The Power of Art - Turner (complete episode)

00:59:05
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ven2Xz_J-EQ

Summary

TLDRThe video highlights the contrasting receptions of two prominent artworks at the 1840 Royal Academy Exhibition: Edwin Lania's 'Laying Down the Law' was lauded as a masterpiece, whereas J.M.W Turner's 'Slave Ship' was harshly criticized by contemporary critics. The episode delves into Turner's life, his rise from a Covent Garden background to a leading figure in British art notorious for his bold choices and dramatic style, characterized by chaos and apocalyptic themes. Turner's piece, intended to address the horrors of the slave trade and human suffering, was misunderstood and ridiculed by critics, yet it remains a celebrated masterpiece today. Turner, influenced by radical thinkers like Walter Forks, defied conventional narrative in art, choosing to portray social injustices and human frailty. His later works, praised for their atmospheric depth and visionary execution, reflect his enduring fight against using art to only glorify the status quo. Despite his perception as an outsider, Turner's revolutionary approach to art encapsulated his deep engagement with the challenges and moral questions of his time, propelling British art toward modernism.

Takeaways

  • 🎨 Turner's 'Slave Ship' was initially mocked by critics for its chaotic style and intense subject matter.
  • 🎭 Turner is recognized for exploring dramatic themes like chaos and apocalypse in his art.
  • 📚 Despite his challenging subjects, Turner's legacy is celebrated as a major shift in British art towards modernism.
  • 🖌️ Known for his unconventional painting techniques, Turner often used his fingers and nails instead of brushes.
  • 👨‍👦 Turner's life was heavily influenced by his father and radical figures like Walter Forks.
  • 🖼️ He tackled social injustices like slavery through his work, making bold statements on human suffering.
  • 🍂 Despite his humble beginnings, Turner became a pivotal figure in British art history.
  • 🎩 Turner's unique style often put him at odds with the artistic norms of his time.
  • 🚢 'The Slave Ship' is now seen as one of the greatest British paintings of the 19th century.
  • 🔍 The episode traces how Turner’s personal tragedies informed his evocative and emotional artistic vision.

Timeline

  • 00:00:00 - 00:05:00

    In May 1840, the Royal Academy's annual exhibition showcases Edwin Lonia's 'Laying Down the Law,' praised for its perfection. However, JMW Turner's 'Slave Ship' faces harsh criticism, compared to a kitchen accident or spit contents. Turner's bold depiction of the horrific reality of the slave trade, meant to evoke empathy, instead incites disdain. This controversy reflects the divide between traditional British aesthetics and Turner's radical approach to art, highlighting his reputation as a national favorite yet misunderstood visionary.

  • 00:05:00 - 00:10:00

    Around 40 years prior, as a promising young painter in his 20s, Turner was celebrated for his enchanting landscapes, earning him a Royal Academy Fellowship at 26. His work 'Dolbadarn Castle' foreshadowed his break from pleasing art, revealing a deeper, more atmospheric British identity. Turner's ambition and passion for epic narratives began to brew, but he balanced this with a career pleasing the leisure-seeking public. However, darker, grand themes were awakening in his fertile imagination.

  • 00:10:00 - 00:15:00

    Turner, enjoying his success and living with his father, avoids traditional family ties. He forms a secretive relationship with Sarah Dani, having children with her. Turner's private life was as complex as his art, showing an England of lyrical serenity while aware of the nation's stark social realities. The class divide and unrest inspired his desire to portray not just idyllic visions but also to capture the tumultuous England of his time, during a period of great social upheaval.

  • 00:15:00 - 00:20:00

    Turner's friendship with radical Walter Forks sparks his interest in political and social themes, impacting his art. He paints scenes reflecting the harshness of life, driven by the era's struggles including the abolition of slavery. 'Hannibal Crossing the Alps' becomes a commentary on Napoleon's ambition, portraying cosmic reckoning rather than mere history. Turner's work resonates as both its historical narrative and its symbolism of contemporary socio-political events, showcasing his deepening thematic focus.

  • 00:20:00 - 00:25:00

    Despite his disdain for Napoleon, Turner does not glorify British victories like Waterloo. Instead, he highlights the tragic aftermath of battles, emphasizing the human cost and suffering over triumph. This approach troubles patrons but reflects Turner's empathy for the powerless, shaped by personal experiences such as his mother's tragic decline into madness. His art reveals a deep sense of human vulnerability, framing his historical epics not as political manifestos, but as universal tragedies.

  • 00:25:00 - 00:30:00

    Turner's figures often reflect vulnerability against overpowering fate, contrasting his academic success with a reputation for rebelliousness. Critics disapprove of his chaotic style as coarse and unrefined, reflecting his working-class roots and disdain for polished convention. Turner embodies artistic engagement with raw creativity, embracing unconventional techniques and materials, which upset the conservative art world.

  • 00:30:00 - 00:35:00

    Turner's time in Venice allows him to explore 'indistinctness,' embracing its watery, dreamlike qualities to free his artistic expression. Yet, Venice's decaying beauty evokes themes of mortality. Facing personal losses and health issues, Turner uses art to grapple with existential themes, depicting cycles of life and death with vivid power. His work during this period, including depictions of apocalyptic visions, reflects a deep personal and artistic exploration of the human condition.

  • 00:35:00 - 00:40:00

    Turner channels his personal tribulations and societal discord into paintings, exemplified by his depiction of the historical and contemporary drama of England. He artistically navigates themes of power, industrial change, and national identity within the context of maritime history. His work oscillates between comforting nostalgia and dynamic change, mirroring Britain's transformation during the Industrial Revolution.

  • 00:40:00 - 00:45:00

    Turner's painting of the shipwreck 'Amphitrite' further illustrates victimhood, rooted in historical tragedy, revealing a profound empathy for human suffering. However, many of his works, brimming with thematic complexity, were left unfinished or unseen. These pieces depict Turner’s evolving critique on cruelty, exploitation, and destitution, continuing to symbolically engage with the turmoil of his era.

  • 00:45:00 - 00:50:00

    Among British society's growing anti-slavery sentiment, Turner's 'Slave Ship' emerges as a powerful visual protest reflecting his long-standing engagement with abolition. The painting serves both as a haunting critique of historical injustices and as a dramatic expression of his mature artistic style, embodying his ability to convey complex narratives through visual chaos and color dynamics, despite critical backlash.

  • 00:50:00 - 00:59:05

    Despite criticism labeling him a madman, Turner's later works pivot toward more elemental expressions of the sublime, capturing the vast forces of nature and time. He transcends traditional art forms, pushing toward an avant-garde approach that redefines British art. Turner's legacy, carried forward by his relentless innovation and exploration of light and color, entrenches his place as a critical figure in global art history.

Show more

Mind Map

Video Q&A

  • What was the reception of Turner's 'Slave Ship' during its exhibition?

    Critics were unanimous in their dismay and scorn, comparing it to a kitchen accident or the contents of a spitoon.

  • How was Lania's 'Laying Down the Law' received?

    It was praised universally as an indisputable masterpiece for its execution, taste, and refinement.

  • What are some of Turner's known artistic styles or themes?

    Turner was known for dramatic, chaotic, and apocalyptic scenes that went beyond the charming and pretty.

  • What personal struggles and influences shaped Turner's work?

    Turner was influenced by his mother's mental illness and death, social issues like slavery, and a personal sense of tragedy and human frailty.

  • How did Turner's social status affect his reception?

    Despite his success, Turner's down-market accent and coarse mannerisms made him an outsider in the high-class art world.

  • What historical themes did Turner explore in his paintings?

    Turner explored themes like the abolition of slavery, the tragedy of wars, and the struggles of common people.

  • What role did his father and other personal connections play in Turner's life and work?

    Turner's father was his loyal assistant, and radical friends like Walter Forks influenced his perspectives, particularly on slavery.

  • Which painting by Turner was often considered the greatest British painting of the 19th century?

    'The Slave Ship' is often considered Turner's masterwork and one of the greatest British paintings of the 19th century.

  • Why was Turner's later work challenging for the traditional art critics?

    His later work was seen as too daring and abstract, embracing indistinctness and visual chaos which clashed with conventional expectations.

  • What was the public perception of Turner towards the end of his career?

    Turner was seen as a solitary mariner and a crazy old man by the public and art critics by the end of his career.

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  • 00:00:01
    [Music]
  • 00:00:08
    damn them
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    all may
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    1840 the annual exhibition of the Royal
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    Academy in London has been a great
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    success
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    on display all the reviewers agree is
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    one indisputable
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    Masterpiece painted by Edwin lania it's
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    called laying down the
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    [Music]
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    law and it features as the Learned judge
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    a
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    poodle it is the critic's chorus perfect
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    perfect in execution taste and
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    refinement
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    [Music]
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    but there's another painting hanging in
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    the 1840 show about which the critics
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    are also absolutely
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    unanimous in dismay and
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    Scorn jmw Turner's slave
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    [Music]
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    ship how is it that we can see a
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    masterpiece while the critics compared
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    it to a kitchen accident or the contents
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    of a spitoon
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    had Turner gone over the top with this
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    Voyage into a sweaty
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    nightmare this Fantastical image of
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    slaves cruy murdered at
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    Sea why had a work Turner had hoped
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    would make people weep instead move them
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    to describe it as a detestable
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    [Music]
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    absurdity what was it about this
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    particular painting the consumation of
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    Turner's career that brought down on his
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    head such a storm of abuse
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    [Music]
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    we all think we know Turner don't we
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    he seems as comfortably British as a cup
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    of
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    [Music]
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    tea he is after all the national
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    gallery's alltime favorite
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    [Music]
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    but there was another Turner the Turner
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    you don't know the painter of chaos
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    conflagration and apocalypse wild and
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    ambitious paintings that one critic
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    called a picture of nothing and very
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    like well this is my turn up extreme
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    turn up the Cockney poet are short of
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    Madness the Turner We ought to know the
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    Turner we really ought to
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    [Music]
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    [Music]
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    rever this turn was on a Delirious
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    Visionary trip that would culminate in
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    the greatest British painting of the
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    19th
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    century the slav ship
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    [Music]
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    [Music]
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    why that is very
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    [Music]
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    fun 40 years before the heroic Fiasco of
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    the slav ship young Turner could do no
  • 00:05:22
    wrong in his 20s the barber son had
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    already been tipped as the next great
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    thing in British
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    [Music]
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    painting with a dab of his brush he
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    could wave fairy dust over the Gentile
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    British
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    Countryside and it would turn into a
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    place of sublime enchantment
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    [Music]
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    and the quality ated
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    up Britain was fighting for its life
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    against the
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    French and the romance of albian had
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    never bitten deeper into the national
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    imagination
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    [Music]
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    Turner meanwhile had been granted a
  • 00:06:34
    great
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    honor Fellowship of the Royal Academy at
  • 00:06:38
    just
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    26 now he had to present them with a
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    picture to mark his
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    entry he gave them
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    this which was to say a
  • 00:06:57
    shock DOL badon Castle in snowdonia was
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    where a medieval Welsh Prince Owen go
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    had met his
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    end in reality it was just a modest pile
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    of stones on a hillside but Turner pumps
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    up the melodrama backlights the desolate
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    Crag so that the castle becomes a
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    personification of the defiant Prince
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    himself the tragic symbol of imprisoned
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    Liberty
  • 00:07:31
    just in case people didn't get it he
  • 00:07:33
    added a little
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    poem how awful is the Silence of the
  • 00:07:41
    waste where nature lifts her mountains
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    to the
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    sky Majestic
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    Solitude behold the tower where hapless
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    Owen long imprisoned pined and rung his
  • 00:07:55
    hands for Liberty in vain
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    okay so it's not exactly Kei but it is
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    Turner reaching for the Epic it's all
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    about atmospherics not finicky
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    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
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    legendary
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    [Music]
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    the painting smoothed the way for the
  • 00:08:33
    young man into the ranks of the academy
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    but it should have put everyone on
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    notice that this was a painter who'd
  • 00:08:40
    never settle for the Charming and the
  • 00:08:44
    [Music]
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    pretty Turner could have made a
  • 00:08:50
    perfectly decent living raking it in
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    from the pleasure and Leisure industry
  • 00:09:00
    but in his fertile imagination something
  • 00:09:03
    Grand and bloody was already
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    [Music]
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    stirring but he still had a fortune to
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    make he wasn't ready yet to be the maker
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    of dark epics
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    [Music]
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    it was time to enjoy being jmw
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    Turner
  • 00:09:55
    ra he's rolling in money and commissions
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    and he buys a West End house for his
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    pictures himself and his old
  • 00:10:05
    dad whom he shamelessly turns into his
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    allpurpose servant old dad would stretch
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    and Prime canvases old dad would Patrol
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    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
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    [Music]
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    [Music]
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    but then conventional Family Ties don't
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    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
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    installs her around the corner he even
  • 00:11:27
    has two children by her
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    [Music]
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    more illicitly still Sarah is the muse
  • 00:11:36
    of his erotic
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    imagination his drawing suggests he
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    takes as much pleasure in sex as a full
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    Moon Over
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    [Music]
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    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
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    [Music]
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    and the erotica remained strictly under
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    wraps in his
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    [Music]
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    lifetime Turner chose to live part of
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    his life amidst the shadows of secret
  • 00:12:29
    fantasies but when he emerged from this
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    world and stroll beside the temps he
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    indulged in another fantasy she lived in
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    a country from which poverty hunger and
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    misery have been banished
  • 00:12:45
    [Music]
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    [Music]
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    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
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    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
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    stroking the self-satisfaction of
  • 00:13:47
    Regency
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    [Music]
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    England but even as he drifted through
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    his home counties Eden
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    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
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    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
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    the kingdom was supposed to be a model
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    of political and social stability but
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    there was massive unemployment hunger
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    anger Rick burning in the countryside
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    machine smashing in the towns the bloody
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    war with Napoleon's France grinding on
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    and on
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    these are hard times radical
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    [Music]
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    times so turna produces a gritty image
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    of rough bratan
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    [Music]
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    what's your most delicious fantasy of
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    old England summertime a picnic well
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    here's a hard-bitten winter Dawn and
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    it's no picnic
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    [Music]
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    a shot hair slung around the shoulders
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    of a
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    [Music]
  • 00:16:07
    girl rotted
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    [Music]
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    tracks two men digging a ditch or is it
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    a
  • 00:16:20
    grave you can feel the tough work of it
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    in that hard Frozen
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    soil everything impact passive
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    unsentimental
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    dur how things really
  • 00:16:38
    are wheny Constable ever do winter in
  • 00:16:42
    the
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    north why would Turner ever do something
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    so
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    flinty well in Yorkshire he has become
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    best mates with someone who will change
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    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
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    your usual country gent he's a political
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    militant the scourge of the old Tor
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    establishment but the cause that's most
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    dear to this radical tough is the great
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    moral Crusade of the
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    day the abolition of the slave trade
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    [Music]
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    Fork's Fury seeped into Turner's
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    [Music]
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    imagination one day in 1810 10 Turner
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    took Fork's son for a walk on the
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    Yorkshire Ms as a storm
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    brood the two of them sketch away Turner
  • 00:18:13
    puts his pencil down there hay he says
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    in 2 years you'll see this and it'll be
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    called Hannibal crossing the Alps
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    [Music]
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    so a Squall over the Yorkshire mes turns
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    into a no Holts barred Alpine cataclysm
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    a simultaneous blizzard and a shaft of
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    sickly Sun Hannibal's Army is the victim
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    as it clambers its painful way over the
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    Alpine
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    passes stragglers kicked off by scary
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    Mountain
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    Men while a sucking Vortex hovers over
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    the scene like some gigantic malevolent
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    bird of
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    prey turn under something tremendous
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    with the storm over the yor Moes it's
  • 00:19:13
    not just Scenic weather it's a cosmic
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    [Music]
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    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
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    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
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    Alps In Search Of
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    Glory the arch enemy
  • 00:19:54
    Napoleon in a crushing put down Turner
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    shrink the mighty Commander to a puny
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    almost comical figure in the remote
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    background a top an elephant that looks
  • 00:20:06
    more like a dumb
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    [Music]
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    Beetle you have to say this about Turner
  • 00:20:19
    though he is an equal opportunity
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    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
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    [Music]
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    in 1817 does he paint Victorious
  • 00:20:33
    Wellington and his Gallant Scarlet
  • 00:20:36
    squares of embattle grenadiers no he
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    gives us a carpet of corpses in the
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    Blackness wives and sweethearts with
  • 00:20:45
    their babies pathetically searching the
  • 00:20:47
    Carnage for their loved
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    [Music]
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    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
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    [Music]
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    one no wonder it wasn't until the
  • 00:21:21
    1980s that this painting was properly
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    [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]
Tags
  • J.M.W Turner
  • Slave Ship
  • Art Criticism
  • Royal Academy
  • 19th Century Art
  • Edwin Lania
  • Slavery
  • British Art
  • Turner's Style
  • Art and Morality