The Power of Art - Bernini (complete episode)
-
0:10 - 0:17[church music]
-
0:17 - 0:23She is in ecstasy, all right.
-
0:23 - 0:27Her head is thrown back, her mouth open.
-
0:27 - 0:32Her heavy-lidded eyes are half closed.
-
0:32 - 0:40An angelic hand is delicately uncovering her breast.
-
0:40 - 0:44You have to look.
-
0:44 - 0:57You don't know where to look.
-
0:57 - 1:01A century after Bernini created this sculpture
-
1:01 - 1:05a French art lover doing the tour of Rome came into this church,
-
1:05 - 1:07peered at the spectacle,
-
1:07 - 1:16and said, "Well, if that's divine love, I know all about it."
-
1:16 - 1:18So what is this?
-
1:18 - 1:21Surely not an erotic trance.
-
1:21 - 1:30Not from the most devout sculptor in Rome.
-
1:30 - 1:33No one who was the bosom friend of popes,
-
1:33 - 1:35a pillar of the Catholic establishment,
-
1:35 - 1:42could possibly want us to see a nun in the throes of orgasm.
-
1:42 - 1:45Could he?
-
2:21 - 2:28It's no good pretending that ecstasy isn't a physical as well as a spiritual experience.
-
2:28 - 2:35The passion doesn't work through the body as well as the soul.
-
2:35 - 2:38Bernini knew all about passion.
-
2:38 - 2:43That's what his art was about.
-
2:43 - 2:51It was this physical intensity that would transform sculpture.
-
2:51 - 2:59No one before Bernini had managed to make marble so carnal.
-
2:59 - 3:10In his nimble hands it would flutter and stream, quiver and sweat.
-
3:10 - 3:12His figures weep and shout.
-
3:12 - 3:21Their torsos twist and run and arch themselves in spasms of intense sensation.
-
3:21 - 3:27He could, like an alchemist, change one material into another.
-
3:27 - 3:29Marble into trees.
-
3:29 - 3:31Leaves, hair.
-
3:31 - 3:40And of course, flesh.
-
3:40 - 3:46[woman singing]
-
3:46 - 3:51The whole point of classical sculpture was to make humans less so,
-
3:51 - 3:55to give mortal flesh the heavyweight smoothness of immortality.
-
3:55 - 4:02So many of them end up looking divine but bloodless.
-
4:15 - 4:21But then along comes Bernini, and suddenly even Michelangelo's David looks immobile
-
4:21 - 4:29beside Bernini's whirling, twisting tornado.
-
4:29 - 4:32His sculpture was supposed to convey gravity.
-
4:32 - 4:35Bernini would defy it.
-
4:35 - 4:38His figures break loose from their plinths,
-
4:38 - 4:42flying away into space.
-
4:44 - 4:49[rushing music]
-
4:49 - 4:52For as long as anyone could remember,
-
4:52 - 4:59Gian Lorenzo Bernini had startled the people who mattered.
-
5:01 - 5:07Brought before the pope when he was just 8, he did a lightning sketch of St. Paul's head
-
5:07 - 5:15that prompted the astonished pope to tip the little boy as the next Michelangelo.
-
5:17 - 5:21His father, Pietro, was a sculptor from Florence,
-
5:21 - 5:25seldom better than competent, and sometimes worse.
-
5:25 - 5:31But in his son, he knew a good thing when he saw it.
-
5:31 - 5:35"Watch out, Signor Bernini," an admiring cardinal said,
-
5:35 - 5:42"The boy will surpass his master."
-
5:42 - 5:45So, fast out of the starting blocks,
-
5:45 - 5:49our little prodigy -
-
5:53 - 5:56Here's a playful tour de force.
-
5:56 - 6:01Two little angels embrace in wide-eyed innocence.
-
6:01 - 6:04Bernini did this in his teens.
-
6:04 - 6:10He kept it on display on the landing of his house throughout his life.
-
6:10 - 6:15And this is his goat, Analthea, and the infant Jupiter.
-
6:15 - 6:25A standard bit of mythology transformed into a romp with the shaggiest nanny goat in sculpture.
-
6:25 - 6:30What makes these little figures burst from their dull mythological subject matter?
-
6:30 - 6:33They have the hot breath of life in them.
-
6:33 - 6:37Lusty, mischievous, nursery school naughtiness.
-
6:37 - 6:45[choral singing]
-
6:47 - 6:54Bernini arrived in Rome in 1605.
-
6:54 - 7:03Just at the time Caravaggio's punchy street dramas were electrifying the church.
-
7:08 - 7:12Giving it a new vision of how to move the flock.
-
7:12 - 7:20No more remote saints. Instead, the shock theatre of the earthy passions.
-
7:20 - 7:26Salvation in the guts.
-
7:26 - 7:29So how do you top Caravaggio?
-
7:29 - 7:32Answer: You cant.
-
7:32 - 7:37But in sculpture.
-
7:42 - 7:48This is St. Lawrence being barbecued alive for his Christian beliefs.
-
7:48 - 7:55Bernini was 16 when he did this.
-
7:55 - 8:00He's trying to catch the moment of transcendent pain.
-
8:00 - 8:08When - if we believe the legends - St. Lawrence turns to his executioners and says, in a moment of macabre drollery,
-
8:08 - 8:13"Right, turn me over boys. This side's done."
-
8:13 - 8:18No wonder he became the patron saint of cooks!
-
8:19 - 8:23But there's something serious going on here.
-
8:23 - 8:31As Lawrence's hand touches the flame, a mysterious transformation takes place.
-
8:31 - 8:38The chronicler said the smell of scorched flesh turned fragrant.
-
8:38 - 8:42Pain and sweetness become one.
-
8:42 - 8:47Torment becomes ecstacy.
-
8:47 - 8:57A rehearsal perhaps, for a sweet ordeal to come.
-
8:57 - 8:59He loved playing with fire, did Bernini.
-
8:59 - 9:02Couldn't stop himself.
-
9:02 - 9:05Here he is as a damned soul.
-
9:05 - 9:08It's a self-portrait.
-
9:08 - 9:13Bernini has scorched his own arm in a naked flame, screaming in the mirror
-
9:13 - 9:18to get the expression just right.
-
9:18 - 9:27An extremist for his art, then, but also perhaps someone capable of impulsive acts of violence.
-
9:27 - 9:37Still, it's a drama of the flesh no one, not even Michelangelo, had made quite so gripping.
-
9:37 - 9:46[glorious choral singing]
-
9:48 - 9:54It was enough to make one bigwig on the Roman scene - Cardinal Scipione Borghese -
-
9:54 - 9:58want to adopt Gian Lorenzo as his personal staff property.
-
9:58 - 10:05Someone who'd make his fabulous new villa up here on the Pinchion hill THE place to see great art.
-
10:05 - 10:10How the other red hats would gnash their teeth in envy!
-
10:18 - 10:26There was something larger than life about Scipione Borghese.
-
10:26 - 10:35The bull-like neck and head sat atop a jumbo body.
-
10:35 - 10:41Sly Bernini. Using a button that can't quite make it through its hole
-
10:41 - 10:50to give us a feeling for the flesh tight-packed into the satin.
-
10:50 - 10:56The holy man of the church is, above all, a physical presence.
-
10:56 - 11:01He looks more like a chief than His Eminence.
-
11:01 - 11:05What he was after, Bernini said, was a speaking likeness
-
11:05 - 11:10because he thought that people gave themselves away most characteristically
-
11:10 - 11:15either just before or after they spoke.
-
11:17 - 11:21So he works his magic on Scipione.
-
11:21 - 11:25The little fringe poking out from the cardinal's hat,
-
11:25 - 11:26the chipmunk's cheeks,
-
11:26 - 11:30the fleshy blubbery lips.
-
11:30 - 11:36Scipione's nose catching the light in such a way as to suggest a film of sweat,
-
11:36 - 11:44the natural effusion of a big man in a hot city.
-
11:49 - 11:54Rome. The holy metropolis buzzing with worldly ambition.
-
11:54 - 11:59For the church aristocracy it's not just the money you've got that counts.
-
11:59 - 12:02It's also the art.
-
12:02 - 12:06Painters, sculptors and architects are angling for patrons.
-
12:06 - 12:10And the Rothschilds and the Sarches of their day, the popes and cardinals
-
12:10 - 12:16are gambling on the next prize genius.
-
12:24 - 12:29Bernini, of course, has everything it takes to succeed.
-
12:29 - 12:31He's witty, charming,
-
12:31 - 12:33extremely well-connected,
-
12:33 - 12:35frighteningly cultured,
-
12:35 - 12:37ferociously disciplined,
-
12:37 - 12:40always delivers when he says he will,
-
12:40 - 12:47and he doesn't drink.
-
12:47 - 12:55In other words, the opposite of Caravaggio.
-
12:55 - 12:57And how do we know all this?
-
12:57 - 13:02Well, someone had noted Bernini's every move - Filippo Baldinucci,
-
13:02 - 13:06minor painter, gossip and art critic.
-
13:06 - 13:11Not that important in himself, but someone who'd collected everything he could
-
13:11 - 13:13from those who knew Bernini,
-
13:13 - 13:18and turned it into his first proper biography.
-
13:18 - 13:39
-
13:39 - 13:42This is Apollo and Daphne.
-
13:42 - 13:47It's a story of sexual hunting.
-
13:47 - 13:50Apollo wants the nymph, Daphne.
-
13:50 - 13:54She definitely doesn't want him.
-
13:54 - 13:57He runs after her,
-
13:57 - 13:59and just as he's about to grab her
-
13:59 - 14:06the gods answer her prayers by turning her into a laurel tree.
-
14:06 - 14:10It's all action sculpture.
-
14:10 - 14:19Apollo, breaking his breathless run, his cape and his hair still flying in the wind,
-
14:19 - 14:25Daphne, who's cornered, isn't rooted to the spot, except botanically.
-
14:25 - 14:33And seems to be climbing into the air, her mouth open wide in a scream.
-
14:33 - 14:44Hair and fingers already metamorphosing into leafy twigs.
-
14:44 - 14:49But the tease of the drama is the silky nude
-
14:49 - 15:00that Bernini's made available to us, exactly as she disappears inside her protective casing of tree bark.
-
15:00 - 15:07A painfully thwarted consummation.
-
15:10 - 15:14It's not just me. A French cardinal said he wouldn't have it in his house
-
15:14 - 15:20because such a beautiful nude would be sure to arouse anybody who saw it.
-
15:20 - 15:26Bernini is said to have been really pleased when he heard that.
-
15:28 - 15:33Bernini is in his early 20's, a superstar.
-
15:33 - 15:39Someone on whom the mighty and the powerful almost fawn.
-
15:39 - 15:43One pope, Gregory XV, makes him a knight.
-
15:43 - 15:48So Bernini is known ever after as the Cavaliere.
-
15:48 - 15:53The next pope, Urban VIII, makes him his best friend.
-
15:53 - 15:57There's a story that when Cardinal Barberini became Pope Urban VIII,
-
15:57 - 16:01he called Bernini into his apartment and said,
-
16:01 - 16:39
-
16:39 - 16:46Bernini is Rome's supreme virtuoso, the emperor of the arts, and not just in sculpture.
-
16:46 - 16:50He's also a painter, a master builder, and a playwright.
-
16:50 - 17:02And he has everything - charisma, swarthy good looks, money, status, and enemies.
-
17:05 - 17:13This is Francesco Borromini - taciturn, neurotic, introverted, depressive.
-
17:13 - 17:19A man of absolutely no social graces whatsoever.
-
17:19 - 17:25For good and for ill, Borromini would play a pivotal role in Bernini's life.
-
17:25 - 17:28The two of them would trip over each other's ambitions,
-
17:28 - 17:36spur each other on to ever-greater heights, ever-greater risks.
-
17:36 - 17:40Borromini was a brilliant architect.
-
17:40 - 17:47He made walls and balconies curve and bulge, where they had no right to.
-
17:47 - 17:54Ceilings that sing and throb.
-
17:54 - 17:57Here is, exaggerating perspective.
-
17:57 - 18:01Making the columns at the back much smaller than they should be,
-
18:01 - 18:05in order to make the space much deeper than it really is.
-
18:05 - 18:11It's all eye wizardry.
-
18:18 - 18:25If two men were responsible for creating the look of the rock Rome, for making Rome Rome,
-
18:25 - 18:33those two men were Borromini and Bernini.
-
18:35 - 18:39And, they hated each other!
-
18:42 - 18:49At first, it was a one-way rivalry - Borromini resented Bernini's popularity,
-
18:49 - 18:53his hogging of the limelight.
-
18:53 - 18:55It's a bit like Mozart and Salieri,
-
18:55 - 18:59only there's no Salieri here, no weaker talent.
-
18:59 - 19:04They're both geniuses.
-
19:04 - 19:09Look at these two churches, just 200 yards away from each other in Rome.
-
19:09 - 19:15One by Bernini, the other by Borromini.
-
19:15 - 19:20Here's the Borromini church - St. Carlo delle Quattro Fontane.
-
19:20 - 19:24It's the work of an architect chess master.
-
19:24 - 19:30Pure and austere, just brick and stucco, no color or sculpture allowed.
-
19:30 - 19:36Just mind-blowing designs worked out from the higher geometry.
-
19:36 - 19:44The heavenly order of shapes and numbers.
-
19:44 - 19:47Now, here's the Bernini church.
-
19:47 - 19:57Loads of color, troweled on, as if it were a stage set with full theatrical lighting.
-
19:57 - 19:59It's all look-at-me razzle dazzle,
-
19:59 - 20:04showy, visceral and sexy - just like him.
-
20:14 - 20:20The rivalry between Bernini and Borromini started in earnest in 1624,
-
20:20 - 20:26when someone had to be appointed the new architect for St. Peter's,
-
20:26 - 20:32and get to build the baldacchino, the enormous canopy over the tomb of St. Peter,
-
20:32 - 20:37located directly under Michelangelo's great dome.
-
20:37 - 20:41It's the plummiest job in town.
-
20:41 - 20:46Now at this stage Borromini was far more qualified than Bernini.
-
20:46 - 20:50He'd trained as an architect and was the obvious candidate for the job.
-
20:50 - 20:51But guess who got it?
-
20:51 - 20:56Mr. Charming - Gian Lorenzo Bernini.
-
20:56 - 20:59What? The biggest job in Rome? And he gives it to him and not me?
-
20:59 - 21:01Just because he's the pope's best friend?
-
21:01 - 21:05I mean, the man knows damn all about buildings.
-
21:05 - 21:11Borromini must have been furious.
-
21:13 - 21:21Of course, the engineering problems of forging the great canopy, raising this twisty gilt-bronzed monster
-
21:21 - 21:25were a serious stretch for Bernini's competence.
-
21:25 - 21:30So, wisely, he gets help.
-
21:30 - 21:35He turns to Borromini, who had no choice but to help.
-
21:35 - 21:39It was for the greater good of the church, after all.
-
21:39 - 21:44Architecture has always been a collaborative exercise.
-
21:44 - 21:53So it's not surprising to find that virtually all the drawings for the balacchino are by Borromini.
-
21:53 - 21:55Does he get the credit he deserves?
-
21:55 - 21:57Does he, hell?
-
21:57 - 22:05And that, Francesco Borromoni neither forgives nor forgets.
-
22:05 - 22:11It's an unappealing trait, this ungenerous instinct for monopolizing the glory.
-
22:11 - 22:15And it will come back to bite Bernini.
-
22:15 - 22:18It's not just Borromini who feels it.
-
22:18 - 22:23The assistant who did that fine leaf work on Daphne's leaves
-
22:23 - 22:25is so angry at not getting his due
-
22:25 - 22:32that he walked out of the project in a rage.
-
22:34 - 22:41But then the Cavaliere Bernini always did have a cavalier way with his assistants.
-
22:41 - 22:44
-
22:44 - 22:47His own mother complained.
-
22:47 - 22:52So he took what he needed, technical expertise, grinding toil,
-
22:52 - 22:58and in the case of one of his assistants, Bonarelli, his wife.
-
23:03 - 23:08Her name is Costanza, Constance.
-
23:08 - 23:14Did she and Bernini have a laugh in bed about that?
-
23:14 - 23:20Here she is in 1637, at the height of their affair.
-
23:23 - 23:29You can see he can't get enough of her.
-
23:29 - 23:33And from the intensity of all this brimming desire
-
23:33 - 23:38comes an entirely new kind of European sculpture.
-
23:41 - 23:45Before Costanza, busts had been entirely respectable,
-
23:45 - 23:50and they were usually reserved for tombs.
-
23:50 - 23:58Only the Romans, a long time before, had used sculpture for informal portraits.
-
24:00 - 24:03But informal doesn't right do it for Costanza.
-
24:03 - 24:05Does it?
-
24:05 - 24:06How about intimate?
-
24:06 - 24:10For this is a portrait of a woman whose passion is written on her face and her body.
-
24:10 - 24:18Whose flaring temper just adds fuel to her lover's fire.
-
24:22 - 24:30This is what we mean by lovingly carved.
-
24:30 - 24:36It's as though Bernini was reliving his caresses with his chisel,
-
24:36 - 24:38the falling away of the blouse,
-
24:38 - 24:48perhaps the single sexiest invitation in all European sculpture.
-
24:48 - 24:51There's something else unique about this sculpture.
-
24:51 - 24:54It's the celebration of a spitfire.
-
24:54 - 24:58Costanza Bonorelli may have been the wife of a lowly assistant sculptor
-
24:58 - 25:01but she came from a proud old family.
-
25:01 - 25:08the Piccolomini.
-
25:08 - 25:14So her jaw is firm, the rosebud mouth is in the act of speaking,
-
25:14 - 25:19and not deferentially.
-
25:19 - 25:22Everything that was supposed to define womanhood -
-
25:22 - 25:27demure, chaste serenity - is junked for Costanza.
-
25:27 - 25:29She's a wild thing.
-
25:29 - 25:37And the sculptor is hooked on her temper.
-
25:41 - 25:45But it was not Costanza's temper that would end up undoing Bernini.
-
25:45 - 25:47It was his own.
-
25:47 - 25:52Despite all the genteel charm, Bernini was known to have a low boiling point.
-
25:52 - 26:02Underneath all those social graces was the bloodthirsty temper of a Neopolitan gangster.
-
26:02 - 26:10And in one unbelievably shocking episode, he lets it rip.
-
26:10 - 26:13It started with a rumor.
-
26:13 - 26:18Costanza, it's whispered, was not so constant after all.
-
26:18 - 26:25Seems she has a thing about the Bernini boys, since she's sleeping not just with Gian Lorenzo,
-
26:25 - 26:31But with his younger brother, Luigi.
-
26:31 - 26:39
-
26:39 - 26:47Oh, it's hard to believe, I know, that anyone would want to get their hands on anyone except Mr. Fabulous himself,
-
26:47 - 26:54But could the rumors be true?
-
26:55 - 26:58The trap is set that evening.
-
26:58 - 27:03Gian Lorenzo says breezily how he has to go off to the country the next day.
-
27:03 - 27:06So he won't be in town.
-
27:06 - 27:09But he doesn't go into the country, does he?
-
27:09 - 27:20Instead, early next morning he goes to Costanza's house, and waits.
-
27:23 - 27:27Luigi emerges. So does Costanza.
-
27:27 - 27:33That swelling breast Bernini had lovingly carved flattened against Luigi's chest
-
27:33 - 27:39in a passionate embrace.
-
27:42 - 27:47There's a chase through the streets, across the piazzas and over the bridges
-
27:47 - 27:53right into St. Peter's itself,
-
27:53 - 28:03where, its official architect does his best to murder his own brother.
-
28:03 - 28:08Gentleman Sir grabs an iron bar and smashes it against Luigi's body,
-
28:08 - 28:14breaking two ribs.
-
28:21 - 28:24He's famous as a miracle worker.
-
28:24 - 28:32This time the miracle is that he hasn't killed his own brother.
-
28:32 - 28:38It takes a message from their mother to the papal cops to separate them.
-
28:38 - 28:45
-
28:45 - 28:47And that's not the end of it.
-
28:47 - 28:54That afternoon Gian Lorenzo sends a servant to Costanza's house.
-
28:54 - 28:56He doesn't cut her throat.
-
28:56 - 29:04Instead, he slashes her perfect face to ribbons.
-
29:04 - 29:08So the man who has cut stone to create beauty
-
29:08 - 29:15has cut flesh to destroy it.
-
29:19 - 29:26And what do you suppose is Bernini's punishment for grievous bodily harm and attempted murder?
-
29:26 - 29:28Oh, a really stiff sentence.
-
29:28 - 29:31A 3000 scudi fine.
-
29:31 - 29:34Except that his pal, the pope, waives it.
-
29:34 - 29:36"Naughty, naughty," says the pope.
-
29:36 - 29:38"This mustn't happen again.
-
29:38 - 29:42So I sentence you to be married.
-
29:42 - 29:46And, by the way, she just happens to be the most beautiful girl in Rome.
-
29:46 - 29:49That should keep you out of mischief!"
-
29:49 - 29:53Papal wink. Papal nudge.
-
29:56 - 29:59So Bernini is married off to Catalina Tetzio,
-
29:59 - 30:03daughter of a Roman lawyer.
-
30:03 - 30:08For his part in the fight, brother Luigi is banished to Bologna.
-
30:08 - 30:11Everyone else goes to jail.
-
30:11 - 30:14The servant who did the razor job,
-
30:14 - 30:17and, insult added to injury,
-
30:17 - 30:19Costanza herself.
-
30:19 - 30:26Convicted of fornication and adultery.
-
30:26 - 30:28And what happened to the bust?
-
30:28 - 30:32Well, Bernini's new wife wouldn't have it in the house.
-
30:32 - 30:39Which is just as well since Gian Lorenzo couldn't bear to look at it either.
-
30:39 - 30:43He might, I suppose, have smashed it.
-
30:43 - 30:51But luckily a Medici buyer from Florence snapped it up.
-
30:51 - 30:56Which is why we're looking at it here, in the Bargello Museum in Florence.
-
30:56 - 31:05The Costanza that once was, and for us always will be.
-
31:05 - 31:10[soprano]
-
31:15 - 31:18And you're thinking, "I don't care how good his sculpture is.
-
31:18 - 31:21I don't care how important his art is.
-
31:21 - 31:24What an absolute bastard!
-
31:24 - 31:32Please, tell me, he doesn't get off scot-free."
-
31:32 - 31:38Well, strangely enough, it's exactly from this moment of the crime against Costanza
-
31:38 - 31:50that things go swiftly downhill for the cavaliere untouchable.
-
31:50 - 31:55And it all went wrong in the place that mattered most for Bernini.
-
31:55 - 32:02The place that made, or broke, artists and architects.
-
32:02 - 32:09The Cathedral of St. Peter's.
-
32:13 - 32:16This is the facade of St. Peter's we all know,
-
32:16 - 32:24but the aggressively confident 17th century popes didn't want to stop with this.
-
32:24 - 32:28They wanted two great bell towers at each corner,
-
32:28 - 32:31above where we now see the clocks.
-
32:31 - 32:37It was those bells, after all, that would summon the faithful for papal blessings,
-
32:37 - 32:43and make the Christian dream real.
-
32:43 - 32:49But in the middle, of course, was Michelangelo's great dome.
-
32:49 - 32:54So the first designs for the towers made them respectfully low.
-
32:54 - 33:01Safe, squat, one-story affairs.
-
33:01 - 33:08Then along comes Bernini, constitutionally incapable of deference.
-
33:08 - 33:12"My towers are going to be taller than your dome," he says.
-
33:12 - 33:19"Three stories tall, in fact. Almost 70 meters above the original pedestals.
-
33:19 - 33:26Six times heavier than the original towers."
-
33:26 - 33:35Problem was, though, Bernini's towers were about to be built on swampy ground.
-
33:38 - 33:42It's not that Bernini didn't know about this before he got started.
-
33:42 - 33:50It's just that he's surrounded by yes-men who tell him what he wants to hear.
-
33:50 - 33:55That building tall towers on dotty ground is no real problem.
-
33:55 - 34:05What he needs are brutally honest advisors who aren't afraid of spelling out the risks he's taking.
-
34:05 - 34:11There was one person who knew that building a tall, heavy tower on unstable foundations
-
34:11 - 34:14was asking for trouble.
-
34:14 - 34:21And that person was Borromini.
-
34:21 - 34:27But it seemed to be beneath Bernini's dignity to ask his rival for advice.
-
34:27 - 34:31So, without the benefit of Borromini's criticism
-
34:31 - 34:39Bernini sails straight into disaster.
-
34:39 - 34:49In July 1641 Bernini unveiled his first tower to the public.
-
34:49 - 34:56Two months later, cracks start to appear.
-
35:00 - 35:10Bernini takes to his bed, won't eat, gets so ill he's reported near death.
-
35:10 - 35:13It gets worse.
-
35:13 - 35:17The cracks aren't just in the foundation of the bell tower,
-
35:17 - 35:24they've spread to the facade of the main church itself.
-
35:24 - 35:49
-
35:49 - 35:53Then, in 1644,disaster.
-
35:53 - 35:58Pope Urban VIII, Bernini's friend and the staunchest supporter of the bell tower, dies.
-
36:04 - 36:12There's a new pope, Innocent X, and he sees it as his job to get rid of all the old favorites,
-
36:12 - 36:14like Bernini.
-
36:14 - 36:22After all, he has a new favorite, Francesco Borromini.
-
36:22 - 36:26So, after 15 years in Bernini's shadow,
-
36:26 - 36:33Borromini's moment for revenge has at last arrived.
-
36:33 - 36:39An inquiry is set up to deal with Bernini's towers.
-
36:39 - 36:43Borromini submits detailed evidence,
-
36:43 - 36:53a lovingly rendered drawing of Bernini's disaster.
-
37:00 - 37:01
-
37:01 - 37:05"Well, what do you expect?" says Borromini.
-
37:05 - 37:08The tower's too tall, too heavy for its base supports.
-
37:08 - 37:13It's too unwieldy. It's built recklessly on swampy ground.
-
37:13 - 37:17It's amazing, actually, it hasn't collapsed already.
-
37:17 - 37:20It's all very well going digging beneath the tower after the offense to see
-
37:20 - 37:23how serious the damage is.
-
37:23 - 37:28If he'd have asked me, since I know a bit about building, I would have told him,
-
37:28 - 37:32but he didn't.
-
37:36 - 37:45On the 23rd of February 1646, a meeting was held at the Vatican to discuss the fate of Bernini's south tower,
-
37:45 - 37:50but the pope had already made his decision.
-
37:50 - 37:56Demolish it.
-
37:56 - 37:57
-
37:57 - 38:00The demolition takes 11 months.
-
38:00 - 38:05If Bernini had been anywhere near St. Peter's he would have seen it and heard it.
-
38:05 - 38:09The winches, the pulleys, the columns stacked on the roof.
-
38:09 - 38:12Down came the bell tower.
-
38:12 - 38:15And down with it came Gian Lorenzo Bernini,
-
38:15 - 38:18from the heights of fame and reputation
-
38:18 - 38:22to something like a laughingstock.
-
38:22 - 38:27
-
38:27 - 38:31[church bells]
-
38:31 - 38:34It's 1648. Bernini is 50.
-
38:34 - 38:38Old by the standards of the time.
-
38:38 - 38:43So how did he survive the humiliation?
-
38:43 - 38:49One visiting English student has him collapsing into despair.
-
38:49 - 38:53Others have him buckling down to work.
-
38:53 - 38:58He still does get commissions, but not from the biggest hitters in Rome,
-
38:58 - 39:00not any more.
-
39:00 - 39:06It would take a miracle now for him to redeem himself.
-
39:06 - 39:06
-
39:06 - 39:08And then -
-
39:08 - 39:12that miracle arrived.
-
39:26 - 39:32A moment of mind-boggling drama.
-
39:32 - 39:40A moment that wavers between mystery and indecency.
-
39:40 - 39:48The body of a saint, penetrated.
-
39:48 - 39:56[dramatic orchestral music]
-
39:56 - 39:59The arrow, withdrawn from its passage,
-
39:59 - 40:03poised to strike again.
-
40:03 - 40:07Her pain indistinguishable from pleasure.
-
40:07 - 40:10The gasping woman, levitating,
-
40:10 - 40:20defying gravity on rippling cushions of stone.
-
40:20 - 40:22So, who was it, then?
-
40:22 - 40:32That gave Bernini the chance to portray a saint in a way no one else had ever dared?
-
40:34 - 40:40You can't imagine a more respectable patron than Cardinal Federico Cornaro,
-
40:40 - 40:43who came from an old aristocratic clan
-
40:43 - 40:49that wanted to build a family chapel in the Church of Santa Maria Della Vittoria.
-
40:49 - 40:52He would have known about St. Teresa of Avila.
-
40:52 - 40:57Everyone did.
-
40:59 - 41:04She'd died in her native Spain, in 1582.
-
41:04 - 41:07But there was something - many things actually -
-
41:07 - 41:12which made Teresa an awkward fit for sainthood.
-
41:12 - 41:18Not least, her levitations.
-
41:20 - 41:30>> A rapture came over me so suddenly, it almost lifted me out of myself.
-
41:30 - 41:43I heard these words, "Now, I want you to speak not with men, but with angels."
-
41:48 - 41:55It's not surprising, then, that of all the modern saints it was Teresa who still had no chapel devoted to her.
-
41:55 - 42:00The Cornari dynasty, who were patrons of her austere order of nuns,
-
42:00 - 42:02the Barefoot Carmelites,
-
42:02 - 42:07jumped in and presented Bernini with the biggest challenge of his career,
-
42:07 - 42:11but also the chance for a spectacular comeback.
-
42:11 - 42:18It was the most daring drama of the body that he, or any other sculptor in the history of art,
-
42:18 - 42:20had ever conceived.
-
42:20 - 42:25Much less executed.
-
42:35 - 42:38Bernini would certainly have known about St. Teresa.
-
42:38 - 42:44Her autobiography was a best-seller in Catholic Rome.
-
42:44 - 42:50Like everyone else, he would have been startled by the earthy directness of her story,
-
42:50 - 42:55but above all, he would have been electrified by those moments
-
42:55 - 42:59in which Teresa, in the most graphic words imaginable,
-
42:59 - 43:04describes what happens to her.
-
43:07 - 43:13>> Very close to me, an angel appeared in human form.
-
43:13 - 43:18In his hands I saw a large golden spear,
-
43:18 - 43:25and at its iron tip there seemed to be a point of fire.
-
43:27 - 43:33I felt as if he'd plunged these into my heart several times,
-
43:33 - 43:40so that it penetrated all the way to my entrails.
-
43:40 - 43:45When he drew it out, he seemed to draw them out with it,
-
43:45 - 43:53and it left me totally inflamed, with a great love for God.
-
43:57 - 44:06The pain was so severe that it made me moan several times.
-
44:15 - 44:19Now if there was one thing that Bernini was not,
-
44:19 - 44:20it was crude.
-
44:20 - 44:25He understood perfectly well that when Teresa wrote of her raptures
-
44:25 - 44:27she meant the longing of her soul.
-
44:27 - 44:30for a consummated union with God.
-
44:30 - 44:36It was the way she wrote about it, that made it seem as if her soul and her body
-
44:36 - 44:40were the same thing.
-
44:43 - 44:50All of Bernini's greatest body dramas had featured figures twisting in ascent.
-
44:50 - 44:53Persephone's flight from Pluto,
-
44:53 - 45:00Daphne rising to the sky as if to escape stony doom,
-
45:00 - 45:04Now it was time for him to make Teresa levitate.
-
45:04 - 45:12This time, not an escape from penetration, but in craving for it.
-
45:17 - 45:21It was time to forget about euphemisms.
-
45:21 - 45:27The only way that Bernini could possibly communicate the flood of her sensation
-
45:27 - 45:32was to make visible what he knew of bodily ecstasy.
-
45:32 - 45:38The face of a women at the height of sexual euphoria.
-
45:38 - 45:43It's as if he's turning his own intimate knowledge of carnal sin
-
45:43 - 45:47into carnal blessing.
-
45:47 - 45:50So, of course, this isn't the real Teresa.
-
45:50 - 45:53Middle aged nun, rising up her cell wall,
-
45:53 - 45:57with sisters hanging onto her habit.
-
45:57 - 46:02No, this woman is unforgettably beautiful!
-
46:02 - 46:08A match for the exquisite seraph angel lover.
-
46:08 - 46:11They are in a way - a couple.
-
46:11 - 46:15Smiley Face is pointing his arrow not at her breast at all,
-
46:15 - 46:21but rather, lower down the torso.
-
46:26 - 46:32But how to make visible both their union and the tide of engulfing feeling
-
46:32 - 46:34washing through Teresa?
-
46:34 - 46:40And here, Bernini has the crucial insight of the whole piece.
-
46:41 - 46:45He turns her body inside out.
-
46:45 - 46:48So that her covering, her habit -
-
46:48 - 46:51the symbol of chastity and containment,
-
46:51 - 46:57becomes a representation of what's going on inside her.
-
47:01 - 47:12It's the accomplice of her helpless dissolution into liquid bliss.
-
47:17 - 47:21It is, in fact, the climax itself.
-
47:21 - 47:24A storm surge of churning sensation,
-
47:24 - 47:30cresting and falling as if the model had been molten.
-
47:30 - 47:35And these billows pour themselves from the smiling angel
-
47:35 - 47:38directly into Teresa's robe,
-
47:38 - 47:42where they join an ocean of heaving waves
-
47:42 - 47:51the folds into hollows and crevices like surf breaking on a shore.
-
47:58 - 48:01There's nothing furtive about any of this.
-
48:01 - 48:07Bernini wants us to look, and look hard.
-
48:07 - 48:11So much that he surrounds the performance with an audience,
-
48:11 - 48:15members of the Cornari family,
-
48:15 - 48:24some watching the show, some chatting about what it might mean.
-
48:24 - 48:26There's every kind of show lighting -
-
48:26 - 48:34fake sunbeams, hidden lights at the back.
-
48:34 - 48:37And, as Teresa climbs to her heights,
-
48:37 - 48:41the earth really does move!
-
48:41 - 48:43Look down here.
-
48:43 - 48:50The ground is opening and out pop the dead.
-
48:50 - 48:55Everything is shaking and quaking.
-
48:55 - 48:58Even the columns of the little chapel.
-
48:58 - 49:06And here Bernini adds the coup de grace to all those critics who said he couldn't do architecture.
-
49:06 - 49:14At least Borromini, who specialized in weird counterintuitive bulges and curves.
-
49:14 - 49:16"Right," said Bernini.
-
49:16 - 49:19"I'll build you a temple that not just curves and bulges,
-
49:19 - 49:25but actually explodes through its columns from the sheer uncontainable force of the drama
-
49:25 - 49:29going on inside."
-
49:33 - 49:38The most ambitious thing he'd ever attempted, the bell tower of St. Peter's,
-
49:38 - 49:46had come crashing down in ignominious failure.
-
49:46 - 49:49Now it was time for Teresa to rise up
-
49:49 - 49:59and carry with her the resurrected reputation of the disgraced cavaliere, Bernini.
-
50:03 - 50:12And you feel him, when he's done, standing back and saying, "Right. Top that."
-
50:12 - 50:18No one ever could.
-
50:27 - 50:30The Cornaro loved their chapel.
-
50:30 - 50:3312,000 scudi. No problem.
-
50:33 - 50:35Worth every scudo.
-
50:35 - 50:37Word got round.
-
50:37 - 50:38The dazzler was back.
-
50:38 - 50:41Even the sour old pope, Innocent X,
-
50:41 - 50:43began to sweeten on Bernini
-
50:43 - 50:51as Borromini's skulked unhappily through the Vatican corridors.
-
50:59 - 51:03It's not that Borromini never gets commissions from the pope again,
-
51:03 - 51:10it's just that it was Bernini who triumphed.
-
51:10 - 51:12So wherever you go in Rome now,
-
51:12 - 51:17you're really in the Cavaliere city.
-
51:17 - 51:21As you approach St. Peter's over the Ponte Sant'Angelo
-
51:21 - 51:25you're in the company of Bernini's angels.
-
51:32 - 51:36And even though he was denied his bell towers at St. Peter's,
-
51:36 - 51:39he did something much better.
-
51:39 - 51:44The Colonnades, which lead us towards the great church,
-
51:44 - 51:50its arms gathering believers to the bosom of the faith.
-
51:55 - 51:59Inside the church, past the baldacchino,
-
51:59 - 52:03you're drawn towards Bernini's great lives.
-
52:03 - 52:09The Holy Spirit, at the seat of St. Peter.
-
52:11 - 52:17Popes came and went, but Bernini endured.
-
52:17 - 52:20He gave up sinning, became a model Christian,
-
52:20 - 52:27fathered 11 children, never strayed again, they said.
-
52:27 - 52:30And we're told that when he was troubled,
-
52:30 - 52:34he'd be found at the Church of Santa Maria Della Vittoria,
-
52:34 - 52:41praying before his shrine to St. Teresa.
-
52:41 - 52:45And what of the others in this story?
-
52:45 - 52:48Costanza with the cut-up face
-
52:48 - 52:58eventually got out of jail, with the help of her long-suffering husband.
-
52:58 - 53:02Borromini went on to become the great master builder,
-
53:02 - 53:06of evermore eccentric and brilliant churches.
-
53:06 - 53:10But in the end he never really felt he got true recognition,
-
53:10 - 53:15and he never got over Bernini's comeback.
-
53:15 - 53:18Eaten up by jealousy and disappointment,
-
53:18 - 53:25he ended up by committing suicide.
-
53:25 - 53:28And what of brother Luigi?
-
53:28 - 53:31Well, he returned to Rome after his exile
-
53:31 - 53:35and deep into his sixties he was at it again,
-
53:35 - 53:39this time caught in flagrante delicto in, guess where?
-
53:39 - 53:44The precincts of the holy Church of St. Peter's.
-
53:44 - 53:46where, according to court records,
-
53:46 - 53:55he was arrested for acts of violent sodomy.
-
53:55 - 54:00To clear the family name and secure a papal pardon for his brother,
-
54:00 - 54:04Bernini created this - the blessed Ludovica Albertoni.
- Title:
- The Power of Art - Bernini (complete episode)
- Description:
-
The complete series: http://gekos.no/workshop/video.html
Perhaps the greatest sculptor of the 17th century and an outstanding architect as well. Bernini created the Baroque style of sculpture and developed it to such an extent that other artists are of only minor importance in a discussion of that style.
A student of Classical sculpture, Bernini possessed the unique ability to capture, in marble, the essence of a narrative moment with a dramatic naturalistic realism which was almost shocking. This ensured that he effectively became the successor of Michelangelo, far outshining other sculptors of his generation, including his rival, Alessandro Algardi. His talent extended beyond the confines of his sculpture to consideration of the setting in which it would be situated; his ability to synthesise sculpture, painting and architecture into a coherent conceptual and visual whole has been termed by the art historian, Irving Lavin, the 'unity of the visual arts'. - Video Language:
- English
- Duration:
- 54:09
![]() |
jaxala1 edited English subtitles for The Power of Art - Bernini (complete episode) | |
![]() |
jaxala1 edited English subtitles for The Power of Art - Bernini (complete episode) | |
![]() |
jaxala1 edited English subtitles for The Power of Art - Bernini (complete episode) | |
![]() |
jaxala1 edited English subtitles for The Power of Art - Bernini (complete episode) | |
![]() |
jaxala1 edited English subtitles for The Power of Art - Bernini (complete episode) | |
![]() |
jaxala1 edited English subtitles for The Power of Art - Bernini (complete episode) | |
![]() |
jaxala1 edited English subtitles for The Power of Art - Bernini (complete episode) | |
![]() |
jaxala1 edited English subtitles for The Power of Art - Bernini (complete episode) |