У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно What beauty means to Philosophy Tube’s Abigail Thorn: The Cult of Beauty at Wellcome Collection или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
Join Abigail Thorn, actress, writer, and creator of Philosophy Tube, as she takes us on a tour around Wellcome Collection, a museum in London covering health and human experience. The focus? A free temporary exhibition called “The Cult of Beauty”, which delves into the meaning of beauty and its evolution throughout history. While highlighting some of the historical objects and artworks that resonate with her, Abigail reflects on beauty ideals past and present, positive and negative – how society is moulded by them, and how they have given shape to her own personal feelings about beauty. This video has been made to accompany The Cult of Beauty exhibition – showing at Wellcome Collection until 28 April 2024. Find out more on our website: https://wellcomecollection.org/exhibi... 0:00 - Intro 0:45 - Ancient beauty and Queen Nefertiti 01:42 - Husbands bringing their ugly wives to a windmill, to be transformed into beautiful women 02:28 - Beauty and ageing 02:44 - Alchemy and the Ripley Scroll 03:25 - What would Barbie look like if she was life size? 03:39 - Beauty as a moral duty, pseudomorality and Heather Widdows 05:40 - Renaissance beauty ingredients 06:07 - Beauty and social media 06:35 - Sleeping Hermaphroditus 07:22 - Hopeful works in The Cult of Beauty 08:25: What permissible beauty means to Abigail Thorn 08:40 - Conclusion #TheCultOfBeauty #WellcomeCollection Music: Nkisi, Lament II (instrumental) Artwork credits: Bust of Queen Nefertiti, originally c. 1351–34 BCE, Clarke and Davies, 1912–28 CE (reproduction), Wellcome Collection / Science Museum Group Husbands bringing their ugly wives to a windmill, to be transformed into beautiful women, Paulus Fürst c.1650, Wellcome Collection Wax vanitas depicting life and death, modelled on Queen Elizabeth I, 1700s, Wellcome Collection / Science Museum Group Ripley Scroll, Unknown maker, after George Ripley, c. 1600, Wellcome Collection Lifesize Barbie and Oriol, Adel Rootstein Ltd., 2009, Stiftung Deutsches Hygiene-Museum Dresden. Social media: / dhmdresden 'It makes no sense to be beautiful if no one is ugly', 2023, by Makeupbrutalism, commissioned by Wellcome Collection. Social media: / makeupbrutalism 2 Reasons You’re Tired All the Time, Juno Calypso, 2013, Courtesy of the artist and T J Boulting and Slendertone II, Juno Calypso, 2015, Courtesy of the artist and T J Boulting. Social media: / junocalypso Beauty Sensorium, 2023, Renaissance Goo x Baum & Leahy, commissioned by Wellcome Collection. / baumleahy and / @profjillburke ‘Mirror, mirror on the wall, Beauty unravelled in the virtual scroll’, Xcessive Aesthetics, 2023 Sleeping Hermaphroditus, 2nd century CE (original), Wellcome Collection / Science Museum Group ‘Perhaps We are all Fictions in the Eye of the Beholder’, Xu Yang, 2021, Courtesy of the artist. Social media: / _xu.yang_ Permissible Beauty, 2022, © RCMG / Soup Co [film stills] / © Robert Taylor [production stills] / Reproduced with permission of RCMG, University of Leicester/ Soup Co. [new photography] / permissiblebeauty (Almost) all of my dead mother’s beautiful things, Narcissister, 2023, Commissioned by Wellcome Collection Find us on Facebook: / / wellcomecollection See us on Instagram: / / wellcomecollection Follow us on Twitter: / / explorewellcome Follow us on Threads: / https://www.threads.net/wellcomecolle...