WEBVTT 00:00:03.930 --> 00:00:06.300 Art... 00:00:06.300 --> 00:00:07.830 ArtSleuth 00:00:09.700 --> 00:00:12.680 A reviving meal 00:00:13.800 --> 00:00:17.220 Reapers in a cornfield 00:00:18.280 --> 00:00:21.680 Rolling countryside, as far as the eye can see, 00:00:25.180 --> 00:00:28.200 A picture by Pieter Bruegel 00:00:28.260 --> 00:00:32.020 Peasant life viewed with a sympathetic eye … 00:00:32.020 --> 00:00:35.680 …or a powerful land-owner’s lofty condescension? 00:00:36.840 --> 00:00:39.760 A question easily answered, one might think: 00:00:39.760 --> 00:00:41.840 since this picture belongs to a series 00:00:41.840 --> 00:00:47.700 painted by one city-dweller for another - a rich Antwerp merchant… 00:00:55.660 --> 00:00:57.660 … and the florid, 00:00:57.680 --> 00:00:58.680 haggard 00:00:58.680 --> 00:01:00.400 and toil-worn faces 00:01:00.420 --> 00:01:04.360 of the people in it hardly tempt one to join the club. 00:01:04.800 --> 00:01:09.820 So what do artist and patron want with these peasants, these minute worker ants? 00:01:09.960 --> 00:01:13.360 Do they enjoy looking down on them? 00:01:13.400 --> 00:01:16.840 And making fun of them? 00:01:16.840 --> 00:01:20.820 Or do they find them genuinely interesting? 00:01:20.820 --> 00:01:25.730 Episode 10 : Bruegel - La Moisson Le Bonheur est dans le pré ? 00:01:29.200 --> 00:01:32.060 Part 1. Rustic joys 00:01:37.820 --> 00:01:41.800 Under a pale moon … 00:01:41.800 --> 00:01:45.860 … the golden corn… 00:01:50.700 --> 00:01:53.880 methodically cut … 00:01:54.960 --> 00:01:56.840 … bundled … 00:01:56.880 --> 00:01:59.580 … bound … 00:01:59.620 --> 00:02:02.840 … and carried off ... 00:02:03.500 --> 00:02:07.260 … in a near-geometrical pattern … 00:02:07.320 --> 00:02:10.260 … leads the eye in two directions: 00:02:10.280 --> 00:02:13.020 towards the village ... 00:02:13.040 --> 00:02:17.280 ... with its houses clustered round the steeple. 00:02:18.040 --> 00:02:21.760 And … through a carefully ordered landscape to the castle 00:02:21.780 --> 00:02:23.780 with its dug-out pond, 00:02:24.960 --> 00:02:26.740 dependent hamlet, 00:02:28.020 --> 00:02:30.300 toll bridge 00:02:31.400 --> 00:02:34.280 and winding roads. 00:02:35.680 --> 00:02:38.280 This pear-laden tree 00:02:38.320 --> 00:02:42.760 is a perfect image of man’s and nature’s productivity, 00:02:42.840 --> 00:02:45.720 and these peasants are - literally and figuratively - at the root of it. 00:02:45.760 --> 00:02:49.060 while one of them sleeps , exhausted by his labours, 00:02:49.060 --> 00:02:53.240 the others settle down merrily to their meal. 00:02:53.240 --> 00:02:54.920 Stirabout comes first, 00:02:54.920 --> 00:02:58.200 then it’s out with the knives for bread and cheese, 00:02:58.200 --> 00:03:00.380 with fruit as dessert. 00:03:00.380 --> 00:03:04.100 A feast fit for a lord - almost! 00:03:04.100 --> 00:03:13.040 But this is no general, freeze-frame celebration of the rural life, with its immemorial rhythms and rituals. 00:03:13.080 --> 00:03:18.360 In fact, the whole picture is brimming with specifics, and time - the real time embodied in action and change - flows through and animates it. 00:03:19.340 --> 00:03:22.920 These strange suspended shapes, for example ... 00:03:22.920 --> 00:03:28.000 … are apples which this peasant has shaken from the tree … 00:03:28.000 --> 00:03:30.340 … and the children are gathering. 00:03:32.320 --> 00:03:36.380 And here, beside another fruit-picker, time speeds up 00:03:36.380 --> 00:03:38.280 , and we see a group of men in hot pursuit of others 00:03:38.280 --> 00:03:43.060 trespassers, perhaps, chased off by guards from the castle? 00:03:43.880 --> 00:03:47.160 For others, it’s time to relax: 00:03:47.180 --> 00:03:49.980 This scene of bathing monks is a full action sequence. We see them: 00:03:49.980 --> 00:03:50.940 - clothed, 00:03:50.960 --> 00:03:51.940 - stripped, 00:03:51.960 --> 00:03:52.980 - entering the water, 00:03:53.000 --> 00:03:54.560 - testing the temperature, 00:03:54.580 --> 00:03:56.320 - getting ready to dive, 00:03:56.320 --> 00:03:58.400 - going bottom-up 00:03:58.440 --> 00:04:01.080 - waving jubilantly. 00:04:02.100 --> 00:04:05.420 And these villagers are playing throw-the-stick: 00:04:05.460 --> 00:04:08.920 the one who kills the goose gets to keep it 00:04:08.940 --> 00:04:15.100 a game which Hogarth, two centuries later, attacked as cruel and barbaric 00:04:15.960 --> 00:04:23.220 Further on, this man - caught in the act of relieving himself in front of the best-kept of the peasants’ houses. 00:04:23.220 --> 00:04:28.560 This motif, which recurs in Bruegel’s Proverbs, is a classic expression of contempt 00:04:28.600 --> 00:04:30.400 - either for the world, as here, 00:04:30.440 --> 00:04:35.120 or for the authority symbolised by the gibbet. 00:04:36.360 --> 00:04:39.840 At first sight, this landscape painting seems to depict the three orders in society 00:04:39.880 --> 00:04:44.700 - as fixed and immutable as the seasons themselves: 00:04:45.300 --> 00:04:49.100 the nobles, who fight to preserve peace and order in this world, 00:04:49.100 --> 00:04:53.020 the clergy, who pray for everyone’s salvation in the next, 00:04:53.020 --> 00:04:58.080 and ordinary people, who work to satisfy their own and others’ worldly needs. 00:04:58.600 --> 00:05:01.120 But the castle here seems diminished and forlorn, 00:05:01.120 --> 00:05:02.800 the monks are not praying, 00:05:02.800 --> 00:05:05.000 and the only ones working are the peasants. 00:05:06.020 --> 00:05:14.520 The only ones? Not quite! The ships in the distance stand for maritime trade, which is booming. 00:05:14.560 --> 00:05:17.480 This is the fundamental change reflected in the picture 00:05:17.480 --> 00:05:22.940 - and it is taking place on the horizon, well beyond the confines of the old feudal system. 00:05:22.940 --> 00:05:26.280 So who is the picture’s real hero? 00:05:26.300 --> 00:05:31.900 The peasant working his smallholding, or the merchant who dominates him - and the world? 00:05:36.730 --> 00:05:36.730 Part 2. Remote - but riveting 00:05:37.360 --> 00:05:39.340 The merchant’s name is Jongelinck, 00:05:39.360 --> 00:05:44.100 and Bruegel’s seasons are to hang in the dining room at his country villa. 00:05:44.120 --> 00:05:47.380 How does he regard these peasants? 00:05:47.420 --> 00:05:49.840 They certainly don’t appear to put much trust in us 00:05:49.860 --> 00:05:53.000 - indeed, our watching presence seems positively unwelcome! 00:05:53.000 --> 00:05:55.920 …and this motif is ambiguous in Bruegel : 00:05:55.920 --> 00:06:03.380 In The Beekeepers, the well-equipped specialists outsmart the amateur and make off with the honey. 00:06:03.440 --> 00:06:08.500 In this scene, the jeering peasant, himself on the point of falling into the stream, 00:06:08.540 --> 00:06:13.200 is as much the butt of the joke as the rash birdnester in the tree. 00:06:13.240 --> 00:06:19.320 Theft itself can be a merry business - take this youthful peasant, who stands for the world, 00:06:19.340 --> 00:06:25.060 as he slyly snips the sinister misanthrope’s purse from his belt. 00:06:25.060 --> 00:06:28.860 Both Breugel and his patron habitually view ordinary life from a distance - 00:06:28.920 --> 00:06:32.200 and this may predispose them to regard theft lightly. 00:06:32.200 --> 00:06:36.460 The merchant, indeed, may see it in plain book-keeping terms: 00:06:36.460 --> 00:06:38.460 since fruit and sheaves can be counted, 00:06:38.460 --> 00:06:41.180 and also the people who need feeding - 00:06:41.180 --> 00:06:43.900 the surplus can be calculated too! 00:06:44.520 --> 00:06:48.060 But the distance between Bruegel and his subjects becomes most apparent 00:06:48.080 --> 00:06:50.720 in his physical treatment of people at work. 00:06:50.740 --> 00:06:53.580 Take this other summer scene, 00:06:53.580 --> 00:06:57.400 where faces are hidden by carried objects and pitchers 00:06:57.400 --> 00:06:59.640 women look like the sheaves they are binding, 00:06:59.640 --> 00:07:02.260 and a water jar takes on human shape - 00:07:02.260 --> 00:07:06.140 as if these people - otherwise strongly individualised 00:07:06.140 --> 00:07:08.560 - were fusing with the work they are doing. 00:07:08.580 --> 00:07:11.160 Work requiring physical effort and skill of a kind 00:07:11.180 --> 00:07:14.420 far removed from the intellectual agility required of men like Jongelinck: 00:07:14.460 --> 00:07:20.240 a passionate art-lover, he has commissioned two other series from Frans Floris. 00:07:20.260 --> 00:07:25.220 These engravings reproduce them:one celebrates the seven liberal arts - specially to be admired, since they approximate to pure knowledge, 00:07:25.260 --> 00:07:28.400 which serves no utilitarian purpose: 00:07:28.420 --> 00:07:30.860 four are linked with mathematics, 00:07:30.880 --> 00:07:32.360 - arithmetic, 00:07:32.400 --> 00:07:33.640 geometry, 00:07:33.680 --> 00:07:34.860 music 00:07:34.880 --> 00:07:36.120 and astronomy – 00:07:36.480 --> 00:07:38.320 and three with discourse 00:07:38.320 --> 00:07:39.340 – grammar, 00:07:39.400 --> 00:07:40.400 rhetoric 00:07:40.420 --> 00:07:41.640 and logic - 00:07:43.680 --> 00:07:45.760 The pictures in the other series trace the 12 labours of Hercules, 00:07:45.760 --> 00:07:47.940 which symbolise aristocratic might. 00:07:48.680 --> 00:07:54.300 The fact remains that these two series are infinitely more conventional and stereotyped than the Bruegel’s: 00:07:54.300 --> 00:07:58.100 they are wooden allegories of a kind which a self-made man, 00:07:58.100 --> 00:08:00.960 seeking to ape the style of some enlightened prince, might well choose to put on his walls. 00:08:01.980 --> 00:08:04.940 Why do we get the feeling that these rough peasants 00:08:04.940 --> 00:08:07.960 are the ones regarded with real interest? 00:08:10.360 --> 00:08:12.300 Part 3. Peasants to the fore! 00:08:13.340 --> 00:08:17.460 Before Bruegel, the peasants always seem to get mere walk-on parts. 00:08:17.500 --> 00:08:24.220 In these nativity scenes, they remain just outside the sacred space - a stable! 00:08:24.240 --> 00:08:26.720 Beside their dull, coarse faces, … 00:08:26.720 --> 00:08:31.500 … the Virgin is a radiant, pale and delicate vision. 00:08:32.440 --> 00:08:35.960 In this book of hours, their life is contrasted with that of the nobles, 00:08:35.980 --> 00:08:40.500 in a world whose limits are set by their lord’s majestic castle. 00:08:41.140 --> 00:08:46.320 Feasting, hunting and courtly love are for the nobles! 00:08:46.320 --> 00:08:50.000 Back-breaking labour for the peasants! 00:08:51.120 --> 00:08:57.720 A century later, Bruegel turns everything round: the work of the peasants is made to seem monumental … 00:08:57.760 --> 00:09:02.980 … and the life of the nobles frivolous and irrelevant. 00:09:03.340 --> 00:09:06.840 The other pictures in the “seasons” series confirm this impression: 00:09:06.840 --> 00:09:09.060 the world has expanded, 00:09:09.060 --> 00:09:12.560 the proud fortresses have receded 00:09:12.580 --> 00:09:17.340 and, paradoxically, the peasant world has become interesting. 00:09:17.360 --> 00:09:19.100 Why? 00:09:19.140 --> 00:09:23.620 Perhaps because the middle-class elite – totally absorbed in the world’s affairs – 00:09:23.620 --> 00:09:27.980 secretly envy the peasant’s narrow horizons. 00:09:29.080 --> 00:09:33.920 While storm-battered ships are lost at sea, and fortunes lost with them… 00:09:33.960 --> 00:09:37.200 … peasant life goes on quietly… 00:09:39.320 --> 00:09:42.200 … and even leaves room for game and role playing 00:09:42.680 --> 00:09:47.660 a paper crown, two thick cushions and a collar taken from a cow are enough 00:09:47.680 --> 00:09:50.900 to make this child feel like one of the magi, 00:09:50.920 --> 00:09:56.180 and a flute is all the adults need to parody the bucolic loves of classical mythology 00:09:57.580 --> 00:10:03.560 Here, two obviously urban visitors appear between this unselfconscious figure 00:10:03.560 --> 00:10:07.340 and the merrily cavorting dancers in front of the sinister gibbet … 00:10:07.340 --> 00:10:10.880 … which also turns up in another seasonal panel. 00:10:10.880 --> 00:10:14.040 The execution is a gri mly recent memory, … 00:10:14.060 --> 00:10:18.420 … but the dominant note in this scene is pleasure at the sight of the fat rumps of these contented cattle, 00:10:18.460 --> 00:10:23.160 …ambling home to the peaceful hamlet, with its playing children. 00:10:26.500 --> 00:10:30.620 This winter scene, finally, suggests a similar link between the playful instincts of the artist, 00:10:30.620 --> 00:10:33.240 who conceals the freezing dogs’ heads 00:10:33.260 --> 00:10:37.620 and gives us a near-abstract bouquet of corkscrew tails ... 00:10:37.640 --> 00:10:44.820 … and those of the skating villagers, who here display a far broader range of human reactions and feelings than they do when they are working. 00:10:44.820 --> 00:10:46.920 Between the two extremes - the watchers from the edge 00:10:46.940 --> 00:10:48.880 and the seasoned performers, we get: 00:10:48.920 --> 00:10:51.680 …cautious beginners… 00:10:51.700 --> 00:10:54.180 …those who help others… 00:10:54.220 --> 00:10:55.780 …mishaps... 00:10:55.780 --> 00:10:57.420 …disasters... 00:10:57.480 --> 00:10:59.580 …and surprises 00:11:01.320 --> 00:11:06.160 And so the difference between Jongelinck and the peasants is not a difference in their nature 00:11:06.180 --> 00:11:08.860 - like that between serf and feudal lord - 00:11:08.860 --> 00:11:12.180 but a difference in the breadth of their horizons. 00:11:14.000 --> 00:11:17.660 Jongelinck owned one more picture by Bruegel: 00:11:17.660 --> 00:11:19.660 The Tower of Babel, 00:11:19.680 --> 00:11:23.140 which the artist placed in a contemporary Flemish town. 00:11:24.120 --> 00:11:28.140 It certainly denounces human pride. 00:11:28.740 --> 00:11:35.680 But it also marks a new divide between the ambitious urban elite, who fix their eyes on the horizon, 00:11:35.680 --> 00:11:38.280 and who love to build 00:11:38.280 --> 00:11:40.280 and take risks... 00:11:41.860 --> 00:11:44.580 …and the great mass of the people, who stick to what they know, 00:11:44.620 --> 00:11:47.120 and never dream of stirring from their own small patch of land. 00:11:49.420 --> 00:11:56.700 The Seasons thus convey a sense of affinity and also remoteness: 00:11:57.580 --> 00:12:03.300 affinity of the man who sees in the peasant a living reminder of humanity’s childhood, … 00:12:03.300 --> 00:12:08.240 …with which it is good to reconnect; 00:12:08.280 --> 00:12:15.780 remoteness of the merchant displaying all the superiority of a far- sighted visionary 00:12:18.740 --> 00:12:27.800 and contesting the voluptuous, decadent nobles’ control of the land. 00:12:39.517 --> 00:12:44.750 This was the last episode of ArtSleuth season 1 Do you want more? 00:12:44.750 --> 00:12:50.917 Find more information on: www.canal-educatif.fr 00:12:50.917 --> 00:12:55.250 Written and directed by: 00:12:55.250 --> 00:12:59.517 Produced by: 00:12:59.517 --> 00:13:03.784 Scientific expert: 00:13:03.784 --> 00:13:08.084 Founding and public support: 00:13:08.084 --> 00:13:12.350 Voiceover: 00:13:12.350 --> 00:13:16.650 Editing & motion graphics: 00:13:16.650 --> 00:13:20.917 Post-production / Sound recording 00:13:20.917 --> 00:13:25.250 Music supervisor 00:13:25.250 --> 00:13:29.517 Music 00:13:29.517 --> 00:13:33.784 Special thanks English subtitles: Vincent Nash 00:13:33.784 --> 00:13:35.784 A CED film