-
[background music] We're in the Museum of Modern Art
-
and we're looking at Constantin Brancusi's "Bird in Space" from 1928.
-
Brancusi was a Romanian who worked
-
for almost his entire career in Paris.
-
He worked in lots of media and often pushed
-
the materials to really new expressions.
-
This is bronze.
-
It's bronze. It's been highly polished.
-
So it looks like gold...
-
But it's not just bronze, because for Brancusi
-
the pedestal was part of the sculpture.
-
And it's got a stone pedestal.
-
It's got limestone below that and very often you'd see
-
a wooden pedestal even below that creating a hierarchy
-
of materials what he considered the most primitive to the most industrial.
-
It's kind of a Neoplatonic idea of ascending
-
from the material up to the immaterial.
-
I think that's exactly right.
-
The reflectivity of the bronze drives that point home.
-
It is really about light and movement, right?
-
This is not a sculpture that is in any way
-
a literal depiction of a bird,
-
it's a depiction of this gentle organic arching
-
of this soaring figure.
-
It's not a bird in so much as a representation
-
of the thing that birds to that we love.
-
As one moves around it and looks at it,
-
the light that reflects on it shifts and changes and flickers,
-
so it does have a sense of something almost kinetic.
-
As if it were moving and soaring,
-
but it's not a propulsion that seems mechanical,
-
even though it's metal and we see it as an industrial material.
-
There's a great story about this sculpture.
-
This was included in a famous 1936 exhibition at MoMA
-
called "Cubism and Abstract Art"
-
and when this came over from France,
-
the customs agents kept it and wouldn't let it out.
-
Why?
-
Because MoMA was claiming it is a work of art
-
and they didn't believe it.
-
This is 1936 and they thought it had some industrial use
-
and therefore could be taxed
-
and MoMA said "No, it's a work of art,
-
it should not be taxed"
-
and it was actually held in.
-
There was a court case about it.
-
But what purpose could this possibly serve?
-
If I remember correctly the papers suggested
-
it may be a propeller or a piece of a propeller.
-
It does really speak to the radicality
-
- which I think we forget - of just how abstract this is.
-
It doesn't really in some ways look so abstract.
-
It does suggest flight and upward movement
-
and we're used to things suggesting things like that.
-
[background music]