franciscan brown knotted cord [Applause] why is he upside down why is he writing on himself in blood why are they nodding off and why is he staring so darkly
here we present a video on the baroque and its presentation in the context of the art history history of our people. these videos are very interesting and have made us more interested in the history of their own lives. however, even in modern age the experts are still Revising the history by people like Caravaggio; as our u.s. experts believe, they do not actually create all the magnificent structures of the past century but instead constructed upon the reconstructed stones of the previous civilization that vanished
here is much
Tangential evidence in term of maps and artworkifacts suggest our history could be indeed changed and those those previously developed were far more technologicalally advanced
despite
the fact that there is an immense amount of information about history,
it is still difficult to understand how this has been accomplished.
Section 1:
a new art, the magnification of text and poetry, is an essential part of this work. it has been shown that there are many classical arts in the world, but little is known about the nature of its kind. we have recently discovered the best art historian -aerator by westernemar which was found to be one of the most enthusiastic and explicit Art he historian narrator ever. here we present a case of a young man with a history of historical science who presented with his passion for reading and writing.
dominicans
or the mercedarians and the carthusians
then so much of what's going on in so
many amazing spanish baroque paintings
will go over your head
[Music]
why for instance is he upside down
why is he
writing on himself in blood
why are they nodding off
and why is he staring so darkly
at that
[Music]
to help you out i've prepared a handy
pilgrim's guide to the spanish religious
orders you'll thank me for this
this one here
he's a franciscan brown robes knotted
cord for a belt franciscan
[Applause]
sometimes the clothes get more ragged
and patched
but they're still Franciscans
he on the other hand
is a dominican black cow white robe
dominican
quite often seen in the americas
converting the indians or sometimes
whipping off their robes and
flagellating themselves
dominicans
[Music]
the ones in the black robes are
benedictines remember black robes
benedictines
they don't appear in art as often as the
others they're the moody silent ones
[Music]
so did you get all that franciscans
brown dominicans black and white
benedictines
all black
now
you're ready for the spanish baroque
[Music]
now you're ready for francisco de
zorbaran
spain's spookiest baroque artist
he was born here in fuente de cantos the
fifth stop on the via de la plata
so his understandings were small town
understandings
and his rhythms were the rhythms of the
pilgrimage
[Music]
these days
zubaran is reasonably well known
but at the start of the 20th century he
was completely obscure
in fact most spanish art apart from
velasquez was under explored and
undervalued
i think
it was so
dark so strange
so catholic that we just didn't get it
and in particular
we didn't get zoberan
[Music]
these are let's face it bizarre and
unsettling images
uncomfortable funerals
impossible deaths
[Music]
the zoberan family house
on the main square in fuento de cantos
it's quite a posh house now
must have been
really posh
in the 17th century
zobran's father was a prosperous textile
merchant from the north basque country
who moved down here because southern
spain particularly andalucia was
experiencing this boom in new religious
building and there's so much money here
for the priests and their new outfits so
there's a lot of work for the zorbarans
[Music]
many years later francisco de zorbaran
painted
a mysterious
series
of christian martyrs
beautiful female martyrs all of whom
were dressed
in modern clothes they're some of the
most beautifully painted and exciting
clothes in 17th century baroque art
and people said
that zorbran was using his father's
textiles in these paintings advertising
them
using these christian martyrs just to
show off
what his dad had for sale
[Music]
zurbaran's main employers were the
spanish religious orders the
mercedarians the carthusians
the benedictines the dominicans
and the franciscans
[Music]
one day pope nicholas v visited assisi
he wanted to see the crypt where saint
francis was buried and at five in the
morning he went down into the crypt with
a band of monks and all they had with
them was torches and as the torchlight
spread around the dark crypt suddenly
they saw saint francis standing there
200 years after his death
still as fresh as if he just stepped out
of a bath
untouched unblemished as if time hadn't
touched him
so abram went on to do many other things
but monks were his speciality
monks were where his genius was best
expressed
and it's not just the vividness with
which he illustrated their uncanny
stories
but that sense you get with him that
zorbaran's monks are so convincingly
full of god
full of worship
full of thought
no painter has painted human belief
as convincingly as this
the baroque pilgrim trudging dutifully
the 600 miles from seville to santiago
de campostella
would have had regular encounters with
the spanish baroque
and waiting for them at the end of the
trudge
was an eye-catching eruption of baroque
architecture
[Music]
you know chaucer's wife of bath came on
the pilgrimage to santiago it's been the
most famous pilgrimage route in europe
for a thousand years
but it was the baroque era that shaped
the town itself and gave santiago de
campostella its memorable and exciting
look
the cathedral here to which thousands of
busy pilgrims scuttle daily is a baroque
wedding cake in the churrigiresque style
which as far as i can tell
consists chiefly of adding things to
places when there isn't really room for
them
but somewhere within this crazily
writhing
sculpture-encrusted fantasy facade
me thinks me sees the remnants of
spain's islamic past
[Music]
inside the great pilgrimage church at
santiago the baroque's love of glitter
has been spectacularly unleashed
guilt may have driven the spanish
baroque
but gold was what paid for it
the stupendous wealth of the american
colonies was flooding into spain
and then into the pockets of the
catholic church which spent it as the
catholic church so often did
on art
you know there's never been an art
movement as a depth as the baroque was
at absorbing local influences taking
them all in
regurgitating them and then spitting
them out at the other end as something
that looks unmistakably baroque
you can't imagine this building in italy
or france or perish the thought england
it's obviously from around here
i'm up here
this
way over here
i'm up on the colonnade of saint peter's
cathedral in rome
high above the crowd looking down on all
these catholics
[Music]
not many people are allowed up here you
know what the vatican's like it's been
ruling the catholics for 2000 years so
there's no need to be nice to me
but i told them what i wanted to do up
here and they agreed immediately
because they could see as well that this
is the best place to do what i wanted to
do
which is to understand
properly at last
that great
sprawling ungainly but glorious art
movement
the baroque
[Music]
the baroque age doesn't have a nice
clear outline
it sprawled across the 17th century and
beyond
it wasn't a tidy movement
but it spawned some of our greatest art
[Music]
the architect of this astounding square
jan lorenzo bernini was one of the key
players of the baroque understand
bernini and you understand the whole
thing
and what he invented here in this piazza
was this huge
colonnade that encircles you
gathers you up
it's like a giant pair of arms
now 300 000 people can fit in here
that's three times more than wembley
stadium and every single one of them
gets this
big
hug
from bernini's piazza
[Music]
so that's the first thing the baroque
does it goes after you and ingratiates
itself with you
other art movements sit there on their
pedestals and arrogantly assume you'll
be interested in them
but the baroque knows you better
it gets off the pedestal
and hunts you down
another of its ambitions is to impress
you with its bigness
its grandeur its drama
would you look at the size of that
and when it fell into the hands of
intense geniuses it became dark and edgy
got all psychological on us
and blurred the divide between art
and reality
and when painting wasn't enough
the baroque roped in all the other arts
to work on you as well
architecture
sculpture
music
everything at once
it was after you
so it threw the kitchen sink at you
what we're going to do in this series is
follow the baroque from saint peter's to
saint paul's from rome where it all
began
to london where it fetched up eventually
because another of the things that makes
the baroque special
is its range it went everywhere
and basically spent
the entire 17th century traveling about
and the really cunning thing about it is
that wherever it went it adopted the
local customs
and changed
and the first place we're going to visit
is up here
in northern italy
trento
[Music]
trento in the italian dolomites is a
pretty town which i recommend for
walking holidays and mountain views
[Music]
but don't let its modern tranquility
fool you
because the great war started up here
a war of art
[Music]
the baroque is best understood as a
fight back a marvelous display of
counter punching by a waspish church
that had come out fighting
[Music]
when martin luther nailed his 95 thesis
onto the church door in wittenberg in
1517
and launched the protestant revolt
against what he called the sink of roman
sodomy the popes the cardinals
he wasn't just taking on the catholic
church
luther was taking on the whole of italy
the entire southern mediterranean world
view and all that goes with it
the colors
the fruitiness
the passions
[Music]
in those days trento was in austria not
in italy
and it was here that the mighty council
of trent met in 1545 to plot the fight
back
[Music]
a wild boar has invaded the vineyard
complained pope leo the tenth memorably
the baroque's task was to hunt that boar
down
and dispatch it
for nearly 20 years the council of trent
met here in the cathedral trento to plan
the catholic riposte
and art was involved from the start
[Music]
the lutherans had been against art
they saw it as a regrettable
vanity
that led to the worship of false idols
terrible waves of iconoclasm had torn
across northern europe destroying
paintings burning statues
but the catholic church
had always believed in art
it relied on it it knew that people like
to see
what they're worshiping
they like images
and that gave art
tremendous power
[Music]
great prophet is derived from all sacred
images declared the council
and when we kiss the sacred image and
prostrate ourselves before it we adore
christ
if anyone shall teach contrary to these
decrees concluded the council scarily
let him be anathema
anathema
anathema
[Music]
like the map
baroque of course
it was produced in amsterdam in 1617
by willem blau the finest and busiest of
the baroque map makers
blau would later be employed by the east
india company to chart the new world
that was being discovered at this time
but first
he drew europe see
the big capitals of europe at the top
london
paris
amsterdam
and down the sides what people were
wearing in these fashionable new
capitals look there are the english in
their silks
and over here those baroque heroes
the poles the feathers in their hats
so
the baroque fight back began
up here
in trento
but it's epicenter the place where the
fireworks really went off was down south
in rome
the eternal city had a fight on its
hands
as the clock ticked over from the 16th
century to the 17th
its architecture grew prouder louder
showier
and bulged up through the roman skyline
but as i said
the baroque went after you with all the
arts at once
and while architecture and sculpture
were frolicking in the roman sunshine
the art form that needed the most
drastic attention painting
chose another path
[Music]
the council of trent instructed its
artists to get out there and grab
people's attention
but how do you do that
one very effective trick is to make
dramatic use of the dark and turn
painting
into theater
[Music]
that was the strategy of the baroque's
greatest revolutionary
a pictorial genius who made damn sure
that the religious message of the
counter-reformation
came after you like a spotlit rottweiler
this master of dramatic darkness was of
course
michelangelo medici de caravaggio
who deserves our sympathy as well as our
admiration
poor caravaggio for 300 years he was
completely forgotten his reputation in
tatters and then the 20th century
rediscovered him and began
misunderstanding him in such terrible
ways
[Music]
what rubbish has been spouted about
caravaggio
even sensible commentators on sensible
tv channels have insisted on seeing him
as a knife mad predatory homosexual who
went berserk in baroque rome
the ripper of roma
this demonic image of caravaggio annoys
me like nothing else in the baroque
world as if a sex mad out of control
roman crazy could really have painted
this
[Music]
thank heavens recent research into
caravaggio has begun correcting all this
nonsense
and we can start seeing him again for
what he really was the most important
religious painter of the counter
reformation caravaggio did everything
the council of trent demanded of its
artists
he created a vivid new religious art
that spoke to the people in a language
they could effortlessly
a language that moved them and changed
them
[Music]
before caravaggio came along religious
art was set somewhere out there
somewhere distant and fluffy but he made
sure it took place right under your nose
here
now
close enough to touch
the cast list changed too
real people rounded up in taverns and
markets and chosen for their
characterful faces replaced the
impossible gods of old
there's that old bloke from the market
and that beautiful waitress from the
tavern
these are people you recognize from the
streets
people you can touch and whose plight
touches you
[Music]
it's as if caravaggio has set himself
the task of completely reinventing
religious art and he uses every baroque
trick in the book to get your attention
the way this basket of fruit is about to
fall over so you want to reach in and
push it back
or the apostles hands shoved out into
your face
it's all
so real so tangible
so believable
[Music]
the churches of baroque rome are filled
with magnificent free helpings of
caravaggio
just go in pretend you're praying and
feel his power
here in the church of santa maria del
popolo where he began working in 1600 he
pushes a horse's backside into your face
so uncouthly and ensures you will not
miss the dramatic calling of saint paul
taking place at the horse's feet
[Music]
on the other wall saint peter is being
crucified upside down
did you ever see such sweaty effort such
tugging such pulling such pain
look how different it all was from the
usual way of spreading the religious
message
caravaggio's art was so tangible so
vivid so cinematic that the roman clergy
which was used to an altogether rosier
religious palette found him a challenge
some of his greatest paintings were
rejected by the churches that had
commissioned them
this one here was originally going to
hang in saint peter's
jesus and mary stamping on the snake of
sin
was he a little too human for them
was she a little too sexy
[Music]
even his great death of the virgin was
rejected by the monks
mary they spat looked like a bloated
who'd been pulled out of a river
but i don't think she does
she just looks like a real woman
and in my book caravaggio was the best
painter of convincing mary's the world
of art has seen
are they too beautiful for their own
good
maybe
do i mind that
not at all
[Music]
while the clergy complained the public
responded and
understood caravaggio's lesson his
darkness his drama
seeped out of rome and infiltrated the
international baroque at an astonishing
speed
and wherever it fetched up in spain in
flanders
in holland
it transformed the local art
[Music]
it's a strange name for an art movement
don't you think ba rock what does it
mean where does it come from
if you think of the renaissance that's a
very clear idea renaissance is french
for
rebirth the rebirth of civilization
but barack
it actually comes
from a portuguese word barroco
which means
a misshapen
pearl
like this one
all these portuguese explorers were
setting off around the world and they
were coming back with gorgeous pearls in
all shapes and sizes
[Music]
now this pearl is not the rock
this is like the renaissance perfectly
formed
delicate
so
civilized
precious
this one however
the baroque pearl
is blobby
exuberant
misshapen
difficult to handle
and exciting in a deformed kind of way
so
this is the renaissance
this
is the baroque
[Music]
nowhere was this baroque outline more
obvious than in the bendy direction now
taken by architecture
[Music]
rome
is basically a baroque creation
i know it's got the great ancient ruins
and the fine renaissance palaces
but the default architecture here the
stuff that gives the city its main mood
is baroque
[Music]
[Applause]
this beautiful little baroque secret is
a courtyard designed in the 1630s
by a genius of the roman baroque called
boromini
francesco boromini
in my opinion
was the single most exciting architect
there's ever been
a genius
a man of twisted brilliance
the picasso of architecture
this tiny courtyard he designed for the
church of san carlo in rome
is almost
gothic in its brooding intensity
i don't know if you can feel it in the
film
but in the flesh
you can certainly
sense the solemnity
this sparse profundity of this tiny
little space
and remember
architecture speaks to the body not just
the eyes
boromini was so inventive can you see
the balustrade up there look at the
actual balusters the way some of them
bulge at the top and others bulge at the
bottom
what for
the renaissance would never have done
something as wayward and playful as that
but boromini was a rule breaker by
instinct
and that makes him
totally baroque
so this is the cloister around which the
monks would walk and read their bibles
now look
at the church
it's like walking into
a stoney piece
of sculpture
i've been in here scores of times i
never miss it if i'm in rome
and i've stared and stared at this
remarkable interior
but if you ask me to draw what's
happening to the walls in here i
couldn't do it
it's too complicated too fidgety
too inventive
but what i can do
is to try and draw
a plan of the building because it's
completely crazy
what boromini is trying to do here is to
blend
two completely different shapes
out here
there's a kind of blunt
greek cross
so a greek cross with the ends taken off
but in the middle
all that becomes
a perfect oval
so this
is the edge of the church or this
seemingly chaotic going in and out
but underlying it
as you can see
is this
perfect
bit of geometry
made up
of rectangles
made up of triangles
and these circles here
and that's what boromini always does he
builds this exact mathematical basis and
then he just
ruffles it up like someone
messing up your hair
[Music]
i've seen geometry as madly busy as that
on the great domes of islam
but never in a christian church
boromini
supplied baroque architecture with
something dark and emotional
it's feminine principle it's yin
but every yin of course needs a yang and
in baroque rome the undisputed king of
yang was jan lorenzo bernini
the great bernini was everything that
boromini wasn't
handsome
rich
haughty
a smooth operator who charmed the kings
and the popes
as architect
as sculptor
as painter
the man could do everything
and the raw spirit of the baroque
coursed through his veins as fiercely as
the water spouting from one of his
fountains
where boromini was almost certainly
homosexual and he died this terrible
death he committed suicide threw himself
on his sword and took a long time to die
bernini
was a ladies man through and through
and bernini would never have dreamt of
killing himself
because that would have deprived the
world of his flamboyant
genius
[Music]
by bernini
it's just a couple of hundred feet up
the road
from boromini's san carlo
but it seems to come from a different
architectural planet
boromini invented the curved church
facade that bends the front of the
church out into the street
but bernini he got really good at it too
and then out here
another curve going the other way
and that's the baroque for you
it twists this way and that always on
the move like a restless dragonfly
[Music]
walking into bernini san andrea is like
walking into a piece of theater
[Music]
bernini fills his church
with rich color
[Music]
look at that lantern up there that gold
of lantern
you put yellow glass up there so when
the sun shines it's as if the whole
interior is being flooded with this
gorgeous golden divine light
[Music]
bernini's church
has this very specific storyline for you
to notice and follow
so saint andrew the patron of the church
is being martyred here he's heading up
towards heaven there
and right at the very top in the lantern
he's being welcomed into heaven the
little cherubs are even standing aside
to make room for him so you can go up
there it's a very theatrical effect very
different from anything boromini ever
tried to do
the baroque had a taste for
theatricality
that's why it liked bernini so much
and if you want to witness some truly
stupendous baroque theater
then follow me into saint peter's
[Music]
an extraordinary creation in front of us
is bernini's bald aquino
put up under the transect
between 1624-1633
now you have a good look at it you tell
me
is that sculpture
or is it architecture
or is it
a combination of the two so it doesn't
really matter
i go for the last option
that's what you get with a baroque
all the dividing lines
get blurred
[Music]
do
the coronaro chapel
in santa maria de la vittoria
which many people consider to be
bernini's masterpiece including bernini
it shows the spanish saint
saint teresa of avila
at a moment when she's having a vision
an angel has come down to her from
heaven and he's piercing her heart with
a flaming arrow
real was the pain to me that i moaned
out loud several times
and yet
it was so indescribably sweet that i
could not wish to be released from it
when the angel withdrew his spear
i was left with a great love of god
[Music]
what he's done here
is create a kind of
theater in the church
on either side
sitting in these boxes is the family
that commissioned the corner chapel the
cornaro family
up there on the right with a little
beard looks a little bit like
shakespeare that's federico cornaro he's
the one who actually paid for it all
so the conaro family has gathered to
witness
this miraculous event at the center
[Music]
the other thing that people always pick
up on about this work
is this look on saint razor's face
this open-mouthed
moaning look
now what berlin is trying to do here
is to find some sculptural form for this
religious ecstasy that she's feeling
but the 20th century in particular
has misinterpreted that look on her face
all sorts of smutty remarks have been
made about her ecstasy what kind of
ecstasy is it wink wink
i really disagree with all of that
imagine trying to find a sculptural form
for something as difficult
[Music]
as a young woman
being overpowered by the love of god
how do you convey that
what do you show
well i'll tell you the answer
that's what you do
this is art dazzling you with miracles
in bernini's hands stone comes alive and
stops behaving like stone
he could turn rock into flesh
women into trees
his work is filled with movement and
restless transformation
the cornaro chapel is a fusion of
sculpture painting marbling
gilding even the real light of god has
been roped into achieving this great
baroque effect
[Music]
if you're investigating the baroque
this is a position i recommend
because from here
you can see the baroque
properly
[Music]
the baroque loved painted ceilings
filling the air above you and around you
with remarkable sights was a very
baroque ambition
of course painted ceilings had existed
in italian art for centuries the sistine
chapel was just the best known example
but they're difficult to do
the barack however was never afraid of
effort
whatever it took whatever it cost the
baroque was up for it
and it developed
such a fierce appetite
for the painted ceiling
when the art is all around you and above
you it creates this other world into
which you've stepped
a new reality
think of it perhaps as a kind of 17th
century virtual reality
because these painted ceilings
blur the divide between the art
and you
this is the first great painted room of
the baroque age
these days
it's the french embassy in rome and
they've kindly let us in because the
french are such fine people
but back in the baroque age this fine
palace belonged to cardinal eduardo
farnasy one of the most powerful clerics
in rome
and in 1597
at the very dawn of the baroque era
farnazy commissioned a young painter
from bologna
anibale karachi to come to rome with his
brothers who are also artists
and to paint this
[Music]
cardinal eduardo farnesy should have
been a man of god and perhaps in his
public life he was
but in his private life back here in his
palace
he seems to have unleashed
his sinful side
and what he commissioned anibale karachi
to paint in the piano nobile of the
fondazi palace
is a room
filled with stories about the mad love
affairs of the gods
wherever you turn in here pagan gods are
loving other gods in a divine orgy of
love and conflict and role-playing
and naughtiness
karachi has somehow managed to celebrate
20 different divine love affairs
simultaneously on this one ceiling
and to do that he's employed a cunning
optical trick
each of the love affairs is taking place
inside its own picture
and all these pictures have been crammed
onto the roof
where they're held wrongly in place by a
busy assortment of cupid's nudes and
statues
and then it gets even more complicated
because all these cherubs refuse to stay
outside the action
so they get involved
sometimes they're inside the picture
other times they're outside the picture
time and space are being played with by
a master stenographer
they're being pulled out of the true
in this glorious jumble of realities
this room was to be hugely influential
and what the karachi invented here
was to become one of the main
ingredients of the baroque
we dart about in this series going here
and there with me telling you this and
that
trying to grasp the baroque
but to be honest there's a much easier
way
all you have to do
to understand the baroque
fully and perfectly
is to come in here
and look up
at that
that
is the baroque
[Music]
we're in the jesuit church of san
ignacio
it was built to celebrate the
canonization of ignatius loyola the
founder of the jesuits
that's him up there on the
cloud in 1626
pope gregory xv officially made ignatius
a saint
and all this could begin
the jesuits liked to keep things in
house
kept down the costs and ensured that the
opinions being expressed by the artist
were jesuit opinions
so for this church they got in the
jesuit lay brother from trento
padre pozzo
[Music]
potso was a master of illusion
he was the best there's ever been at
making small spaces look huge
[Music]
his influential book on achieving these
amazing optical illusions was read by
everybody through the ages they even say
that cecil b demille consulted it when
planning his biggest cinema moments
because padre pozzo was a wonderful
movie maker born 300 years early
pozzo's first work in here was this dark
illusionistic dome which unlike a real
dome was cheap and easy to repair
you just got someone in and repainted it
[Music]
the little dome was so convincing the
jesuits decided to unleash pozzo on the
rest of the church
all that is basically a flat roof the
entire sky has been painted every cloud
every architrave every column
what potso's done here is to use his
baroque magic to open up the roof
and create this stupendous shortcut to
heaven
and right in the middle
floating up on a cloud is saint ignatius
himself
he's going up to heaven
where jesus is waiting to greet him
and see that glorious light emanating
from the wound in jesus side
that's the light of divine revelation
pouring out of jesus and into saint
ignatius
then it's being scattered further to the
four corners of the earth
to asia with that rather wonky camel
to africa with what i suppose must be a
crocodile
europe rather tame in comparison
and america
where a bare-chested red indian amazon
looks down at a roaring cougar
all these were places that the jesuits
had their missions
it's what my daughter might call a
rather cheesy bit of jesuit propaganda
but what fantastic theater what ambition
what scale what excitement
[Music]
[Applause]
[Music]
something in here i want to show you
it's a little baroque gym a secret
it's more work
by padre potzer
so it's a kind of
illusionistic colonnade
all painted by pozzo
showing the story of the life of
ignatius because we're in the jesuit
college deep inside somewhere not sure
exactly which bit of it now what's
amazing about this
is that you can get really close
to the pozzo painting
and see how it's done
for example
can you see the two figures over there
holding up an urn on the left right i'm
going to point it out to you stay there
say that
these two fingers here
come over here
look at that
that's how wide they have to be
so all of these figures or the
architecture has been corrected
so that it only looks right
from one place
i call it pozzo's work
you have to stand
on a particular spot for it to look good
someone asked potzer about that once
they said what's the point of doing one
of these things when you only see it
from one place that means only one
person at a time can see it properly and
he said
that's their problem my job is to paint
it their job is to understand it
[Music]
so here in rome a revolution had been
launched
painting had been reinvented
sculpture transformed
architecture
revolutionized
and it was time for the baroque
to spread its wings
soon enough it would arrive on the
doorstep of most of the known world and
become the first truly global art
movement but first there was the rest of
italy to conquer
down here in naples for instance all
sorts of baroque darknesses were
stirring
[Music]
i don't want to go down there i'm scared
but the story of the baroque leaves me
no option
[Music]
there's a book that's very popular now
i'm sure you've heard of it
a thousand places to see before you die
by patricia schultz
naples isn't in it but it should be
because that title about seeing places
before you die is taken from a line by
goethe
see naples and die wrote goethe
ambiguously in the 18th century after
he'd spent some time here
but what exactly did he mean
is he saying that naples is so beautiful
that once you've seen it you'll die
happy
or is he saying that naples is so
dangerous that if you come here the
chances are you'll end up dead
in caravaggio's day this was the second
biggest city in europe after paris
half a billion people
were squashed into naples most of them
out of work
living in slums
one in ten of the inhabitants was some
sort of cleric
a priest a nun
so religion
and wickedness had carved up naples
between them and the two of them
were operating here
in tandem
caravaggio turned up in naples in 1606.
he'd gotten into an argument in rome
over a tennis match and murdered his
opponent
now he was on the run
[Music]
at that time
naples was a spanish colony
separate from the rest of italy
so all sorts of ruffians thieves
murderers and good for nothings turned
up here fleeing from the italian
authorities
caravaggio's reputation got to naples
before he did
and he was soon at work here at his
usual breakneck speed painting some of
his greatest pictures
[Music]
the moment he reached naples his art
seemed to grow darker
rome may be where the baroque was born
but naples was where it learned to
scream
and how
this is the pio monte de misericordia
it's
the home church
of another of these strange little
confraternities that were so busy in the
baroque
the
misericordianists
dispense charity to the poor so as you
can imagine they were very busy in
naples
caravaggio painted this soon after he
arrived he was only in naples for less
than a year but see what he achieved
[Music]
there's a school of thought which
believes that this picture the seven
acts of mercy is the greatest religious
painting of the 17th century
and i'm not about to disagree
we're on a street corner
in naples
there's a prison
on the right
and over here out of sight
there's a tavern
the original idea
was to paint
each of the seven acts of mercy in a
separate altarpiece in the chapel
caravaggio has combined all of them
in one picture
now you'll be thinking what the hell are
the seven acts of mercy
good question
basically they're seven human kindnesses
that you can and should perform for your
fellows
and i'm sure that you do
first
you have to bury the dead and that's
going on here see
there's the little feet of a fresh
corpse being carried away
another act of mercy is to clothe the
naked and saint martin here has cut his
cloak in half and presents it to a naked
beggar
you also have to help the sick and the
infirm
and that's going on down here too
because the naked beggar is also a lowly
pulling himself along on the
ground
you also have to visit those in prison
as she's doing over here
and you're meant to feed the hungry as
well
and this kindly daughter is giving suck
to her own imprisoned father
it's a startling sight
the charitable are supposed to offer
shelter to pilgrims he's a pilgrim you
can tell from the shell in his hat so
the innkeeper here is offering him a
room for the night
finally the thirsty must be given
something to drink
so samson in the gloom is gulping down
the contents of an ass's jaw
so there you have it seven acts of mercy
all recorded in one baroque tornado of a
composition
[Music]
caravaggio wasn't the only law breaker
to seek refuge in naples
there were many
others including a spanish painter and
caravaggio worshipper called giuseppe
ribera or as the locals called him la
spanoletto the little spaniard
this little spaniard ribera
was a quarrelsome devil
he came
to naples
to flee his creditors in rome
and
because
naples was under spanish control then
ribera had his pick
of rich spanish clients
for most of his career he painted in the
caravaggio manor dark brooding religious
art sweaty and guilty
but his spanish roots began to show soon
enough
and his taste for the macabre was
legendary
this is ribera's infamous bearded woman
whom he painted more than once
ribera liked bearded women
[Music]
and this deceptively cheerful smiling
boy is actually a with a club
foot
when you notice his deformity the smile
on his face takes on a different meaning
[Music]
ribera
was the main mover
in a nasty little organization a kind of
mini mafia
called the cabal of naples
he got together
with two other local miss koreans
a vicious greek called corenzio
and a fine neapolitan painter caracciolo
who deserves
a much better reputation
than he's got
because caracciolo
painted some magnificently dark
neapolitan pictures
so these three
ribera
corenzio
and caraciolo
began
beating up and murdering
all their rivals
[Music]
[Applause]
if you were a foreign painter taking
business away from the cabal of naples
you'd better beware
the cabal was particularly cruel
to the followers of anibale karachi
dominikino came here
to paint a fresco
and every morning
the cabal would remove
what he'd done the day before and then
they put sand in his paint
dominicano
died in naples
poisoned they say
by the cabal
[Music]
poor old guido rainey had an even worse
time
the cabal
hired an assassin to murder him
and this assassin
made a mistake
and killed one of reini's assistants
instead
and rene
fled the city
never to return
so one of his pupils
was sent down here to finish the
commission
and this pupil
was lured onto a boat in the bay of
naples
and never heard from
again
the cabal of naples was wound up in 1641
but its work was done
the cheerful side of the barak had been
kept out of naples
by the time the cabal was done with it
the baroque had forgotten many of its
good intentions
darkness violence
murder
horror
those were naples's black gifts to the
baroque
and particularly to spain where our
journey continues in the next film and
where the baroque was taken to such
passionate extremes
[Music]
oh
[Music]
um
[Music]
let's see
in the last film we're over here in
italy watching the birth of the baroque
and we ended up
in naples
down here naples was a spanish colony
and that means
the next stage of our journey
is over here
in spain
oh my god
[Music]
so
[Music]
one of the chief reasons why the baroque
was as successful as it was
why it became the first global art
movement
was because it was so damn adaptable
the baroque spread across europe like a
wildfire and everywhere it went it
adopted the local tastes and customs and
sneakily made itself at home
but when it got here
to spain
it didn't have
that much adapting to do
the spanish were already fiercely
catholic they liked drama emotion
passion
darkness
they were if you like instinctively
baroque
so the baroque's task here in spain
wasn't really
a case of adaptation
it was more like
pouring petrol
on a large bonfire
[Music]
the spanish baroque was hardcore
the most fiercely catholic the baroque
became
some of its sights will turn your
stomach and appall you
but the baroque was a war remember a
battle for your heart deliberately
started by the counter-reformation
and in times of war anything goes
[Music]
this is the
longest pilgrim trail in spain the
southern route to santiago de
campostello
it's called the via de la plata the
silver road and i'm going to be walking
some of it for you because it takes you
past so many key baroque sites
[Music]
but the first stop i want to make
is that
lovely
tower
shimmering on the horizon
seville
the start
of the via de la plata
[Music]
this is a cultural hot spot if ever
there was one the old jewish quarter in
seville
[Music]
can you feel the cultural potency
bubbling up in this place
this is where rossini's famous opera the
barber of seville is set and also
mozart's marriage of figaro
[Music]
a bit further out is the baroque tobacco
factory in which that dangerous beauty
carmen worked in bizet's opera
what a grand building for a tobacco
factory what a perfect building for an
opera
[Music]
now all this is pertinent because
remember
opera is a baroque invention
and
fusing the arts together like this music
and theater dance and spectacle was a
very baroque thing to do
but that's not why i've brought you here
i wanted to show you
where diego velasquez was born in that
modest house over there in seville's
jewish quarter in 1599
[Music]
velasquez spain's greatest baroque
artist would later pass himself off as a
man of aristocratic
bearing what a haughty presence he
affected in his own art
official painter to the spanish king the
dark dignitary the maestro with the
perfect
moustache but some energetic researchers
have recently been digging up
velasquez's past and it's been
discovered that he was in fact of jewish
origin his family on his father's side
were portuguese jews who'd converted to
christianity what they call around here
conversos
so velazquez the son of a converso could
almost be called the first jewish artist
[Music]
the first
important paintings that velasquez
produced weren't portrayals of kings or
venuses or popes
but humble and very realistic depictions
of ordinary life
they were called
bodagons after the spanish word bodagon
which means a tavern or eating house
[Music]
the young velasquez painted a clutch of
these bodagonis
[Music]
they're brilliant things so atmospheric
and tactile
[Music]
you can hear the eggs sizzling
you can smell the garlic being crushed
[Music]
the brock's fascination with low life
bars
taverns kitchens amounted to an
obsession and it shouldn't really
surprise us remember one of the chief
aims of the counter-reformation was to
address the hearts and the minds of
ordinary people
so art was encouraged to talk their
language and to set its action
in their spaces
[Music]
the bodhigonis have a deeper meaning
realism for realism's sake was never
velasquez's only ambition he was much
too baroque for that
realism's job in his art
is to hook you and pull you in closer to
close enough to see
the painting's real meaning
[Music]
look into the background of the great
kitchen scene in the house of martha and
mary and you'll see that jesus got here
before you
according to the bible jesus came to
visit the two sisters martha and mary
and while martha visited herself in the
kitchen
mary sat at jesus's feet and listened to
his word
when martha complained that her sister
wasn't helping out
jesus stopped her
mary he replied
has chosen to listen
and in the end listening to the word
is more important than preparing the
dinner
it's that baroque message again
life is short
reality is an illusion
and only the word of god lasts forever
velasquez was so strikingly talented
that when he was 23 he was summoned to
madrid by the king himself philip iv and
told to paint the royal portrait
so he left seville
never really came back
but his new employers were about to
discover a splendid baroque rule
you can take a genius out of the bodega
yes
but you can't take the bodiga out of a
genius
the spanish kings the dreaded habsburgs
were a spectacularly awful bunch
dimwitted arrogant
pious
deformed
but god in his wisdom saw something he
liked about them and gave them most of
the known world to rule
a gigantic international empire of three
billion acres spreading from italy to
the netherlands from africa to the
americas
but to rule you need rulers and that's
where it had got tricky
their problem was the usual royal
problem of inbreeding
to keep the money and the titles in the
family the habsburgs had spent too many