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Why is this painting so captivating? - James Earle and Christina Bozsik

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    On first glance, this painting might not
    seem terribly special,
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    but it's actually one of the most analyzed
    paintings in the history of art.
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    It's called "Las Meninas,"
    or "The Maids of Honor,"
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    painted by Diego Velázquez in 1656,
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    and it depicts a scene in the life
    of the Spanish Royal Court.
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    A well-dressed child princess refuses
    a glass of water from a handmaid,
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    while a dwarf teases a dog.
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    A second dwarf stands next to them,
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    while the artist himself
    pauses at his canvas.
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    Two more people whisper in the background,
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    while a third appears
    to be exiting the room,
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    and why wouldn't he when there seems
    to be so little going on?
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    Even the dog looks bored.
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    But look more closely.
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    The two people reflected
    in the blurry mirror at the back,
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    easily missed at first glance,
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    are none other than
    King Philip IV and Queen Mariana,
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    seemingly changing the scene from a simple
    depiction of court life
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    to that of a royal portrait.
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    And with this piece of information,
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    we can begin to understand far more
    about the painting
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    and why it has captivated viewers
    for centuries.
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    First, there's the historical context.
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    When "Las Meninas" was painted
    at the end of Philip's reign,
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    the Spanish Empire
    was in a period of decline,
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    having suffered defeat in
    The Thirty Years War,
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    as well as economic
    and political difficulties.
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    The King himself had also
    suffered misfortune,
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    losing both his first wife and his only
    heir to the throne before remarrying.
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    But the painting obscures their struggle
    to provide food for their household.
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    Even the monarch's advanced
    age is concealed
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    through the blurring of the mirror.
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    What we do see in the geometric center
    of the canvas,
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    brightly illuminated by the light
    from the window,
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    in the Infanta Margarita Teresa,
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    the King's only living legitimate child
    at the time.
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    Her glowing and healthy appearance
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    is an idealized view of the struggling
    empire's future.
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    However, the Infanta is not the only
    center of the painting.
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    Through the clever use of perspective,
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    as well as painting the work life-sized,
    on a 10.5 x 9 foot canvas,
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    Velázquez blurs the boundary
    between art and reality,
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    creating the sense of a three-dimensional
    picture that we can walk into.
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    The line between the ceiling and the wall
    converges to the open door,
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    further creating the perception
    of the painting as a physical space
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    seen from the viewer's perspective.
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    In this sense, the audience
    and the real world are the focus,
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    underlined by the three figures
    looking straight at the viewer.
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    But there is still another focal point.
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    The line formed by the light fixtures
    leads to the center of the back wall
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    to the mirror reflecting the royal couple.
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    And its positioning relative to the viewer
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    has led to radically different
    interpretations of the entire work.
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    The mirror could be reflecting the King
    and Queen posing for their portrait,
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    or is it reflecting the canvas?
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    And what do we make of the fact
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    that Velázquez never painted
    the royal portrait implied here?
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    Could the painting actually be
    depicting its own creation instead?
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    With the incorporation of the mirror
    into his work,
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    Velázquez elevated the art of painting
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    from its perception as a simple craft
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    to an intellectual endeavor.
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    With its three competing center points,
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    "Las Meninas" captures the contrast
    between the ideal,
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    the real,
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    and the reflected worlds,
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    maintaining an unresolved tension
    between them to tell a more complex story
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    than any mirror can provide.
Title:
Why is this painting so captivating? - James Earle and Christina Bozsik
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
03:53

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