00:00:01
[Music]
00:00:08
damn them
00:00:13
all may
00:00:15
1840 the annual exhibition of the Royal
00:00:18
Academy in London has been a great
00:00:21
success
00:00:30
on display all the reviewers agree is
00:00:33
one indisputable
00:00:35
Masterpiece painted by Edwin lania it's
00:00:39
called laying down the
00:00:41
[Music]
00:00:43
law and it features as the Learned judge
00:00:47
a
00:00:48
poodle it is the critic's chorus perfect
00:00:53
perfect in execution taste and
00:00:56
refinement
00:00:58
[Music]
00:01:01
but there's another painting hanging in
00:01:03
the 1840 show about which the critics
00:01:06
are also absolutely
00:01:09
unanimous in dismay and
00:01:14
Scorn jmw Turner's slave
00:01:18
[Music]
00:01:20
ship how is it that we can see a
00:01:23
masterpiece while the critics compared
00:01:25
it to a kitchen accident or the contents
00:01:28
of a spitoon
00:01:33
had Turner gone over the top with this
00:01:36
Voyage into a sweaty
00:01:40
nightmare this Fantastical image of
00:01:44
slaves cruy murdered at
00:01:49
Sea why had a work Turner had hoped
00:01:53
would make people weep instead move them
00:01:56
to describe it as a detestable
00:02:00
[Music]
00:02:05
absurdity what was it about this
00:02:07
particular painting the consumation of
00:02:09
Turner's career that brought down on his
00:02:12
head such a storm of abuse
00:02:22
[Music]
00:02:56
we all think we know Turner don't we
00:03:00
he seems as comfortably British as a cup
00:03:02
of
00:03:04
[Music]
00:03:19
tea he is after all the national
00:03:22
gallery's alltime favorite
00:03:25
[Music]
00:03:35
but there was another Turner the Turner
00:03:38
you don't know the painter of chaos
00:03:41
conflagration and apocalypse wild and
00:03:45
ambitious paintings that one critic
00:03:47
called a picture of nothing and very
00:03:53
like well this is my turn up extreme
00:03:57
turn up the Cockney poet are short of
00:04:00
Madness the Turner We ought to know the
00:04:03
Turner we really ought to
00:04:10
[Music]
00:04:15
[Music]
00:04:22
rever this turn was on a Delirious
00:04:26
Visionary trip that would culminate in
00:04:28
the greatest British painting of the
00:04:30
19th
00:04:32
century the slav ship
00:04:36
[Music]
00:04:50
[Music]
00:05:04
why that is very
00:05:11
[Music]
00:05:15
fun 40 years before the heroic Fiasco of
00:05:19
the slav ship young Turner could do no
00:05:22
wrong in his 20s the barber son had
00:05:26
already been tipped as the next great
00:05:28
thing in British
00:05:30
[Music]
00:05:39
painting with a dab of his brush he
00:05:42
could wave fairy dust over the Gentile
00:05:45
British
00:05:48
Countryside and it would turn into a
00:05:50
place of sublime enchantment
00:05:55
[Music]
00:06:05
and the quality ated
00:06:08
up Britain was fighting for its life
00:06:11
against the
00:06:12
French and the romance of albian had
00:06:16
never bitten deeper into the national
00:06:19
imagination
00:06:21
[Music]
00:06:31
Turner meanwhile had been granted a
00:06:34
great
00:06:35
honor Fellowship of the Royal Academy at
00:06:38
just
00:06:41
26 now he had to present them with a
00:06:43
picture to mark his
00:06:47
entry he gave them
00:06:53
this which was to say a
00:06:57
shock DOL badon Castle in snowdonia was
00:07:01
where a medieval Welsh Prince Owen go
00:07:04
had met his
00:07:07
end in reality it was just a modest pile
00:07:10
of stones on a hillside but Turner pumps
00:07:14
up the melodrama backlights the desolate
00:07:17
Crag so that the castle becomes a
00:07:20
personification of the defiant Prince
00:07:24
himself the tragic symbol of imprisoned
00:07:27
Liberty
00:07:31
just in case people didn't get it he
00:07:33
added a little
00:07:37
poem how awful is the Silence of the
00:07:41
waste where nature lifts her mountains
00:07:44
to the
00:07:45
sky Majestic
00:07:48
Solitude behold the tower where hapless
00:07:52
Owen long imprisoned pined and rung his
00:07:55
hands for Liberty in vain
00:08:00
okay so it's not exactly Kei but it is
00:08:03
Turner reaching for the Epic it's all
00:08:06
about atmospherics not finicky
00:08:09
topographical description because that's
00:08:11
what Britain was for Turner a biological
00:08:14
sentiment an instinct in the blood an
00:08:18
irresistibly operatic arrangement of
00:08:21
light air and water Elemental heroic
00:08:25
legendary
00:08:27
[Music]
00:08:31
the painting smoothed the way for the
00:08:33
young man into the ranks of the academy
00:08:36
but it should have put everyone on
00:08:38
notice that this was a painter who'd
00:08:40
never settle for the Charming and the
00:08:44
[Music]
00:08:48
pretty Turner could have made a
00:08:50
perfectly decent living raking it in
00:08:53
from the pleasure and Leisure industry
00:09:00
but in his fertile imagination something
00:09:03
Grand and bloody was already
00:09:16
[Music]
00:09:18
stirring but he still had a fortune to
00:09:23
make he wasn't ready yet to be the maker
00:09:26
of dark epics
00:09:32
[Music]
00:09:47
it was time to enjoy being jmw
00:09:51
Turner
00:09:55
ra he's rolling in money and commissions
00:09:59
and he buys a West End house for his
00:10:01
pictures himself and his old
00:10:05
dad whom he shamelessly turns into his
00:10:08
allpurpose servant old dad would stretch
00:10:11
and Prime canvases old dad would Patrol
00:10:15
the gallery old dad would tend the
00:10:18
vegetable garden out by the river and
00:10:20
revel in his son's Fame and
00:10:23
Fortune good old dad
00:10:27
[Music]
00:10:49
[Music]
00:10:58
but then conventional Family Ties don't
00:11:01
seem to mean much to Turner there's no
00:11:04
dutiful Mrs tea at home marriage and art
00:11:08
don't go together he
00:11:12
[Music]
00:11:17
said so instead he takes as a lover the
00:11:21
Widow of a friend Sarah dambi and
00:11:24
installs her around the corner he even
00:11:27
has two children by her
00:11:30
[Music]
00:11:33
more illicitly still Sarah is the muse
00:11:36
of his erotic
00:11:39
imagination his drawing suggests he
00:11:41
takes as much pleasure in sex as a full
00:11:44
Moon Over
00:11:46
[Music]
00:11:48
bamir It wasn't until Turner's will was
00:11:51
published that anyone knew about Sarah
00:11:54
Dani and the children
00:11:58
[Music]
00:12:06
and the erotica remained strictly under
00:12:09
wraps in his
00:12:11
[Music]
00:12:23
lifetime Turner chose to live part of
00:12:26
his life amidst the shadows of secret
00:12:29
fantasies but when he emerged from this
00:12:32
world and stroll beside the temps he
00:12:34
indulged in another fantasy she lived in
00:12:37
a country from which poverty hunger and
00:12:40
misery have been banished
00:12:45
[Music]
00:12:59
[Music]
00:13:21
turnus temps was the place where the
00:13:25
romance of England came to him with
00:13:27
lyrical intensity
00:13:30
a place of almost narcotic Serenity this
00:13:34
is the pleasure seeking public pleasing
00:13:37
Turner and perhaps he could have settled
00:13:40
for this mellow dream world gently
00:13:44
stroking the self-satisfaction of
00:13:47
Regency
00:13:48
[Music]
00:13:54
England but even as he drifted through
00:13:57
his home counties Eden
00:13:59
Turner must have been aware that
00:14:01
alongside this idle there was another
00:14:03
England an England in distress and
00:14:06
something in Turner wanted to paint that
00:14:09
England
00:14:13
too for this was the early 1800s the
00:14:17
rockiest years in all modern British
00:14:20
history the time when the distance
00:14:23
between the fantasy Britain and the
00:14:25
reality was at its widest
00:14:38
the kingdom was supposed to be a model
00:14:41
of political and social stability but
00:14:44
there was massive unemployment hunger
00:14:47
anger Rick burning in the countryside
00:14:50
machine smashing in the towns the bloody
00:14:53
war with Napoleon's France grinding on
00:14:57
and on
00:14:59
these are hard times radical
00:15:13
[Music]
00:15:17
times so turna produces a gritty image
00:15:21
of rough bratan
00:15:26
[Music]
00:15:32
what's your most delicious fantasy of
00:15:34
old England summertime a picnic well
00:15:38
here's a hard-bitten winter Dawn and
00:15:41
it's no picnic
00:15:43
[Music]
00:15:59
a shot hair slung around the shoulders
00:16:02
of a
00:16:05
[Music]
00:16:07
girl rotted
00:16:12
[Music]
00:16:16
tracks two men digging a ditch or is it
00:16:20
a
00:16:20
grave you can feel the tough work of it
00:16:24
in that hard Frozen
00:16:26
soil everything impact passive
00:16:30
unsentimental
00:16:34
dur how things really
00:16:38
are wheny Constable ever do winter in
00:16:42
the
00:16:45
north why would Turner ever do something
00:16:49
so
00:16:51
flinty well in Yorkshire he has become
00:16:54
best mates with someone who will change
00:16:57
the way he sees the
00:16:59
World Walter Fork's view of Britain
00:17:02
isn't exactly Rose tinted and he's not
00:17:05
your usual country gent he's a political
00:17:09
militant the scourge of the old Tor
00:17:15
establishment but the cause that's most
00:17:17
dear to this radical tough is the great
00:17:20
moral Crusade of the
00:17:23
day the abolition of the slave trade
00:17:32
[Music]
00:17:36
Fork's Fury seeped into Turner's
00:17:40
[Music]
00:17:56
imagination one day in 1810 10 Turner
00:18:00
took Fork's son for a walk on the
00:18:02
Yorkshire Ms as a storm
00:18:10
brood the two of them sketch away Turner
00:18:13
puts his pencil down there hay he says
00:18:16
in 2 years you'll see this and it'll be
00:18:19
called Hannibal crossing the Alps
00:18:25
[Music]
00:18:29
so a Squall over the Yorkshire mes turns
00:18:33
into a no Holts barred Alpine cataclysm
00:18:37
a simultaneous blizzard and a shaft of
00:18:40
sickly Sun Hannibal's Army is the victim
00:18:44
as it clambers its painful way over the
00:18:47
Alpine
00:18:51
passes stragglers kicked off by scary
00:18:54
Mountain
00:18:57
Men while a sucking Vortex hovers over
00:19:01
the scene like some gigantic malevolent
00:19:05
bird of
00:19:07
prey turn under something tremendous
00:19:10
with the storm over the yor Moes it's
00:19:13
not just Scenic weather it's a cosmic
00:19:17
[Music]
00:19:19
Reckoning Hannibal is a hit people
00:19:23
crowded around it so densely The Gents
00:19:26
couldn't elbow their way in to see it
00:19:30
but why did this picture pull in the
00:19:32
crowds not because it was a scene from
00:19:34
ancient history but because everybody
00:19:36
knew it was also a modern painting a
00:19:40
contemporary
00:19:42
story The comeuppence handed out to
00:19:45
another arrogant Invader who crossed the
00:19:48
Alps In Search Of
00:19:50
Glory the arch enemy
00:19:54
Napoleon in a crushing put down Turner
00:19:58
shrink the mighty Commander to a puny
00:20:01
almost comical figure in the remote
00:20:03
background a top an elephant that looks
00:20:06
more like a dumb
00:20:09
[Music]
00:20:16
Beetle you have to say this about Turner
00:20:19
though he is an equal opportunity
00:20:21
pessimist as much as he wants to see the
00:20:24
end of Napoleon he's got a damn funny
00:20:26
way of celebrating waterl
00:20:28
[Music]
00:20:30
in 1817 does he paint Victorious
00:20:33
Wellington and his Gallant Scarlet
00:20:36
squares of embattle grenadiers no he
00:20:40
gives us a carpet of corpses in the
00:20:43
Blackness wives and sweethearts with
00:20:45
their babies pathetically searching the
00:20:47
Carnage for their loved
00:20:50
[Music]
00:20:55
ones an apparition of pure hell
00:21:03
rather than glorify the Iron Duke it
00:21:06
seems to exemplify one of his pous
00:21:10
verdicts the next worst thing to a
00:21:12
battle lost is a battle
00:21:16
[Music]
00:21:17
one no wonder it wasn't until the
00:21:21
1980s that this painting was properly
00:21:24
[Music]
00:21:26
displayed Turner's refusal to beat the
00:21:29
Patriotic drum or Wag the flag cost him
00:21:32
patrons but with the field of watero his
00:21:35
reach for something profound a British
00:21:38
art that will act out the suffering of
00:21:50
victims but then Turner knows all about
00:21:53
the lot of the Common People
00:22:06
[Music]
00:22:24
he's no gentleman artist he was born and
00:22:28
grew up in in the filthy back alleys of
00:22:30
coven
00:22:31
Garden where every day he rubed
00:22:33
shoulders with the desperate and the
00:22:37
[Music]
00:22:49
destitute this didn't make his waterl or
00:22:52
any of his historical epics manifestos
00:22:56
for revolution they are bigger
00:22:59
more disturbing than
00:23:02
that they have washing through them The
00:23:05
Tragic Truth About the powerlessness of
00:23:07
ordinary people when faced with atrocity
00:23:11
and disaster people who existed right on
00:23:15
the
00:23:16
edge and there was someone in his own
00:23:19
life who'd gone right over
00:23:24
it his mother
00:23:34
Mary Turner was a shrieking Fury in the
00:23:38
painter's
00:23:39
[Applause]
00:23:43
house driven mad perhaps by the death of
00:23:46
Turner's youngest
00:23:50
sister in 1800 she was incarcerated in
00:23:54
bedum disappearing from his life and
00:23:57
dying four years later in total
00:24:06
[Applause]
00:24:09
neglect but if Turner abandoned her
00:24:12
could there have been I wonder a
00:24:18
haunting was Mary's howling rage
00:24:22
translated into the dark Thunder and
00:24:24
Burning Gold of Turner's Skies
00:24:37
this much I can
00:24:39
say that an acute tragic sense of the
00:24:42
Frailty of human existence frame
00:24:45
Turner's life and Powers the greatest of
00:24:48
his works
00:24:50
[Music]
00:25:06
so the figures who populate his history
00:25:08
paintings are often weirdly invertebrate
00:25:12
so many ragd dolls tossed around by the
00:25:15
immense forces of fate
00:25:19
[Applause]
00:25:19
[Music]
00:25:34
painting these discarded marionet was
00:25:37
particularly willful for someone who'd
00:25:39
studied academic figure drawing but then
00:25:44
despite the fact he's been a fellow of
00:25:46
the academy for nearly 20 years Turner
00:25:49
was proving to be the odd man out in the
00:25:52
play safe world of British art
00:26:00
it's not just what he paints that gets
00:26:02
him into trouble with high class critics
00:26:05
it's the way he paints
00:26:10
it one critic despairs that Turner
00:26:14
Delights in abstractions that go back to
00:26:17
the first chaos of the
00:26:21
[Music]
00:26:24
world well my dears what would you
00:26:27
expect from the grubby little parvenue
00:26:29
with his down Market accent and his up
00:26:32
Market house there's something
00:26:35
obstinately coarse that clings to him a
00:26:38
pungent social
00:26:41
Aroma when Turner visits France the
00:26:43
painter delaqua is taken a that he looks
00:26:47
rather like a farmer with unwashed hands
00:26:50
oh there's dirt under Turner Nails all
00:26:52
right but it's likely to be gambo's
00:26:55
yellow or Prussian Blue not farmer
00:26:59
and the worst thing is that he seems to
00:27:01
wear his unwashed hands like a badge of
00:27:04
Professional
00:27:06
Pride when a young gentleman aspirant
00:27:09
artist comes to see him Turner grabs his
00:27:12
Lily white hands and growls you're no
00:27:16
[Music]
00:27:21
artist Turner himself uses his fingers
00:27:25
to make his art keeps a nail
00:27:28
deliberately untrimmed so he could wield
00:27:30
it like a claw to cut into the paint
00:27:33
surface he's no dainty brush flicker he
00:27:37
wipes and scrapes attacks the surface
00:27:40
with a pmus stone spits into the paint
00:27:43
and gives it a good
00:27:45
smush it's this joyous urchin light
00:27:49
wallowing in the muck and slather of
00:27:51
paint that Turner's critics found so
00:27:55
appalling and one of them complained
00:27:57
about his Perpetual need to be
00:28:00
extraordinary well yes how very unri
00:28:07
[Music]
00:28:38
but Turner didn't want to be Boxed In by
00:28:40
what Britain was
00:28:42
becoming an Empire of solid praic
00:28:46
commercial facts he needed something
00:28:49
more a place where the poetic
00:28:51
imagination could drift and float
00:28:55
[Music]
00:29:00
there was one place where not being
00:29:02
sound or solid was of the essence Venice
00:29:07
for 20 years off and on Turner made the
00:29:10
floating city his soulmate
00:29:14
[Music]
00:29:34
Turner was
00:29:35
Spellbound and conjured from a wisp here
00:29:39
aorb there the Gauzy Radiance of the
00:29:43
[Music]
00:29:48
place Turner's critics accused him of
00:29:51
the cardinal sin of
00:29:54
indistinctness but here in the floating
00:29:56
city where everything was liquid and
00:29:58
slippery he could Embrace that
00:30:01
indistinctness make it his own
00:30:03
particular Glory
00:30:05
[Music]
00:30:47
[Music]
00:31:11
Turner could have been tranquilized by
00:31:14
Venice seduced into becoming an
00:31:17
accomplished supplier of sensuous
00:31:23
Bliss but the stagnant beauty of the
00:31:26
city made him think of something
00:31:30
else he looked at Venice and he saw
00:31:34
[Music]
00:31:50
[Music]
00:31:53
death for most of his life Turner had
00:31:56
been the picture of rude health
00:31:58
now he's sick losing weight
00:32:05
wheezing he feels the grip of the
00:32:09
ancient story of life and death in his
00:32:11
very own bones
00:32:13
[Music]
00:32:20
[Music]
00:32:36
mortality eats away at
00:32:39
him his indispensable multitasking old
00:32:44
dad had died not just his personal jack
00:32:47
of all trades but his best friend other
00:32:50
cherished Intimates Walter Forks the old
00:32:53
radical had gone too
00:32:56
[Music]
00:32:58
to keep the aches and pains at Bay he
00:33:00
uses a tincture of Thorn Apple to cope a
00:33:04
narcotic which probably sends his always
00:33:08
hyperactive visual imagination into
00:33:11
planetary
00:33:12
orbit and from his bad dreams gallops a
00:33:17
Biblical
00:33:25
horror and I look
00:33:28
and beheld a Pale Horse and his name
00:33:32
that sat on him was
00:33:35
death and Hell Followed with
00:33:53
him but Turner paints his way out of the
00:33:56
nightmare
00:33:58
look closely the skeleton is
00:34:02
Lim death is dead Turner lives to paint
00:34:11
on he won't limply surrender like some
00:34:15
consumptive romantic instead he gathers
00:34:19
his energies puts his obsession to work
00:34:22
makes the cycle of life and death
00:34:25
suffering and salvation the thing theme
00:34:28
of his greatest period of
00:34:34
[Music]
00:34:44
painting he's deep into his middle age
00:34:47
when he stares at the waves pounding the
00:34:50
coast of Kent he feels that Rhythm Of
00:34:53
Destruction and
00:34:55
creation Now marget might not seem to
00:34:59
you much of a place to brood on
00:35:01
historical Destiny but for Turner it was
00:35:04
definitely more than just Seaside ozone
00:35:07
and a stroll along the beach
00:35:10
[Music]
00:35:34
the sea becomes something more than the
00:35:36
carrier of power and
00:35:40
wealth it's the stage on which the drama
00:35:43
of British history gets played
00:35:49
out sometimes that drama is fierce and
00:35:53
turbulent and sometimes it's a
00:35:56
comforting story for revolutionary times
00:36:00
[Music]
00:36:29
so in the painting he calls his old
00:36:31
darling he gives us romantic wistfulness
00:36:34
for the veteran Battleship of trafala
00:36:37
the fighting
00:36:39
[Music]
00:36:44
Tamer the vessel is restored
00:36:47
fictitiously to one last heroic farewell
00:36:51
Voyage before being broken up in
00:36:54
Turner's picture its masts are still
00:36:57
standing its sails
00:36:59
furled but the little steam power tug
00:37:02
that pulls it isn't some sort of modern
00:37:05
villain it's simply a fact of life in
00:37:08
the New Britain a nation in upheaval as
00:37:12
the Industrial Revolution gathers
00:37:15
momentum and Turner has Perfect Pitch
00:37:18
for a British public torn between
00:37:21
affection for the past and anticipation
00:37:24
of the future
00:37:29
it's so emotionally versatile this
00:37:31
picture that it lets you indulge
00:37:34
whatever mood takes you feel like an
00:37:36
allergy well fine then this can be the
00:37:39
sunset of Nelson's England just made a
00:37:43
lot of money from an industrial patent
00:37:45
and feeling good fine
00:37:48
again this is the sunrise of your new
00:37:52
industrial Empire
00:38:00
but Turner's Restless imagination won't
00:38:04
settle for poignant gentleness he knows
00:38:07
the truth is more tumultuous and that
00:38:10
the sea has terrible Tales to
00:38:17
tell ships in Peril fill his mind those
00:38:21
ships become an emblem of the country
00:38:24
the oceanic deep becomes the sight of
00:38:27
which Imperial Destiny unfolds where
00:38:30
British history will be wrecked rescued
00:38:34
or
00:38:44
salvaged the amphet was a convict ship
00:38:48
carrying women and children to Australia
00:38:51
but it didn't get far in the channel of
00:38:54
bulong the ship ran ground and began to
00:38:57
bre break
00:39:03
[Music]
00:39:07
up the French offered to land the
00:39:10
passengers and the crew but the captain
00:39:12
of brutal disciplinarian rejected the
00:39:15
offer on the grounds he had no authority
00:39:18
to land them anywhere except their antip
00:39:21
ofan
00:39:23
prison the crew clung to masts and Spar
00:39:27
and most survived the wreck but the
00:39:29
women and children all
00:39:31
125 of them were swept away and
00:39:36
drowned like his Waterloo it's a
00:39:39
painting of victims so much human Flom
00:39:42
and Jetsam but this is the bare skeleton
00:39:46
of a Masterwork Turner never finished or
00:39:49
showed it
00:39:54
[Music]
00:40:07
but the idea behind it cruelty at Sea
00:40:11
blood martyrdom retribution and
00:40:15
salvation had certainly not gone
00:40:22
away it simmered and then exploded in a
00:40:26
sky
00:40:28
the color of blood
00:40:30
[Music]
00:41:07
[Music]
00:41:15
in the late 1830s one issue galvanized
00:41:19
British moral outrage more than any
00:41:22
other slavery
00:41:39
[Music]
00:41:48
Britain had outlawed slavery throughout
00:41:50
the
00:41:52
Empire but in the Hispanic Empires and
00:41:55
the United States it not not only
00:41:57
survived but
00:42:02
thrived in 1840 in London an
00:42:06
International Convention of the great
00:42:08
and good was planned to express
00:42:10
righteous indignation at this
00:42:12
fact Turner initiated into the cause so
00:42:16
many years ago by his Patron Walter
00:42:19
Forks wanted to have his say in paint
00:42:32
and how does he do
00:42:33
it by being a thorn in a side of self-
00:42:44
congratulation Turner reaches back 60
00:42:47
years to resurrect one of the most
00:42:49
shameful episodes in the history of the
00:42:52
British Empire
00:43:21
1781 the British slaver the zong was off
00:43:25
the coast of Jamaica after a routinely
00:43:27
profitable Journey from
00:43:40
Africa but deep below deck there was
00:43:49
trouble slaves were dying at more than a
00:43:53
usual rate and the ship's Master Luke
00:43:56
cin wood suddenly had a business
00:43:59
disaster on his
00:44:04
hands his human cargo was insured but
00:44:08
the underwriters would only pay up if
00:44:10
the casualties could be accounted for as
00:44:13
losses at Sea Not Dead on Arrival
00:44:27
so Captain Collingwood went below
00:44:33
de and began the merciless business of
00:44:36
selecting which slaves he would swiftly
00:44:39
turn into losses at sea
00:45:25
132 Africans men women and children
00:45:30
their hands and feet fettered were
00:45:32
thrown overboard into the shark infested
00:45:35
waters of the
00:45:38
[Music]
00:45:51
[Music]
00:45:55
Caribbean the moral horror of the case
00:45:57
of the zong was the moment when
00:46:00
thousands of Britain abandoned their
00:46:03
indifference and became campaigners
00:46:06
against the slave
00:46:08
[Music]
00:46:25
trade 13 32 Africans perished horribly
00:46:30
but a mass movement was born from their
00:46:41
martydom Turner's approach to this
00:46:44
appalling tragedy was not that of a
00:46:47
literal historical
00:46:50
illustrator what the great enchanter of
00:46:53
the canvas wanted was Prospero like to
00:46:56
summon an apocalypse a
00:47:05
[Music]
00:47:20
typhoon the slave ship pitches us into
00:47:24
the midst of a feverish dream of
00:47:26
catastrophe and Terror sin and
00:47:39
retribution the silhouetted ship almost
00:47:42
engulfed in the erupting spray is both a
00:47:45
real vessel and something cursed and
00:47:49
haunted like the ship of the Ancient
00:47:54
Mariner waves seee with
00:47:57
monsters a kind of obscene pirania likee
00:48:01
nibbling and
00:48:04
[Music]
00:48:08
gobbling and the oncoming fishy monster
00:48:11
is not to be caught off the coast of
00:48:13
Jamaica but off the canvas a herous
00:48:17
Bosch hell in high water
00:48:28
of course it has its imperfections all
00:48:31
that flailing flurry of action in the
00:48:34
foreground the mysteriously floating
00:48:37
iron Fetters the flung limb that may or
00:48:41
may not be detached from its torso all
00:48:45
the Frantic fishy action could seem too
00:48:48
fussily
00:48:51
staged in the end there's only one test
00:48:54
that matters you come into the room you
00:48:57
fix it in your sights does it or does it
00:49:00
not attack you in the guts it
00:49:09
does does your heart jump do your eyes
00:49:12
widen does your pulse race do your feet
00:49:14
get a bad attack of lead boots you're so
00:49:17
struck down by it they
00:49:23
do ferer has drowned you In This Moment
00:49:28
pulled you into this terrifying chasm in
00:49:31
the ocean drenched you in his bloody
00:49:34
light exactly the Hue you sense on your
00:49:37
blood filled optic nerves When You Close
00:49:41
Your Eyes in blinding
00:49:46
sunlight though almost all of his
00:49:48
critics believe that the slavers
00:49:51
represented an alltime low in Turner's
00:49:54
Reckless disregard for the walls of art
00:49:58
it was in fact his greatest Triumph in
00:50:01
the sculptural carving of
00:50:05
space for none of the stormy
00:50:07
atmospherics the great pin wheel Fury of
00:50:11
Reds and Golds would have the impact
00:50:13
they did were it not for that deep
00:50:16
trough Turner has cut in the ocean which
00:50:19
at the center of the painting makes the
00:50:22
blackly heaving swell stand still as
00:50:26
though the Roth ful hand of Jehovah has
00:50:28
suddenly passed over the boiling
00:50:35
waters for this is a day of martyrdom
00:50:39
Retribution and
00:50:46
judgment but also a scene Turner must
00:50:50
have optimistically thought a
00:50:55
Vindication it would would be a sin
00:51:00
redeemed slavery would be
00:51:06
defeated there is after all a patch of
00:51:10
clearing blue at the top right corner of
00:51:13
the painting
00:51:15
[Music]
00:51:27
the critics went to town Turner became
00:51:30
the butt of jokes a crackpot old loon
00:51:34
lost in the Tempest with his ridiculous
00:51:38
painting and it's even more ridiculous
00:51:41
full
00:51:43
title slavers slave ship throwing over
00:51:47
the dead and dying typhoon coming
00:51:54
on punch magazine joined in the chorus
00:51:57
of Cals lampooning Turner by inventing a
00:52:01
painting with the title a typhoon
00:52:04
bursting a simoon over a Whirlpool
00:52:07
Maelstrom Norway a ship on fire an
00:52:11
eclipse with the effect of a lunar
00:52:13
rainbow
00:52:27
[Music]
00:52:28
but punch and all the other high hack
00:52:31
critics miss the one overwhelming point
00:52:35
which makes this the greatest British
00:52:38
picture of the 19th
00:52:41
century the perfect match between
00:52:45
message and
00:52:49
form the payoff of the slaves martyrdom
00:52:52
would in the end be freedom
00:52:59
[Music]
00:53:05
so Turner has given himself glorious
00:53:08
Freedom with his brush and with his
00:53:11
color and with his imagery to convey the
00:53:15
power of the Sacred moment
00:53:18
[Music]
00:53:26
he
00:53:45
[Music]
00:54:02
2 years after the de bark of the slave
00:54:06
ship a young Scottish admirer William
00:54:09
Leighton leech visited Turner's house in
00:54:11
Queen an
00:54:13
[Music]
00:54:22
Street he'd heard that the Turner
00:54:25
Gallery was in repair but nothing could
00:54:29
possibly have prepared leech for the
00:54:33
[Music]
00:54:37
squala I walked backwards and forwards
00:54:39
in the gallery feeling cold and
00:54:43
uncomfortable there was no sound to be
00:54:45
heard but the rain splashing through the
00:54:48
broken windows upon the
00:54:52
floor leech stood in the evil smelling
00:54:55
Gloom
00:54:57
and as he peered at Turner's most recent
00:55:00
work among which was hanging somewhere
00:55:03
the Scarlet explosion that was the
00:55:06
unsold unwanted unloved slav ship he
00:55:10
felt more and more
00:55:13
depressed but this was the moment when
00:55:16
the country's favorite painter once
00:55:18
revered as the patriarch of British art
00:55:21
was written off as a Cena lunatic
00:55:33
[Music]
00:55:40
yet the effect of the critical Onslaught
00:55:42
is to make him more not less Brave he's
00:55:46
off on his own now the solitary Mariner
00:55:48
on a completely Uncharted ocean of pure
00:55:52
painting
00:55:54
[Music]
00:57:18
alongside all these scenes of oceanic
00:57:21
turmoil Turner was still capable of
00:57:24
painting images of Exquisite liquid
00:57:27
K but you have the feeling he could do
00:57:30
those in his
00:57:32
sleep it's when his Whirlpool of paint
00:57:35
resolves itself into something weightier
00:57:38
and mightier than the entertainment of
00:57:40
the senses when he reaches towards the
00:57:44
truths of history and Eternity I think
00:57:48
Turner is at his
00:57:50
greatest that's when he changes not just
00:57:54
British art but all of part most
00:57:59
[Music]
00:58:05
completely and you know this is why
00:58:08
Turner still matters to us and always
00:58:10
will that old cotney Giza in his
00:58:13
battered hat and filthy coat transports
00:58:16
us somewhere where the Slick could
00:58:18
formist would never dare to go into the
00:58:21
eye of History Storm Into The Ocean of
00:58:25
light
00:58:35
[Music]
00:58:45
[Music]
00:58:51
oh
00:58:53
[Music]