7:45 p.m.

(b)

The one on the left is a Rembrandt, one of my favorite Dutch painters, along with Johannes Vermeer, who were masters at painting light from flames or sun. I learn, Van Dyck's something else. Flemish or something, I don't really know. He's on the right.

I learn the royal nobility, love the ███████████████████████████████████████████████████whereas the mercantile, rich people prefer Rembrandt.

I am divided internally, I see myself as both. But I think, I'd mix it up.

I like my grandma painting, the face is seen as someone realist, if I use that word right, the arms inspired by Vincent Van Gogh, a bit of abstract impressionism, wavy colors, I like to mix it up.

# 1
The video frame is from YouTube, taken from a video titled "Van Dyck's 'Charles I' in 10 minutes | Art history | National Gallery" by The National Gallery. It shows a comparison between two paintings attributed to the renowned artist Van Dyck, illustrating his depiction of Charles I. On the left, one painting captures a regal figure on horseback, dressed in a richly detailed yellow outfit and a wide-brimmed hat, set against a dark, moody background. The right painting also features a mounted Charles I, with a more dynamic posture, against a brighter, more natural backdrop with blue skies and trees. This juxtaposition highlights different stylistic approaches and lighting techniques used by Van Dyck. The video is part of an art history discussion, as suggested by the caption: "Now this is a face-off, if you like, between the two leading schools of painting," indicating an analysis of artistic schools or styles.
- Title: "Van Dyck's 'Charles I' in 10 minutes | Art history | National Gallery"
- Channel / profile: "The National Gallery"
- Site / app: "YouTube"
- Captions / subtitles: "Now this is a face-off, if you like, between the two leading schools of painting"
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