Subtitles section Play video
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(piano playing)
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Dr. Zucker: We're in the National Gallery
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and we're looking at Jan Van Eyck's portrait of ...
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well, I learned this painting as the Arnolfini wedding portrait.
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Dr. Harris: So did I.
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Dr. Zucker: But there's been a lot of scholarship subsequently
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and there's a lot of disagreement
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over what this painting actually represents.
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Dr. Harris: But the National Gallery,
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which probably represents the most authoritative view right now,
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or the most widely accepted says that,
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in fact, this is not an actual wedding taking place
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or being witnessed as you and I were taught,
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but that it's simply a double portrait
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of a couple who are already married.
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Dr. Zucker: Some scholars suggested that perhaps
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it's a memorial portrait and the woman on the right
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actually had passed away the previous year,
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but that's only one of a variety of theories.
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Dr. Harris: No.
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Dr. Zucker: What we do know is,
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is that whoever is represented here was an Italian
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merchant who worked in Bruges.
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Dr. Harris: Bruges was a thriving economic town in the early 15th Century.
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Dr. Zucker: His wealth is quite apparently throughout this portrait.
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Dr. Harris: In a way, this portrait is about his wealth.
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Everything from both their clothing to the furnishings of the house.
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Dr. Zucker: Some have suggested that perhaps
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this is a kind of witnessing of the male
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actually giving a kind of authority to the women in legal affairs.
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Dr. Harris: I don't think we'll ever know
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exactly what this represents.
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The thing is, that it's [unintelligible]
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to me that it can't simply be just a double portrait
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because it really looks like something important is happening.
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They're joining their hands, their shoes are off,
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Dr. Zucker: Now those all have symbolic value.
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This is a period when there's tremendous importance
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put on symbolism, so the shoes being off,
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for instance, as you mentioned is often a reference
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to a sacred event taking place.
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Dr. Harris: We have a single candle in the chandelier,
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which I was taught is a symbol of the presence of God,
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but again, we're just not really sure.
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But the way that they're joined together,
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the way his hand is up,
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perhaps he's just greeting the visitors who we see in the mirror.
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Dr. Zucker: There are two people who are in the doorway, actually,
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wonderfully situated where we would be looking at this painting.
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Dr. Harris: It does seem to me like something significant is going on.
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Dr. Zucker: That there is a kind of witnessing taking place.
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Dr. Harris: Yeah, I think that that's reinforced
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by the signature that we see above the mirror
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and below the chandelier that says,
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"Johannes van eyck fuit hic"
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or translated, Johannes van eyck was here.
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So there is that sense of the artists presences,
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the artist witnessing, the artist being here in this room with these figures.
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Dr. Zucker: Let's go about this painting
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and really look at the different elements
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because there are many things that
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we do agree about as our historians.
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The mirror in the center is really one of
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the most compelling elements you have,
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not only in a sense, the greater visual reality
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of this room depicted because we can actually see
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as if we're standing in the back of the room looking forward,
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Dr. Harris: Scenes from the passion of Christ.
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Dr. Zucker: ... painted on the back pieces
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of glass panels that are set into that wooden frame.
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Dr. Harris: I have to say that it's hard
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to get a sense of this when you're watching a video
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or looking at illustrations in a book,
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but those little roundels around the mirror,
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how big would you say those are?
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Dr. Zucker: They are, I would say, about half the size ...
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Dr. Zucker: ... half the size of my fingernail.
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Dr. Harris: Yeah, they're tiny.
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And yet we can make out what scenes
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from the Passion of Christ are represented there,
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there's that attention to detail
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and detail painted in enormous clarity
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that we associate with the Northern Renaissance.
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Dr. Zucker: Some of this painting seems to
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have been painted with a single [hair brush].
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Dr. Harris: If you look at the hair of the dog, for example.
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Dr. Zucker: The dog is an interesting element
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because you wouldn't expect to see a dog in a formal portrait.
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How many wedding photographs have you seen with a dog in it?
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Dr. Harris: Actually, dogs are common symbols in paintings of couples
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because the dog is a symbol of fidelity or loyalty.
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Dr. Zucker: Of course, there's tremendous attention
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that's been paid to the dress of both figures
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and there's a kind of curious element
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because they're wearing fur-lined clothing
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and yet there is fruit on the tree outside.
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So, it's a war moment and yet they're wearing their finest winter wear,
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that's an issue that has, I think, perplexed our historians.
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Dr. Harris: And that fruit on the window sill
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may also be a symbol, or a sign I should say,
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of their wealth since oranges were very expensive in Flanders.
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Dr. Zucker: Someone suggested that that was
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one of the items that the Arnolfini's actually imported
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a reference to the source of their wealth.
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Dr. Harris: This is a good example of one of the ways
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that it's easy to misinterpret,
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it looks as though the scene is taking place
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in what we would think of as the bedroom,
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in a kind of private space,
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but in fact, bedrooms were not that in the 15th Century.
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They were rooms where you received visitors.
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Dr. Zucker: And a symbol of wealth.
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There are all kinds of symbols of wealth here,
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beyond the oranges if you look at the carpet down on the floor,
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that would have been an example of both taste and wealth.
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Dr. Harris: Look at the way that the ...
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you see those teeny little cuts in the green robe that she wears, those heavy ...
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Dr. Zucker: That's been frayed out that was ...
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Dr. Zucker: ... that was a very fashionable.
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Dr. Harris: And the crispness of the lace
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that she wears around her head.
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Dr. Zucker: Now, there's a mistake that is often made,
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which is people often look at the sort of bulge of her belly
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and suggest that she's pregnant,
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Dr. Harris: Right.
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Dr. Zucker: This was very much an expression of the fashion of the day.
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Dr. Harris: Right and another way that it's easy
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to misinterpret based on what we know in the 21st Century.
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Dr. Zucker: Van Ecyk is, I think, critically important
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not only because of the brilliance of his painting,
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but because he was using oil paint
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in a way that had never really been used.
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He was able to create a luminous quality,
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a richness of color that tempera simply couldn't achieve.
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Dr. Harris: Yeah, and he's doing this
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because he's applying thin, multiple layers,
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or glazes of thinned out oil painting
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so that each layer is translucent
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and layer after layer applied creates these
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incredibly deep rich colors.
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Dr. Zucker: Which allows him to then
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produce this rich, luminous, incredibly subtle light.
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Dr. Harris: I know.
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Dr. Zucker: ... and moves across the faces of the figures,
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their hands, across the furniture.
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Dr. Harris: On the chandelier, the little shadow
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cast by that bottom bar of the window.
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There's a real love of light here
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that also is very typical of the Northern Renaissance.
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Dr. Zucker: And the way they can sort of brilliantly pick up a color,
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like on the oranges, for instance,
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or to find an object such as Arnolfini's shoes.
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Dr. Harris: The figures are kind elongated.
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The base of the room seems very cramped,
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it's filled with all of these material objects.
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Dr. Zucker: It's certainly not [perspectogoly] correct.
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Dr. Harris: Right and both of those things,
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that lack of interest in human anatomy
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and the rational prospectively correct space
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really tells that we're not in the Italian Renaissance
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we're in the Northern Renaissance,
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that love of texture, the use of oil paint,
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the attention to detail.
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Van Eyck is a master, or 'the' master of the Northern Renaissance.
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(piano playing)