Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
(jazzy music)
Male: We're in the Prado in Madrid
and we're looking at a great early
Velazquez, The Triumph of Bacchus.
The painting is unnervingly vivid,
almost more than photographic.
Female: Bacchus, the god of wine,
looks beautiful and he's sort of bathed in light.
Male: That young central figure.
Female: He's sitting on a jug of wine.
Male: (chuckles) Yes, appropriately.
Female: He's the god of wine.
Male: He's got grape leaves in his hair.
Female: He's come down to earth to bring men wine,
which relieves life's sufferings.
And relieving it, it is!
Everyone's having a really good time.
There's a figure kneeling down,
one of Bacchus' followers.
He's having a crown placed on his head.
There's a feeling of revelry and partying and fun.
Bacchus looks away, but that other figure just to the right
Male: With the hat.
Female: He feels like someone we've all seen
in a bar somewhere.
Male: Exactly right.
He's got this bowl of wine that he's about
to bring to his lips, which, I dont' know about for you,
but to me, I feel as if I can just feel
the coolness of that liquid.
It is so transparent, I can feel it sort of waft
Female: The glistening surface.
Male: The glistening surface, I can feel it
sort of edge side to side.
I can see his anticipation, but he's looked up at us.
So it's not just the vividness of the contrast
of light and shadow across his face,
but it's the way in which he smiles directly at us
so that we are there.
We are right there ready to partake.
Female: Yeah, I think that's what
sort of uncomfortable about it.
He's a kind of seedy character.
Male: Yes, he is.
Female: I mean, he looks sort of like he's
lived a hard life, and the figures around him, too;
a kind of leathery skin and clothing that looks very poor.
Male: Especially in contrast to the god.
Female: When he looks out at us, it sort of implies
that we're like him.
I've sort of become a rowdy reveler
in a half-drunken state, sort of partying it up
and not feeling life's pain anymore.
Male: There is a kind of guilt by association.
I think that that's exactly right.
We are drawn in.
It's interesting that we're drawn in
not only because of the scale of the figures
and the sense of proximity,
but we're drawn in by a kind of almost moral equivalency.
Female: There is kind of lovely frieze of the figures.
They're all very much close to the foreground
in a kind of very Baroque way, and occupy all
kind of the same plane across that foreground,
taking up much of the space of the painting.
There's a real directness about the figures.
They're very much in our space.
Male: There's also a really interesting set of contrasts.
You have the, as you described, the very beautiful body,
and young and sort of perfect body, of Bacchus.
You've then got this hater just over his shoulder.
Those two mythological figures,
and perhaps the third crouching down in the foreground
in the shadow, are so contrasted against
the figures of our reality who are on the right.
One of the things that I think makes this painting
feel so vivid and so engaging
is the variation in sort of degrees of focus
that Velasquez brings to the canvas.
In other words, look at the background.
It couldn't be sort of more unfinished.
The figure in the foreground in the lower left
that we mentioned in shadow feels almost incomplete.
So that really draws our eye right to those center figures.
There is something very interesting about
the contrast, again.
You mentioned it before, between the directness
of the man with a hat and the way in which
Bacchus himself looks off to the side,
so that our eye has to go to the man
that we don't want to go to, in a sense.
Female: There's a kind of realism that
Velasquez is bringing to a mythological subject
and intentionally not representing it
in a kind of Classical manner.
Male: He gives us a few handles,
actually quite literally.
If you look at the jugs down at the bottom,
in the center, there is a kind of vividness there.
We feel as if we can literally reach in
and grab one of those an it will be poured
full of wine for us.
There are these sort of points of entrance
and these points of physical reality
that give us access to the mythological
in a way that I don't think we're used to.
Female: It's very much like the way that
Caravaggio would paint religious subjects in Italy,
with that kind of immediacy and realism
and physicality and the down-to-earthness
of the figures and the way that everything
is happening very close to us.
I think what we're seeing is a kind of
Caravaggio-inspired approach applied
to a mythological subject.
(jazzy music)