрын
  • The mother painting was in Musée d’Orsay. Just saw the painting last month

    @BBnose@BBnose3 ай бұрын
  • This is why I have a fear of looking into the past of my favorite creatives. I had no idea that he was a Confederate.

    @Redroem@Redroem3 ай бұрын
  • The meaning that I see here is that art distills the best from the artist, separating it from his (sometimes glaring) faults. The same applies to Richard Wagner, George Gordon Lord Byron, and many others whose works I enjoy but who I wouldn't want in my home.

    @DoloresJNurss@DoloresJNurss3 ай бұрын
  • Oh no ! I used to love that painting ! You are right : it does change my perception of it and I can't feel sorry for the fate of this cruel man nor his mother's. Thanks for having brought this to conscience. I would like to do to it the same thing Mr Bean did in the "Bean" movie by Rowan Atkinson, so all I would see is the "study in grey and black" and no human face. The movie is now even funnier in hindsight.

    @cardinalgin@cardinalgin3 ай бұрын
  • Thanks!

    @cgautz@cgautz3 ай бұрын
  • This was at the Art Institute of Chicago in 2017, which I got to see as well as some of his other works. It's much bigger than I imagined. I remember going to see it before Mother's Day and was hoping to get a postcard of the painting to give to my mom. Unfortunately, the gift shop didn't have any.

    @maryrath9062@maryrath90623 ай бұрын
  • It occurs to me that the confederate colors were blue and gray; that blue was also a color of the union armies; that the alternative designation for Negroes (from the Spanish word for black) is blacks. The defeat of the Confederacy to a racist Southern mind might suggest the surrounding of the pro-slavery population by black, either in its direct racial connotation or as a substitution for the perceived enabling "blue" Union victory, in either case, a "black" day for the slave system and its ideology. Or, perhaps, it simply was Whistler's art-for-art's-sake.

    @philipu150@philipu1503 ай бұрын
  • Even though Mr. Whistler was perfectly aware that his mother was a hideous old bat who looked like she'd had a cactus lodged up her backside, he stuck with her, and even took the time to paint this amazing picture of her. It's not just a painting. It's a picture of a mad old cow who he thought the world of. And that's marvellous... Well that's what I think.

    @concernedbro2464@concernedbro24643 ай бұрын
  • My favourite bookstore was shutting its doors late last year and as part of my penultimate haul, I picked up a seemingly adorable miniature among others. It wasn't until two months later, on perusing the book that I learned what Thomas Carlyle stood for, as it contained excerpts from the cited work, though the title in this printing was even worse than the pejorative used in the video. With a flex nib and golden brown ink, I scrawled on one of the endpapers: 'Don't bother, Carlyle was quite racist.' Caveat emptor!

    @CSGraves@CSGraves3 ай бұрын
  • excellent essay 👍

    @Akentrophyta@Akentrophyta3 ай бұрын
  • She lived and died by strict morals she wasn't sure that she ever believed in

    @firecrotch9190@firecrotch91903 ай бұрын
  • If we're to judge the works of people who lived many decades or centuries before us based on their personal takes on matters that weren't viewed as we view them in the present, there won't be anything standing. That's guaranteed.

    @VIK_1903@VIK_19032 ай бұрын
    • Agreed

      @mdude625@mdude6256 күн бұрын
  • thank you

    @jacodelangevandyk@jacodelangevandyk3 ай бұрын
  • I've always thought Whistler's titles for and descriptions of his paintings reeked of marketing. Perhaps it was just misdirection. I spent some time looking at this painting and thinking about it before watching the video, knowing nothing about the background you describe. What struck me was the resolute refusal of the subject of the painting to engage with the viewer, alongside the rectilinear, rigid composition and her stiff posture and terse expression. I saw someone holding the world at bay by maintaining a controlled personal demeanor and environment. Apart from the silly dopamine rush from having these thoughts supported by the history you describe, it makes me think about the difference between knowing a picture's story and being in ignorance when you critically examine it, and if we can learn anything from that difference.

    @Poohze01@Poohze013 ай бұрын
  • After learning the background, I think there is a subconcious internal to external expression of emotion here. The life is grey and not as vibrant as it was. The outlook now is grey for this womsn that grew up in the other. And, black os a color of mourning. So, she is in her grey world mourning the loss of what was.

    @ashleyklump4638@ashleyklump46383 ай бұрын
  • Sure are a lot of shades of gray. I don't think the discord link is active. I lost access to the channel after my attempt to sort out duplicate accounts failed spectacularly, and the code provided here is not accepted by the discord app.

    @Spiritofdarkandlonelywater@Spiritofdarkandlonelywater3 ай бұрын
  • Excellent video, ce serait intéressant que vous documentiez un artiste canadien.

    @5ym0n@5ym0n3 ай бұрын
    • Kent Monkman, perhaps?

      @margaretphillips4894@margaretphillips48943 ай бұрын
  • WOW just wow

    @daviddyephotography@daviddyephotography3 ай бұрын
  • @shreedevart@shreedevart3 ай бұрын
  • So love your essays

    @Xeronimo74@Xeronimo743 ай бұрын
  • One of the best videos you've ever made

    @papayafigure@papayafigure3 ай бұрын
  • The biography of this artist is a testimony to his skill as an artist. Whistler may not have attached any meaning other than the simple visual to his work, but his intent is itself irrelevant to the work. Whistler and his family may have been traitorous enslavers, but he was also a gifted artist and his work holds meaning that it doesn’t appear he was able to see.

    @EastSider48215@EastSider482153 ай бұрын
  • there is and never can be such a thing as "ars gratia artis" (thanks MGM) art for art's sake is a refined and skimmed soup cooked up to try to justify ...well, I'm not sure *why* it became a trope. but it wasn't about art, I'm sure... you can't separate Caravaggio's violent life from his equally violent art. or Michelangelo's misogyny from his homoerotic art. or Leonardo's sublimity from his negatively aloof attitude to his fellow humans. the art is part and parcel of the artist, a product of *everything* that artist has learned, and has done, in their life.

    @kidmohair8151@kidmohair81513 ай бұрын
  • I don't know what Whistler's intention was, but when I see this picture I see a widow who lost her husband and has no meaningful social connections only her son who painted this picture. She looks like someone who is wainting for death, but death doesn't come. It shows the loneliness of old age.

    @petersteel8021@petersteel80213 ай бұрын
  • Mr Bean first comes to mind.

    @seamusdoherty@seamusdoherty2 ай бұрын
  • Ah, but the real question is, what was he always whistling, that people called him that...

    @alden1132@alden11323 ай бұрын
  • I have always found this painting very pretty. And that was even before I know who painted it or who is in the painting. To be honest it never really mattered to me. So I find that to me the artist achieved his goal. We are sometimes a bit too focused with meaning that we don't appreciate what is right in front of us. Even in this video we try to find meaning where the artist stated there is none. It's absurd to think that we don't believe the artist because such a famous painting can't be what it is without having an awesome backstory. Sure we can analyze it and it's okay to be curious but sometimes we will just overintellectualize things. I find we should enjoy art the way we enjoy music. It can make us feel good and make us move without even understanding the lyrics. We don't question the guitar or the drumkit. As long as it sounds right.

    @nenemydog@nenemydog3 ай бұрын
    • I wonder if it’s related to Barthes “Death of the Author.” Since it’s gained traction academically over my lifetime, we seem to want to put our own self into every piece of work. Having just finished a degree, I have been in courses where we were indeed asked to put our own meaning onto various pieces of music, creator be damned.

      @AlloftheGoodNamesAreTaken@AlloftheGoodNamesAreTaken3 ай бұрын
    • @@AlloftheGoodNamesAreTaken Thanks for your input. Death of the Author sounds intriguing. I will definitely have a look at it. As to putting ourselves in to it: I feel like it's just the art version of waiting for your turn to speak without actually listening. But I am aware I might have phrased this a bit stronger than I mean it. It's strange how we are so meaning-focused. We are trained to approach the arts (especially the visual arts) with a rational approach. Everything we do needs to be because of a rational decision to do so with a specific goal in mind. I paint too and feel that not everything is this rational from the POV of the creator (at least in my case). Sometimes it just feels right to paint a specific subject without knowing why at the time. Sure I can analyze my stuff afterwards and see a pattern and make up my rational explanation afterwards. But it would be a lie to say that I made that decision at the time of creation. What's your opinion on analyzing music that way you describe?

      @nenemydog@nenemydog3 ай бұрын
    • @@nenemydog You can find Barthes work free online. I understand what you mean about your art. As one who has only dabbled, that makes sense. In fact, I appreciated the idea that we were only supposed to be looking at color in this painting. I don’t think that gave it any less value. Regarding interpreting music through my personal lens that way, it was frustrating. Imagine taking an anti-war song from the sixties and justifying your opinion that it promotes the so-called “just war” theory in fundamentalist Christianity. Or claiming a song about lynching could be about anything else. (I got a poor grade for claiming that a song about lynching was exactly what it said. I was supposed to put my own meaning on it.) I am currently trying to breakdown Barthes idea, the timing of its publication, and how that has impacted my specific department (English Literature). But I don’t think that’s necessarily related to the video. Things like this do make me wonder if we all are looking for meaning in our own lives so much so that we insist that even the meaningless have meaning.

      @AlloftheGoodNamesAreTaken@AlloftheGoodNamesAreTaken3 ай бұрын
    • @@AlloftheGoodNamesAreTaken I have the feeling that it becomes easier to appreciate art for what it is when it is abstract in nature. Just like music (without lyrics of course). That's what must be interesting when standing in front of a big Painting by Pollock or Rothko. But people end up intellectualizing the art too. Often in the context of "I could have done that" or again the search for hidden meaning . I remember seeing an analysis of one of Rothkos works in which they took the painting and placed it within the artists personal timeline to make the point that he was expressing what he was experiencing because of these key events. While this could be possible I find it hard to be anything more than speculation. Just as you say about your music analysis. Of course there's better, more plausible arguments to be made but we can never be sure. Of course it can be interesting to analyze any medium through a completely different lens to give it new meaning. I completely agree. Projecting meaning unto everything is not always useful. It reminds me a bit of existentialist/absurdist thoughts in that aspect. @prettyDecentDude My point is not that art is meaningless. I think that it's not always the right approach to assume the artist had a very clear intention to begin with. Someone might paint a flower just for the color or shape and not think too much about the symbolic meaning of the specific flower.

      @nenemydog@nenemydog3 ай бұрын
    • @@Dimitris_Balf The meaning may be that the artist finds the arrangement of gray and black pleasing, and nothing more. The reason the artist does something is not the sole or even most valuable aspect of a work of art. The most important value is the feelings and thoughts the work inspires in the viewer.

      @ArtemisVomKiefernTal@ArtemisVomKiefernTal3 ай бұрын
  • Who knew?

    @CardboardBots@CardboardBots3 ай бұрын
  • Thank You - it is very gratifying to have someone acknowledge, albeit rarely, and all too briefly, the true meaning of art, namely the formal qualities rather than force art to be the slave of the causes du jour. Too bad that you just can't seem to leave it at that.

    @mckeestudio1101@mckeestudio11013 ай бұрын
  • but isn't that a poster?

    @raptorex22@raptorex223 ай бұрын
    • The original is in Mr. Bean's house.

      @fokkusuh4425@fokkusuh44253 ай бұрын
  • I always thought Whistler was overrated.

    @dakinayantv3245@dakinayantv32453 ай бұрын
    • He's not.

      @mazolab@mazolab2 ай бұрын
  • I have to say I disagree. I really think one should review these paintings the way Whistler intended. Those different shades aren’t boring at all. What he does is slowly step by step exploring our visual perception of the world and how much depth our mind can find in just two shades of the same color. To me this is quite amazing and much more existential than any family story could possibly be.

    @casinodertoten721@casinodertoten7213 ай бұрын
  • Art for art sake, money for God sake. You may be a good artist without being a good person. Interesting video but I doubt I need to know more as there are so many other artists that are more important to me.

    @zetectic7968@zetectic79683 ай бұрын
  • 1st

    @assaf_jerry@assaf_jerry3 ай бұрын
  • We as society are stepping into a new art epoch . Soon it will be obvious to the general public, that art isn’t constrained to a number of specific activities, like painting or music etc. The idea is the only “active ingredient”, that separates art from craft. Creating a pristine reproduction of Duchamp’s Fountain will be nothing but a urinal. Because it is stripped of the great abstract idea, that made it art, back in the day. The reason I think that the turning point in society’s attitude towards art is exactly now is because of AI generated content. Bare with me 😅 Any kid, who has fiddled with Midjourney etc, will not be impressed with a high quality picture of anything if the picture has nothing interesting to say. On the other hand a plain text prompt for a generative AI can be discussed for years without a need to see the generated picture

    @bassbich@bassbichАй бұрын
  • sometimes, meaning is irrelevant

    @MBulteau@MBulteauАй бұрын
  • It's a shame that Whistler was born when he was. If abstraction was something he could have explored freely during his lifetime, he could have created completely original works that people don't have to work so hard to misinterpret.

    @Proctophile@Proctophile3 ай бұрын
  • I don't know why you resist so much the formal aspects of a work of art. Why is it so difficult to appreciate them for what they are, why do you insist in bringing up "art for art's sake" as something of lesser esteem? To dimish the value inherent to the relationships between value, tone, composition and texture is to overlook one big (probably the biggest) characteristic of what makes a painting a painting. I did throughly enjoy your commentary here and the story you brought, but it seems like you are ignoring one big dimension of painting.

    @tiberio_gabriel@tiberio_gabriel3 ай бұрын
  • This may be the most boring title of a video on this channel

    @giladshayer3118@giladshayer31183 ай бұрын
  • I enjoyed this video, but it's weird how people treat the term Negro as a slur now. I dated, sure, but I never saw it as a slur.

    @IronySpidery@IronySpidery2 ай бұрын
  • Totally indifferent to the backstory.

    @kristolball@kristolballАй бұрын
  • Study in antebellum racism. Really? Is that fair to his poor mother? Where goes the son, so went the mother? You didn't quote anything she said - probably nothing some old hag had to say was considered worth it anyway. It turns out she had a very interesting life but you would never know it because her famous son used her as a model. She has no voice, she sits in frustrated patience, the artist doesn't even allow her to make eye contact with the viewer, to at least make her case with a facial exptession. It's like he told her to sit down, shut up, and stare at the wall for the next week while I paint this sympathetic family portrait. Then 150 years later she gets berated for having a slave owning cousin or something. If we're going to start cancelling, let's start with androcentrism, man splaining, male gaze, I don't know, this is a rabbit hole that has nothing to say about this picture whatsoever.

    @MrCanadatom@MrCanadatom3 ай бұрын
  • This is kinda surface level and dumb lmao

    @henrycolucci3754@henrycolucci37543 ай бұрын
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