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(piano music playing)
Steven: We're in the Pitti palace in Florence looking at
The Consequences of War by Peter Paul Rubens.
It's a big painting full of very large,
incredibly energetic figures.
Beth: Mars heading off to war being egged on by the
fury Alekto and Venus, the goddess of love, trying
desperately to stop him. An allegorical figure of Europe
flings her arms up in despair on the left and below
allegorical figures representing the arts
are about to be trampled by war.
There's clearly a message here.
Steven: Yeah, I think so.
This was commissioned by a Flemish member
of the Medici court during the Thirty Years' War,
a time when Europe was experiencing enormous
suffering and the consequences of war,
couldn't have been more clear.
You can see who these figures are.
Venus, beautiful in the classic rubenesque pose
with a twisted torso reaching out.
Look at the colors of her body.
Beth: Yeah, she's got greens and blues in her flesh.
Steven: Look at the way her right arm stretches out.
She's holding back her lover, Mars, holding his right arm,
but she reaches out to pull Alekto the fury away
from her lover and to detach him
and to change this momentum.
Beth: Yeah.
It reminds me of the work that Goya will do.
Beth: Yeah, he looks absolutely mad and you get a sense
immediately when you look at this painting of a
contrast between the beauty of Venus and the
madness and the ugliness of Alekto and therefore
the horrors of war personified.
Steven: Alekto's terrified fury, Mars looking back at Venus
and then the tears that are welling up in Europe's eyes,
all of these are set against each other creating this
over the top emotion.
Beth: You want to feels Europe's pain.
Venus' attempts to stop Mars and to detach Alekto
are totally in vain. Mars looks determined.
He looks back at Venus,
but he doesn't seem to feel much remorse.
Steven: There is already blood dripping from his sword,
pointing to the arts that, as you said, are about to be
trampled. Among them you can see, perhaps,
an architect holding a compass.
You can see that Mars' boot is trampling a book.
A lute, the musical instrument, but it's neck has been broken.
and so you see the costs both to culture
and also to human life.
If you look just past those allegorical figures,
you can see the two figures, perhaps,
a mother holding a child and there's real terror there.
Beth: But one senses overall the inevitability of war
for human beings. You know, this is ... this is an
unstoppable force and all of the foreshortening
that Rubens gives us, especially of the allegorical figures
on the lower right, indicates the hopelessness
of the situation. Things can spill out, fall down,
pour over and the power of Mars and this sharp diagonal
from lower left to upper right is completely unstoppable.
Steven: There's an incredible kind of momentum,
the words that you were using to describe it,
seemed absolutely appropriate to me.
There's a kind of momentum, a kind of energy,
a kind of an inevitability
and the brushwork itself, the colors, the composition
and the madness of the storm on the right,
all of this speaks to the overwhelming tragedy,
inevitability, the horror of war.
(piano music playing)