Guys ano po ang kwento at sino po nakakaalam ng (botticelli's Venus: the making an icon) yung Tagalog po sana please Hindi ko kasi naintindihan pag English mahina pa ako sa English , na search ko na po puro English kasi lumalabas sa google need lang po ngayon na po ang pasa nito
Kung sino po nakakaalqm pa láρág po at salamat at advance na din sa tutulong, dito lang ako nakakakuha ng knowledge sa inyu,
Thank you Mga ka phc
Ito po
In this 1x30’ film for BBC Four, artist and entrepreneur Sam Roddick, founder of Coco de Mer, explores the enduring appeal of a Renaissance masterpiece: Botticelli’s Birth Of Venus. A joyous celebration of female sexuality, its journey to worldwide fame was far from straightforward and it lay in obscurity for centuries.
Botticelli’s Birth of Venus was perceived as radical, unknown and shocking in its day, yet is now one of the most celebrated paintings in Western art. Not just as a symbol of sublime, feminine beauty but a worldwide icon; reproduced, modified, imitated and reflected on in the work of countless artists, fashion designers, graphic artists, advertising directors and film-makers.
Sam explores the impact of Botticelli's masterpiece with one of many artists to have popularised the image - Terry Gilliam, who used it to memorable effect in his Monty Python's Flying Circus animation.
Sharing her own long-held fascination with Botticelli, Sam also reveals the beguiling and surprising story behind this remarkable painting. Although lauded in Botticelli’s lifetime both the work and its creator were largely forgotten for almost 300 years, until the painting was progressively rediscovered in the 19th century.
Since then it has inspired multiple re-births by eminent artists such as Rossetti, Ruskin, the Pre-Raphaelites (who first brought an unknown Botticelli to the public’s attention long after his death) - along with Degas, Moreau, William Morris and Magritte. In more recent times Venus has also inspired Andy Warhol, David LaChappelle, Monty Python and Dolce & Gabbana, and has found a place on more prosaic everyday objects such as postcards and T-shirts. But has its ubiquity overshadowed the original?
Sam Roddick explores the appeal of the image today, talking to artists, curators, designers, and historians about the remarkable potency of this image and its ability to offer successive generations something that seems to fit their age. Traveling to the Uffizi gallery in Florence, she reflects on the birth of the painting itself, and reveals the radical and explosive nature of the original, which although intended to be hung in private was in fact a revolutionary work that, once launched on an international stage, would embed itself in the consciousness of the public for centuries to come.
O Ito po video na
https://m.YøùTùbécom/watch?v=6n23LHWp01g
Yung emoji po patanggal na lang po salamat
Kung sino po nakakaalqm pa láρág po at salamat at advance na din sa tutulong, dito lang ako nakakakuha ng knowledge sa inyu,
Thank you Mga ka phc
Ito po
In this 1x30’ film for BBC Four, artist and entrepreneur Sam Roddick, founder of Coco de Mer, explores the enduring appeal of a Renaissance masterpiece: Botticelli’s Birth Of Venus. A joyous celebration of female sexuality, its journey to worldwide fame was far from straightforward and it lay in obscurity for centuries.
Botticelli’s Birth of Venus was perceived as radical, unknown and shocking in its day, yet is now one of the most celebrated paintings in Western art. Not just as a symbol of sublime, feminine beauty but a worldwide icon; reproduced, modified, imitated and reflected on in the work of countless artists, fashion designers, graphic artists, advertising directors and film-makers.
Sam explores the impact of Botticelli's masterpiece with one of many artists to have popularised the image - Terry Gilliam, who used it to memorable effect in his Monty Python's Flying Circus animation.
Sharing her own long-held fascination with Botticelli, Sam also reveals the beguiling and surprising story behind this remarkable painting. Although lauded in Botticelli’s lifetime both the work and its creator were largely forgotten for almost 300 years, until the painting was progressively rediscovered in the 19th century.
Since then it has inspired multiple re-births by eminent artists such as Rossetti, Ruskin, the Pre-Raphaelites (who first brought an unknown Botticelli to the public’s attention long after his death) - along with Degas, Moreau, William Morris and Magritte. In more recent times Venus has also inspired Andy Warhol, David LaChappelle, Monty Python and Dolce & Gabbana, and has found a place on more prosaic everyday objects such as postcards and T-shirts. But has its ubiquity overshadowed the original?
Sam Roddick explores the appeal of the image today, talking to artists, curators, designers, and historians about the remarkable potency of this image and its ability to offer successive generations something that seems to fit their age. Traveling to the Uffizi gallery in Florence, she reflects on the birth of the painting itself, and reveals the radical and explosive nature of the original, which although intended to be hung in private was in fact a revolutionary work that, once launched on an international stage, would embed itself in the consciousness of the public for centuries to come.
O Ito po video na
https://m.YøùTùbécom/watch?v=6n23LHWp01g
Yung emoji po patanggal na lang po salamat
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