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Omaha Steve

(99,499 posts)
Mon Nov 17, 2014, 11:46 AM Nov 2014

In 125 Years, Millions Of People Have Looked At This Painting. No One Really Saw It Until Now.

Last edited Mon Nov 17, 2014, 02:13 PM - Edit history (1)


http://www.upworthy.com/in-125-years-millions-of-people-have-looked-at-this-painting-no-one-really-saw-it-until-now?c=upw1

Curated by Alisha Huber

I'm not easily impressed, OK?

I know Van Gogh was a genius. If the point of this were "Van Gogh was a mad genius," I would not be sharing this with you.

But I found this and I thought, "Oh, what a vaguely interesting thing." And then I got to the part about the Hubble Space Telescope, and, let me tell you: Mind. Blown.

We've got the set up here, but you have to watch the video for the full effect. It's all the way at the bottom.


MUCH more at link you should look over first.




30 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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In 125 Years, Millions Of People Have Looked At This Painting. No One Really Saw It Until Now. (Original Post) Omaha Steve Nov 2014 OP
Amazing! I love the neuroscientific ramifications of this! RufusTFirefly Nov 2014 #1
Kick.... daleanime Nov 2014 #2
The description at the end reminded me of Barbara Ehrenreich's book "Living with a Wild God." Jim__ Nov 2014 #3
I like to disorient my students by telling them that their senses are not there tblue37 Nov 2014 #15
I'd say that's pretty much in agreement with what Ehrenreich was saying. - n/t Jim__ Nov 2014 #17
Good stuff! TreasonousBastard Nov 2014 #4
art. more than something to hang over the sofa. mopinko Nov 2014 #5
Fascinating! KnR Hekate Nov 2014 #6
kick 840high Nov 2014 #7
K & R LiberalLovinLug Nov 2014 #8
Really cool! BeanMusical Nov 2014 #9
posted to for later 1StrongBlackMan Nov 2014 #10
Thanks Steve... Totally awesome! N_E_1 for Tennis Nov 2014 #11
being a genius and having mental issues seem to frequently go hand in hand. n/t FourScore Nov 2014 #12
This message was self-deleted by its author guyton Nov 2014 #13
Great stuff! abakan Nov 2014 #14
Mind blown rurallib Nov 2014 #16
Kick'd & Rec'd. Iggo Nov 2014 #18
*gasp* So. Cool. tanyev Nov 2014 #19
Interesting. longship Nov 2014 #20
I have to mention Omaha Steve Nov 2014 #21
The ''stars'' have always been seen as spirals to me: DeSwiss Nov 2014 #22
That vortex proReality Nov 2014 #24
The vortex is everywhere. DeSwiss Nov 2014 #29
The study of turbulence zentrum Nov 2014 #23
Good thing Van Gogh had health insurance that covered his mental illness! Dustlawyer Nov 2014 #25
I think science has intervened in a wonderful way with art... CTyankee Nov 2014 #26
nobody could place the paint like Vermeer elehhhhna Nov 2014 #27
my guess is that Vermeer was experimenting but really didn't know what he was really doing... CTyankee Nov 2014 #28
I'm thinking of the Dr. Who episode: "Vincent and the Doctor." LongTomH Jan 2015 #30

Jim__

(14,063 posts)
3. The description at the end reminded me of Barbara Ehrenreich's book "Living with a Wild God."
Mon Nov 17, 2014, 12:34 PM
Nov 2014

In that book, Ehrenreich describes episodes in her life, mostly in her adolescent years, where she experiences a form of visual dissociation. She sees things, familiar objects, and yet they don't appear to her as those familiar objects, but rather as (I'm speaking from memory so this may be somewhat off her description) form and color floating in her visual field. She could still recognize the object, but she wasn't processing it visually as an object. Ehrenreich said that her linguistic description could not do justice to the experience. She believed that she was experiencing an aspect of reality that our senses normally mask - again, that's my recollection of what she was saying.

tblue37

(65,227 posts)
15. I like to disorient my students by telling them that their senses are not there
Mon Nov 17, 2014, 02:29 PM
Nov 2014

Last edited Mon Nov 17, 2014, 05:36 PM - Edit history (1)

mainly to convey information to their brain, but rather to filter out almost all the information that is out there, so they can focus on the tiny bit of info necessary for survival without crashing their wetware computers.

mopinko

(70,015 posts)
5. art. more than something to hang over the sofa.
Mon Nov 17, 2014, 01:03 PM
Nov 2014

and people wonder why we should have government agencies to support artists......

and a reminder that van gogh never sold a painting in his lifetime. he would have starved without his brother, theo.

Response to Omaha Steve (Original post)

longship

(40,416 posts)
20. Interesting.
Mon Nov 17, 2014, 09:32 PM
Nov 2014

Even with very limited download limits, I had to click through and watch.

And yes, turbulence makes undergrad physics and engineering students cry. Grad students know better. They just shrug.

R&K

Omaha Steve

(99,499 posts)
21. I have to mention
Mon Nov 17, 2014, 10:54 PM
Nov 2014

In 1978? (or so pre-ST I shooting) Marta and I attended Leonard Nimoy's one man show of Vincent with the bubbly mixer. Yes we got the autograph.

Starry Night is the background of my Excite homepage.

OS

 

DeSwiss

(27,137 posts)
22. The ''stars'' have always been seen as spirals to me:
Tue Nov 18, 2014, 01:44 AM
Nov 2014
- Or as a spinning toroidal-vortex -- as seen from the top or bottom.

K&R



proReality

(1,628 posts)
24. That vortex
Tue Nov 18, 2014, 11:55 AM
Nov 2014

periodically happens around the outer rim of my eyes just since my cataract operation. I go to bed and close my eyes when it happens...now I think I'll try painting while it's going on to see what comes out on canvas.

 

DeSwiss

(27,137 posts)
29. The vortex is everywhere.
Wed Nov 19, 2014, 06:45 AM
Nov 2014
- Around us and all matter. The vortex is the vibration, the resonance, the frequency of matter within nature.

It spirals and turns, into infinity......

zentrum

(9,865 posts)
23. The study of turbulence
Tue Nov 18, 2014, 11:44 AM
Nov 2014

is in Da Vinci's notebooks. He did experiments trying to understand it. I think he may have been the first to take this on.

He made a glass model of a pig's heart in order to understand, among other things, the turbulence in blood flow.

CTyankee

(63,890 posts)
28. my guess is that Vermeer was experimenting but really didn't know what he was really doing...
Tue Nov 18, 2014, 08:19 PM
Nov 2014

he had his vision and he had his device but I am not sure he knew what exactly he would find....until he did! Good hunch!

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