Well done. Thank you!! If the person who created this video wishes to contact me to share our thoughts of Art as welll as mutual appreciation of Heironymous Bosch please contact me at my email address: captainfantastic@myself.com
A música é linda, porém na minha opinião totalmente incompatível com o espírito perturbador e satírico de Bosch. A última coisa que Bosch desejava com seus quadros era transmitir paz ou tranquilidade. Hoje em dia conheço um grande artista quando sua obra me revira o estomago e ao mesmo tempo me agride com sua beleza e detalhismo. Grande seleção de imagens péssima selção de música!
i remember when i was rly young, my parents would have this arts book with all of his collected work in it at home. and i would look through it all the time, and get so scared by those paintings, but utterly fascinated at the same time. i didnt understand anything about it, i used to think those pictures were an exact replica of how this world used to look a long time ago and i was so thankful for not having lived then... thank you for this, this takes me back to then.
Not quite sure. I tend to leave the performer's name out to keep from getting the audio yanked by Youtube. But I bet if you look here on Youtube for the title you can find the singers. Sorry. Thank you for watching.
I'm imagining how people of the time saw this art. Back before modern media saturation had overstimulated and dulled the senses. When most of what everyone saw most of their lives was either flat countryside or filthy Medieval streets, when they went into the church and saw paintings and triptychs like these, they must have been blown away.
Bosch is one of my favorite artists, probably THE favorite, even though his work displays an almost pathological obsession with sin and Hell and damnation, and in real life I despise Jesus-freaks, especially the morbid ones. But his work is so intense and full of detail piled on top of detail, and meaning piled on top of meaning, it's like a whole book compressed into one image. I really want to see some Northern renaissance paintings in person.
Bosch is amazing. He has clearly inspired artists form Francis Bacon to Clive Barker. He was so avant garde. I saw the tryptich 'Garden of Earthly Delights', and other works by Bosch at the Prado in Madrid, Spain. I was blown away. I had a tryptich of this made to display in my office.
that image is a detail from the panel "the hell" -"monster with birdhead which devours the damned and then excretes them in a transparent stool afterwhich they are disposed of in a well." there there are other sinners there. the sloth, the glutton, vanity where a woman sees her reflection in the backside of a demon. and the spendthrift who wastes his money. most images reflect a dutch proverb relating some christian wisdom. so i guess a lot of the meanings are lost now
What is the name of this music and the the group involved, please? I am not familiar with Bosch, but the way you have presented him here makes him seem a genius or something. Quite amzing and the music gives it a haunting effect to your mind or spirit.
It's a recording by the Kings Singers called "La Renaissance", with some extreemly beautiful motets and songs, f.i.O Virgo Virginum, Sy congie prens, Nymphes des Boys, Benedicta Est, Nymphes nappees etc.
I was always fascinated and intrigued by Bosch. His work delves into our inner spiritual fears and trys to explain the unexplainable. Plus he liked to drink absinthe....
Thank you Brenda! One of my all-time favorite composers and matched so beautifully with one of my all-time favorite painters. Here's a translation of the heartbreaking lyrics:
Regrets sans fins --
I have to endure endless regrets;
in great mourning let my suffering bear on my days.
It would be better for me to end my life than to continue in such pain.
I want to abandon all pleasure;
I don't want to give solace since I have to suffer by desire only.
could you tell us what albums you have of desprez? i've been searching for a good recording of "regretz sans fin" and finding mostly out-of-print cds on amazon. BTW, if you like desprez, i've heard no better than chanticleer's version of "o virgo virginum," which i've used for my video, "the greater light." check it out!
Did Josquin write the lyrics or just compose the music? Also, is this a full translation? I am not able to find the King's Singers version of this song on iTunes. Which album is is found and where can I get it?
Did Josquin write the lyrics or just compose the music? Also, is this a full translation? I am not able to find the King's Singers version of this song on iTunes. Which album is is found and where can I get it?
I've never seen anything in art that scares me more than Bosch's Medieval insect people. Some of the creepiest figures are the ones that are supposed to represent the living. They actually look more like animated corpses or demons. I don't mean that this is a fault, on the contrary, he is very good at using psychological effects like that. I just don't like to watch his works too often because they disturb me.
I love these kinds of paintings that include all sorts of minute details that make you examine the entire picture. Even if you do not understand the symbolism, they are wonderful to observe. One of my favorite examples is Brueghel's "Netherlandish Proverbs", it's almost like a 16th cent. "Where's Waldo?".
This has nothing to do w/ the vid or my comment, but I was just thinking how odd it is when you look at pictures in a book as opposed to the real thing. Esp. w/ Dutch still lifes. In a book you can only see the detail, but when you actually see one it looks so real. I do not mind modern art, but it is a shame that no one really creates original works that emulate the old masters. Everything today is an individual style or chocolate box art.
For more detail of Bosch's "Christ Carrying The Cross" check out the video of the same name in the window to the right>>>. A good short vid, with close-ups of some pretty unattractive characters.
This is reall such a teaser.I wish to view each painting closely for a longer time so as to see every detail. This mde me feel that I was in anoth world, one I want to visit again and again until I've satisfied myself that I've experienced everything there. Choice of music is great!
Oh how I know about seeing the details, I have a huge magnifying glass and many wrinkles from squinting to see every wee brush stroke. I am glad you enjoyed it, thank you for your comment. Peace.
Your videos keep getter better and better, more beautiful, more integrated in music with image. This one struck me powerfully as I watched it again and again during Holy Week. A wondrous experience. How can I ever thank you enough.
You already have! Bless you for your wonderful comments! TripleGinger, you have got my brendafohio all over google! I loves ya for that, I surely doooooooooooo! :D
To me, Bosch was the first surrealist. I took a Northern European Renaissance art history course & seem to recall that a lot of the little "demons" were actually editorial comments like an insect with a pope hat doing some rude thing with a bellows...still, nothing less than amazing...
Yea, imagination, at the same time though very "documentary" on 15th cent things, like all the details in clothing, buildings etc. I love Bosch, and Brueghel even more. Thanks for putting together all this stuff so beautifully!
Thank you for watching! Yes, I adore Bosch and Brueghel. The mystical beings, the emotion in people's faces....he had/has a way of making you look closer.
For the first time I used something other than Windows Movie Maker to make this video. I used Plus Photo Story for most of it. Love the way it scans over the pictures, but that is about it. WMM is much easier to use. The pictures from the internet do not do Bosch's works justice. I encourage you to seek the images out and get a magnifying glass, this man had a killer imagination.
Sou fã incondicional do tom satírico e da proximidade do surrealismo de Bosch...isso em 1500d.C.
silviabreu1000 6 months ago
Fantastic!!!
Elegarret 10 months ago
Oh to the joys of Ergot
TheNoMarks 11 months ago
Well done. Thank you!! If the person who created this video wishes to contact me to share our thoughts of Art as welll as mutual appreciation of Heironymous Bosch please contact me at my email address: captainfantastic@myself.com
Happyhound62 1 year ago
What a wonderful soundtrack to follow my favourite artists' masterpiece.
Thanks for sharing perfection!
muzikkraz 1 year ago
A música é linda, porém na minha opinião totalmente incompatível com o espírito perturbador e satírico de Bosch. A última coisa que Bosch desejava com seus quadros era transmitir paz ou tranquilidade. Hoje em dia conheço um grande artista quando sua obra me revira o estomago e ao mesmo tempo me agride com sua beleza e detalhismo. Grande seleção de imagens péssima selção de música!
marcosohpolo 1 year ago
el mejor de todos para mi, a puetso a que dali y picaso tenian un poster gigante de el bosco en su cuarto
cesarvilcapoma 1 year ago
ジョスカン・デ・プレとボッスは同じ年だったのですね。
わかりやすいです。
tkamio 1 year ago
perfect. brenda+devo= proofofOhio's potential to deserve better nicknames in the future.
fleshtruck 1 year ago
i remember when i was rly young, my parents would have this arts book with all of his collected work in it at home. and i would look through it all the time, and get so scared by those paintings, but utterly fascinated at the same time. i didnt understand anything about it, i used to think those pictures were an exact replica of how this world used to look a long time ago and i was so thankful for not having lived then... thank you for this, this takes me back to then.
mueller11 1 year ago
Thanks, Hieronymus Bosch!
dada1492 1 year ago
where did you get all this pictures?
maurigk16 2 years ago
i'd like to have all his paintins
maurigk16 2 years ago
Thank you for doing this.
TempestBroog 2 years ago
Let me take you down, 'cause I'm going to Strawberry Fields.
Nothing is real and nothing to get hung about.
Strawberry Fields forever.
Living is easy with eyes closed, misunderstanding all you see.
It's getting hard to be someone but it all works out.
It doesn't matter much to me.
nikolaspearce 2 years ago
danke schön für den schönen Film und den Platz für Videoantworten
GalerieKNOX 2 years ago
One of Greatest!!
Mul4iBe 2 years ago
One of my favorite artists
DavidVelezPerez 2 years ago
5*****!
megatwingo 2 years ago
He is my 5th great Grandpa
ilovemusic2OO8 2 years ago
i love this paintings
torintoto 2 years ago
Beautiful recording! Who's singing?
micrologus2 2 years ago
Not quite sure. I tend to leave the performer's name out to keep from getting the audio yanked by Youtube. But I bet if you look here on Youtube for the title you can find the singers. Sorry. Thank you for watching.
brendafohio 2 years ago
MIKCEY MAOSE
rondonneld 2 years ago
@micrologus2 I don't think anyone is singing but the composer's name is Josquin Desprez.
muzikkraz 1 year ago
Wonderful!
mdediegof 2 years ago
thats the kind of shit i see when i eat them mushrooms.
handsomevision 2 years ago
You're cool....
NormbrettaMod 2 years ago
i admire the two artists immensely, but that brenda at the end is cute!
Oscar301 3 years ago
I like him.
Technonaana 3 years ago
I'm imagining how people of the time saw this art. Back before modern media saturation had overstimulated and dulled the senses. When most of what everyone saw most of their lives was either flat countryside or filthy Medieval streets, when they went into the church and saw paintings and triptychs like these, they must have been blown away.
yerk3 3 years ago
yes.
AstartEnchantress 3 years ago
He was a very important person and very well known for his art abroad
spikkel70 1 year ago
Bosch is one of my favorite artists, probably THE favorite, even though his work displays an almost pathological obsession with sin and Hell and damnation, and in real life I despise Jesus-freaks, especially the morbid ones. But his work is so intense and full of detail piled on top of detail, and meaning piled on top of meaning, it's like a whole book compressed into one image. I really want to see some Northern renaissance paintings in person.
yerk3 3 years ago
Heel bijzonder, alleen ik had wat meer tijd per afbeelding gelaten. Ze komen nu wat te "gehaast" door het beeld. Maar verder...ga zo door...
pietmk 3 years ago
thanks that was fantastic
scotishjohn 3 years ago
Who is performing Josquin's chanson?
This is a very good recording.
Well, the video is also very nice, of course :)
navtelagata 3 years ago
It's a recording by the Kings Singers, called "La Renaissence". 21 motets and songs from Josquin DesPrez.
Outstanding
pietmk 3 years ago
Yes, it is.
So I will keep my eyes open if I can get this CD.
Thanks
navtelagata 3 years ago
Che meraviglia. Grazie Brenda.
costuorzolo 3 years ago
Bosch is amazing. He has clearly inspired artists form Francis Bacon to Clive Barker. He was so avant garde. I saw the tryptich 'Garden of Earthly Delights', and other works by Bosch at the Prado in Madrid, Spain. I was blown away. I had a tryptich of this made to display in my office.
scubajenjen 3 years ago
What´s the name of the image at 4:08?
sciprio 3 years ago
that image is a detail from the panel "the hell" -"monster with birdhead which devours the damned and then excretes them in a transparent stool afterwhich they are disposed of in a well." there there are other sinners there. the sloth, the glutton, vanity where a woman sees her reflection in the backside of a demon. and the spendthrift who wastes his money. most images reflect a dutch proverb relating some christian wisdom. so i guess a lot of the meanings are lost now
iorixs 3 years ago
Thank you very much.
sciprio 3 years ago
I think that bosch was almost a surrealist painter. He went ahead to the surrealist painters for four hundred years.
sciprio 3 years ago
love this artist ! your video is placed in my playlist of Hieronymus Bosch
meesterschilders 3 years ago
What is the name of this music and the the group involved, please? I am not familiar with Bosch, but the way you have presented him here makes him seem a genius or something. Quite amzing and the music gives it a haunting effect to your mind or spirit.
stephen2000306 3 years ago
It's a recording by the Kings Singers called "La Renaissance", with some extreemly beautiful motets and songs, f.i.O Virgo Virginum, Sy congie prens, Nymphes des Boys, Benedicta Est, Nymphes nappees etc.
pietmk 3 years ago
beautiful
BAZHE 3 years ago
I was always fascinated and intrigued by Bosch. His work delves into our inner spiritual fears and trys to explain the unexplainable. Plus he liked to drink absinthe....
AIamannic 3 years ago
German singer Nico would go good with these paintings too.
castingtherunes 3 years ago
Beautiful..I take to my playlist!!
Thanks :-)
gilcarosio 3 years ago
why doesnt youtube have videos of Hieronymus Bosch the band?? I mean i like the artist and everything but doesnt anyone know the banddd???/
jackripper29 3 years ago
Best artist in the history of ever.
Naxwell 3 years ago
i wouldnt say best. but definately one of the most individualist. funny, too, though he didnt make em for laughs
flappsta6 3 years ago
One of the more original artists and popular in the Habsburg court.
AIamannic 3 years ago
Brava.
piasintei 4 years ago
Sehr gute Zusammenstellung von Malerei und Musik. Wirklich gut gwählte Bildausschnitte.
Maiwald666 4 years ago
Gorgeous.
dopestr33t 4 years ago
I like the fact that YOU came to look at my stuff! Thank you Richard.
Peace.
brendafohio 4 years ago
Thank you.
Skaldsson 4 years ago
Brenda, that was so freaking good. Thank you.
pezor 4 years ago
Thank you Brenda! One of my all-time favorite composers and matched so beautifully with one of my all-time favorite painters. Here's a translation of the heartbreaking lyrics:
Regrets sans fins --
I have to endure endless regrets;
in great mourning let my suffering bear on my days.
It would be better for me to end my life than to continue in such pain.
I want to abandon all pleasure;
I don't want to give solace since I have to suffer by desire only.
hsvbeary 4 years ago
Thank you for the translation, I knew by the name it was not a happy song, but such despair, I had no idea.
brendafohio 4 years ago
could you tell us what albums you have of desprez? i've been searching for a good recording of "regretz sans fin" and finding mostly out-of-print cds on amazon. BTW, if you like desprez, i've heard no better than chanticleer's version of "o virgo virginum," which i've used for my video, "the greater light." check it out!
nubezalel 4 years ago
Your video is gorgeous! The music is perfect. Five starred and favorited. Thank you for watching and commenting.
Peace.
brendafohio 4 years ago
@hsvbeary
Did Josquin write the lyrics or just compose the music? Also, is this a full translation? I am not able to find the King's Singers version of this song on iTunes. Which album is is found and where can I get it?
damiansar15 1 year ago
@hsvbeary
Did Josquin write the lyrics or just compose the music? Also, is this a full translation? I am not able to find the King's Singers version of this song on iTunes. Which album is is found and where can I get it?
damiansar15 1 year ago
Can somebody tell me the music of the video?
or name a few exapmles of chants which sound similar? I like it alot!
DzigaVertov 4 years ago
I'm sorry, the music is listed in the clip, first read, then post!
DzigaVertov 4 years ago
Regrets Sans Fin by Josquin Desprez
brendafohio 4 years ago
I've never seen anything in art that scares me more than Bosch's Medieval insect people. Some of the creepiest figures are the ones that are supposed to represent the living. They actually look more like animated corpses or demons. I don't mean that this is a fault, on the contrary, he is very good at using psychological effects like that. I just don't like to watch his works too often because they disturb me.
masameus 4 years ago
I love these kinds of paintings that include all sorts of minute details that make you examine the entire picture. Even if you do not understand the symbolism, they are wonderful to observe. One of my favorite examples is Brueghel's "Netherlandish Proverbs", it's almost like a 16th cent. "Where's Waldo?".
NGS712 4 years ago
I have always been facinated by Bosch and Brueghel and lol you are right about the Where's Waldo factor.
brendafohio 4 years ago
This has nothing to do w/ the vid or my comment, but I was just thinking how odd it is when you look at pictures in a book as opposed to the real thing. Esp. w/ Dutch still lifes. In a book you can only see the detail, but when you actually see one it looks so real. I do not mind modern art, but it is a shame that no one really creates original works that emulate the old masters. Everything today is an individual style or chocolate box art.
NGS712 4 years ago
Thank you-for your work-(time) with this video-Music and pickture together.-
I feel good to watch and hear it...
wsrthy 4 years ago
OH WOW! MY FAVORITE PAINTORS OF EVERE!!! I LOVE HYERONYMUS, I DREAM IT! VERY COMPLIMENTS!
PS: go to see my video on flemish panting ;D
caretto 4 years ago
For more detail of Bosch's "Christ Carrying The Cross" check out the video of the same name in the window to the right>>>. A good short vid, with close-ups of some pretty unattractive characters.
brendafohio 4 years ago
This is reall such a teaser.I wish to view each painting closely for a longer time so as to see every detail. This mde me feel that I was in anoth world, one I want to visit again and again until I've satisfied myself that I've experienced everything there. Choice of music is great!
VictoriaWinters 4 years ago
Oh how I know about seeing the details, I have a huge magnifying glass and many wrinkles from squinting to see every wee brush stroke. I am glad you enjoyed it, thank you for your comment. Peace.
brendafohio 4 years ago
Your videos keep getter better and better, more beautiful, more integrated in music with image. This one struck me powerfully as I watched it again and again during Holy Week. A wondrous experience. How can I ever thank you enough.
TripleGinger 4 years ago
You already have! Bless you for your wonderful comments! TripleGinger, you have got my brendafohio all over google! I loves ya for that, I surely doooooooooooo! :D
brendafohio 4 years ago
To me, Bosch was the first surrealist. I took a Northern European Renaissance art history course & seem to recall that a lot of the little "demons" were actually editorial comments like an insect with a pope hat doing some rude thing with a bellows...still, nothing less than amazing...
ejp3art 4 years ago
Yea, imagination, at the same time though very "documentary" on 15th cent things, like all the details in clothing, buildings etc. I love Bosch, and Brueghel even more. Thanks for putting together all this stuff so beautifully!
xAmandine 4 years ago
Thank you for watching! Yes, I adore Bosch and Brueghel. The mystical beings, the emotion in people's faces....he had/has a way of making you look closer.
brendafohio 4 years ago
For the first time I used something other than Windows Movie Maker to make this video. I used Plus Photo Story for most of it. Love the way it scans over the pictures, but that is about it. WMM is much easier to use. The pictures from the internet do not do Bosch's works justice. I encourage you to seek the images out and get a magnifying glass, this man had a killer imagination.
brendafohio 4 years ago
nicely done...and..."killer imagination" is a grand understatement ....
tps607 4 years ago