Explore the Bayeux Tapestry online (Full Version)

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TulliusDetritus -> Explore the Bayeux Tapestry online (2/12/2021 6:26:04 PM)

"Discover the entire Bayeux Tapestry following online the 70 meter-long embroidered canvas which tells the story of the conquest of England in 1066".

https://www.bayeuxmuseum.com/en/the-bayeux-tapestry/discover-the-bayeux-tapestry/explore-online/

Amazing high resolution. A sample:

[image]local://upfiles/11562/AEC5FA59C5BE48E9B383F1EAB83FC59F.jpg[/image]




MrsWargamer -> RE: Explore the Bayeux Tapestry online (2/12/2021 6:35:51 PM)

Truly amazing.

But it always amazes me how artists of the time actually thought people looked the way they were depicted. The history of art forms always makes me wonder, what were they actually seeing? How can they do a 3d sculpture so incredibly realistic, and not portray accurately an image on a flat surface.




ncc1701e -> RE: Explore the Bayeux Tapestry online (2/12/2021 7:07:29 PM)

Beautiful, thanks for sharing.




TulliusDetritus -> RE: Explore the Bayeux Tapestry online (2/12/2021 7:16:38 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: MrsWargamer
But it always amazes me how artists of the time actually thought people looked the way they were depicted. The history of art forms always makes me wonder, what were they actually seeing? How can they do a 3d sculpture so incredibly realistic, and not portray accurately an image on a flat surface.


My guess is they could not get skilled artists. An invaluable historical document, as grognerd says, but yes, rather *primitive*




z1812 -> RE: Explore the Bayeux Tapestry online (2/12/2021 8:40:28 PM)

Thank you so much for posting this. I love the style. Remember this was embroidered not woven.

Before you criticize the artwork, keep in mind that you are not seeing the original. The style is Romanesque which was prevalent at the time. Here is a link to what it looked like originally.

https://images.app.goo.gl/QciMfajcRn1QUxBr5





RFalvo69 -> RE: Explore the Bayeux Tapestry online (2/13/2021 1:25:25 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: MrsWargamer

Truly amazing.

But it always amazes me how artists of the time actually thought people looked the way they were depicted. The history of art forms always makes me wonder, what were they actually seeing? How can they do a 3d sculpture so incredibly realistic, and not portray accurately an image on a flat surface.

Until the works of Paolo Uccello, in the XV Century, the West didn't really understand the concept of "perspective", much less how to give a 3D "vista" on a 2D surface (whereas when sculpting or building you already started with tridimensional blocks which guided you in obtaining a tridimensional portrayal).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paolo_Uccello

Paolo Uccello was a mathematician obsessed by the concepts of "perspective" and "vanishing points". Today they are considered a given but, if you think about it, they are neither intuitive nor easy to grasp. His works, thus, become groundbreaking, even if the portrayals of people, things and landscapes still show a mix of 2D and 3D (often 2/2.5D figures in a 3D landscape). It took the works of his successors, like Piero della Francesca and Leonardo, to fully flesh the portrayal of the World in 3D.

All of the above in the West. I don't know if Middle-Eastern and Oriental artists reached the same results by themselves or if imported them from Europe.




z1812 -> RE: Explore the Bayeux Tapestry online (2/13/2021 1:44:59 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: RFalvo69


quote:

ORIGINAL: MrsWargamer

Truly amazing.

But it always amazes me how artists of the time actually thought people looked the way they were depicted. The history of art forms always makes me wonder, what were they actually seeing? How can they do a 3d sculpture so incredibly realistic, and not portray accurately an image on a flat surface.

Until the works of Paolo Uccello, in the XV Century, the West didn't really understand the concept of "perspective", much less how to give a 3D "vista" on a 2D surface (whereas when sculpting or building you already started with tridimensional blocks which guided you in obtaining a tridimensional portrayal).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paolo_Uccello

Paolo Uccello was a mathematician obsessed by the concepts of "perspective" and "vanishing points". Today they are considered a given but, if you think about it, they are neither intuitive nor easy to grasp. His works, thus, become groundbreaking, even if the portrayals of people, things and landscapes still show a mix of 2D and 3D (often 2/2.5D figures in a 3D landscape). It took the works of his successors, like Piero della Francesca and Leonardo, to fully flesh the portrayal of the World in 3D.

All of the above in the West. I don't know if Middle-Eastern and Oriental artists reached the same results by themselves or if imported them from Europe.




No love for Filippo Brunelleschi?................thank goodness for the Italians. Without them we would all be walking through a 2d world.....[;)]




RFalvo69 -> RE: Explore the Bayeux Tapestry online (2/13/2021 2:46:37 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: z1812
No love for Filippo Brunelleschi?................thank goodness for the Italians. Without them we would all be walking through a 2d world.....[;)]

A lot [:)]. He dabbled in the theory of perspective in the second half of the XV Century but his work was mostly theoretical - even if it was of inspiration for other painters. However he was mostly a sculptor and an architect. He was strangely obsessed by "domes" and published many theoretical projects of them (along with his works, like, most famously, the dome of the Florence Cathedral.

Fun fact for our American friends: the United States Capitol dome in Washington D.C. was inspired by Brunelleschi's concept of "a dome within a dome". [:)] The same concept is the basis for the dome of Les Invalides in Paris.




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