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Why Beauty Matters by Roger Scruton

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    (soft orchestral music)
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    - At any time between 1750 and 1930,
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    if you had asked educated people
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    to describe the aim of
    poetry, art, or music,
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    they would've replied, beauty.
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    (soft orchestral music)
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    And if you had asked
    for the point of that,
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    you would've learned
    that beauty is a value
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    as important as truth and goodness.
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    (soft orchestral music)
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    Then in the 20th century,
    beauty stopped being important.
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    Art increasingly aimed to disturb
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    and to break moral taboos.
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    It was not beauty, but originality,
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    however achieved and
    at whatever moral cost
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    that won the prizes.
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    (soft opera music)
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    Not only has art made a cult of ugliness,
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    architecture too has
    become soulless and sterile
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    and is not just our physical surroundings
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    that have become ugly.
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    Our language, our music, and our manners
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    are increasingly raucous, self-centered,
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    and offensive, as if beauty and good taste
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    have no real place in our lives.
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    One word is written large
    on all these ugly things,
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    and that word is me.
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    My profits, my desires, my pleasures,
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    and art has nothing to
    say in response to this
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    except yeah, go for it.
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    I think we are losing beauty,
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    and there is a danger that with it,
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    we will lose the meaning of life.
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    (soft orchestral music)
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    (lively orchestral music)
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    I'm Roger Scruton, philosopher and writer.
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    My trade is to ask questions.
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    During the last few years,
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    I have been asking questions about beauty.
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    Beauty has been central
    to our civilization
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    for over 2000 years.
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    From its beginnings in ancient Greece,
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    philosophy has reflected
    on the place of beauty
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    in art, poetry, music,
    architecture, and everyday life.
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    (lively orchestral music)
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    Philosophers have argued that through
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    the pursuit of beauty,
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    we shape the world as a home.
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    We also come to understand our own nature
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    as spiritual beings.
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    But our world has turned
    its back on beauty,
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    and because of that, we find ourselves
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    surrounded by ugliness and alienation.
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    I want to persuade you
    that beauty matters,
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    that it is not just a subjective thing,
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    but a universal need of human beings.
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    If we ignore this need,
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    we find ourselves in a spiritual desert.
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    I want to show you the
    path out of that desert,
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    and it is a path that leads to home.
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    (lively orchestral music)
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    (lively piano music)
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    The great artists of the past
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    were aware that human life is
    full of chaos and suffering,
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    but they had a remedy of this,
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    and the name of this remedy was beauty.
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    (lively piano music)
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    The beautiful work of art
    brings consolation in sorrow
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    and affirmation in joy.
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    It shows human life to be worthwhile.
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    (lively piano music)
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    Many modern artists have become weary
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    of this sacred task.
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    The randomness of modern life, they think,
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    could not be redeemed by art.
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    Instead, it should be displayed.
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    The pattern was set nearly a century ago
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    by the French artist Marcel Duchamp
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    who signed a urinal with
    a fictitious signature,
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    R. Mutt, and entered it for an exhibition.
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    His gesture was satirical
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    designed to mock the world of art
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    and the snobberies that go with it.
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    But it has been
    interpreted in another way,
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    that showing that anything can be art.
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    Like a light going on and off.
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    (light music)
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    A can of excrement,
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    or even a pile of bricks.
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    No longer does art have a sacred status.
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    No longer does it raise
    us to a higher moral
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    or spiritual plane.
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    It is just one human gesture among others,
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    no more meaningful than
    a laugh or a shout.
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    - I think they're making fun of us.
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    It's a pile of bricks.
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    - Art once made a cult of beauty.
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    Now we have a cult of ugliness instead.
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    Since the world is disturbing,
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    art should be disturbing too.
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    Those who look for beauty in art
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    are just out of touch
    with modern realities.
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    Sometimes, the intention is to shock us,
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    but what is shocking first time round
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    is boring and vacuous when repeated.
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    This makes art into an elaborate joke,
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    though one that by now
    has ceased to be funny.
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    Yet the critics go on endorsing it,
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    afraid to say that the
    emperor has no clothes.
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    Creative art is not
    achieved just like that,
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    simply by having an idea.
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    Of course, ideas can be
    interesting and amusing,
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    but this doesn't justify the appropriation
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    of the label art.
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    If a work of art is
    nothing more than an idea,
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    anybody can be an artist,
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    and any object can be a work of art.
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    There is no longer any need
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    for skill, taste, or creativity.
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    (mischievous instrumental music)
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    - What you are also attempting to do,
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    as I understand it, was devalue the art
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    as an object simply by saying,
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    if I say it's a work of art,
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    that makes it a work of art.
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    - Yeah, but even the word work of art,
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    you see, is not so important for me.
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    I don't care about the word art
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    because it's been so,
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    you know, discredited, in such a word.
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    - [Joan] But you in fact
    contributed to the discrediting,
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    didn't you, quite deliberately?
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    - Deliberately yes.
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    So I very want to get rid of it
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    because in a way, many people today
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    have done away with religion.
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    - People accepted Duchamp
    at his own valuation.
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    I think he did not get rid of art.
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    He just got rid of creativity.
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    However, Duchamp's works
    are still influencing
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    the course of art today.
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    Artist Michael Craig-Martin,
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    who taught several of
    the young British artists
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    whose work dominates the art world,
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    followed Duchamp's example
    with his own seminal work
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    called An Oak Tree.
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    This consists of a glass
    of water on a shelf
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    with a text explaining it is an oak tree.
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    When I first entered St. Peter's
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    and confronted Michelangelo's Pieta,
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    for me, that was a
    transporting experience.
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    My life was changed by this.
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    Do you think that someone
    can have the same experience
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    with Duchamp's urinal, or perhaps,
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    with your oak tree, which is
    after all a similar thing?
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    - I know that when I was a teenager,
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    and I first came upon Duchamp,
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    and I first came upon the ready mades,
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    I was absolutely stunned in amazement.
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    I don't think people are overwhelmed
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    by a sense of beauty
    when they see the urinal.
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    It's not meant to be beautiful,
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    but that doesn't mean that
    there isn't something about it
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    that doesn't captivate the imagination,
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    and I think captivate the imagination
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    is the key to what an artwork seeks to do.
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    Duchamp felt that art had become
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    too interested in techniques,
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    too interested in optics.
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    He felt that it had become
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    intellectually and morally corrupt.
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    Now his reason for making an artwork
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    that didn't fit the
    system was not cynicism.
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    It was in order to say
    I'm trying to make an art
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    that denies all of the things
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    that people say art should have
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    because I'm trying to say
    the central question of art
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    rests somewhere else.
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    - I take that point that
    things had to change.
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    Duchamp was trying to change them,
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    but what was he trying to change them to?
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    - Well, he could never,
    in his wildest dreams,
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    have imagined what would
    happen would happen,
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    or that he himself, I'm
    sure he had no idea,
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    how central the thing was
    that he had stumbled upon,
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    that he had come upon,
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    essentially that a work of art
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    is a work of art because
    we think of it as such.
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    I also think it's important to say
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    that the notion of
    beauty has been extended
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    to include things that would
    not have been thought of.
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    That's part of the artist's function,
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    is to make beautify, make one
    see something as beautiful,
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    something that nobody
    thought was beautiful
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    up until now.
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    - Right, like a can of shit.
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    - Well, I'm not sure that it's beautiful,
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    but if you take an example
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    that's not trying to be beautiful,
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    if you take say Jeff Koons,
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    Jeff Koons has some things
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    which are truly astoundingly beautiful.
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    - [Roger] It's like so much kitsch to me,
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    but kitsch with sugar on.
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    - [Michael] This is the
    subject matter of his work,
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    not the substance of his work.
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    - What is the use of this art?
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    What does it help people to do?
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    - I think it hopefully allows people
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    to see the world in which they are living
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    in a way that gives it
    more meaning to them,
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    and it's not the world of an ideal world
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    of some other world, some better place,
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    but of the here and now,
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    of the world that they're in,
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    and are trying to live more at ease
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    within the world that they're given.
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    (discordant instrumental music)
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    - So the art of today shows
    us the world as it is.
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    The here and now and
    all its imperfections.
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    But is the result really art?
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    Surely something is not a work of art
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    because it offers a slice of reality,
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    ugliness included, and calls itself art.
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    ("Cello Suite Number One" by Bach)
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    Art needs creativity,
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    and creativity is about sharing.
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    It is a call to others to see the world
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    as the artist sees it.
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    That is why we find beauty
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    in the naive art of children.
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    Children are not giving us ideas
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    in the place of creative images,
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    nor are they wallowing in ugliness.
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    They are trying to affirm
    the world as they see it
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    and to share what they feel.
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    Something of the child's
    pure delight in creation
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    survives in every true work of art.
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    But creativity is not enough,
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    and the skill of the true artist
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    is to show the real in
    the light of the ideal,
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    and so, transfigure it.
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    This is what Michelangelo achieves
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    in his great portrayal of David.
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    But when we encounter a
    concrete cast of the David,
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    perhaps it's part of
    some garden arrangement,
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    it is not beautiful at all,
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    for it lacks the essential
    ingredient of creativity.
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    (upbeat electronic music)
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    (soft instrumental music)
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    Discussions of the kind I have
    been having are dangerous.
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    In our democratic culture,
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    people often think it is threatening
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    to judge another person's taste.
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    Some are even offended by the suggestion
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    that there is a difference
    between good and bad taste,
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    or that it matters what you look at
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    or read or listen to.
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    But this doesn't help anybody.
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    There are standards of beauty
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    which have a firm base in human nature,
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    and we need to look for them
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    and build them into our lives.
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    Maybe people have lost
    their faith in beauty
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    because they have lost
    their belief in ideals.
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    All there is, they are tempted to think,
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    is the world of appetite.
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    There are no values other
    than utilitarian ones.
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    Something has a value if it has a use,
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    and what's the use of beauty?
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    All art is absolutely
    useless wrote Oscar Wilde,
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    who intended his remark as praise.
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    For Wilde, beauty of a value
    higher than usefulness.
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    People need useless things
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    just as much as, even more than
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    they need things with a use.
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    Just think of it.
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    What is the use of love,
    of friendship, of worship?
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    None whatsoever.
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    And the same goes for beauty.
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    Our consumer society
    puts usefulness first,
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    and beauty is no better
    than a side effect.
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    Since art is useless, it
    doesn't matter what you read,
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    what you look at, what you listen to.
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    ♫ I see you baby
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    ♫ Shaking that ass
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    ♫ Shaking that ass
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    ♫ Shaking that ass
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    We are besieged by message on every side,
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    titillated, tempted by appetite,
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    never at rest, and that is one reason
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    why beauty is disappearing from our world.
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    ♫ Shaking that ass
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    ♫ Shaking that ass
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    Getting and spending, wrote Wordsworth,
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    we lay waste our powers.
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    ♫ Shaking that ass
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    ♫ Shaking that ass
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    In our culture today,
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    the advert is more important
    than the work of art,
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    and artworks often try
    to capture our attention
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    as adverts do, by being
    brash or outrageous,
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    like this bejeweled platinum
    skull by Damien Hirst.
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    Lie adverts, today's works of art
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    aim to create a brand, even if
    they have no product to sell,
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    except themselves.
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    (crowd chattering)
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    (somber orchestral music)
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    (building collapsing and shattering)
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    Beauty is assailed from two directions,
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    by the cult of ugliness in the arts
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    and by the cult of
    utility in everyday life.
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    These two cults come together
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    in the world of modern architecture.
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    (somber orchestral music)
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    At the turn of the 20th century,
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    architects, like artists, began
    to be impatient with beauty
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    and to put utility in its place.
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    The American architect, Louis Sullivan,
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    expressed the credo of the modernists
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    when he said that form follows function.
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    In other words, stop thinking about
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    the way a building looks
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    and think instead about what it does.
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    Sullivan's doctrine has been used
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    to justify the greatest
    crime against beauty
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    that the world has yet seen,
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    and that is the crime
    of modern architecture.
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    (tense instrumental music)
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    I grew up near Reading,
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    which was a charming Victorian town
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    with terraced streets and Gothic churches
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    crowned by elegant public buildings
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    and smart hotels.
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    But in the 1960s, things began to change.
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    Here, in the center, the
    homely streets were demolished
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    to make way for office blocks,
    a bus station, and car parks,
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    all designed without
    consideration for beauty,
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    and the result proves as clearly as can be
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    that if you consider only utility,
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    the things you build will soon be useless.
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    This building is boarded up
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    because nobody has a use for it.
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    Nobody has a use for it
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    because nobody wants to be in it.
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    Nobody wants to be in it
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    because the thing is so damned ugly.
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    (somber instrumental music)
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    Everywhere you turn, there
    is ugliness and mutilation.
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    The offices and bus station
    have been abandoned.
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    The only things at home here
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    are the pigeons fouling the pavements.
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    Everything has been vandalized.
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    But we shouldn't blame the vandals.
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    This place was built by vandals,
  • 19:56 - 19:58
    and those who added the graffiti
  • 19:58 - 20:00
    merely finished the job.
  • 20:05 - 20:09
    Most of our towns and
    cities have areas like this
  • 20:09 - 20:12
    in which buildings erected
    merely for their utility
  • 20:12 - 20:15
    have rapidly become useless,
  • 20:15 - 20:19
    not that architects
    learned from the disaster.
  • 20:20 - 20:22
    (explosion)
  • 20:22 - 20:26
    (glass crashing and shattering)
  • 20:34 - 20:36
    When the public began to react
  • 20:36 - 20:39
    against the brutal concrete
    style of the 1960s,
  • 20:39 - 20:41
    architects simply replaced it
  • 20:41 - 20:44
    with a new kind of junk, glass walls
  • 20:44 - 20:47
    hung on steel frames with absurd details
  • 20:47 - 20:49
    that don't match.
  • 20:49 - 20:52
    Result is another kind of failure to fit.
  • 20:52 - 20:55
    It is there simply to be demolished.
  • 20:55 - 20:57
    (funky music)
  • 21:03 - 21:05
    (light music)
  • 21:11 - 21:13
    In the midst of all this desolation,
  • 21:13 - 21:18
    we find a fragment of the
    streets that were destroyed.
  • 21:18 - 21:20
    Once a forge, now a cafe.
  • 21:21 - 21:23
    People come here from all around
  • 21:23 - 21:26
    because it is the last
    bit of life remaining,
  • 21:26 - 21:29
    and the life comes from the building.
  • 21:29 - 21:32
    (light music)
  • 21:41 - 21:43
    This returns me to Oscar Wilde's remark
  • 21:43 - 21:46
    that all art is absolutely useless.
  • 21:46 - 21:50
    Put usefulness first, and you lose it.
  • 21:50 - 21:53
    Put beauty first, and what you do
  • 21:53 - 21:55
    will be useful forever.
  • 21:56 - 21:58
    It turns out that nothing is more useful
  • 21:58 - 22:00
    than the useless.
  • 22:00 - 22:02
    (light music)
  • 22:05 - 22:08
    We see this in traditional architecture
  • 22:08 - 22:11
    with its decorative details.
  • 22:11 - 22:14
    Ornaments liberate us from
    the tyranny of the useful
  • 22:14 - 22:17
    and satisfy our need for harmony.
  • 22:17 - 22:21
    In a strange way, they
    make us feel at home.
  • 22:21 - 22:24
    They remind us that we have
    more than practical needs.
  • 22:24 - 22:27
    We are not just governed
    by animal appetites
  • 22:27 - 22:29
    like eating and sleeping.
  • 22:29 - 22:32
    We have spiritual and moral needs too,
  • 22:32 - 22:35
    and if those needs go
    unsatisfied, so do we.
  • 22:35 - 22:39
    (soft orchestral music)
  • 22:57 - 22:58
    We all know what it is like
  • 22:58 - 23:00
    even in the everyday world
  • 23:00 - 23:03
    suddenly to be transported
    by the things we see
  • 23:03 - 23:06
    from the ordinary world of our appetites
  • 23:06 - 23:09
    to the illuminated
    sphere of contemplation.
  • 23:12 - 23:15
    A flash of sunlight, a remembered melody,
  • 23:15 - 23:18
    the face of someone
    loved, these dawn on us
  • 23:18 - 23:20
    in the most distracted moments,
  • 23:20 - 23:23
    and suddenly, life is worthwhile.
  • 23:23 - 23:26
    (soft orchestral music)
  • 23:31 - 23:33
    These are timeless moments
  • 23:33 - 23:37
    in which we feel the presence
    of another and higher world.
  • 23:41 - 23:43
    From the beginning of
    Western civilization,
  • 23:43 - 23:46
    poets and philosophers have
    seen the experience of beauty
  • 23:46 - 23:49
    as calling us to the divine.
  • 23:52 - 23:56
    Plato, writing in Athens
    in the fourth century BC,
  • 23:56 - 23:58
    argued that beauty is the sign
  • 23:58 - 24:00
    of another and higher order.
  • 24:04 - 24:07
    Beholding beauty with the
    eye of the mind, he wrote,
  • 24:07 - 24:10
    you will be able to nourish true virtue
  • 24:10 - 24:12
    and become the friend of God.
  • 24:16 - 24:19
    Plato was an idealist.
  • 24:19 - 24:21
    He believed that human beings are pilgrims
  • 24:21 - 24:24
    and passengers in this world
  • 24:24 - 24:27
    while always aspiring beyond it
  • 24:27 - 24:31
    to the eternal realm where
    we will be united with God.
  • 24:36 - 24:40
    God exists in a transcendental world
  • 24:40 - 24:42
    to which we humans aspire,
  • 24:42 - 24:45
    but which we cannot know directly.
  • 24:48 - 24:51
    But one way of glimpsing that
    heavenly sphere here below
  • 24:51 - 24:54
    is through the experience with beauty.
  • 24:58 - 25:00
    This leads to a paradox.
  • 25:01 - 25:04
    For Plato, beauty was first and foremost
  • 25:04 - 25:08
    the beauty of the human
    face and the human form.
  • 25:08 - 25:09
    The love of beauty, he thought,
  • 25:09 - 25:14
    originates in eros, a
    passion that all of us feel.
  • 25:14 - 25:17
    We would call this passion romantic love.
  • 25:17 - 25:20
    For Plato, eros was a cosmic force
  • 25:20 - 25:24
    which flows through us in
    the form of sexual desire.
  • 25:28 - 25:31
    But if human beauty arouses desire,
  • 25:31 - 25:35
    how can it have anything
    to do with the divine?
  • 25:35 - 25:39
    Desire is for the individual
    living in this world.
  • 25:39 - 25:41
    It is an urgent passion.
  • 25:44 - 25:47
    Sexual desire presents us with a choice,
  • 25:47 - 25:50
    adoration or appetite, love or lust.
  • 25:53 - 25:57
    Lust is about taking,
    but love is about giving.
  • 26:02 - 26:06
    Lust brings ugliness, the
    ugliness of human relations
  • 26:06 - 26:07
    in which one person treats another
  • 26:07 - 26:10
    as a disposable instrument.
  • 26:13 - 26:15
    To reach the source of beauty,
  • 26:15 - 26:17
    we must overcome lust.
  • 26:17 - 26:21
    (playful instrumental music)
  • 26:23 - 26:27
    (somber instrumental music)
  • 26:34 - 26:37
    This longing without lust
    is what we mean today
  • 26:37 - 26:39
    by platonic love.
  • 26:42 - 26:44
    When we find beauty in a youthful person,
  • 26:44 - 26:47
    it is because we glimpse
    the light of eternity
  • 26:47 - 26:49
    shining in those features
  • 26:49 - 26:52
    from a heavenly source beyond this world.
  • 26:52 - 26:55
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 26:58 - 27:00
    The beautiful human form is an invitation
  • 27:00 - 27:03
    to unite with it
    spiritually, not physically.
  • 27:06 - 27:08
    Our feeling for beauty is, therefore,
  • 27:08 - 27:12
    a religious and not a sensual emotion.
  • 27:12 - 27:15
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 27:19 - 27:22
    This theory of Plato's is astonishing.
  • 27:22 - 27:25
    Beauty, he thought, is a
    visitor from another world.
  • 27:25 - 27:28
    We can do nothing with it save contemplate
  • 27:28 - 27:30
    its pure radiance.
  • 27:30 - 27:33
    Anything else pollutes and desecrates it,
  • 27:33 - 27:35
    destroying its sacred aura.
  • 27:35 - 27:39
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 27:44 - 27:48
    Plato's theory may seem
    quaint to people today,
  • 27:48 - 27:53
    but it is one of the most
    influential theories in history.
  • 27:53 - 27:55
    Throughout our civilization,
  • 27:55 - 27:59
    poets, storytellers, painters,
    priests, and philosophers
  • 27:59 - 28:03
    have been inspired by Plato's
    views on sex and love.
  • 28:09 - 28:11
    If we are to just look
    in the poetry corner
  • 28:11 - 28:13
    as to then books by people
    who have tried to express
  • 28:13 - 28:16
    the Platonic vision of the erotic,
  • 28:16 - 28:18
    let's see who there is.
  • 28:20 - 28:24
    Thomas Malory's Morte d'Arthur,
    John Donne Here and There,
  • 28:24 - 28:28
    Gawain and the Green Knight, Chaucer,
  • 28:28 - 28:29
    especially The Knight's Tale,
  • 28:29 - 28:32
    The Poems of the Pearl Manuscript,
  • 28:32 - 28:35
    incredible expressions of
    the Platonic love here,
  • 28:35 - 28:38
    Cavalcanti, who is the master of Dante,
  • 28:38 - 28:41
    and Dante himself definitely,
  • 28:41 - 28:44
    oh Spencer of course, The Fairy Queen,
  • 28:44 - 28:48
    Dafydd ap Gwilym, to take
    the Welsh version of it all,
  • 28:48 - 28:52
    The Women Troubadours, Christina Rosetti.
  • 28:52 - 28:55
    I don't believe it more
    Victorian about it.
  • 28:55 - 28:57
    Ah, so it goes on.
  • 29:00 - 29:04
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 29:10 - 29:13
    The early Renaissance
    painter Sandro Botticelli
  • 29:13 - 29:16
    illustrated the theory
    in this famous painting,
  • 29:16 - 29:20
    which shows the birth of
    Venus, goddess of erotic love.
  • 29:22 - 29:26
    Venus looks on the world
    from a place beyond desire.
  • 29:26 - 29:29
    She is inviting us to
    transcend our earthly appetites
  • 29:29 - 29:34
    and unite with her through
    the pure love of beauty.
  • 29:37 - 29:40
    Botticelli's model was Simonetta Vespucci.
  • 29:40 - 29:43
    Botticelli loved her until
    the end of her short life
  • 29:43 - 29:46
    and actually asked to
    be buried at her feet.
  • 29:46 - 29:49
    She represented to him Plato's ideal.
  • 29:49 - 29:54
    This was beauty to be
    contemplated but not possessed.
  • 29:54 - 29:57
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 29:57 - 29:59
    Plato and Botticelli are telling us
  • 29:59 - 30:03
    that real beauty lies
    beyond sexual desire,
  • 30:03 - 30:07
    so we can find beauty not only
    in a desirable young person
  • 30:07 - 30:12
    but also in a face full
    of age, grief, and wisdom,
  • 30:12 - 30:14
    such as Rembrandt painted.
  • 30:14 - 30:17
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 30:21 - 30:23
    The beauty of a face is a symbol
  • 30:23 - 30:26
    of the life expressed in it.
  • 30:26 - 30:28
    It is flesh become spirit,
  • 30:28 - 30:30
    and in fixing our eyes on it,
  • 30:30 - 30:34
    we seem to see right
    through into the soul.
  • 30:37 - 30:39
    Painters like Rembrandt are important
  • 30:39 - 30:41
    for showing us that beauty is an ordinary,
  • 30:41 - 30:43
    everyday kind of thing.
  • 30:43 - 30:45
    It lies all around us.
  • 30:45 - 30:47
    We need only the eyes to see it
  • 30:47 - 30:49
    and the hearts to feel.
  • 30:49 - 30:51
    The most ordinary event can be made
  • 30:51 - 30:54
    into something beautiful by a painter
  • 30:54 - 30:57
    who can see into the heart of things.
  • 30:57 - 31:00
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 31:10 - 31:12
    So long as the belief
    in a transcendental god
  • 31:12 - 31:16
    was firmly anchored in the
    heart of our civilization,
  • 31:16 - 31:19
    artists and philosophers
    continued to think of beauty
  • 31:19 - 31:20
    in Plato's way.
  • 31:22 - 31:24
    Beauty was the revelation of God
  • 31:24 - 31:26
    in the here and now.
  • 31:29 - 31:31
    This religious approach to the beautiful
  • 31:31 - 31:33
    lasted for 2000 years.
  • 31:35 - 31:38
    But in the 17th century,
    the scientific revolution
  • 31:38 - 31:40
    began to sow the seeds of doubt.
  • 31:40 - 31:44
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 31:44 - 31:47
    The medieval church
    accepted the ancient view
  • 31:47 - 31:51
    that the Earth lies at the
    center of the universe.
  • 31:53 - 31:56
    Then, Copernicus and Galileo
    proved that the Earth
  • 31:56 - 32:00
    circles the sun, and Newton
    completed their work,
  • 32:01 - 32:03
    describing a clockwork universe
  • 32:03 - 32:06
    in which each moment follows mechanically
  • 32:06 - 32:07
    from the one before.
  • 32:07 - 32:11
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 32:15 - 32:17
    This was the Enlightenment vision
  • 32:17 - 32:19
    which described our world
  • 32:19 - 32:21
    as though there was no place in it
  • 32:21 - 32:22
    for gods and spirits,
  • 32:22 - 32:25
    no place for values and ideals,
  • 32:25 - 32:30
    no place for anything save
    the regular clockwork movement
  • 32:30 - 32:32
    which turned the moon around the Earth
  • 32:32 - 32:34
    and the Earth around the sun
  • 32:34 - 32:37
    for no purpose whatsoever.
  • 32:37 - 32:40
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 32:42 - 32:44
    At the heart of Newton's universe
  • 32:44 - 32:48
    is a God shaped hole, a spiritual vacuum,
  • 32:48 - 32:50
    and one philosopher in particular
  • 32:50 - 32:53
    set out to fill this vacuum.
  • 32:53 - 32:55
    That is the Third Earl of Shaftesbury.
  • 32:55 - 32:59
    (light instrumental music)
  • 32:59 - 33:03
    Science explains things,
    but, thought Shaftesbury,
  • 33:03 - 33:07
    its account of the world
    is in one way incomplete.
  • 33:07 - 33:10
    We can see the world
    from another perspective,
  • 33:10 - 33:14
    not seeking to use it or explain it,
  • 33:14 - 33:17
    but simply contemplating its appearance
  • 33:17 - 33:20
    as we might contemplate
    a landscape or a flower.
  • 33:20 - 33:24
    (light instrumental music)
  • 33:24 - 33:27
    The idea that the world is
    intrinsically meaningful,
  • 33:27 - 33:31
    full of an enchantment, that
    it needs no religious doctrine
  • 33:31 - 33:35
    to perceive answered to
    a deep emotional need.
  • 33:35 - 33:38
    Beauty was not planted
    in the world by God,
  • 33:38 - 33:40
    but discovered there by people.
  • 33:40 - 33:43
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 33:56 - 34:00
    Shaftesbury's idea
    encouraged the cult of beauty
  • 34:00 - 34:03
    which raised the appreciation
    of art and nature
  • 34:03 - 34:08
    to the place once occupied
    by the worship of God.
  • 34:08 - 34:10
    Beauty was to fill the God shaped hole
  • 34:10 - 34:12
    made by science.
  • 34:12 - 34:15
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 34:16 - 34:19
    Artists were no longer illustrators
  • 34:19 - 34:23
    of the sacred stories who worked
    as servants of the church.
  • 34:23 - 34:26
    They were discovering the
    stories for themselves
  • 34:26 - 34:29
    by interpreting the secrets of nature.
  • 34:29 - 34:31
    Landscapes which used
    to be mere backgrounds
  • 34:31 - 34:35
    to holy images became foregrounds
  • 34:35 - 34:38
    with the human figure
    often lost in their folds.
  • 34:38 - 34:42
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 34:43 - 34:46
    But for Shaftesbury, it
    does not need a work of art
  • 34:46 - 34:49
    to present us with the
    beauty of the world.
  • 34:49 - 34:51
    We simply need to look on things
  • 34:51 - 34:54
    with clear eyes and free emotions.
  • 34:59 - 35:02
    Shaftesbury is telling
    us to stop using things,
  • 35:02 - 35:04
    stop explaining them and exploiting them,
  • 35:04 - 35:07
    but look at them instead.
  • 35:07 - 35:10
    Then we will understand what they mean.
  • 35:10 - 35:13
    The message of the flower is the flower.
  • 35:13 - 35:16
    (light instrumental music)
  • 35:24 - 35:27
    Zen Buddhists have said similar things.
  • 35:27 - 35:31
    Only by leaving all our interests
    and business to one side
  • 35:31 - 35:35
    do we encounter the real
    truth of the flower.
  • 35:35 - 35:39
    Seeing things that way,
    we discover their beauty.
  • 35:39 - 35:42
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 35:46 - 35:48
    The greatest philosopher
    of the Enlightenment,
  • 35:48 - 35:51
    Immanuel Kant, was profoundly influenced
  • 35:51 - 35:53
    by Shaftesbury's idea.
  • 35:54 - 35:57
    Kant argued that the experience of beauty
  • 35:57 - 36:01
    comes when we put our
    interests to one side,
  • 36:01 - 36:03
    when we look on things
    not in order to use them
  • 36:03 - 36:07
    for our purposes or to
    explain how they work
  • 36:07 - 36:10
    or to satisfy some need or appetite,
  • 36:10 - 36:14
    but simply to absorb them
    and to endorse what they are.
  • 36:14 - 36:17
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 36:22 - 36:24
    Consider the joy you might feel
  • 36:24 - 36:28
    when you hold a friend's
    baby in your arms.
  • 36:28 - 36:30
    You don't want to do
    anything with the baby.
  • 36:30 - 36:33
    You don't want to eat
    it, to put it to any use,
  • 36:33 - 36:37
    or to conduct scientific
    experiments on it.
  • 36:37 - 36:39
    You want simply to look at it
  • 36:39 - 36:42
    and to feel the great
    surge of delight that comes
  • 36:42 - 36:45
    when you focus all your
    thoughts on this baby
  • 36:45 - 36:47
    and none at all on yourself.
  • 36:47 - 36:51
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 36:52 - 36:54
    That is what Kant described
  • 36:54 - 36:57
    as a disinterested attitude,
  • 36:57 - 36:58
    and it is the attitude that underlies
  • 36:58 - 37:00
    our experience of beauty.
  • 37:04 - 37:06
    To explain this is extremely difficult
  • 37:06 - 37:08
    because if you haven't experienced it,
  • 37:08 - 37:10
    you don't really know what it is,
  • 37:10 - 37:14
    but everybody listening to
    a beautiful piece of music,
  • 37:14 - 37:17
    looking at a sublime landscape,
  • 37:17 - 37:20
    reading a poem which seems to contain
  • 37:20 - 37:22
    the essence of the thing it describes,
  • 37:22 - 37:24
    everybody in an experience like that
  • 37:24 - 37:26
    says yes, this is enough.
  • 37:28 - 37:31
    (soft piano music)
  • 37:34 - 37:38
    But why is this experience so important?
  • 37:38 - 37:40
    The encounter with beauty is so vivid,
  • 37:40 - 37:43
    so immediate, so personal that it seems
  • 37:43 - 37:47
    hardly to belong to the ordinary world,
  • 37:47 - 37:51
    yet beauty shines on us
    from ordinary things.
  • 37:51 - 37:53
    Is it a feature of the world
  • 37:53 - 37:55
    or a figment of the imagination?
  • 37:59 - 38:02
    Most of the time, our lives are organized
  • 38:02 - 38:06
    by our everyday concerns,
    but every now and then,
  • 38:06 - 38:09
    we find ourself jolted
    out of our complacency
  • 38:09 - 38:13
    in the presence of something
    vastly more important
  • 38:13 - 38:16
    than our immediate desires and interests,
  • 38:16 - 38:18
    something not of this world.
  • 38:20 - 38:23
    From Plato to Kant,
    philosophers have tried
  • 38:23 - 38:27
    to capture the peculiar way
    in which beauty dawns on us.
  • 38:29 - 38:31
    Like a sudden ray of sunlight
  • 38:31 - 38:32
    or a surge of love.
  • 38:34 - 38:37
    For Plato, the only explanation
    of such an experience
  • 38:37 - 38:40
    was its transcendental origin.
  • 38:40 - 38:43
    It speaks to us like the voice of God.
  • 38:47 - 38:50
    And Kant too in a much more sober way
  • 38:50 - 38:52
    believed that the experience of beauty
  • 38:52 - 38:56
    connects us with the
    ultimate mystery of being.
  • 38:58 - 39:01
    Through beauty, we are
    brought into the presence
  • 39:01 - 39:02
    of the sacred.
  • 39:08 - 39:11
    We can understand what
    such philosophers mean
  • 39:11 - 39:15
    if we reflect on what we feel
    in the presence of death,
  • 39:15 - 39:19
    especially the death of someone loved.
  • 39:19 - 39:21
    We look with awe on the human body
  • 39:21 - 39:23
    from which their life has fled.
  • 39:23 - 39:26
    We are reluctant to touch the dead body.
  • 39:26 - 39:30
    We see it as not properly
    a part of our world,
  • 39:30 - 39:33
    almost a visitor from some other sphere.
  • 39:40 - 39:42
    And the same sense of the transcendental
  • 39:42 - 39:46
    arises in the experience
    that inspired Plato,
  • 39:46 - 39:48
    the experience of falling in love.
  • 39:48 - 39:53
    ("Les Contes d'Hoffmann" by Offenbach)
  • 39:55 - 39:57
    This too is a human universal,
  • 39:57 - 40:01
    and it is an experience
    of the strangest kind,
  • 40:01 - 40:03
    the face and body of the beloved
  • 40:03 - 40:06
    are imbued with the intensest life,
  • 40:06 - 40:08
    but in one crucial respect,
  • 40:08 - 40:12
    they are like the body of someone dead.
  • 40:13 - 40:17
    They seem not to belong
    in the everyday world.
  • 40:17 - 40:19
    Poets have expended thousands of words
  • 40:19 - 40:22
    on this experience which no words
  • 40:22 - 40:24
    seem entirely to capture.
  • 40:28 - 40:31
    But these great changes
    in the stream of life,
  • 40:31 - 40:33
    the urge to unite with another person,
  • 40:33 - 40:35
    the loss of someone loved,
  • 40:35 - 40:39
    are moments that we understand as sacred.
  • 40:39 - 40:43
    (discordant instrumental music)
  • 40:53 - 40:55
    If we look at the history
    of the idea of beauty,
  • 40:55 - 40:57
    we see that philosophers and artists
  • 40:57 - 41:01
    have had good reason to connect
    the beautiful and the sacred
  • 41:01 - 41:03
    and to see our need for beauty
  • 41:03 - 41:06
    as something deep in our nature,
  • 41:06 - 41:08
    part of our longing for consolation
  • 41:08 - 41:11
    in a world of danger,
    sorrow, and distress.
  • 41:11 - 41:15
    (discordant instrumental music)
  • 41:20 - 41:24
    Today, many artists look on the
    idea of beauty with disdain,
  • 41:24 - 41:27
    a leftover from a vanished way of living
  • 41:27 - 41:29
    which has no real
    connection with the world
  • 41:29 - 41:31
    which now surrounds us.
  • 41:31 - 41:34
    (discordant instrumental music)
  • 41:34 - 41:37
    So there has been a desire to desecrate
  • 41:37 - 41:39
    the experiences of sex and death
  • 41:39 - 41:43
    by displaying them in
    trivial and impersonal ways
  • 41:43 - 41:46
    that destroy all sense of
    their spiritual significance.
  • 41:46 - 41:50
    (discordant instrumental music)
  • 41:57 - 41:59
    Just as those who lose their religion
  • 41:59 - 42:02
    have an urge to mock the
    faith that they have lost,
  • 42:02 - 42:04
    so do artists today feel an urge
  • 42:04 - 42:08
    to treat human life in demeaning ways
  • 42:08 - 42:10
    and to mock the pursuit of beauty.
  • 42:14 - 42:18
    This willful desecration
    is also a denial of love,
  • 42:18 - 42:21
    an attempt to remake the world
  • 42:21 - 42:23
    as though love were no
    longer a part of it,
  • 42:23 - 42:27
    and this, it seems to me, is
    the most important feature
  • 42:27 - 42:29
    of our post-modern culture,
  • 42:29 - 42:31
    that it is a loveless culture
  • 42:31 - 42:36
    determined to portray the
    human world as unlovable.
  • 42:36 - 42:40
    (soft instrumental music)
  • 42:43 - 42:44
    Of course this habit of dwelling
  • 42:44 - 42:47
    on the distressing side
    of human life isn't new.
  • 42:47 - 42:50
    From the beginning of our civilization,
  • 42:50 - 42:52
    it has been one of the tasks of art
  • 42:52 - 42:55
    to take what is most painful
    in the human condition
  • 42:55 - 42:58
    and to redeem it in a work of beauty.
  • 42:58 - 43:01
    (man screaming)
  • 43:03 - 43:06
    - Oh you are men of stones.
  • 43:07 - 43:09
    Had I your tongues and eyes,
  • 43:10 - 43:14
    I'd use them so that
    heaven's vault should crack.
  • 43:19 - 43:22
    She's gone forever.
  • 43:22 - 43:25
    (lively piano music)
  • 43:41 - 43:44
    - Art has the ability to redeem life
  • 43:44 - 43:48
    by finding beauty even in
    the worst aspect of things.
  • 43:51 - 43:53
    Mantegna's crucifixion,
    displaying the cruelest
  • 43:53 - 43:55
    and most ugly of deaths,
  • 43:55 - 43:59
    achieves a kind of majesty and serenity.
  • 43:59 - 44:02
    It redeems the horror that it shows.
  • 44:02 - 44:05
    In the face of death,
    human beings can still show
  • 44:05 - 44:08
    nobility, compassion, and dignity,
  • 44:09 - 44:11
    and art helps us to accept death
  • 44:11 - 44:13
    by presenting it in such a light.
  • 44:13 - 44:16
    (quick piano music)
  • 44:20 - 44:22
    What about things which are not tragic
  • 44:22 - 44:25
    but merely sordid or depraved?
  • 44:25 - 44:27
    Can art find beauty even here?
  • 44:27 - 44:31
    (frantic instrumental music)
  • 44:38 - 44:39
    This painting by Delacroix
  • 44:39 - 44:44
    shows us the artist's bed
    in all its sordid disorder.
  • 44:44 - 44:48
    He too is bringing beauty
    to a thing that lacks it
  • 44:48 - 44:50
    and bestowing a kind of blessing
  • 44:50 - 44:52
    on his own emotional chaos.
  • 44:55 - 44:59
    Delacroix says, see how
    these sweat stained sheets
  • 44:59 - 45:01
    record the troubled dreams,
  • 45:01 - 45:04
    the tormented energy of the
    person who has left them,
  • 45:04 - 45:05
    and how the light picks them out
  • 45:05 - 45:10
    as though they are still
    animated by the sleeper.
  • 45:10 - 45:13
    The bed is transformed by the creative act
  • 45:13 - 45:14
    to become something else,
  • 45:14 - 45:17
    a vivid symbol of the human condition,
  • 45:17 - 45:21
    and one which makes a bond
    between us and the artist.
  • 45:21 - 45:24
    (lively cello music)
  • 45:28 - 45:33
    Some people describe Tracey
    Emin's bed in that way,
  • 45:33 - 45:34
    but there is all the
    difference in the world
  • 45:34 - 45:36
    between a real work of art
  • 45:36 - 45:38
    which makes ugliness beautiful
  • 45:38 - 45:40
    and the fake work of art
  • 45:40 - 45:43
    which shares the ugliness that it shows.
  • 45:47 - 45:49
    This is modern life presented
  • 45:49 - 45:51
    in all its randomness and disorder.
  • 45:55 - 45:59
    - [David] What is it that makes that art
  • 45:59 - 46:01
    rather than just a rumpled bed?
  • 46:01 - 46:03
    - Well, the first thing that makes it art
  • 46:03 - 46:04
    is because I say that it is.
  • 46:04 - 46:05
    - [David] You say that it is.
  • 46:05 - 46:06
    - I say that it is.
  • 46:06 - 46:07
    - [David] The second thing
    is the Tate says it is.
  • 46:07 - 46:10
    But what do you want the viewer,
  • 46:10 - 46:12
    the visitor to the gallery to say?
  • 46:12 - 46:14
    You presumably don't want him to say
  • 46:14 - 46:16
    I think that's beautiful.
  • 46:16 - 46:18
    - No, no one's actually
    said that, only me.
  • 46:18 - 46:19
    - You think it's beautiful?
  • 46:19 - 46:21
    - Yeah I do.
    - You do think it's beautiful.
  • 46:21 - 46:22
    - I think it beautiful yeah.
  • 46:22 - 46:25
    Otherwise, I wouldn't be sharing it.
  • 46:25 - 46:28
    - How can this be a beautiful work of art
  • 46:28 - 46:30
    if it makes no attempt to transform
  • 46:30 - 46:33
    the raw material of an idea?
  • 46:33 - 46:36
    It is just one sordid
    reality among others,
  • 46:36 - 46:38
    literally an unmade bed.
  • 46:38 - 46:42
    (light instrumental music)
  • 46:42 - 46:43
    We are back with the question
  • 46:43 - 46:45
    raised by Duchamp's urinal
  • 46:45 - 46:47
    whether anything can be art.
  • 46:49 - 46:52
    This question occupies both
    the would-be innovators
  • 46:52 - 46:56
    and the traditionalists
    like Alexander Stoddart,
  • 46:56 - 47:00
    a monumental sculptor whose
    works stand in public places
  • 47:00 - 47:02
    around the world as well
    as in the Queen's gallery
  • 47:02 - 47:05
    at Buckingham Palace.
  • 47:05 - 47:07
    A defender of conceptual art
  • 47:07 - 47:10
    might say that an idea can be beautiful,
  • 47:10 - 47:15
    so that there's nothing wrong
    with conceptual art as such.
  • 47:15 - 47:19
    - Yes, but this is in
    everybody's field of endeavor.
  • 47:21 - 47:23
    The lawyer can come up
    with a beautiful idea.
  • 47:23 - 47:26
    You know, the statesman, the medic.
  • 47:28 - 47:31
    Let's cure cancer, a beautiful idea,
  • 47:31 - 47:33
    but he doesn't say he's an
    artist in the back of that.
  • 47:33 - 47:37
    Conceptual art, of course,
    is entirely world bound.
  • 47:37 - 47:40
    It is in fact a kind
    of art that's exhausted
  • 47:40 - 47:42
    in its veritable description,
  • 47:42 - 47:44
    so you need to just say,
  • 47:44 - 47:46
    half a cow in a tank of formaldehyde,
  • 47:46 - 47:49
    and you're really all the way there.
  • 47:49 - 47:52
    The object itself then can be dumped.
  • 47:52 - 47:55
    Tracey Emin's bed is a
    perfect example of that.
  • 47:55 - 47:58
    If you walked past a skip in some scheme
  • 48:00 - 48:02
    and you saw that bed lying there,
  • 48:02 - 48:05
    you would walk on, but of course,
  • 48:05 - 48:07
    if you saw even just the torso
  • 48:07 - 48:10
    of the Apollo Belvedere
    lying in that skip,
  • 48:10 - 48:11
    you would be arrested by it,
  • 48:11 - 48:15
    and you may even climb in
    and try to retrieve it.
  • 48:15 - 48:18
    Many students come to me
    from sculpture departments,
  • 48:18 - 48:21
    secretly of course, because they don't
  • 48:21 - 48:23
    want to tell their
    tutors that they've come
  • 48:23 - 48:25
    to chat with the enemy,
  • 48:25 - 48:28
    and they say I try to
    become a model figure,
  • 48:28 - 48:31
    and I modeled it in clay,
    and then a tutor came up
  • 48:31 - 48:33
    and told me to cut it in half
  • 48:33 - 48:36
    and dump some diarrhea on top of it,
  • 48:36 - 48:39
    and that will make it interesting.
  • 48:39 - 48:42
    - It's what I feel about the kind of
  • 48:43 - 48:46
    standardized desecration that
    passes for art these days
  • 48:46 - 48:48
    is actually a kind of immorality
  • 48:48 - 48:51
    because it is an attempt to obliterate
  • 48:51 - 48:53
    meaning from the human form in some way.
  • 48:53 - 48:57
    - Well it's intent to
    obliterate knowledge.
  • 48:57 - 49:00
    (light instrumental music)
  • 49:03 - 49:05
    - The art establishment has turned away
  • 49:05 - 49:07
    from the old curriculum
  • 49:07 - 49:11
    which put beauty and craft
    at the top of the agenda.
  • 49:11 - 49:14
    Those like Alexander
    Stoddart who try to restore
  • 49:14 - 49:17
    the age old connection
    between the beautiful
  • 49:17 - 49:21
    and the sacred are seen as
    old fashioned and absurd.
  • 49:21 - 49:25
    (light instrumental music)
  • 49:33 - 49:36
    The same kind of criticism
    is aimed at traditionalists
  • 49:36 - 49:37
    in architecture.
  • 49:39 - 49:41
    One target is Leon Krier,
  • 49:41 - 49:44
    architect of the Prince
    of Wales' model town
  • 49:44 - 49:45
    of Poundbury.
  • 49:45 - 49:50
    (light instrumental music)
  • 49:50 - 49:54
    Designing modest streets,
    laid out in traditional ways,
  • 49:54 - 49:57
    using the well tried
    and much loved details
  • 49:57 - 49:59
    that have served us down the centuries,
  • 49:59 - 50:03
    Leon Krier as created
    a genuine settlement.
  • 50:03 - 50:06
    The proportions are human proportions.
  • 50:08 - 50:11
    The details are restful to the eye.
  • 50:11 - 50:14
    (light instrumental music)
  • 50:15 - 50:18
    This is not great or original architecture
  • 50:18 - 50:20
    nor does it try to be.
  • 50:20 - 50:23
    It is a modest attempt to get things right
  • 50:23 - 50:25
    by following patterns and examples
  • 50:25 - 50:28
    laid down by tradition.
  • 50:28 - 50:32
    This is not nostalgia,
    but knowledge passed on
  • 50:32 - 50:33
    from age to age.
  • 50:38 - 50:40
    Architecture that doesn't respect the past
  • 50:40 - 50:42
    is not respecting the present
  • 50:42 - 50:45
    because it is not respecting
    people's primary need
  • 50:45 - 50:47
    from architecture, which is to build
  • 50:47 - 50:48
    a longstanding home.
  • 50:49 - 50:53
    (lively instrumental music)
  • 50:59 - 51:00
    I have shown some of the ways
  • 51:00 - 51:02
    in which artists and architects
  • 51:02 - 51:06
    have followed the call of beauty.
  • 51:06 - 51:09
    In doing so, they have
    given our world meaning.
  • 51:09 - 51:13
    (lively instrumental music)
  • 51:13 - 51:15
    The masters of the past recognized
  • 51:15 - 51:17
    that we have spiritual needs
  • 51:17 - 51:19
    as well as animal appetites.
  • 51:21 - 51:25
    For Plato, beauty was a path to God
  • 51:25 - 51:27
    while thinkers of the Enlightenment
  • 51:27 - 51:30
    saw art and beauty as ways
    in which we save ourselves
  • 51:30 - 51:32
    from meaningless routines
  • 51:32 - 51:34
    and rise to a higher level.
  • 51:38 - 51:41
    But art turned its back on beauty.
  • 51:41 - 51:43
    It became a slave to the consumer culture
  • 51:43 - 51:46
    feeding our pleasures and addictions
  • 51:46 - 51:48
    and wallowing in self-disgust.
  • 51:48 - 51:52
    (lively instrumental music)
  • 51:52 - 51:54
    That, it seems to me, is the lesson
  • 51:54 - 51:59
    of the ugliest forms of
    modern art and architecture.
  • 51:59 - 52:02
    They do not show reality,
    but take revenge on it,
  • 52:02 - 52:05
    spoiling what might have been a home
  • 52:05 - 52:08
    and leaving us to wander
    unconsoled and alienated
  • 52:08 - 52:10
    in a spiritual desert.
  • 52:14 - 52:17
    Of course it is true that there
    is much in the world today
  • 52:17 - 52:20
    that distracts and troubles us.
  • 52:20 - 52:23
    Our lives are full of leftovers.
  • 52:23 - 52:26
    We battle through lies and distraction,
  • 52:26 - 52:27
    and nothing resolves.
  • 52:27 - 52:32
    (lively instrumental music)
  • 52:32 - 52:33
    The right response, however,
  • 52:33 - 52:36
    is not to endorse this alienation.
  • 52:36 - 52:40
    It is to look for the
    path back from the desert,
  • 52:40 - 52:42
    one that will point us to a place
  • 52:42 - 52:46
    where the real and the ideal
    may still exist in harmony.
  • 52:48 - 52:52
    ("Stabat Mater" by Pergolesi)
  • 52:58 - 53:00
    In my own life, I have found this path
  • 53:00 - 53:03
    more easily through music
  • 53:03 - 53:05
    than through any other art form.
  • 53:08 - 53:13
    Pergolesi was 26 when he
    wrote the Stabat Mater.
  • 53:13 - 53:15
    It describes the grief of the holy virgin
  • 53:15 - 53:19
    beside the cross of the dying Christ.
  • 53:19 - 53:20
    All the suffering of the world
  • 53:20 - 53:23
    is symbolized in its exquisite lines.
  • 53:23 - 53:27
    ("Stabat Mater" by Pergolesi)
  • 53:32 - 53:34
    Given that Pergolesi was
    suffering from tuberculosis
  • 53:34 - 53:36
    when he wrote the Stabat Mater,
  • 53:36 - 53:40
    he is that son dying on the cross too.
  • 53:40 - 53:42
    In fact, he died within a few months
  • 53:42 - 53:44
    of the work's completion.
  • 53:46 - 53:49
    This is not a complex or
    ambitious piece of music,
  • 53:49 - 53:51
    simply a heartfelt expression
  • 53:51 - 53:54
    of the composer's faith.
  • 53:54 - 53:57
    It shows the way in which
    deep and troubling emotions
  • 53:57 - 54:01
    can achieve unity and
    freedom through music.
  • 54:02 - 54:06
    The voice of Mary is
    written for two singers.
  • 54:06 - 54:09
    The melody rises slowly, painfully,
  • 54:09 - 54:11
    resolving dissonance only to be gripped
  • 54:11 - 54:14
    by another dissonance as the voices clash,
  • 54:14 - 54:18
    representing the conflict
    and sorrow within her.
  • 54:22 - 54:25
    - [Catherine] Why don't
    I just give you, bar 18?
  • 54:25 - 54:27
    - [Roger] Okay, good idea.
  • 54:27 - 54:31
    ("Stabat Mater" by Pergolesi)
  • 54:58 - 55:01
    - Here we have a very
    simple and sacred text.
  • 55:01 - 55:05
    The mother stands grieving
    and weeping at the cross
  • 55:06 - 55:09
    on which her son is hanging.
  • 55:09 - 55:11
    That's really all that you have to say.
  • 55:11 - 55:12
    - And a completely unmusical person
  • 55:12 - 55:14
    would be immediately get the message
  • 55:14 - 55:17
    that it's a piece of
    grieving, wouldn't they?
  • 55:17 - 55:20
    There can be no possible doubt about that.
  • 55:20 - 55:21
    - The music takes over the words
  • 55:21 - 55:24
    and makes them speak to you
  • 55:24 - 55:27
    in another language in your own heart.
  • 55:27 - 55:30
    - Well it means that today,
    in our secular world,
  • 55:30 - 55:32
    that it can delight and move
  • 55:32 - 55:33
    without people having to know.
  • 55:33 - 55:34
    - [Roger] Yes, exactly.
  • 55:34 - 55:35
    - What it's about.
  • 55:35 - 55:38
    - We learn without the
    theological apparatus
  • 55:38 - 55:41
    that there is this thing called suffering,
  • 55:41 - 55:43
    and that it's at the destiny of all of us,
  • 55:43 - 55:46
    but also is not the end of all of us.
  • 55:46 - 55:50
    ("Stabat Mater" by Pergolesi)
  • 57:12 - 57:14
    In this film, I have described beauty
  • 57:14 - 57:16
    as an essential resource.
  • 57:18 - 57:19
    Through the pursuit of beauty,
  • 57:19 - 57:21
    we shape the world as a home,
  • 57:21 - 57:25
    and in doing so, we both amplify our joys
  • 57:25 - 57:28
    and find consolation for our sorrows.
  • 57:28 - 57:31
    ("Stabat Mater" by Pergolesi)
  • 57:31 - 57:34
    Art and music shine a light of meaning
  • 57:34 - 57:36
    on ordinary life, and through them,
  • 57:36 - 57:40
    we are able to confront
    the things that trouble us
  • 57:40 - 57:44
    and to find consolation and
    peace in their presence.
  • 57:47 - 57:49
    This capacity of beauty
    too redeem our suffering
  • 57:49 - 57:52
    is one reason why beauty can be seen
  • 57:52 - 57:55
    as a substitute for religion.
  • 57:55 - 57:59
    ("Stabat Mater" by Pergolesi)
  • 57:59 - 58:02
    Why give priority to religion?
  • 58:02 - 58:05
    Why not say that religion
    is a beauty substitute?
  • 58:05 - 58:08
    Better still, why describe
    the two as rivals?
  • 58:08 - 58:12
    The sacred and the beautiful
    stand side by side,
  • 58:12 - 58:15
    two doors that open onto a single space,
  • 58:15 - 58:18
    and in that space, we find our home.
  • 58:18 - 58:22
    ("Stabat Mater" by Pergolesi)
  • 58:40 - 58:41
    - [Broadcaster] And our
    Modern Beauty season
  • 58:41 - 58:43
    continues on Monday night with large scale
  • 58:43 - 58:46
    pieces of public art
    challenging the six finalists
  • 58:46 - 58:49
    of the School of Saatchi at nine.
  • 58:49 - 58:50
    Next tonight on BBC Two, this week's
  • 58:50 - 58:52
    Have I Got News For You
  • 58:52 - 58:54
    complete with extra bits.
Title:
Why Beauty Matters by Roger Scruton
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
58:58

English subtitles

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