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SECRET Messages in Famous Works of Art!

We recognize famous works of art, but how much do any of us know about them? Unless you’re an art enthusiast or art history major, it’s probably not much. Let’s take a look at some of the most recognized paintings by the most famous artists of all time. What are the hidden messages and secrets behind them? Keep watching to find out!

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6. Young Woman Powdering Herself
In French, Georges Seurat’s painting is entitled “Jeune femme se poudrant.” Seurat created it between 1889 to 1890. What can anyone draw from this art piece other than a young woman powdering herself? The portrait is of one of Seurat’s girlfriends at the time, Madeleine Knobloch. In 2014, experts found the only self-portrait of Seurat that exists is hidden under this famous painting. Through technical examination, they were able to see that Seurat painted himself in the window area where there is now a potted plant.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/38/Young_Woman_Powdering_Herself_Georges_Seurat.jpg/498px-Young_Woman_Powdering_Herself_Georges_Seurat.jpg

5. The Ambassadors
"The Ambassadors" dates back to 1533, during the Tudor period, and is a work by Hans Holbein the Younger. The two men illustrated are known as Jean de Dinteville and Georges de Selve. However, the most prominent part of this work isn’t even the two men, but the strange blob at the bottom of the frame. That blob is what makes this an “anamorphic picture.” These types of pictures appear distorted when you’re standing right in front of it. If you were to glance at it from a different angle, you would see that the blob forms a skull. Holbein designed the painting to hang on a staircase. That way, people ascending the stairs could see it as it was meant to be seen.

4. The Birth Of Venus
Although “Primavera” is widely-known, Botticelli’s most famous work has to be “The Birth of Venus.” In it, we see Venus or Aphrodite, the goddess of love, prosperity, and victory, standing on an open scallop shell as she emerges from the sea as a fully grown woman. In the air is the god Zephyr, who is blowing wind toward her as he carries a female. Most people think that the woman is “Aura, the personification of a breeze. On Venus’s right is a minor Greek goddess of the seasons. These are all accepted interpretations. One the features up for debate is what the shell means. Some believe it represents physical womanhood and fertility.
3. The Creation Of Adam
Again with Michelangelo! Up next is one of his most famous Biblical illustrations: The Creation of Adam. We’ve all seen it before. It shows Adam leaning backward with his pointer finger extended, barely touching the band of God himself. Michelangelo painted “The Creation of Adam” onto the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in the 1500s. Draw your attention to the twelve people behind God’s cloak-like item. Look at the shape of the cloak. Theorists say that Michelangelo based it off the contours of the human brain. The people and body parts are the anatomical sections of this organ. With this idea, you could conclude that Michelangelo wished to show God not only giving Adam life but also knowledge.
2. Starry Night
Not only is “Starry Night” Vincent Van Gogh’s most famous work, but it is also one of the most famous art pieces ever. Van Gogh created “The Starry Night” in the summer of 1889. It is his view outside the east-facing window if his asylum room in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, located in the south of France. To give you some context, Van Gogh made this half a year after the famous breakdown and ear mutilation. During her 2014 TED Talk, researcher Natalya St. Clair explained that the movement of the paint strokes of the sky wasn’t for mere aesthetic. Instead, St. Clair believes they hint at turbulent flow, a mathematical concept discovered decades after Van Gogh’s creation. With the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomists saw the faraway cloud dust and gas surrounding a star. The image from the telescope looked eerily similar to “Starry Night.”
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4 мая 2019 г. 4:00:05
00:12:01
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