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Picasso, The Reservoir, Horta de Ebro, 1909

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    (piano music)
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    Voiceover: We're on the fifth floor of the
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    Museum of Modern Art looking at
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    a painting by Pablo Picasso from 1909.
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    From the summer of 1909,
    Horta de Ebro, and it's
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    one of Picasso's critical
    early cubist paintings.
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    Voiceover: It looks very cubist, already.
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    (laughter)
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    I mean, it already looks like a radical
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    departure from Cézanne.
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    But this is two years after
    Les Demoiselles d'Avignon.
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    Voiceover: Yeah.
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    Voiceover: So he's already made that step.
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    Voiceover: He has.
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    This is one of those
    paintings that lives up
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    to the title of the movement, right?
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    Voiceover: Cubism?
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    Voiceover: Yeah.
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    Voiceover: Because it really
    looks like little cubes.
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    Voiceover: It does.
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    Our historical chronology
    is usually that after
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    Desmoiselles, Braque
    really begins to explore
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    Cézanne in very serious ways.
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    Picasso responds to-
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    Voiceover: Follows Braque.
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    Voiceover: Yeah, by way of
    Cézanne, exactly, right.
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    And he'd gone to the
    South of Spain to this
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    very arid environment and you can really
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    get a sense of the terracotta.
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    We're looking at a hilltop town.
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    There's a little water collect down at the
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    bottom right and,
    actually, you can even see
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    the reflection in the
    surface of the water there.
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    Of course what most
    people find so interesting
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    about this painting is his willingness
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    to pull and push perspective.
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    Voiceover: Mm hm.
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    So that we're looking,
    sometimes, at the top
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    of things and the sides of things.
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    From below and from
    above as though we were
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    moving and shifting our
    gaze through the site.
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    Voiceover: Yeah, so
    that the objects become
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    plastic, they become,
    you know, malleable, they
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    become shaped by our
    movement through space
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    and through time.
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    Voiceover: But they're
    also all interconnected.
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    That thing that Picasso,
    and Cézanne started
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    also before him, of interlocking these
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    different planes by
    color so that something
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    that's brown moves into something else
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    that's brown that is a different shape
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    that's the top of a house that moves into
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    the side of a house.
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    So that there's really a kind of loss
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    of the separation of
    different forms in a space.
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    Voiceover: It becomes a synthetic hole.
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    And actually, he's doing
    something else that
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    I think further assists that.
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    If you look at shadow and
    reflection, they become
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    almost objects in space themselves rather
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    than just, sort of, optical phenomena.
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    Voiceover: What do you mean?
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    Voiceover: Well if you
    look, for instance, at some
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    of the doorways in the
    center of the canvas,
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    you can see that there are
    shadows and reflections
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    that cast of it that
    are, in some ways, almost
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    as solid as the objects that are purported
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    to create those optical phenomena, right?
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    So there's almost this leveling of
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    object and the visual.
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    Voiceover: And surface?
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    Voiceover: More than surface.
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    Object and, in a sense, the visual-
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    Voiceover: Phenomena.
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    Voiceover: Phenomena.
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    Something that is pure
    sight and intangible
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    becomes as important in the canvas
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    as a building.
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    Voiceover: Maybe the
    way that we begin to see
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    in Les Demoiselles that the space itself
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    between the figures seems solid.
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    Voiceover: Yes, exactly right.
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    Voiceover: Okay.
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    The other thing that struck me as funny
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    when you said that this was a village
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    was that I imagine sunlight in a landscape
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    and there's no sense of
    it here to me at all.
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    Voiceover: There isn't, you're right.
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    It's funny that light has been ...
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    I mean, light is clearly the thing that
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    constructs form here.
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    Voiceover: Right.
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    Voiceover: You've got shadow, you've got
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    areas of light, but in
    fact, there is no actual-
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    Voiceover: No.
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    Voiceover: Direction.
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    It almost has more to
    do with the subjective
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    experience of one's sight
    as one moves through,
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    the way in which light
    is cast or shadows cast,
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    than what is, in fact, from nature.
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    Voiceover: Right.
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    And the other thing that strikes me is
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    the way that, for
    example, you were talking
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    about those doorways.
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    The one in the center really looks like
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    a doorway into something.
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    But just to the left of
    that, there's something
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    else that seems to be a doorway that also
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    casts a shadow but is also much more
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    obviously a stroke of paint.
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    Voiceover: Right and it almost seems like
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    a positive form in front
    of the building in a sense.
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    Voiceover: Right.
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    And yet it's also a brush stroke.
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    Voiceover: That's right.
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    That's wonderful.
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    So there's this constant
    sort of dislocation
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    of the way in which form is constructed.
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    So it's not just about
    the rendering of form,
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    it's not just the observing of form.
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    It's actually also, sort of, this funny
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    dislocating of the
    process of rendering form.
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    Voiceover: Right.
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    Voiceover: Yeah.
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    Voiceover: It's very self-conscious in a
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    very modern way.
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    Voiceover: It certainly is.
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    (piano music)
Title:
Picasso, The Reservoir, Horta de Ebro, 1909
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
04:15

English subtitles

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