Shelter island is such an amazing place…was a nanny there back in 1992, and loved being in the Hamptons. Lucky bunch you guys
@MissTuturutu16 күн бұрын
Asssole 🎉
@adamcrary160217 күн бұрын
This guy is a fun and intelligent speaker. Just the right amount of self- deprivation which is what i’m convinced ( in my own foolish way) is the key component to the quality of “ charm”. 🧐 Anyhow, this came up after a speech he gave in Montreal- which i highly recommend if you like this. This guy has wisdom for/from Life,not just for artists and other crazy people… I sincerely think that there’s something here for everyone. There aren’t a lot of speakers i could listen to twice in a row but he has a particular cadence, rhythm and tone that makes him enjoyable to listen to, like a musician- which coincidentally he just started talking about jazz musicians as i was writing this. I’m gonna listen. Respect to this man; i thought I would hate any art critic🤷🏻… happily surprised. Ty, sir.🙏🏻AC
@selwynr27 күн бұрын
Amazeballs artist.
@NilsBay37Ай бұрын
A master class of the process of painting
@ericam.8433Ай бұрын
I just saw her new exhibition at the Broad in LA and loved it. If you have a chance to see it, I highly recommend…her work is a feast for the eyes and the imagination.
@evastamfestova1616Ай бұрын
Jerry Salz is calling that great art?
@kaseyjones2770Ай бұрын
Romare Bearden collaged different eyes onto faces a long time ago.
@johnkitching6293Ай бұрын
Tracy is so genuine and wonderful creative artist I just love her xxxxx
@yisellandreasanabriaquinteroАй бұрын
is the program for beginners?
@raycooper3269Ай бұрын
What hotel? Show a painting please
@Floyd123452 ай бұрын
I got a lot from this, thank you.
@fuckThisComputerOoO2 ай бұрын
The conversation really only starts at 41:26, everything before that could be said by someone else, or simply made into a slideshow of the paintings and their name.
@chrisp13552 ай бұрын
Gorgeous work Alexander. .
@MD.EliasAhmed-qx5wr2 ай бұрын
hello sir
@allweb4292 ай бұрын
Jerry please translate your books to Spanish please
@educate2cre82 ай бұрын
This captivated me!
@charlesscottbuchanan41883 ай бұрын
i really enjoyrd this conversation, being an artist in a small town, in my own gallery, I miss the opurtunities of New York. Mickalene Thomas and Jerry Salz are amazing. Fortunatly I agree with her personal motivation! Keep producing such wonderful work.
@eileenmills94713 ай бұрын
I now understand why people love Tracey Emin.
@akewa49643 ай бұрын
I am very interested
@newyorkacademyofart77883 ай бұрын
Hi. Thank you for your interest in the New York Academy of Art! At the New York Academy of Art, you will be taught by professors and practicing artists who have works in galleries around the world! You'll be exposed to influential collectors at the school’s annual events and at prestigious art shows in New York City. For more information: nyaa.edu Email: [email protected] Call: 212 966 0300 We also offer a Certificate of Fine Arts, or if you'd like the opportunity to study short or online classes with our excellent faculty there are continuing education classes. For more information about our online or single class courses, please contact John Volk at [email protected] or Call: 212-842-5968. You can also sign up for more information about everything we offer here: nyaa.edu/admissions/
@jfreeman3433 ай бұрын
Jerry Saltz, you and Roberta Smith are about as authentic to art and art criticism as an old Soviet TV game show. You're the old dock parrot who's seen it all from your perch at the intersection of Non-Art Blvd. and Money Laundering St. down at the busy loading docks of art-as-financial-asset, yet you speak to the rest of us about the Art World in smug, self-congratulatory riddles. Does it ever feel bad deep down inside that you're a phony critic in a phony art world, perhaps indeed an underpaid but valuable tool of the rich for screwing the many, a champion of the expensive junk stored underground below sea level in freeports around the world as counterweights to tax liability and stores of value for laundered drug money? What a legacy! This woman is not an artist.
@jfreeman3434 ай бұрын
Jerry Saltz, you and Roberta Smith are about as authentic to art and art criticism as an old Soviet TV game show. You're the old dock parrot who's seen it all from your perch at the intersection of Non-Art Blvd. and Money Laundering St. down at the busy loading docks of art-as-financial-asset, yet you speak to the rest of us about the Art World in smug, self-congratulatory riddles. Does it ever feel bad deep down inside that you're a phony critic in a phony art world, perhaps indeed an underpaid but valuable tool of the rich for screwing the many, a champion of the expensive junk stored underground below sea level in freeports around the world as counterweights to tax liability and stores of value for laundered drug money? What a legacy!
@michelleeissler37614 ай бұрын
Loved the talk! (Also loved the one with Tracey Emin)
@bigjohnknew4 ай бұрын
Maybe next time just introduce the artists normally instead of that crap at the start
@susand4844 ай бұрын
"radical vulnerability " I love that. I was looking for those words to describe her
@renzo64904 ай бұрын
The Mona Lisa, I hear, is rather small as are the works of Vermeer…didn’t hurt them.
@renzo64904 ай бұрын
Not about painting… Clearly, the panel needs a different seating arrangement. No place to set down water bottles or reading material.
@11buleria4 ай бұрын
The problem with modern narrative painting is that only the artist knows what it’s about. The majority of viewers can make no sense of the images. It gets worse when a viewer tries to imagine their own narrative. . Narrative art needs a description next to each painting explaining what the hell is happening. At least during the renaissance the literate public knew biblical stories and educated people knew mythology.
@stevenrussellblack4 ай бұрын
Great conversation. Would love to have heard more from Carl Dobsky as I feel he is at the forefront of this kind of work and his images the most powerful
@sublimeister96304 ай бұрын
Love the talk on the “Sublime,” but don’t get caught up in the dualistic, bipolar, and bipartisan critiques of art or art-making. Just as “All Art is Contemporary,” all humans are born artists-innate to existence (Osho). 🙏🏼😊
@Jerkcurb15 ай бұрын
A true legend
@FrancesSabinaReid-tm8es5 ай бұрын
Amazing women x
@wahidnazari36785 ай бұрын
The antiquated artist has gone forward with a nakedness. 🤣🤘
@flaviaintestaspit5 ай бұрын
She has done extraordinarily well in her arch of life up until now. I love how optimistic she is about life as a 90 year old artist! Yay! #punkisnotdead ❤
@samuelhumphrey59086 ай бұрын
❤❤❤ Took me a while to get here... Great interview! When i make it to the Museum i shall say "Hello, I love you"
@soniahalfner2726 ай бұрын
45:50 “Jerry: And one thing about questions: don’t get up and make a goddamn statement - especially MEN.” (Presumeably = mansplaining 😂)
@helgaleifsdottir51916 ай бұрын
What a fabulous interview. A brilliant artist with a splendid interviewer.
@lindachubbs17907 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! Great advice! I am an "older emerging artist" So I really value and appreciate your collective knowledge.❤
@jonburgermanvideos7 ай бұрын
Beasely Street is by John Cooper Clarke! Great painting, great song :)
@asaxearts7 ай бұрын
I don't understand how she gets a period anymore. Unlikely...isn't she in her 50's?
@El_papa_de_RamboАй бұрын
There are women near 70 that still get one. Not impossible.
@J0hnC0ltrane7 ай бұрын
I knew when Tracy said she was good with money she is a Cancer. July 3rd. What a life she has had.
@chasityhernandez7057 ай бұрын
Goose bumps. Finally an artist that I can truly relate to! I love how she refers to Harry!!