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Welcome to the Low Countries -
a vast flatland
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where continental Europe threatens
to slide into the North Sea.
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If it weren't for the dikes and the
continual pumping away of water,
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thousands of square miles would
simply be washed away.
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The region of the Low Countries
has always been
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a place of shifting borders
and uneasily coexisting tribes.
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It can't be pinned down
to a single nation
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or even a particular
mother tongue.
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Labels like Dutch, Netherlandish,
Flemish, Walloon,
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they're nebulous, they meant
different things at different times.
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And there's the paradox.
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This place, which sometimes seems
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as difficult to grasp
as water itself,
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has exerted an enormous tangible
influence
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on the whole
course of Western civilisation.
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And if you want to understand how
this watery world has
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shaped our modern
world in terms of politics, science,
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the advancement of learning,
economics, history, I think there's
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no better way to begin than by
exploring the rich story of its art.
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Behind the obvious cliches -
the beer and the moules frites,
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the chocolate and waffles,
the windmills and clogs,
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lies a vivid, complex tale
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encapsulated in some of the world's
most compelling works of art.
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From the world of medieval Flanders,
rich and poor,
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sacred and secular...
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to the glories of the Dutch Golden
Age...
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00:02:00,870 --> 00:02:05,070
to the somewhat tortuous emergence
of modern Holland and Belgium.
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It's the art of an
Atlantis in reverse,
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a land that rose
from beneath the water
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to reach the pinnacle of
civilisation.
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The Zwin Estuary - this is the
spot where modern day Belgium
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and the Netherlands
meet each other, and the sea.
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Despite thousands of years of human
presence here,
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it still feels uncanny -
a strange, shifting land.
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To the Romans, this coastline
was frontierland,
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the uncouth edge of Empire,
the arse-end of the world.
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00:03:17,750 --> 00:03:21,470
The Roman historian Tacitus
described this tidal,
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watery region as "a place
somewhere between land and sea,
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"inhabited by wretched natives
leading primitive lives."
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For heat,
they burned clods of dried earth,
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and for sustenance
they had little more than this...
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Modest beginnings, perhaps,
but the marshy mix of water and land
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that disgusted the Romans
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was the very thing that the
"wretched herring-eating natives"
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would eventually turn
to their advantage.
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By the 10th century,
they were building dikes,
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man-made humps to fence off parcels
of land from the sea.
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Bit by bit, the threat of floods was
replaced with stable farmland,
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then towns, then cities.
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Through sheer hard graft,
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the Lowlanders created a
sophisticated society
from almost nothing.
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But I think what made the whole
culture of the Low Countries
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unique was that this really was
a civilisation built on a network,
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a trading network,
and a network of canals,
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the gentle terrain of the Lowlands,
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the fact that it was a civilisation
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that had been conjured from water,
against all odds,
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was also
the thing that enabled it to become
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a great flourishing civilisation.
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From the late Middle Ages
on well into the Renaissance,
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Men from Flanders were known
for their skill at managing water.
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It's nice to see the city
from the water, because you can feel
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how the houses actually
face this way.
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Naturally, these beautiful little
gardens all facing on to the water.
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Location was crucial -
canals connected the Low Countries
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with sea lanes north to the Baltic,
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west to the British Isles,
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south to Iberia
and the Mediterranean.
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By the 1300s, the Low Countries
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dominated trade in Northern Europe,
and this city, Bruges,
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was at the heart of one of the
greatest trading centres
in the world.
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It was the economic powerhouse
of a place known as Flanders,
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part of a Low Countries
patchwork of mini-states.
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Low Countries success
was founded, above all, on cloth.
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00:06:06,830 --> 00:06:10,070
As these people had woven land
and sea to create the world
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they lived in, so they wove
their identity into their fabrics.
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And when does it really start
to get busy? About midday?
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Flanders became an international
byword for quality textiles -
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none brighter or finer.
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So it's entirely fitting that
Lowlanders found their first
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great artistic expression
not in paint,
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but in cloth -
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threading vivid images
into the medium of tapestry.
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A little to the east of Bruges
in the Belgian town of Mechelen
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is the De Wit Royal Manufacturers
of tapestry.
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Housed inside a 15th century
building is a truly superb
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collection of these Flemish
masterpieces,
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displayed just as they might have
been by their original owners.
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Now this room is where
they keep some of the very earliest
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tapestries in the whole
De Wit collection,
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including this one - it's perhaps
the smallest piece in the collection
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but it's one of the most important
because it's phenomenally early,
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it's possibly as early as the 1430s,
certainly no later than the 1450s.
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It was created in Tournai
in what is now Southern Belgium.
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It's an object of immense
preciousness.
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We know from inventories of the time
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that something like this would have
been valued far more highly
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because of the sheer
amount of labour that went into it,
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than a painting or a sculpture,
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even objects made of gold
or silver - tapestry was number one
luxury item.
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00:07:55,430 --> 00:07:59,870
So here we've got this
image of Christ on the cross.
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Wonderful details - here's the bad
thief with his lost soul
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on its way to hell at the moment
of his death.
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00:08:09,070 --> 00:08:12,870
This character was a centurion
who's said to have pierced Christ's
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side with his sword,
and as the blood gushed forth -
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look at that wonderful
red blood - some of it
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went in Longinus' eye and he was
miraculously cured of his blindness.
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00:08:24,190 --> 00:08:27,670
If you look in close detail,
and this is very, very rare to have
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survived, you can see that there
are gold threads in the haloes.
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00:08:33,990 --> 00:08:40,270
I think it reminds us that this
was a culture simultaneously
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in love with luxury and wedded
to a profound sense of piety.
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The tension between piety and luxury
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had its origins in the very
creation of the Low Countries.
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00:09:04,390 --> 00:09:08,350
This was a society ultimately built
and owned by merchants
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00:09:08,350 --> 00:09:11,470
and businessmen - secular people.
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But the foundations had been
laid by monks and nuns.
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The ruins of the 13th century
Cistercian Abbey at Orval,
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in what is now the French-speaking
part of southern Belgium,
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might seem to evoke the otherworldly
nature of the monastic life.
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00:09:27,630 --> 00:09:30,790
Yet it was the practical know-how
developed in monasteries
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that first made possible the
region's rise from mud and poverty.
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It was monks who first
reclaimed the land,
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and harnessed water for human use.
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In a society with no social
services,
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monasteries were at the forefront
of public health and welfare.
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And part of that was turning
water into beer.
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Today, a community of Trappist monks
continues Orval's brewing tradition.
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00:10:04,670 --> 00:10:08,790
In some respects, the methods
and ingredients are unchanged,
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but they also use state-of-the-art
equipment, making them
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every bit as progressive
as their 13th century predecessors.
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'Brother Xavier is the manager
of Orval Abbey's brewery.'
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IN FRENCH:
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Hops! Special aromatiques.
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Mmm!
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Du pain liquide!
That's a great phrase!
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Liquid bread, they called it because
it had this sustaining ability.
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The monks of medieval Flanders
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only brewed enough
beer for their own use.
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But the entrepreneurial Lowlanders
knew how to turn monastic
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ingenuity into commercial success.
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By the 14th century, the
Low Countries were the continent's
biggest exporters of ale.
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Entrepreneurs also turned monastic
art into big business.
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The illuminated
manuscript, for centuries
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made by monks in the sanctity
of their abbey scriptoria,
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was taken to a height
of sophistication by secular
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Flemish artists whose workshops
were in Flemish town centres.
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By the 1400s, all of Europe's ruling
elite were commissioning
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manuscripts from Flanders -
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portable luxury objects even more
precious than tapestries.
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00:12:24,230 --> 00:12:28,110
The Mayer van den Bergh Museum
in Antwerp houses what I think of
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as the single most brilliant
illuminated book ever created.
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It was made in around 1500,
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probably as a wedding
gift for the Queen of Portugal.
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Now, Claire, I think of this
as possibly the finest
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illustrated manuscript produced
by the whole Flemish tradition
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and I have to admit that when I put
in a request that we might
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actually look at it, I didn't
imagine that you would get it out
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and that we would actually be
allowed to turn the pages.
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And you've started with
an image of Christmas?
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Yes. It is one of the most
beautiful illuminations
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here in the manuscript but there
are lots of miniatures like this
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because it's a prayer book,
a book of hours.
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Normally it was made for monks
to use during the year.
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Well, that's, that's where it began,
isn't it? Yes.
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But by the time
we get to an object such as this,
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these books are being distributed
to very rich people...
Yes, it is.
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..across Europe to aid them
in their personal prayer.
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Yes.
And it's interesting to me that the
faces seem very Flemish.
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It's that medieval or late medieval
habit of imagining the scene
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as if it's happening
in your own time.
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Yes, it is because it doesn't
look like Jerusalem or Bethlehem.
No. Not at all.
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It's happening in Bruges or Flanders.
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I can see down here exactly what
you're saying because this is...
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I think this is Mary and Joseph
being told there's no room at the
inn?
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00:14:00,590 --> 00:14:03,910
Yes, it is, yeah.
But it's a Bruges inn.
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And these buildings are built
of brick and they've got those
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very,
very characteristic Flemish windows.
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Yes, you even can see
here at the background a tower,
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which could be a church in Bruges.
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Can we look some more?
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Where are you going to take us now?
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I can show you this one.
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It's just a decoration for...
Just a...
..a normal page, just decoration.
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Yeah. But it's so beautiful
because it's jewellery
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with beautiful gems hanging
here on hooks.
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It's an amazing thing, isn't it,
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00:14:41,310 --> 00:14:43,830
cos it's almost like an imaginary
jewellery box.
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The new queen of the King of
Portugal.
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00:14:47,710 --> 00:14:49,870
Nothing's too
good for her, is it?
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00:14:52,830 --> 00:14:56,710
And we have here
a very beautiful... Wow!
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..illumination where you can see
all the apostles
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and Holy Mary with the blue...
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00:15:02,750 --> 00:15:04,390
There again with the blue.
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00:15:04,390 --> 00:15:09,270
..gown looking at the clouds
where you can see disappearing
just...
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and only the feet of Christ.
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00:15:11,590 --> 00:15:13,590
There he goes, up to heaven.
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00:15:13,590 --> 00:15:14,910
And where... His feet.
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00:15:14,910 --> 00:15:18,830
..he started you can see but very,
very little one,
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00:15:18,830 --> 00:15:20,670
his two feet.
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Ah!
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In the rocks. His footprints.
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00:15:23,910 --> 00:15:25,150
His footprints, yes.
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00:15:26,870 --> 00:15:30,550
No-one can imitate this quality now
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00:15:30,550 --> 00:15:36,710
because we don't have the, the art
and also not the materials...
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00:15:36,710 --> 00:15:40,630
It's a sobering thought that yes,
I think you're exactly right -
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no-one will ever perhaps draw
with that fineness...
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No. ..ever again.
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Flemish illuminators achieved
unsurpassed levels of immediacy
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and imagination.
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00:16:05,990 --> 00:16:09,430
It's often hard to know who the
artists responsible were,
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00:16:09,430 --> 00:16:12,310
because their names are rarely
recorded.
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But throughout Flanders during the
15th century, the skills
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00:16:15,790 --> 00:16:19,590
developed within the borders
of a book's page would increasingly
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00:16:19,590 --> 00:16:22,390
be applied to the more public
medium of painting.
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00:16:29,470 --> 00:16:33,350
And the first great painter to
translate Flemish illumination
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00:16:33,350 --> 00:16:37,990
on to this far grander scale would
have such an impact on the whole
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00:16:37,990 --> 00:16:42,310
course of Western art that we
most certainly know his name.
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00:16:42,310 --> 00:16:44,870
Jan van Eyck.
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00:16:44,870 --> 00:16:48,030
Van Eyck may himself have started
out as an illuminator.
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00:16:49,150 --> 00:16:51,510
He lived and worked in Bruges,
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00:16:51,510 --> 00:16:55,670
but it was another nearby city
that he created his most spectacular
work.
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00:17:00,630 --> 00:17:02,510
Well, I'm in Ghent and it's raining.
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00:17:02,510 --> 00:17:03,750
It's another grey day
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00:17:03,750 --> 00:17:07,830
in the Low Countries, but then again
who needs sunshine when there's
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00:17:07,830 --> 00:17:12,230
so much light and colour in the art,
and in the church behind me,
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00:17:12,230 --> 00:17:16,310
there is, for my money, the most
radiant Flemish masterpiece of the
lot.
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00:17:28,430 --> 00:17:33,670
In 1432, Jan van Eyck completed
a commission for this cathedral -
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00:17:33,670 --> 00:17:37,750
possibly begun by his brother,
Hubert, but essentially his work.
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00:17:40,030 --> 00:17:43,990
It was a chance for van Eyck to
show off his breathtaking discovery,
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00:17:43,990 --> 00:17:49,150
something never seen before - a way
of applying layers of translucent
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00:17:49,150 --> 00:17:53,630
oil paint to create astonishing
illusions of depth and light.
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00:18:00,790 --> 00:18:05,630
This work is now so cherished it's
kept behind bulletproof glass
233
00:18:05,630 --> 00:18:09,670
under carefully controlled climate
and lighting conditions.
234
00:18:14,470 --> 00:18:17,070
So here it is - van Eyck's
Ghent Altarpiece,
235
00:18:17,070 --> 00:18:20,590
one of the very greatest
paintings in the whole world.
236
00:18:20,590 --> 00:18:22,870
And what does it represent?
237
00:18:22,870 --> 00:18:26,070
Well, essentially it's
a vision, it's a fantasy,
238
00:18:26,070 --> 00:18:31,670
it's a dream of what might
happen at the end of the world.
239
00:18:31,670 --> 00:18:34,310
Everything converges
on a sacred centre,
240
00:18:34,310 --> 00:18:40,350
here the sacred centre is that
astonishing solemn, severe hieratic
241
00:18:40,350 --> 00:18:45,590
figure of Christ the judge
and God the father rolled into one.
242
00:18:48,150 --> 00:18:51,710
And at the extreme edge on either
side we have Adam
243
00:18:51,710 --> 00:18:57,230
and Eve represented with
tremendous lack of idealism -
244
00:18:57,230 --> 00:18:59,430
these are real human bodies.
245
00:18:59,430 --> 00:19:02,190
And that's the whole point
246
00:19:02,190 --> 00:19:05,990
because it is their sin that has
condemned us to live in a world of
247
00:19:05,990 --> 00:19:13,710
mortal time and that is what in this
moment is being redeemed by Christ.
248
00:19:13,710 --> 00:19:18,030
This is the moment when all of the
blessed, as described in the Book of
249
00:19:18,030 --> 00:19:25,670
Revelations, gather to enter the New
Jerusalem, paradise, eternal life.
250
00:19:26,950 --> 00:19:30,670
They're all converging on that
central mystical vision
251
00:19:30,670 --> 00:19:34,990
of the lamb of God,
symbol of Christ, shedding his blood
252
00:19:34,990 --> 00:19:39,110
on an altar while angels bear
the symbols of his Passion.
253
00:19:39,110 --> 00:19:44,910
It's like a church service taking
place in a garden of utter
beauty and delight.
254
00:19:46,870 --> 00:19:51,030
But what makes this picture
truly extraordinary?
255
00:19:51,030 --> 00:19:55,150
What makes it one of the great
works of art ever painted?
256
00:19:55,150 --> 00:19:58,550
I think it's partly to do with
van Eyck's sense of composition
257
00:19:58,550 --> 00:20:03,790
and the way in which he's imagined
heavenly perfection as this
258
00:20:03,790 --> 00:20:06,270
perfectly symmetrical
universe of form.
259
00:20:08,950 --> 00:20:12,590
You can almost imagine the picture
having just been painted one half
260
00:20:12,590 --> 00:20:16,750
and then folded over and the
other half mirrors it perfectly.
261
00:20:18,390 --> 00:20:22,030
And yet when you look more
closely into the picture,
262
00:20:22,030 --> 00:20:25,150
there are these wonderful lightning
flashes of realism,
263
00:20:25,150 --> 00:20:27,590
these faces that jump out at you,
264
00:20:27,590 --> 00:20:33,070
beards that you feel you can touch,
flowers that you feel you can smell.
265
00:20:34,390 --> 00:20:36,270
And how did van Eyck achieve this?
266
00:20:36,270 --> 00:20:41,830
Well, Giorgio Vasari, the great
Italian art historian, tells us
267
00:20:41,830 --> 00:20:46,910
he invented a new form of art,
it was called oil painting.
268
00:20:46,910 --> 00:20:49,150
Now, generations of modern art
historians have said that
269
00:20:49,150 --> 00:20:51,550
that's a myth, of course van Eyck
didn't invent oil painting,
270
00:20:51,550 --> 00:20:52,870
it was already around.
271
00:20:52,870 --> 00:20:57,430
But the fact is that van Eyck DID
in effect invent oil painting -
272
00:20:57,430 --> 00:21:01,750
certainly he discovered the things
that could be done with pigment,
273
00:21:01,750 --> 00:21:06,190
when it was suspended in this
medium of oil.
274
00:21:06,190 --> 00:21:10,070
And this picture is a kind
of encyclopaedia of his talents,
275
00:21:10,070 --> 00:21:13,910
"Look!" he's saying,
look what I can do with oil paint.
276
00:21:13,910 --> 00:21:19,990
I can paint ermine-trimmed robes,
I can paint each separate
277
00:21:19,990 --> 00:21:26,430
hair in a horse's mane, I can paint
geology, architecture, I can
278
00:21:26,430 --> 00:21:32,750
paint the reflection in somebody's
eye - it all started here.
279
00:21:34,230 --> 00:21:39,910
Now the first people who saw this
picture were so stunned by it,
280
00:21:39,910 --> 00:21:41,710
so taken aback by it,
281
00:21:41,710 --> 00:21:46,350
they could not believe that an image
that was made of nothing
282
00:21:46,350 --> 00:21:53,270
but paint applied to boards of wood
could seem to them like life itself.
283
00:21:53,270 --> 00:22:00,910
So much so that the rumour was
put about in Ghent, in Bruges,
284
00:22:00,910 --> 00:22:06,150
van Eyck's home town, that this
painter wasn't just an artist,
285
00:22:07,390 --> 00:22:10,630
he was a magician,
some kind of necromancer.
286
00:22:19,830 --> 00:22:23,790
Van Eyck's innovations would be
enormously influential.
287
00:22:23,790 --> 00:22:27,990
Oil painting, the medium that he had
pioneered, would be taken up all
288
00:22:27,990 --> 00:22:32,870
over Europe, from Venice to Northern
and Central Italy, to Spain
and beyond.
289
00:22:32,870 --> 00:22:38,550
And as generation after
generation of painters
290
00:22:38,550 --> 00:22:46,470
explored its effects, art itself
would be transformed forever.
291
00:22:48,470 --> 00:22:51,830
Van Eyck's mastery of oil paint
made him one of the richest,
292
00:22:51,830 --> 00:22:56,470
most highly respected
artists of his day.
293
00:22:58,430 --> 00:23:03,150
But where he used the medium to
conjure up an entire world of
vivid detail,
294
00:23:04,350 --> 00:23:07,510
it was another great Flemish artist
who went beneath that
295
00:23:07,510 --> 00:23:12,750
glistening surface, to explore
the far depths of human emotion.
296
00:23:15,110 --> 00:23:17,470
Brussels-based Rogier van
der Weyden,
297
00:23:17,470 --> 00:23:20,910
believed to have portrayed
himself here as St Luke,
298
00:23:20,910 --> 00:23:24,230
patron saint of artists,
was described by his contemporaries
299
00:23:24,230 --> 00:23:27,670
as "the greatest",
"the most noble" of painters.
300
00:23:32,350 --> 00:23:37,550
In his almost unbearable portrayal
of Christ's Descent from the Cross,
301
00:23:37,550 --> 00:23:41,390
van der Weyden explored every last
trick of oil paint -
302
00:23:41,390 --> 00:23:46,270
above all its ability to capture
tears, and blood - to render
303
00:23:46,270 --> 00:23:50,270
the full horror of Christ's death
immediate and shocking.
304
00:23:52,070 --> 00:23:56,830
This is pain, grief and sorrow made
visible - almost tangible.
305
00:24:01,870 --> 00:24:06,030
In 1443, the founders of this
hospital commissioned
306
00:24:06,030 --> 00:24:09,030
Rogier van der Weyden to paint
what would be one of the great
307
00:24:09,030 --> 00:24:13,670
jewels in the crown of Flemish
art -
308
00:24:13,670 --> 00:24:19,190
a consolation, or was it perhaps a
warning, for those who lay sick
309
00:24:19,190 --> 00:24:23,430
and dying in a world of barely
imaginable harshness and hardship.
310
00:24:26,230 --> 00:24:30,910
Smallpox and cholera were endemic,
plague a regular terror.
311
00:24:32,790 --> 00:24:36,630
Monks who tended the sick were
themselves at constant risk.
312
00:24:42,750 --> 00:24:45,870
But this wasn't just
a hospital for curing bodies,
313
00:24:45,870 --> 00:24:50,110
it was a hospital for saving souls,
and its focal point,
314
00:24:50,110 --> 00:24:52,910
placed at the end
of the room of the sick,
315
00:24:52,910 --> 00:24:59,590
facing all of those beds, was this
great picture, a Flemish altarpiece.
316
00:24:59,590 --> 00:25:03,630
It was painted by Rogier van der
Weyden about 11 years after
317
00:25:03,630 --> 00:25:05,950
van Eyck painted the Ghent
altarpiece
318
00:25:05,950 --> 00:25:09,990
and what it shows us is in effect
the prequel to the Ghent
319
00:25:09,990 --> 00:25:15,270
altarpiece, because this is
the moment of the Last Judgement.
320
00:25:15,270 --> 00:25:21,590
Christ sits in majesty over
the world in a cloud of gold.
321
00:25:23,270 --> 00:25:30,470
In the centre, Saint Michael,
depicted as a pale-faced Flemish
322
00:25:30,470 --> 00:25:34,990
prince of Justice,
holds up the scales with which
323
00:25:34,990 --> 00:25:38,790
he will weigh
the souls of all mankind.
324
00:25:40,830 --> 00:25:44,470
The heavier of the two souls
represents sin -
325
00:25:44,470 --> 00:25:46,710
"peccata" is written on the
painting.
326
00:25:46,710 --> 00:25:51,590
And he screams because he knows
he's going to hell forever.
327
00:25:51,590 --> 00:25:56,270
Whereas the soul on the right looks
almost complacent, kneels
328
00:25:56,270 --> 00:26:00,910
in prayer, rises up, he's a light
soul, on his way to heaven.
329
00:26:03,070 --> 00:26:09,030
And as the four angels blow the last
trump, the earth cracks open
330
00:26:09,030 --> 00:26:14,190
and the dead rise from their graves
to discover their fate.
331
00:26:15,630 --> 00:26:23,430
Those on Christ's left are dragged
vomiting, screaming, wailing,
332
00:26:23,430 --> 00:26:28,510
weeping into the flames of hell.
333
00:26:30,390 --> 00:26:34,670
On the right-hand side,
it's all rather more tranquil.
334
00:26:34,670 --> 00:26:41,830
We can see, here, they troop
off towards the heavenly city.
335
00:26:44,510 --> 00:26:47,990
I like this detail here - as the
angel ushers them through the door,
336
00:26:47,990 --> 00:26:50,030
we know where they're going.
337
00:26:50,030 --> 00:26:55,950
They're going to that heavenly
paradise garden depicted in van
Eyck's altarpiece.
338
00:26:55,950 --> 00:26:59,630
It's, so to speak, "This way for the
Ghent altarpiece".
339
00:27:01,070 --> 00:27:05,990
Now to a superstitious
Christian in the 15th century,
340
00:27:05,990 --> 00:27:09,950
the purpose of this picture would
have been eminently practical.
341
00:27:11,430 --> 00:27:16,710
Most of the people in those beds,
in times of plague for sure,
342
00:27:16,710 --> 00:27:17,710
were going to die.
343
00:27:19,230 --> 00:27:23,270
Before they did so,
each one of them would be
344
00:27:23,270 --> 00:27:28,670
instructed to come forward into the
chapel at the end of the room,
345
00:27:28,670 --> 00:27:31,510
and to contemplate this picture.
346
00:27:31,510 --> 00:27:37,150
And the picture basically is there
to give them a choice -
347
00:27:37,150 --> 00:27:38,710
where do you want to end up?
348
00:27:39,910 --> 00:27:46,750
To Christ's left, down in the flames
of hell, or Christ's right,
349
00:27:46,750 --> 00:27:49,030
on your way to paradise?
350
00:27:49,030 --> 00:27:52,030
Makes the choice pretty
unambiguous, I'd say.
351
00:27:52,030 --> 00:27:56,230
Having seen it,
you're filled with terror.
352
00:27:57,470 --> 00:28:01,590
It's a cinemascope vision of what
might happen to you.
353
00:28:01,590 --> 00:28:04,350
So you go back to your bed,
you call the confessor,
354
00:28:04,350 --> 00:28:10,750
you confess your sins, and if you
confess all of them, you're saved.
355
00:28:13,390 --> 00:28:16,270
It's an astonishing picture,
356
00:28:16,270 --> 00:28:21,710
it's one of the great
masterpieces of Flemish art,
357
00:28:21,710 --> 00:28:25,550
it absolutely represents that great
flowering of painting that
358
00:28:25,550 --> 00:28:29,230
took place in Flanders in the first
half of the 15th century.
359
00:28:31,230 --> 00:28:36,070
And yet, and here's the sting in the
tail, it's not actually in Flanders.
360
00:28:36,070 --> 00:28:41,030
It's hundreds of miles south,
in a country we now call France.
361
00:28:54,590 --> 00:28:59,470
Our modern borders bear little
relation to 15th century geography.
362
00:28:59,470 --> 00:29:02,630
This hospital,
known as the Hotel-Dieu de Beaune,
363
00:29:02,630 --> 00:29:06,150
once stood at the heart
of the powerful Duchy of Burgundy.
364
00:29:08,750 --> 00:29:11,590
The ambitious Dukes of Burgundy
coveted the great
365
00:29:11,590 --> 00:29:13,350
riches of Flanders to the North.
366
00:29:14,510 --> 00:29:17,950
Through strategic marriages
and clever alliances,
367
00:29:17,950 --> 00:29:21,070
they began to extend their power
into the Low Countries.
368
00:29:23,630 --> 00:29:27,150
It took the Dukes of Burgundy a few
generations to take over.
369
00:29:27,150 --> 00:29:31,790
They had to absorb each independent
mini-state, one by one.
370
00:29:31,790 --> 00:29:34,430
By the mid 1400s,
Rogier van der Weyden, Jan van Eyck
371
00:29:34,430 --> 00:29:38,470
and all their fellow Low
Countrymen had become the subjects
372
00:29:38,470 --> 00:29:42,750
of the most illustrious Burgundian
Duke of them all, Philip the Good.
373
00:29:44,790 --> 00:29:48,670
In fact, Philip wanted culturally
rich Flanders so much that he
374
00:29:48,670 --> 00:29:52,790
even relocated his ancestral
court 300 miles north, to Brussels.
375
00:30:11,190 --> 00:30:14,870
Philip the Good was good
news for Flemish art.
376
00:30:14,870 --> 00:30:17,390
He was an enthusiastic patron,
377
00:30:17,390 --> 00:30:20,910
especially of great talents like
van Eyck and van der Weyden.
378
00:30:22,630 --> 00:30:25,190
And he was no oppressive autocrat -
379
00:30:25,190 --> 00:30:28,230
he pretty much gave the Low Country
states freedom to
380
00:30:28,230 --> 00:30:31,630
conduct their business
and their lives the way they wished.
381
00:30:34,510 --> 00:30:39,870
Flemish society revolved around the
upwardly mobile merchant classes.
382
00:30:39,870 --> 00:30:42,350
They'd grown used to the finer
things in life,
383
00:30:42,350 --> 00:30:44,910
and they wanted their art
to reflect that.
384
00:30:47,230 --> 00:30:50,110
They commissioned
portraits of themselves,
385
00:30:50,110 --> 00:30:53,630
immortalised in all their finery,
as evidence that they had made it.
386
00:30:55,670 --> 00:31:01,070
The most extraordinary
portrait of all is also the oldest.
387
00:31:01,070 --> 00:31:02,230
Painted by none other than
388
00:31:02,230 --> 00:31:05,550
the first great Flemish pioneer
of oil painting,
389
00:31:05,550 --> 00:31:07,590
it's the secular counterpart
390
00:31:07,590 --> 00:31:09,270
to his Ghent Altarpiece -
391
00:31:09,270 --> 00:31:12,230
not a vision of heaven,
but a depiction
392
00:31:12,230 --> 00:31:16,950
of an inscrutable man and his wife
in the comfort of their bedroom.
393
00:31:19,030 --> 00:31:25,470
Painted in 1434, this entrancing
picture by Jan van Eyck opens
394
00:31:25,470 --> 00:31:34,030
the door to the private world of the
wealthy Flemish merchant class.
395
00:31:34,030 --> 00:31:37,710
It used to be called
The Arnolfini Wedding.
396
00:31:37,710 --> 00:31:41,230
It used to be thought that
it depicted Giovanni Arnolfini,
397
00:31:41,230 --> 00:31:45,710
a wealthy banker from Lucca
based in Bruges, and his wife.
398
00:31:47,270 --> 00:31:49,710
That's by no means certain,
399
00:31:49,710 --> 00:31:56,070
but I think we can say that these
people were extremely well off.
400
00:31:56,070 --> 00:32:02,310
They were representative of this new
upsurge of Flemish wealth
401
00:32:02,310 --> 00:32:03,790
and prosperity.
402
00:32:03,790 --> 00:32:08,550
But it would be
a mistake to see this picture,
403
00:32:08,550 --> 00:32:15,150
for all its realism, as some kind of
snapshot of their domestic world -
404
00:32:15,150 --> 00:32:21,270
it's a highly charged, symbolic,
ritualised depiction of two people.
405
00:32:21,270 --> 00:32:23,830
There's something extremely
solemn about it.
406
00:32:25,230 --> 00:32:29,910
If Jan van Eyck was a necromancer,
a magician using paint,
407
00:32:29,910 --> 00:32:34,230
I think of this portrait very much
as a kind of spell or
408
00:32:34,230 --> 00:32:40,070
incantation designed to bring
good fortune on this couple.
409
00:32:41,110 --> 00:32:47,310
The dog stands at the couple's feet,
stands for loyalty,
410
00:32:47,310 --> 00:32:51,230
for obedience, for fidelity.
411
00:32:51,230 --> 00:32:57,470
Behind the bride hangs a broom -
symbol of purity, cleanliness.
412
00:32:58,590 --> 00:33:02,750
And around that beautiful convex
mirror,
413
00:33:02,750 --> 00:33:06,870
there are painted scenes
of Christ's passion,
414
00:33:06,870 --> 00:33:12,430
as if to indicate that this is
a union blessed in the eyes of God.
415
00:33:13,710 --> 00:33:16,430
A single candle
burns in the chandelier,
416
00:33:18,030 --> 00:33:21,910
emblem of the love that shall
never be extinguished.
417
00:33:23,870 --> 00:33:28,870
And just above that
pair of clasped hands,
418
00:33:28,870 --> 00:33:31,710
van Eyck has intruded another
significant detail -
419
00:33:33,110 --> 00:33:35,830
a grinning, gurning gargoyle
420
00:33:35,830 --> 00:33:39,990
carved into the arm of the chair
421
00:33:39,990 --> 00:33:41,630
at the back of the room.
422
00:33:41,630 --> 00:33:44,390
And I think that gargoyle
423
00:33:44,390 --> 00:33:47,110
is here to do exactly the same job
424
00:33:47,110 --> 00:33:50,190
as gargoyles on the fronts
of churches -
425
00:33:50,190 --> 00:33:53,230
namely to scare off evil spirits.
426
00:33:53,230 --> 00:33:57,470
To ward off all evil
from damaging this union.
427
00:33:59,710 --> 00:34:02,270
Look on the window
ledge, and look on the sideboard.
428
00:34:02,270 --> 00:34:04,310
A little cluster of fruit.
429
00:34:06,750 --> 00:34:09,430
Her belly is round -
not because she's pregnant,
430
00:34:09,430 --> 00:34:10,870
because she's wearing a stomacher,
431
00:34:10,870 --> 00:34:12,710
but I think the hope is
432
00:34:12,710 --> 00:34:15,510
that this union
will itself bear fruit.
433
00:34:17,630 --> 00:34:21,910
And on the back wall,
Jan van Eyck has signed the picture
434
00:34:21,910 --> 00:34:26,150
in wonderful curlicue script.
435
00:34:26,150 --> 00:34:30,990
The inscription says,
in Latin, "Jan van Eyck was here."
436
00:34:33,430 --> 00:34:36,990
And if you look just below it,
if you look into that reflection
437
00:34:36,990 --> 00:34:40,870
in the convex mirror, so beautifully
painted, what do you see?
438
00:34:40,870 --> 00:34:44,150
You see the couple from the back.
439
00:34:45,870 --> 00:34:50,230
And if you look closely enough,
you can see a shadowy figure,
440
00:34:50,230 --> 00:34:51,910
perhaps two figures.
441
00:34:53,110 --> 00:35:00,870
I wonder if one of them is not meant
to be Jan van Eyck himself.
442
00:35:00,870 --> 00:35:07,430
The painter, preserving forever this
moment when he looks at them
443
00:35:07,430 --> 00:35:09,190
and they look at him.
444
00:35:09,190 --> 00:35:12,950
I wonder if this picture
wasn't his wedding gift
445
00:35:12,950 --> 00:35:15,070
to the couple in the painting?
446
00:35:15,070 --> 00:35:18,110
If so, I do hope they were grateful.
447
00:35:28,550 --> 00:35:32,950
Flemish art's change of focus
from sacred to secular
448
00:35:32,950 --> 00:35:36,510
was part of a seismic shift
taking place across all of Europe,
449
00:35:36,510 --> 00:35:38,550
but especially in the Low Countries.
450
00:35:41,790 --> 00:35:45,230
Even under Burgundian rule,
Lowlanders clung fiercely
451
00:35:45,230 --> 00:35:48,750
to their localised customs
and independent ideas.
452
00:35:50,790 --> 00:35:53,950
Far from the shadow of the Vatican,
there were religious
453
00:35:53,950 --> 00:35:57,870
movements - like the Brethren of
Common Life - who were not afraid to
454
00:35:57,870 --> 00:36:02,350
criticise the Church, to challenge
authority they saw as corrupt.
455
00:36:04,110 --> 00:36:08,590
This was a strange, unsettling time,
especially when seen through
456
00:36:08,590 --> 00:36:13,750
the eyes of a medieval man of faith
- like the artist Hieronymus Bosch.
457
00:36:15,790 --> 00:36:19,270
As far as we know, he spent his
whole life in and around the small
458
00:36:19,270 --> 00:36:23,070
Dutch town from which
he took his name - 's-Hertogenbosch.
459
00:36:25,550 --> 00:36:28,390
Yet his most famous work -
known to us as The Garden
460
00:36:28,390 --> 00:36:32,030
of Earthly Delights - includes
some of the weirdest objects
461
00:36:32,030 --> 00:36:36,910
and creatures, from worlds both
known and unknown, ever seen in art.
462
00:36:43,910 --> 00:36:48,350
Painted around 1500,
its meaning seems at first sight
463
00:36:48,350 --> 00:36:52,430
disturbingly obscure -
and may never be fully explained.
464
00:36:55,350 --> 00:36:59,750
On the left we see Christ with Adam
and Eve in the Garden of Eden,
465
00:36:59,750 --> 00:37:02,030
but it's an Eden unlike any other.
466
00:37:04,590 --> 00:37:06,710
There's a giraffe and an elephant -
467
00:37:06,710 --> 00:37:09,790
but also some rather frightening
hybrid animals.
468
00:37:18,590 --> 00:37:21,510
On the right,
some of art's most inventive
469
00:37:21,510 --> 00:37:25,550
impressions of the fate that
awaits the damned.
470
00:37:25,550 --> 00:37:30,590
A pot-headed bird eats sinners
and excretes them into the abyss.
471
00:37:30,590 --> 00:37:34,710
Instruments and forms of torture
scatter the blackened landscape.
472
00:37:38,350 --> 00:37:41,070
But what does the central
panel show us?
473
00:37:41,070 --> 00:37:43,670
The corruption of our earthly world?
474
00:37:44,750 --> 00:37:49,430
If so, what do the outsized fruit
and birds represent?
475
00:37:51,270 --> 00:37:54,350
And why is it filled with
the bizarrest of rituals?
476
00:38:03,910 --> 00:38:07,750
Might it be significant that Bosch
painted this claustrophobic enigma
477
00:38:07,750 --> 00:38:11,550
just a decade after Columbus
discovered the riches of America?
478
00:38:15,830 --> 00:38:19,910
One of my favourite
details in Bosch's strange teeming
479
00:38:19,910 --> 00:38:23,830
panorama of a picture shows a little
group of people holding up
480
00:38:23,830 --> 00:38:29,550
a gigantic strawberry - almost
like the cult devotees worshipping
481
00:38:29,550 --> 00:38:31,630
this object, this exotic thing.
482
00:38:31,630 --> 00:38:34,510
And I think
when you look at Bosch's painting,
483
00:38:34,510 --> 00:38:37,430
it's important to remember this was
the first time anyone in Europe
484
00:38:37,430 --> 00:38:41,350
had ever seen a strawberry, it was
an object of wonderment to him.
485
00:38:41,350 --> 00:38:43,790
It was as if the world that
they'd known for
486
00:38:43,790 --> 00:38:46,750
so many centuries had suddenly been
changed - they suddenly realised
487
00:38:46,750 --> 00:38:50,310
there was another whole
universe out there, a new world.
488
00:38:50,310 --> 00:38:53,230
And I think Bosch's picture
is in part an attempt to imagine
489
00:38:53,230 --> 00:38:55,870
what that new world might be like,
490
00:38:55,870 --> 00:39:00,390
this is a Pandora's box moment in
the history of human civilisation.
491
00:39:17,190 --> 00:39:20,230
Bosch lived at a great turning
point in history -
492
00:39:20,230 --> 00:39:24,230
a moment when the medieval mind,
obsessed with the terrors of hell
493
00:39:24,230 --> 00:39:29,990
and damnation, was giving way
before a modern world of rapidly
494
00:39:29,990 --> 00:39:33,510
expanding horizons,
495
00:39:33,510 --> 00:39:35,630
of science and knowledge,
496
00:39:35,630 --> 00:39:38,110
a world where the old order
was being challenged
497
00:39:38,110 --> 00:39:40,350
by dangerous new ideas.
498
00:39:42,390 --> 00:39:47,070
These were the things made flesh as
the beasts of Bosch's imagination.
499
00:39:50,310 --> 00:39:53,350
In his own highly original way,
Bosch expressed
500
00:39:53,350 --> 00:39:56,790
both the fascinations
and the anxieties of his age.
501
00:40:04,870 --> 00:40:08,790
And if you want to see his own
solution to those anxieties,
502
00:40:08,790 --> 00:40:14,070
I think you have to turn to one of
his simpler, least cryptic pictures.
503
00:40:14,070 --> 00:40:17,510
A work that hangs in the
Fine Arts Museum in Ghent.
504
00:40:22,390 --> 00:40:28,030
This fairly small, fairly dark
image of Christ carrying the cross
505
00:40:28,030 --> 00:40:32,830
is one of Bosch's cruder pictures,
506
00:40:32,830 --> 00:40:39,030
but I think it takes you right to
the centre of what he has to say.
507
00:40:40,430 --> 00:40:43,190
It takes you to the centre
of his vision of the world.
508
00:40:43,190 --> 00:40:49,630
Here, he sees the world as a kind
of sea of malevolence,
509
00:40:49,630 --> 00:40:56,830
weirdness, evil,
through which Christ has to pass.
510
00:40:56,830 --> 00:41:00,190
Look at that crowd.
511
00:41:00,190 --> 00:41:03,590
These three blokes down here
including the evil thief -
512
00:41:03,590 --> 00:41:08,110
I suppose you might see them
today on the street corner, drinking
513
00:41:08,110 --> 00:41:12,590
their Tennent's full strength
lager at ten in the morning.
514
00:41:12,590 --> 00:41:15,950
Here's a fat-jowled soldier.
515
00:41:15,950 --> 00:41:20,630
A curious image of a witch
with a hat
516
00:41:20,630 --> 00:41:25,510
that reminds me
of Pink Floyd album covers, of
517
00:41:25,510 --> 00:41:27,870
their middle to late period
weirdly enough.
518
00:41:27,870 --> 00:41:31,190
Up here, the hook-nosed mercenary.
519
00:41:32,470 --> 00:41:36,030
Here we see another soldier
clutching the cross
520
00:41:36,030 --> 00:41:40,470
with his fingers - who knows why.
521
00:41:40,470 --> 00:41:44,870
And at the centre of it all,
the image of Christ.
522
00:41:44,870 --> 00:41:48,910
I think you can just see a tear
coming out of that,
523
00:41:48,910 --> 00:41:51,550
leaking out of his right eye.
524
00:41:52,830 --> 00:41:56,430
It's as if he is passing
through this world
525
00:41:56,430 --> 00:41:59,030
as if it were a bad dream.
526
00:41:59,030 --> 00:42:01,190
He's right at the centre.
527
00:42:01,190 --> 00:42:07,550
And I think what Bosch is saying
to us, is in this age of anxiety,
528
00:42:07,550 --> 00:42:12,910
uncertainty, religious unrest,
intellectual change,
529
00:42:12,910 --> 00:42:17,310
geographical exploration, this world
where we suddenly no longer
530
00:42:17,310 --> 00:42:24,750
know where we are, that's the one
thing we CAN be sure of.
531
00:42:24,750 --> 00:42:27,110
That IS the one thing
we can be sure of.
532
00:42:27,110 --> 00:42:30,350
In that sense Bosch is still
a man of the Middle Ages,
533
00:42:30,350 --> 00:42:35,950
he does believe in God as the one
route to salvation.
534
00:42:35,950 --> 00:42:40,310
And I think he gives us a little
clue here, because there is actually
535
00:42:40,310 --> 00:42:43,670
other than Christ, one other
good figure in the painting and
536
00:42:43,670 --> 00:42:48,310
that is Saint Veronica. She's got
the veil, the veil that she used to
537
00:42:48,310 --> 00:42:52,430
wipe the brow of Christ - it's what
lies behind the Turin shroud myth -
538
00:42:52,430 --> 00:42:57,470
on which is miraculously imprinted
the image of Christ's face.
539
00:42:57,470 --> 00:43:01,030
She is on her way out of this
maelstrom of evil -
540
00:43:01,030 --> 00:43:03,670
she's found her escape route,
because her escape route
541
00:43:03,670 --> 00:43:08,070
is the image of Christ
that she's holding in her heart.
542
00:43:08,070 --> 00:43:11,390
And Bosch is saying to all of us
looking at the picture,
543
00:43:11,390 --> 00:43:14,310
"Do what she does."
544
00:43:15,430 --> 00:43:17,750
"Look at his face.
545
00:43:17,750 --> 00:43:20,510
"Burn it into your mind's eye -
546
00:43:20,510 --> 00:43:24,750
"because it's the only path through
547
00:43:24,750 --> 00:43:28,390
"this evil world, it's the only way
out of these troubled times."
548
00:43:35,190 --> 00:43:39,230
The tides of change
swept on regardless.
549
00:43:39,230 --> 00:43:43,750
Soon after Bosch's death in 1516,
the Reformation shook
550
00:43:43,750 --> 00:43:46,910
the established Church
to its foundations.
551
00:43:46,910 --> 00:43:49,590
Art too turned critical.
552
00:43:49,590 --> 00:43:51,190
The subtleties of oil paint,
553
00:43:51,190 --> 00:43:55,390
once used to conjure beauty
or flatter the wealthy,
554
00:43:55,390 --> 00:43:59,110
were now deployed as weapons
against corruption and ugliness.
555
00:44:01,110 --> 00:44:03,790
Satire was the order of the day.
556
00:44:03,790 --> 00:44:08,350
Grotesques that ridiculed the
well-to-do as vain and pompous.
557
00:44:08,350 --> 00:44:11,190
Caricatures of the jobsworth
bureaucrats
558
00:44:11,190 --> 00:44:13,590
who propped up unpopular rulers.
559
00:44:14,950 --> 00:44:19,590
The flames of unrest were
fanned by a tyrannical new regime.
560
00:44:19,590 --> 00:44:24,070
In 1555,
King Philip II of Spain inherited
561
00:44:24,070 --> 00:44:27,590
the Low Countries
from his Burgundian ancestors.
562
00:44:27,590 --> 00:44:30,910
A fanatic Catholic, he was
determined to stamp out heresy.
563
00:44:34,550 --> 00:44:39,750
The attempted clampdown only
provoked more unrest.
564
00:44:39,750 --> 00:44:41,350
Free thinkers multiplied.
565
00:44:45,470 --> 00:44:48,950
Perhaps the most quietly radical
idea of all was hatched in the
566
00:44:48,950 --> 00:44:54,790
imagination not of a philosopher or
a scientist, but a painter who took
567
00:44:54,790 --> 00:44:58,630
his inspiration from the rituals
and festivities of the common man.
568
00:45:00,910 --> 00:45:04,550
Well the architecture's changed
a bit, the angels might be wearing
569
00:45:04,550 --> 00:45:07,550
peroxide Shirley Temple
wigs, and the floats might be
570
00:45:07,550 --> 00:45:11,230
made of polystyrene, but otherwise
remarkably little has changed.
571
00:45:11,230 --> 00:45:14,270
The fact is that the people
of the Low Countries have been
572
00:45:14,270 --> 00:45:18,270
participating in popular
religious festivals like this
573
00:45:18,270 --> 00:45:22,950
since the Middle Ages. This festival
here in Mechelen, which celebrates
574
00:45:22,950 --> 00:45:27,990
the saving of the city from plague
by the blessed Virgin Mary in 1272,
575
00:45:27,990 --> 00:45:31,390
has been going for more than
700 years.
576
00:45:31,390 --> 00:45:34,310
But the funny thing is that
ordinary people doing this
577
00:45:34,310 --> 00:45:37,270
kind of thing simply don't
appear in Flemish art
578
00:45:37,270 --> 00:45:40,910
until the middle years of the 16th
century, and it's one man,
579
00:45:40,910 --> 00:45:46,790
Pieter Bruegel the Elder, who puts
the common people centre stage.
580
00:45:52,470 --> 00:45:55,910
Pieter Bruegel painted peasants
going about their business -
581
00:45:55,910 --> 00:45:59,390
feasting, laughing, dancing,
drinking.
582
00:46:02,710 --> 00:46:06,070
Bruegel's work was popular,
and no doubt the wealthy clients who
583
00:46:06,070 --> 00:46:09,990
bought his paintings found comical
entertainment in the rich detail.
584
00:46:12,270 --> 00:46:15,310
But there's also a gently
subversive warmth
585
00:46:15,310 --> 00:46:17,950
and empathy for these
ordinary people.
586
00:46:17,950 --> 00:46:20,830
It's as though Bruegel is saying
that it's NOT just
587
00:46:20,830 --> 00:46:23,030
the high and mighty
who are important -
588
00:46:23,030 --> 00:46:26,870
there's nobody who's
an unworthy subject for art.
589
00:46:37,270 --> 00:46:40,710
This is one of the most famous
pictures associated with
590
00:46:40,710 --> 00:46:43,030
the name of Pieter Bruegel
the Elder -
591
00:46:43,030 --> 00:46:47,230
in fact people come specially
on pilgrimage here to the Musee
592
00:46:47,230 --> 00:46:52,190
des Beaux Arts in Brussels just
to see this one celebrated image.
593
00:46:55,030 --> 00:46:59,550
At first sight it's quite
a baffling, disorientating picture.
594
00:47:00,870 --> 00:47:05,790
The eye is immediately drawn to this
figure of the ploughman
595
00:47:05,790 --> 00:47:10,790
plodding along his modest
patch of earth,
596
00:47:10,790 --> 00:47:15,350
ploughing it up into these meaty
chunks, following his horse.
597
00:47:15,350 --> 00:47:22,350
Behind him is a shepherd, with
his dog, and they both seem absorbed
598
00:47:22,350 --> 00:47:27,150
by something or other, we can't
quite tell what, in these trees.
599
00:47:27,150 --> 00:47:30,750
Over here is another character,
600
00:47:30,750 --> 00:47:35,550
another person from ordinary life
absorbed in an ordinary activity,
601
00:47:35,550 --> 00:47:37,270
fishing.
602
00:47:37,270 --> 00:47:39,310
Behind, there are ships.
603
00:47:39,310 --> 00:47:42,710
But then, you look at the title
of the painting
604
00:47:42,710 --> 00:47:47,230
and you see
Landscape With The Fall Of Icarus.
605
00:47:47,230 --> 00:47:49,350
Icarus, that character from
mythology,
606
00:47:49,350 --> 00:47:53,110
the boy who makes himself
wings from feathers and wax, flies
607
00:47:53,110 --> 00:47:58,070
too close to the sun, the wings melt
and he falls to his death.
608
00:47:59,390 --> 00:48:01,270
Where's Icarus?
609
00:48:02,870 --> 00:48:05,790
You look all over the painting -
610
00:48:05,790 --> 00:48:10,150
and then suddenly,
if you look hard enough,
611
00:48:10,150 --> 00:48:14,190
it's a sort of Breugelian
"Where's Wally?" moment.
612
00:48:14,190 --> 00:48:18,950
There he is -
a pair of white, floppy legs,
613
00:48:18,950 --> 00:48:24,750
splashing into this emerald
green ocean.
614
00:48:26,910 --> 00:48:33,110
But what an extraordinary image
of that mythological event this is.
615
00:48:33,110 --> 00:48:38,470
Here he's imagining what it actually
feels like to be someone
616
00:48:38,470 --> 00:48:40,550
who's outside history.
617
00:48:42,550 --> 00:48:46,630
In a way it's
a picture about the spear carriers,
618
00:48:46,630 --> 00:48:51,910
the people who aren't
the heart of the action.
619
00:48:51,910 --> 00:48:54,470
But they are at the heart of their
own lives, and it's a picture
620
00:48:54,470 --> 00:48:57,950
about the disjunction between
big history and little history,
621
00:48:57,950 --> 00:49:00,990
and the little history doesn't even
notice that the big history
622
00:49:00,990 --> 00:49:04,670
is going on, it's a picture
about not looking, not seeing.
623
00:49:04,670 --> 00:49:09,030
And WH Auden wrote a wonderful poem
about this picture.
624
00:49:13,470 --> 00:49:17,550
"Everything turns away quite
leisurely from the disaster.
625
00:49:17,550 --> 00:49:21,070
"The ploughman may have heard
the splash, the forsaken cry,
626
00:49:21,070 --> 00:49:24,790
"but for him
it was not an important failure.
627
00:49:26,910 --> 00:49:29,350
"The sun shone, as it had to,
628
00:49:29,350 --> 00:49:34,270
"on the white legs
disappearing into the green water.
629
00:49:34,270 --> 00:49:37,510
"And the expensive delicate ship
that must have seen something
630
00:49:37,510 --> 00:49:41,830
"amazing, a boy falling out
of the sky,
631
00:49:41,830 --> 00:49:46,870
"had somewhere to get to,
and sailed calmly on."
632
00:49:48,470 --> 00:49:53,390
And I think the subversive
implication behind it,
633
00:49:53,390 --> 00:49:57,230
perhaps for someone
living in the Low Countries,
634
00:49:57,230 --> 00:50:01,950
someone unhappy with Spanish rule,
635
00:50:01,950 --> 00:50:03,950
the implication behind it is that
636
00:50:05,750 --> 00:50:10,870
if you don't
like the history that's given to you
637
00:50:10,870 --> 00:50:14,230
by the great, perhaps the not so
good,
638
00:50:14,230 --> 00:50:17,990
by kings from elsewhere, those
639
00:50:17,990 --> 00:50:21,550
coming into your world from outside,
a little bit like Icarus -
640
00:50:21,550 --> 00:50:24,270
if you don't like their history,
641
00:50:24,270 --> 00:50:27,950
perhaps you're allowed
to create your own.
642
00:50:34,390 --> 00:50:39,270
In reality, the lives of ordinary
people went from bad to worse.
643
00:50:40,510 --> 00:50:44,070
When the Low Countries openly
rebelled against Philip II's rule
644
00:50:44,070 --> 00:50:48,830
in the late 1560s, he tried to
crush them with Spanish troops.
645
00:50:51,710 --> 00:50:56,510
Thus began a bloody 80-year
war against Spanish oppression
646
00:50:56,510 --> 00:51:00,150
that would split
the Low Countries in two.
647
00:51:03,270 --> 00:51:05,670
No-one would escape the fallout.
648
00:51:05,670 --> 00:51:08,950
Massacres on an epic scale,
649
00:51:08,950 --> 00:51:14,150
widespread famine, cities besieged
till their starving citizens
650
00:51:14,150 --> 00:51:16,070
boiled shoe leather for food.
651
00:51:22,310 --> 00:51:26,830
This darkest of times would
produce one last great
652
00:51:26,830 --> 00:51:31,030
flowering of Flemish art -
653
00:51:31,030 --> 00:51:35,590
the work of an Antwerp painter
called Peter Paul Rubens,
654
00:51:35,590 --> 00:51:38,350
which for me
represents both the end
655
00:51:38,350 --> 00:51:41,990
and the encapsulation of the whole
Flemish tradition.
656
00:51:54,390 --> 00:51:58,230
Rubens was the supreme
master of a new, bold style
657
00:51:58,230 --> 00:52:02,550
emerging from the Catholic
Counter-Reformation - the Baroque.
658
00:52:04,950 --> 00:52:07,030
He spent most
of his glittering career
659
00:52:07,030 --> 00:52:09,510
travelling
Europe at the behest of his
660
00:52:09,510 --> 00:52:14,950
seriously impressive client list,
painting grand state allegories
661
00:52:14,950 --> 00:52:19,790
of power for among others the royal
families of France and England.
662
00:52:23,590 --> 00:52:27,030
At the public level, Rubens had
lived out a personal version
663
00:52:27,030 --> 00:52:29,510
of the history
of the Low Countries -
664
00:52:29,510 --> 00:52:32,350
trading with foreign powers,
rising from low origins
665
00:52:32,350 --> 00:52:34,910
to achieve astonishing wealth.
666
00:52:36,190 --> 00:52:40,790
This is his house in Antwerp -
the palace of a prince.
667
00:52:42,950 --> 00:52:47,750
But if you look behind its facade to
the private Rubens,
668
00:52:47,750 --> 00:52:50,510
you discover
that his most intimate dream
669
00:52:50,510 --> 00:52:54,390
was surprisingly humble,
touchingly simple.
670
00:53:05,350 --> 00:53:10,190
Now, Rubens painted that piercing
self-portrait in 1630.
671
00:53:10,190 --> 00:53:15,110
He was 53 years old,
and on the face of it he had it all,
672
00:53:15,110 --> 00:53:19,510
he'd just been knighted
by King Charles I of England.
673
00:53:19,510 --> 00:53:24,550
He's the painter to kings, princes,
queens all across Europe.
674
00:53:24,550 --> 00:53:28,190
He is the single most powerful
and influential artist who has
675
00:53:28,190 --> 00:53:33,470
ever lived, and at this point, he
does something truly extraordinary.
676
00:53:33,470 --> 00:53:38,870
He decides to marry the 16-year-old
daughter of a merchant
677
00:53:38,870 --> 00:53:41,670
here in Antwerp -
she's called Helene Fourment,
678
00:53:41,670 --> 00:53:45,750
he's completely besotted with her,
they'll have five children -
679
00:53:45,750 --> 00:53:48,790
and he decides to retreat
completely from public life.
680
00:53:49,950 --> 00:53:52,310
He writes about it in a letter,
he says,
681
00:53:52,310 --> 00:53:55,390
"I have decided to do myself
a kind of violence.
682
00:53:55,390 --> 00:54:00,230
"I have decided to cut
the golden knot of my own ambition."
683
00:54:01,230 --> 00:54:04,390
He retreats away from the world,
684
00:54:04,390 --> 00:54:10,830
and during his last 10 years
he creates an extraordinary,
685
00:54:10,830 --> 00:54:16,030
deeply personal body of work. Highly
idiosyncratic, utterly unique,
686
00:54:16,030 --> 00:54:18,750
and yet also, I think,
687
00:54:18,750 --> 00:54:23,550
the ultimate expression of a fantasy
that had obsessed
688
00:54:23,550 --> 00:54:27,750
the imagination of people here
in the Low Countries for centuries.
689
00:54:34,830 --> 00:54:37,990
Some of those final
works are rapturous allegories
690
00:54:37,990 --> 00:54:39,990
of marital joy,
691
00:54:39,990 --> 00:54:41,630
invariably bursting with
692
00:54:41,630 --> 00:54:46,950
Rubens' characteristically
voluptuous, fleshy bodies.
693
00:54:46,950 --> 00:54:48,670
Here we see Rubens himself
694
00:54:48,670 --> 00:54:52,870
gazing in adoration at his
rosy-cheeked young bride.
695
00:54:55,110 --> 00:54:57,310
Everything in Rubens's late
paintings
696
00:54:57,310 --> 00:55:00,990
seems to speak of desire -
no-one had ever expressed it
697
00:55:00,990 --> 00:55:04,510
more urgently, more carnally.
698
00:55:04,510 --> 00:55:07,430
But I think it's essentially that
same desire for colour,
699
00:55:07,430 --> 00:55:10,510
life, light and blessedness
700
00:55:10,510 --> 00:55:13,270
that had always infused
the tapestries,
701
00:55:13,270 --> 00:55:17,390
illuminated books and paintings of
Flanders right from the beginning.
702
00:55:17,390 --> 00:55:21,870
But for me, there's one
work above all in which he revealed
703
00:55:21,870 --> 00:55:24,950
his true Low Country soul.
704
00:55:32,830 --> 00:55:37,790
Painted on an epic, panoramic scale,
Rubens' Landscape With A Rainbow
705
00:55:37,790 --> 00:55:42,550
is quite simply one of the greatest
landscapes ever painted.
706
00:55:42,550 --> 00:55:45,830
Like all of his pictures it's
a cornucopia,
707
00:55:45,830 --> 00:55:50,670
a hymn to plenty and abundance.
Ripeness is all.
708
00:55:54,270 --> 00:56:00,190
Look at those ducks - literal symbol
of the fat of the land -
709
00:56:00,190 --> 00:56:03,830
clucking and quacking and waggling
their feathers
710
00:56:03,830 --> 00:56:05,910
and diving into the water.
711
00:56:05,910 --> 00:56:09,790
The cows seem to be
multiplying before our very eyes,
712
00:56:09,790 --> 00:56:12,870
and there,
as so often in Rubens' art,
713
00:56:12,870 --> 00:56:15,950
a real touch of human carnality.
714
00:56:15,950 --> 00:56:20,790
There's a milkmaid,
with her ewer balanced
715
00:56:20,790 --> 00:56:23,390
very ingeniously on her head,
716
00:56:23,390 --> 00:56:26,630
simultaneously flirting with
a peasant,
717
00:56:26,630 --> 00:56:28,990
and giving us
a wink at the same time,
718
00:56:28,990 --> 00:56:32,270
her companion flirting with
the other peasant,
719
00:56:32,270 --> 00:56:36,070
the hay wain, as he winds his way
into the picture.
720
00:56:36,070 --> 00:56:39,710
Constable, who painted The Hay Wain,
loved this work of art.
721
00:56:42,070 --> 00:56:47,590
Look at that slab of
yet to be cut hay.
722
00:56:47,590 --> 00:56:50,590
It could almost be a slab of butter.
723
00:56:51,830 --> 00:56:55,030
Look at the way the landscape has
been laid out before us
724
00:56:55,030 --> 00:56:58,190
almost like a fertile body.
725
00:57:00,230 --> 00:57:05,030
A windmill's sails,
glittering on the far distance.
726
00:57:05,030 --> 00:57:10,510
Even Rubens' sky is abundantly
stocked with clouds.
727
00:57:10,510 --> 00:57:17,030
It's a dream of peace,
and a dream of plenty.
728
00:57:17,030 --> 00:57:23,950
And I think that Rubens wants us
to recognise that it IS a dream.
729
00:57:23,950 --> 00:57:29,550
Flanders in his day was not a place
of utmost peace and prosperity
730
00:57:29,550 --> 00:57:34,070
and I think that's why he's included
the rainbow,
731
00:57:34,070 --> 00:57:37,110
an old divine symbol of hope,
732
00:57:37,110 --> 00:57:40,230
of something that
might come to pass in the future.
733
00:57:40,230 --> 00:57:43,990
I think Rubens himself knows that
what he's depicted is a world
734
00:57:43,990 --> 00:57:47,870
that does indeed lie beyond the
far end of the rainbow.
735
00:57:47,870 --> 00:57:51,750
A world that he hopes may one
day come into being.
736
00:57:52,710 --> 00:57:59,950
So yes, the painting
is a beautiful dream -
737
00:57:59,950 --> 00:58:02,310
but it's also a prophecy.
738
00:58:02,310 --> 00:58:05,350
Because not too far to the north,
739
00:58:05,350 --> 00:58:11,110
another upstart nation of the
Low Countries, the Dutch Republic,
740
00:58:11,110 --> 00:58:16,830
would be attempting to turn
that dream into a reality.
741
00:58:16,830 --> 00:58:18,750
But that's another story.
742
00:58:40,310 --> 00:58:42,310
Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd
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