Heaven & Hell in Art: The Birth of the Italian Renaissance (Art History Documentary) | Perspective

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[Music] so that says here that the renaissance was a tremendously important period in european culture that produced the beginnings of modern thought and this period says here was marked by the revival of the spirit of greece and rome and by an increasing preoccupation with secular life and i suppose some of the time that's what it was [Music] in some bits of the italian renaissance the greeks and the romans are definitely being remembered and modern thought is perhaps being invented and it's certainly getting more secular [Music] but that's only in some bits [Music] over the years i've been all round italy and i've seen an awful lot of renee sols art and wonderful work no arguments there but you know very few bits of it very few indeed are actually trying to do what it says in the books [Music] i mean this is a forgotten master of the italian renaissance nicolo del arca have you heard of him no why because he doesn't fit this yet this was made in around 1460 so in the pioneering early days of the italian renaissance yet are the greeks and the romans being revived here is modern thought being invented has this got secular ambitions i don't think so [Music] fact is a lot of what we've been told about italian renaissance art is thoroughly misleading it's just not what was going on most of the time italian art wasn't reviving the greeks it wasn't inventing modern thought it was doing something far more important than that it was telling stories to people who couldn't read imagining the unimaginable and getting in touch with religious feelings that were deep and catholic i mean come on this is italy [Music] [Music] ah here it is zechariah chapter 3 verse 8. behold i will bring forth my servant the orient [Music] see that town up there on the hill that's assisi a town filled with renaissance art but also with renaissance complications because that's where francis of assisi was born francis was the founder of the franciscan order of monks the grave friars as they were known in robin hood times and in italy he pops up in more renaissance art than anyone except jesus christ and the virgin mary now why would the founder of an order of monks get this much attention [Music] there it goes the sun coming up over a cc how beautiful is that now if you ever find yourself without a compass in italy and you want to know which way you're pointing the thing to do is to find the nearest catholic church because they all point to the east to the rising sun [Music] interestingly in the tuscan dialect assisi or assassi actually means rising up like the sun rising in the east or as we used to call it the orient so that's it zechariah again chapter 6 verse 12 a cheviot audience no men else behold the man whose name is orient he shall build the temple of the lord [Music] now because francis his story keeps appearing in all this renaissance art we know it really well we know that he was very rich but then he saw the light and gave away all his possessions [Music] we know that one day francis was coming down from assisi when he came across a ruined chapel here at san damiano at the bottom of the hill and he went in inside was a crucifix and miracle of miracles it spoke to him francis said the talking crucifix my house is crumbling go and restore it [Music] so that's what he did carrying the stones on his own back francis of assisi rebuilt the chapel here at san damiano and fulfilled the prophecy of zechariah [Music] hang on a minute valdemar you might be thinking you're sounding like dan brown here what are you implying what i'm implying is that francis of assisi was a messianic figure who thought he'd been instructed to act by the bible zechariah chapter 6 verse 12 my servant the orient will rebuild the temple of the lord francis of assisi thought he was the orient [Music] his followers thought it too up on the balcony of the franciscan headquarters in assisi looking out across the world they've put the words of the great tuscan poet dante which make the connection with the orient explicit francis wasn't just living a life he was fulfilling a huge biblical prophecy [Music] you don't have to take my word for it take the word of renaissance art and particularly of the marvellous giotto [Music] this is the great basilica in assisi built in memory of saint francis in the 13th century and in around 1300 giotto was commissioned to paint francis's story now 1300 that's early and this is one of the defining frescoes at the very beginning of the renaissance it's all up there there's francis giving away all his clothes and renouncing his inheritance there he is talking to the animals in a famous miracle of divine communication and there he is holding up the church rebuilding it exactly as zechariah predicted [Music] it's all here laid out with the clarity of a comic book in this vivid explosion of imaginative renaissance storytelling [Music] now when people go on about the pioneering art of giotto they talk about the new solidity of his figures the classical influences at work on his anatomies this new naturalism of his landscapes and all that is true but it misses the point [Music] what's really remarkable here astonishing amazing is that giotto has found a way to imagine the unimaginable i mean look at this stigmata scene christ as an angel sending lines of pain from heaven transferring his wounds to francis what a strange storyline that is [Music] in the real world none of this could happen francis couldn't hoist the church up on his back or talk to the pigeons or receive the wounds of christ in the real world it can't happen but in art it can and that's what's so telling and exciting about the art of the renaissance it's not about regaining the civilization of the greeks or quoting the classical world it's about making the impossible feel vivid and real and if you can do that [Music] that's an enormous power it's the power of renaissance art [Music] now i don't know how familiar you are with the concept of purgatory these are godless times so the chances are you don't know as much about it as people used to purgatory is somewhere between earth and heaven it's where you go if you haven't been bad enough to go to hell but you haven't been good enough to go to heaven either not straight away at least in purgatory your penance continues and your soul gets scrubbed up till it's clean enough to enter paradise that's dante the great tuscan poet who's quoted so pointedly on that big balcony in assisi with that line about the orient in this inventive fresco by dominico de micolino painted in 1465 the giant dante looms over florence surrounded by the scary and painful future that all we sinners must face [Music] on the left of him that's hell with all those poor sinners being stung by bees and burned by the eternal fires and behind him see that mountain that's purgatory where the world's lesser sinners run off their sins like naughty school boys running around the football pitch when i was at school and i was naughty which happened a lot i'm afraid i was given lines to write the same thing over and over again i will not flick ink at my geography teacher that kind of thing but in renaissance italy if you wanted to atone for your sins and spend less time in purgatory you had to pray for forgiveness and the best person to pray to was the virgin mary why are there so many beautiful madonnas in renaissance art because so many renaissance sinners have so much praying to do these fascinating battles to imagine the virgin mary and capture her perfection resulted in some of the renaissance's greatest pictures when i say great i mean great look at the size of that the enthroned virgin mary painted in the very early days of the renaissance in around 1315 by simone martini now that's what you call an enthroned madonna i don't know about you but when i look at renaissance pictures i need to know what i'm looking at otherwise even the best renaissance art can blur into an impenetrable wall of religiosity [Music] and that's particularly true of all these renaissance madonnas [Music] there's so many of them and they can all feel the same so in this film i'm going to guide you through the main types of madonna that you find in renaissance art so when you go into a museum you'll know exactly what you're looking at this big one the enthroned madonna sits above us surrounded by saints how do we know they're saints because they've all got halos that is saint peter jesus's trusty apostle you can always spot him in art because he's always carrying a big key the key to heaven and there is saint john the baptist he's always wearing an animal skin because he lived in the wilderness so john the baptist is here saint peter is here the virgin mary is here and where is the only place where they could all be together like this that's right heaven they're all in heaven [Music] what simone martini has done here in the palazzo publico in siena is to imagine that this wall is an opening in the side of the building that looks out onto heaven where the madonna and her saints have gathered so that we over here in the corporeal world can see her and worship her the enthroned madonna is particularly popular but there are many other renaissance madonnas to pray to and a man could go mad deciding which to pick so to narrow them down i've done what any sensible admirer of renaissance art should do i'm focusing on the madonnas painted by piero della francesca between 1445 and 1474 along this stretch of road on the borders between tuscany and umbria right at the heart of the italian renaissance pierrot painted a cluster of madonnas that can all be visited in a day and the one to start with is up there in the little tuscan hill town of monterkey it was painted for the town church but an earthquake knocked it down so it's now got its own museum [Music] she's called the madonna del pato that's in italian in english she's the madonna of parturition so if you know what parturition means you'll know why she's so special partition is childbirth so what this is is an image of the holy madonna pregnant with the baby jesus it's very rare in art to see mary pregnant not just in the renaissance but anytime it's as if pregnancy is just too real too biological to fit with the image of the virgin mary but pierrot pulls it off here with such grace [Music] the next piero madonna is here in his home town of sansa pulchro in the town museum where you'll find her at the center of a complex religious arrangement it's apocalyptic an altarpiece made of many parts and pierrot was originally commissioned to paint it in 1445 so that's right at the start of his career but he dillied and he dallied and he did all these side panels first and the madonna herself she was only finished in 1462. when as you can see he was at his peak [Music] she's what they call the madonna misericordia the virgin of mercy who's always shown with a cloak outstretched offering mercy and protection to those who shelter under it these giant madonnas of mercy are a kind of stand-in for the church itself a human building in which the congregation can gather and all these kneeling figures at the front these are the donors the people who actually paid for the picture [Music] because that's the other way you earned time off from purgatory in the renaissance by commissioning works of art for the church why is there so much great renaissance art because so many great renaissance sinners were trying to get into god's good books [Music] this is the ducal palace in albino and that is piero's flagellation such a mysterious little picture and very unusually he signed it with the name of his [Music] hometown but this is what we've come here to look at pierrot's madonna of senegalea she's so tranquil so still so lovely and as with all these madonnas pierrot is faced here with the fiendishly difficult task of painting a madonna who's both a mother and a virgin and that is the big challenge facing the renaissance imagination so up on the shelf he's painted a basket of crisp white linen a deliberate echo of the madonna's purity but this is piero della francesca the master of light so he doesn't just do it with linen he does it with sun beams as well [Music] look here how the light coming in so gently through the window makes a beeline for christ [Music] in the subtle symbolism of this wonderful picture jesus is the product of a magic penetration a penetration by light [Music] now i think we're all agreed that pierrot's madonnas are serenely beautiful but i think we can also all agree that his baby jesus is to put it charitably ah a touch unconvincing [Music] no let's go further than that they're pretty ugly and the same can be said of a lot of renaissance babies how can an era that gets the madonna so right get the baby jesus so wrong well actually it doesn't get him wrong at least not on its own terms because you have to remember what they're trying to paint here isn't just a baby this is a god who's come down to earth as a man when they painted the baby jesus the artists of the renaissance we're trying to imagine a baby who's also a god a newborn who's been there since the beginning of time two very different concepts are trying to squeeze themselves into one tiny body no wonder so many of them are so ugly [Music] because pierrot's madonnas are so noble and lovely i worry that i may be painting too sunnier picture for you here of the essential drives of the italian renaissance yes italy a land of mama's boys was especially fond of madonnas but it was also a land full of sinners who needed purging [Music] this is the convent of san marco in florence and as you can see it's full of wonders it was taken over in 1435 by a religious order called the dominicans [Music] the dominicans were founded by saint dominic of guzman at the beginning of the 13th century and the self-appointed task of this fierce religious order was to rid the church of heretics you can always spot the dominicans in art they're the ones wearing the white robes with the black cows [Music] and that's why they came to be called the black friars [Music] the other nickname of the dominicans was the hounds of the lord it was based on a pun dominican sounds a little like dominique which is latin for god's dogs and this terrifying nickname the hounds of the lord seemed to sue their spirit [Music] the dominicans were notoriously keen on flagellation they had a relationship to pain and when the pope in rome set up the inquisition in 1229 to rid the church of its heretics the dominicans were entrusted to lead it so the dominicans were the dogs of god religiously fierce taking on the heretics but you wouldn't know it from the art they made not here at least in san marco where the entire convent is filled with the paintings of a dominican genius they called fra giovanni angelico the angelic brother john [Music] frangelico was a friar here at san marco and in each of the cells in the convent he painted the story of christ so the friars could contemplate it 24 7. there's nothing else like this in the world has a feat of stamina it's a mind-boggling achievement but it's also extraordinary because frangelico fully deserved his name he really was such a sweet and gentle painter all the frantic flagellation that went on here seems so far away from the delicate moods of frat angelico [Music] here's his annunciation the angel gabriel telling mary she's going to give birth to jesus and here's another enunciation also in san marco a painting of such sparse and simple beauty [Music] apparently he would always pray before he began a painting and once he started a picture he'd never retouch it or change it because he believed that his art was divinely inspired and if the word of god flows through you you're not allowed to alter it [Music] the sweetness of frangelico drifts through the monastery of san marco like a beautiful scent [Music] but at the end of the corridor darkness lurks this is the cell occupied by a dominican whose name still strikes terror in the hearts of us unworthy types savanna roller it isn't time yet to deal with him but i need to warn you he's coming up see that snow on the top of that mountain that's not snow at all it's gleaming white marble which means i'm in carrara whose famous quarries supplied the stone for one of the giants of the renaissance so far in this series we've talked mostly about paintings but of course it was also a tremendous era for sculpture and when you talk about sculpture in the renaissance you come here to carrara and you talk about michelangelo [Music] michelangelo's battles with the white marble of carrara have come to define renaissance sculpture and the way he carved that marble has come to be seen as the renaissance way of carving [Music] you know the stories they've gone down in the folklore of art how michelangelo saw the figures hidden inside the huge blocks of carrara marble how he struggled with the stone to set them free [Music] but it wasn't just the stones of carrara that michelangelo was taking on in these famous sculptural struggles of his he was also taking on the past buried beneath renaissance italy was the ancient world of the romans and the greeks which was now being dug up again inspiring the renaissance to compete with it and match it the trouble is all these wonderful ancient marbles that were being dug out of the ground in renaissance times inspiring michelangelo and co were fundamentally misleading when they came out of the ground they were pure and white but that wasn't how they went into the ground we now know that the sculptures of the ancients were never white they were always highly coloured and gaudy but paint doesn't last as long as stone so when these ancient sculptures were dug up again they came out white and misled an entire civilization [Music] poor old michelangelo there he was competing with a mythic white past that never actually existed but in this film we're not going to make the same mistake because what we're going to do is to follow another renaissance storyline not the myth but the truth so the first thing we need to do is to find out who broke michelangelo's [Music] nose the brancachi chapel in florence a renaissance hot spot that's on every art lover's bucket list two things of note happened in here the first was that in around 1425 masaccio painted these famous frescoes telling the story of how we were expelled from paradise and why but there's another reason to come here because it was in here in the brancachi chapel that michelangelo's nose was broken by a rival sculptor called pietro torreggiano michelangelo had been taking the mickey out of torreggiano and torregiano snapped and punched him in the nose i felt bone and cartilage go down like biscuit he later remembered [Music] so this torigiano was obviously violent and arrogant but he was also highly gifted and while michelangelo with his broken nose went on to dominate renaissance sculpture torregiano had to flee from florence and he found himself written out of the story of the renaissance he spent the rest of his career floating around europe making weirdly vivid sculpture that's been largely forgotten this is also by him it's actually henry vii king of england because amazingly torregiano came to london too where he worked for the tudor court but england didn't work out for him either and he ended up in spain where he died in prison destitute and forgotten but look what he left behind a thoroughly different sculptural tradition just as renaissance as the gleaming white marbles of michelangelo but thrillingly realistic and alive just look at the details of the anatomy this wonderfully stringy and wiry body of the old saint jerome as he beats himself penitentially with a rock [Music] this is the renaissance that history forgot intense neurotic realistic and the reason torrigiano can be as convincing as this is because this isn't made out of marble it's made out of terracotta clay which you can mold and shape and paint with so much more detail yes it's less macho than stone carving but that doesn't make it less renaissance and it's a tradition that doesn't deserve to be forgotten this is what they call a compianto a lamentation over the dead christ by an artist from bologna called nicolo dellaca this was made in around 1460 that's right 1460 it's way ahead of its time one of the most dynamic and exciting masterpieces of renaissance sculpture [Music] even michelangelo when he came here to bologna admired nicolo del arca but since then he's been written out of the story of the renaissance [Music] you just don't hear about nicolo del arca why because terracotta burnt clay is such unglamorous stuff you don't have to go to carrara to find it you just look down at the ground under your feet and there it is [Music] and the lord rained upon sodom and gomorrah brimstone and fire from out of heaven you remember earlier in the film how i mentioned girolam or savanna rolla and how we'd be coming back to him well now's that time [Music] that's him painted by fra bartolomeo another of the artistic dominicans working here at san marco [Music] was not the kind of monk you'd like to meet down a dark florentine alley swarthy hook nosed intense he entered the dominican order in 1475. apparently he just knocked on the door of the dominican convent in bologna and announced that he was going to be a knight of christ so they let him in [Music] in 1482 he moved to florence where his first task was to teach logic and ethics to the san marco novices judging by what happened next logic and ethics were not things he knew much about [Music] at some point in his early days in florence savannah roller had a vision he saw that the catholic church was in need of purging and he began to suspect that he might be the one who'd been chosen to do it according to savannah roller the renaissance world had grown sinful and corrupt the rich had grown corrupt art had grown corrupt [Music] as these sermons of savanna rollers grew more and more fiery so more and more people wanted to hear them and soon there wasn't enough room in san marco and he began preaching here in the duomo in florence to ever larger crowds savannah roller preached against makeup and immodest behavior against music dancing and licentiousness [Music] and he began preaching as well against art and those examples of it that were not christian enough for him things reached ahead in 1493 when he had an especially apocalyptic vision that the sword of the lord was about to fall on the city now as it happened at exactly the same time the french were about to invade italy and when they turned up outside florence in 1494 it was as if savannah rollers prophecies were about to become uncannily true god it seemed had decided to back savannah roller to the hilt every one of his mad prophecies was coming true if this had been a genuinely enlightened era the kind of renaissance we've all been taught about then savannah roller's prophecies would have been recognized as the rantings of a lunatic but the renaissance never was as enlightened or progressive as we've been taught and instead of locking him up renaissance florence turned herself over to him gangs of young men began to patrol the city to ensure that women were wearing suitably modest dress new laws were issued against sodomy adultery drunkenness and a series of bonfires was started the bonfires of the vanities and all that was sinful was thrown on them botticelli who'd painted such gorgeous reimaginings of the classical world was one of several florentine painters who fell under sabonerola's who were persuaded to throw their pagan art onto the bonfire of the vanities it's also said with good reason i think that this strange painting botticelli's mystic nativity was inspired directly by one of savanna roller's christmas sermons christ will come again said savannah roller and when he does the countdown will begin to the end of the world savannarola's reign of terror didn't last long in 1498 he was challenged by the franciscans to a trial by fire to prove that his dominican prophecies were true savanna roller refused and the mood in florence turned quickly against him [Music] imprisoned and tortured by the papal inquisition he confessed that his visions and prophecies had all been made up and a few weeks later they hanged him in the piazza signuria in florence and then burned his broken body to keep it from the relic hunters [Music] remember earlier in the film we were looking at baby jesus in art and why they are so ugly well this is the other end of the story [Music] jesus was 33 when he died on the cross a fully grown man but in renaissance pietas mary cradles him on her lap as if he was still a baby it's one of the most awkward poses in art and only the best artists could pull it off imagine me stretched across the lap of my mother and she's holding me up as if i were weightless that's so hard to get right and what all these pietas are trying to do is to link the death of jesus with his birth because jesus was born to die and by dying save the rest of us that's why the baby jesus looks forward to the man and the manly jesus looks back to the baby it's a very problematic scenario not surprisingly most renaissance artists tied themselves into ugly knots trying to imagine it [Music] here's cosimo torah from ferrara different as ever and describing the impossible scene with a wild eyed and wired intensity [Music] even the great peregino usually so poised struggles mightily with the terrible dynamics of this terrible pose [Music] this particular pieta is by an artist called sodoma now i'm sure i don't need to tell you why he was called that this is the renaissance after all anyway it's a decent stab at this fiendishly difficult subject what sodomer's pieta gets wrong isn't the anatomy but the mood there's a tenderness missing sodoma gives us a decent jesus it's the mary he can't manage [Music] if jesus was 33 when he died mary would have been around 50. so she has to be middle aged yet also emblematically beautiful and innocent now how do you paint that it's an enormous challenge for any artist one of my favorite pietas is this one in the louvre painted in around 1450 in avignon this is pioneering french realism feel the emotional depth of this forgotten french renaissance so the pieta was a test that only the greatest could pass and here in saint peter's in rome michelangelo finally gives us the perfect example he makes his mary a little bigger and his jesus a little smaller so they fit together gracefully and yes mary is a bit young for her age but this extra youth adds a note of fragility to the moment and stokes up the tenderness of the mother-son [Music] relationship so that's zechariah 14 1 behold the day of the lord cometh [Music] this is another michelangelo the risen christ it's the moment when jesus risen from the dead comes back to earth after the crucifixion and according to the scriptures he's supposed to be completely naked because he left his shroud in the sepulcher when they buried him and that's how michelangelo originally sculpted him but as you can see someone has added this discreet loin cloth happily it's removable in the past when the famously liberal john the 23rd was pope jesus was allowed to be fully naked as michelangelo sculpted him but these days he's not you can always tell the papal mood by coming here to santa maria's opera minerva in rome and seeing if michelangelo's christ is naked as he's supposed to be or covered up as the authorities have decided he should be so far in this film i've only nibbled at the edges of michelangelo he's such a huge renaissance presence you'd need a 24-part series to tackle him properly on the telly and not the few minutes i have left in this film so there's only time to focus on one aspect of him but it's the key aspect his religious fierceness with some renaissance artists it's never entirely clear what they believe in but with michelangelo there's never any doubt that he's an old-fashioned tub thumping italian catholic guilty angsty and devoted it's true of everything he made but it's particularly true of his masterpiece the sistine chapel it's the greatest room of art in the world a banquet of tremendous religious storytelling and not just by michelangelo botticelli is in here too showing the punishment of korra dathan and abiram when god burns them up with invisible fire [Music] and here's perugino again with christ handing the keys of heaven to saint peter and doing it so gracefully [Music] so on the lower level there are all these impressive frescoes by other artists and then up above there's michelangelo and together they act as one space that encircles you with art and engulfs you in a dark religious storyline there is no angrier god in art than the god of the sistine chapel he presides over a room filled with trepidation and guilt upon high god creates adam and adam lets him down [Music] god creates noah and noah lets him down god creates the prophets [Music] and the prophets let him down and because they're prophets they know what's coming [Music] it's like a steamroller of fear passing over you the typhoon of guilt trepidation and anxiety blowing through the vatican and because it's happening all around you it pulls you into it and soaks into you and the reason why everyone up there is so frightened is made clear by michelangelo on the far wall [Music] this isn't any old day we've walked into this is the last day of all the day of judgment just as zechariah predicted the end of the world is upon us and everyone up there knows it and of course it isn't just the saints and the prophets painted by michelangelo who are being judged everyone who walks into the sistine chapel walks into the day of reckoning we're all being judged the whole room is judging us and terrifying us with the consequences of our sins [Music] who's going to be saved and who's going to be doomed that's what the walls are asking us it's not a very greek question but it is a very renaissance one [Music] in the next film things cheer up again when we go to venice we'll be eating we'll be drinking and we'll be doing a bit of this [Music] you
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Channel: Perspective
Views: 215,022
Rating: 4.8828797 out of 5
Keywords: Arts, The Arts, Theatre, Music, Full EPisode, Full documentary, documentary, performing arts, art history, waldemar januszczak documentary, waldemar januszczak, renaissance art, classical art, history documentary, art history documentary, art documentary, waldemar, italian renaissance, renaissance documentary, art history renaissance, ap european history renaissance, giotto, religious art
Id: t4nTTHd5efA
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 59min 38sec (3578 seconds)
Published: Sat Sep 26 2020
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