The world of art can be very hard to navigate! I’ll openly admit that even though I’m an art lover, when it comes to the bit about recognizing which time period a piece is from, I end up completely befuddled. Luckily for me, there are plenty of friendly people on the internet to set the record straight, educate us, and help make us seem like art rockstars at dinner parties and art galleries alike.
One of these people is Melbourne art historian and video creator Mary McGillivray, who created a series of very informative and witty videos explaining what art movements a particular work of art is from and who the artist who painted it is. All so we can show off our great taste and in-depth knowledge in front of our friends (and learn something new while we’re at it!). Check out some of Mary’s full videos below, as shared on her _theiconoclass TikTok account, and be sure to follow Mary’s social media accounts for her latest updates if you enjoyed her content.
Mary was kind enough to offer me a glimpse into how she went from studying art history to creating educational videos. "The story begins back in Australia's first COVID lockdown in 2020—ah, memories—where I found myself stuck at home with nothing to do. On a whim, I decided to put my degree in art history and my skills as a professional video editor to good use and make TikToks to entertain myself. I had no idea people would like my jokes about homoerotic frescoes as much as they did, but 10 months later, here we are!" the art historian told Bored Panda. You'll find our full interview with her, as well as with former gallery director and art expert Shelby Bercume, below!
More info: TikTok | YouTube | Instagram | Twitter | MaryMcGillivray.com.au | Patreon
This Australian art historian is helping educate millions of people
Image credits: _theiconoclass
In some of her witty videos, she explains how we can impress our friends by learning to recognize different art movements and artists
@_theiconoclass Want a part two? 😏😘 #arthistorytiktok #arthistorymajor #learnontiktok
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"If It Looks Like The Chaos After A Blackout Where Everyone Is Stumbling Around In The Dark Under One Solitary Emergency Light, It's A Caravaggio"
"The Taking of Christ" by Caravaggio
This painting is also in the National Gallery of Ireland, it's amazing
"If Its A Portrait Of Rembrandt, It's A Rembrandt"
"Self Portrait" by Rembrant
After Mary graduated from the University of Melbourne, she started on the path of making comedic and engaging video content for TikTok and YouTube about visual culture history. TikTok is a way for her to reach and educate millions of young people.
I was curious to find out what Mary thought were the main challenges keeping some people from delving into art history. "A lot of people think that art history is very serious and very important and this leads to them feeling overwhelmed—or even feeling like art history isn't for them. This isn't true! I've said it before and I'll say it again, art history is just old memes. Once we start to see the humor and the humanity in art, it becomes far less intimidating," she shared how we can change our perspective and embrace the complicated subject. Art as memes? Sign me up!
"If It Looks Like You Need Your Glasses Prescription Updated, Then It's Impressionism"
"The walk" by Claude Monet
I suck at drawing. Really. We did art and art history at school. We would have a class learning about a particular movement and then we would all have to try and draw a picture in that movement. The ONLY time I got a good grade was when we did Impressionism. I drew the tree outside our classroom. It according to my teacher was drawn in true impressionism style. All I did was take of my glasses and drew the tree as I saw it in my myopic state. Still it was the first time I got an A in an art class.
"If Everyone In The Painting Looks Unreasonably Jacked, Including The Women, It's A Michelangelo"
"The Creation of Adam" and "Prophets And Sibyls: Libyan Sibyl" by Michelangelo
Mary revealed that she's always had a knack and a passion for art history. Her tale started in her early childhood, having been raised by an art history teacher and a museum curator. "You could say it's 'in my blood!'" she quipped.
"Ever since I watched John Berger's 'Ways of Seeing' in high school, I knew I wanted to be able to reach people the way he did, and demystify the often stuffy and elite world of art history," Mary shared how her passion grew from there.
Meanwhile, if she finds that she's losing faith in her project, she simply re-watches 'The Da Vinci Code' movie. "The fiery rage it sparks within pushes me to go on. Nothing like pure hatred to fuel creativity," she said.
"If It's Got Palpable Female Rage And/Or Vengeance - It's An Artemisia"
"Judith Slaying Holofernes" by Artemisia Gentileschi
"If There's At Least One Person Looking To The Camera Like They're On The Office, It's Diego Velázquez"
"Las Meninas" by Diego Velázquez
Who the heck are the people in the mirror? Are they supposed to represent the viewer(s)?
Bored Panda also reached out to talk about art history with Shelby Bercume, a former gallery director from Florida. According to Shelby, art history isn't a subject that's taught in all schools, so it's often "intimidating and difficult to grasp" for those of us who don't have a background in it. However, she pointed out, that's true for pretty much every subject that we're unfamiliar with!
"I don’t necessarily think art history is an inaccessible entity, but I know that people tend to feel intimidated by things they aren’t experts in. Since art is often, if not always subjective, it feels even more intimidating than a subject with a 'right answer,' like math for example," Shelby shared with Bored Panda. "I think often that leads to a disconnect between the desire to dive into the subject of art and by relation art history, and the execution of it."
"If Its Got Rich People Frollicing Outdoors Then Its Rococo"
"The swing" by Jean-Honoré Fragonard
"If She's Blonde And Has This Exact Face, It's A Botticelli"
"Figure of Flora", "Portrait of Venus" and "Portrait of Simonetta Vespucci" by Sandro Botticelli
Former gallery director Shelby believes that the idea of educational art history TikTok videos is absolutely great. They help make difficult subjects more accessible, less lofty, and far less scary. "Art is something to be enjoyed and shouldn’t be reserved for an exclusive group," she said.
A major part of the appeal of art, according to the art expert, is that there's no wrong answer. "Art is aesthetics and feelings. If you love something, voice why you love it... if you can’t find the words, that’s ok! Talking about art is really discussing how the art affects your emotional state and what thoughts it provokes," she told Bored Panda.
"And remember, it is ok to not love everything, believe it or not, certain artworks are meant to be disturbing or disliked. Just don’t be intimidated to speak up because that’s really all we’re doing when we talk about art. We’re voicing opinions."
"If It Looks Like A Tupperware Drawer, Then It's Cubism"
"Girl with a Mandolin" by Pablo Picasso
"If It Looks Like A Nightmare You Once Had About Being Stranded In The Desert Then Its Surrealism"
"The Temptation of Saint Anthony" by Salvador Dalí
Meanwhile, TikToker Mary isn’t just a great art historian—she also knows that humor helps people remember her lessons better. That’s because humor activates the dopamine reward system in our brains, meaning that our long-term memory gets stimulated.
If you want to become an art history buff, making humorous associations between art movements and artists is the best way to make things easier for yourself. So when Mary makes a quip about Cubism artworks looking like your Tupperware drawer, you’re quite likely to remember. In fact, this particular example stuck with me so much, I can’t wait to share it with my friends.
Pssst, that’s also one of the reasons why you’ll remember things for your exams that much better if you rephrase things to sound funny (or even a tiny bit rude). Peculiarity and weirdness also tend to stick out more in our memories.
"If It Looks Like An Amateur Theatre Production, Then Its Neo-Classical"
"Oath of the Horatii" by Jacques-Louis David
"If It Looks Like Angsty Male Ego, Then It's German Romanticism"
"Wanderer Above The Sea Of Fog" by Caspar David Friedrich
"If It Looks Like A Scene From Madaline, It's A Jean Dufy"
"Paris, La Seine" by Jean Dufy
"If It's Got Ugly Babies, It's Medieval"
"Madonna and Child" by Bernardo Daddi
"If It Looks Like ... It's An O'keeffe"
"Untitled" by By Georgia O’Keeffe
"If It Looks Like A Cottagecore Pinup Girl, Then Its Art Nouveau"
"Moët & Chandon: Champagne White Star" by Alphonse Mucha
"If It's Got More Flesh Than A Nudist Beach - It's A Rubens"
"The Feast of Venus" by Peter Paul Rubens
The term Rubenesque came from Paul Rubens the artist. As he have a love of painting fuller figured subjects, particularly women.
"If Its Unfinished, It's Probably A Leonardo"
"The Adoration of the Magi" by Leonardo da Vinci
"If It Looks Like A Really Satisfying Game Of Tetris It's A Mondrian"
"Composition with Red Blue and Yellow" by Piet Mondrian
"It Looks Like A School Nativity Play Where Everyone's Made A Toga Out Of Different Colored Bedsheets It's A Giotto"
"Lamentation (The Mourning of Christ)" by Giotto di Bondone
"If There's A Room With Some Nice Furniture, A Window, And Some Women Just Going About Here Everyday Business, It's A Vermeer"
"Lady Writing a Letter with her Maid" by Johannes Vermeer
"If It Looks Like The Artistic Equivalent Of A Nicotine Addiction, Its An Egon Schiele"
"Self portrait" by Egon Schiele
"If Its Got Sad Peasants It's 19th Century Realism"
"The Gleaners" by Jean-Francois Millet
"If The People Look Way Too Long, Then It's Mannerism"
"Madonna and Child" by Parmigianino
"If It's Got A Happy Presence, It's A Dutch Genre Painting"
"The Way You Hear it is the Way You Sing it" by Jan Steen
What a ridiculous scene! Have you ever been subjected to indoor bagpipes? They're unfathomably loud.
"If You're Not Sure If It Is Art, Then Its Dada"
"Fountain" by Marcel Duchamp
"If It Looks Like A Low Res Jpeg Blown Up Its Pointillism"
Detail of "La Parade de Cirque" by Seurat
"If It's Got Cute Babies, It's Baroque"
"The Virgin and Child" by Ludovico Carracci
I'm the first to comment and I think that is cuz no one want's to admit that this baby is actually creepy lol
"If Its Homoerotic And Painted On A Wall Or Ceiling, Then Its High Renaissance"
Sistine Chapel ceiling painted by Michelangelo
"If It's Just Got Nice Trees, It's A Claude Lorrain"
"Pastoral Landscape" by Claude Lorrain
"If It Looks Like A Really Stressful Game Of Tetris It's A George Braque"
"Bottle and Fishes" by Georges Braque
"If It Looks Like A Trendy Collage Artist's Instagram Then Its Constructivism"
Movie poster for the experimental avant-garde film "Man With A Movie Camera" by Vladimir and Georgii Stenberg
"If It Looks Like A Gorman Puffer Jacket It's A Matisse"
"The Sheaf" by Henri Matisse
"If It Looks Like The First Kid At School Who Learnt How To Draw In 3D And Would Not Shut Up About It, It's A Massaccio"
"Holy Trinity" by Masaccio
The woman (Mary?) on the left looks like a really bored tour guide. "And here we have Jesus. He died. Moving on! We're walking,we're wlking..."
"If She's Blonde And Got Thicc Thighs, It's A Titian"
"Sacred and Profane Love" by Titian
do you really censor boobs in a renaissance painting???
"If It's Got Nice Trees But Boring Figures, It's A Poussin"
"Baptism of Christ" by Nicolas Poussin
Surprised not to see Botero. If people or things in the painting look unusually rotund, it's a Botero.
I always say "if they all look horrified and/or in some sort visible turmoil then it's a Caravaggio". I'm always blown away by the size of his works. They are impressively massive just like the Mona Lisa is disappointingly small (and almost invisible due to the number of people).
oooh! If it's got females with red hair and lots of vibrant colours, it's pre-raphaelite!
Hey! They forgot El Greco and his hands! The hands tell you it's an El Greco!
If it looks like a bunch of marketing execs dropped acid before their latest planning session, it's a Warhol.
If it looks like a 3rd grader made potato stampers to use up the rest of his basic color paints.............it's a Warhol.
if it's a winter painting with ice skating, a tower and a old man with his dog its a Avercamp
If it looks like you can win it at a carnival or a fair, it‘s Jeff Koons. If it looks like it should go in the trash, it’s modern art. If it looks like a stack of boxes that a giant bird might like to live on top of, it’s Herzog & De Meuron. If it seems like your feet appear to be doing seemingly impossible things with a round ball, you might be Ronaldinho. If it looks like a comedian, walks like a comedian and talks like a comedian but isn’t actually funny, it’s Amy Schumer.
Art History is not a degree in "Looking at, and memorizing, pictures." I saw many a economics major take an art history class "for fun" and end up in tears. Art History is a degree in critical writing, a skill much in demand in the professional world where acronyms rule social media. Also: Teacher, gallery professional, archivist, librarian, art restoration, art insurance, museum preparator, curator, director, appraiser, education director, marketing....it goes on. I've been in libraries and archives for 30 years. Yes, I knew I wouldn't get rich, but I've loved my work. I worked in a museum business office and every morning I walked by a Monet to go to my desk.
Load More Replies...Surprised not to see Botero. If people or things in the painting look unusually rotund, it's a Botero.
I always say "if they all look horrified and/or in some sort visible turmoil then it's a Caravaggio". I'm always blown away by the size of his works. They are impressively massive just like the Mona Lisa is disappointingly small (and almost invisible due to the number of people).
oooh! If it's got females with red hair and lots of vibrant colours, it's pre-raphaelite!
Hey! They forgot El Greco and his hands! The hands tell you it's an El Greco!
If it looks like a bunch of marketing execs dropped acid before their latest planning session, it's a Warhol.
If it looks like a 3rd grader made potato stampers to use up the rest of his basic color paints.............it's a Warhol.
if it's a winter painting with ice skating, a tower and a old man with his dog its a Avercamp
If it looks like you can win it at a carnival or a fair, it‘s Jeff Koons. If it looks like it should go in the trash, it’s modern art. If it looks like a stack of boxes that a giant bird might like to live on top of, it’s Herzog & De Meuron. If it seems like your feet appear to be doing seemingly impossible things with a round ball, you might be Ronaldinho. If it looks like a comedian, walks like a comedian and talks like a comedian but isn’t actually funny, it’s Amy Schumer.
Art History is not a degree in "Looking at, and memorizing, pictures." I saw many a economics major take an art history class "for fun" and end up in tears. Art History is a degree in critical writing, a skill much in demand in the professional world where acronyms rule social media. Also: Teacher, gallery professional, archivist, librarian, art restoration, art insurance, museum preparator, curator, director, appraiser, education director, marketing....it goes on. I've been in libraries and archives for 30 years. Yes, I knew I wouldn't get rich, but I've loved my work. I worked in a museum business office and every morning I walked by a Monet to go to my desk.
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