解说写的实在太漂亮,决定挑一些喜欢的誊下来。
时隔一年半,我终于把剩下的三集看完了。一集一集写。
E06 Radiance
26’20’’ Goya
The Black Paintings seem to me to be an endgame for Goya, not just in his own life and career in his 70s, but also his feeling about an endgame for art, the art that aspired through beauty to ennoble the spirit of civilization.
//www.museodelprado.es/en/the-collection/art-work/saturn/18110a75-b0e7-430c-bc73-2a4d55893bd6
One of the most terrifying of all these paintings, perhaps the most famous one, shows Saturn devouring one of his children. That’s what it’s come to. The huge tradition of classical mythology reduced to a mad, antic, capering monster, chewing on the stump of a small body, but look at that body. Not a child at all. It’s the body miniaturized of a female nude. Two millennia of looking at the nude, of seeing it as a symbol of art’s perfection is reduced to this horrifying image of sadistic cruelty.
In one of the paintings, he puts the lights back on. We’re able to see something, but what is it we’re seeing? The light is given to us to reveal another kind of horror. These two huge peasant-like figures beating the living daylights out of each other. Blood is streaming down the head of one of them, even as they sink deeper and deeper into a kind of sandy quagmire. This is what Spain has become. Endless, relentless, mutual slaughter.
Now, all these monsters and horrors and demons and dragons of course had appeared all over European art before, but where had they appeared? They’d appeared in images of the Last Judgment and the Apocalypse, and they were always balanced by a sense of the optimism of salvation. But Goya has come to the conclusion that God is absent without leave and there is one painting, which in a sense is least likely to have the horrifying pessimistic eloquence, but it does.
There are no figures, there’s just a dog, a mutt. But for this dog, the master is gone, dead, slaughtered, missing. He’s no longer going to be fed. He’s simply faced with drowning inside this formless brown vacuum. It’s all come down to this, then. A dog without a master. Spain without its god. Humanity absolutely without civilization.
E01 Second Moment of Creation
4’53’’
We can spend a lot of time debating what civilization is or isn’t, but when it’s opposite shows up, in all its brutality and cruelty and intolerance and lust for destruction, we know what civilization is; we know it from the shock of its imminent loss as a mutilation on the body of our humanity.
16’58’’
With this exquisite, intensively carved female head, we have for the first time, something immensely and movingly momentous. We have the revelation of the human face. It’s a tiny thing, it can just go in the palm of your hand and it could have only been made by an extraordinary array of dexterous skills.
39’36’’
Ultimately, all civilizations want exactly what they can’t have: the conquest of time. So they build bigger, higher and grander as if they could build their way out of mortality, and it never works.
There always comes a moment where the most populous of cities with their markets and temples and palaces and funeral tombs are simply abandoned. And that most indefatigable leveller of all, mother nature, closes in, covering the place with desert sand, or strangling it with vegetation. And then, civilization dies the death of deaths, invisibility.
E02 How do we look?
25'41"
The one thing you really get here is that size matters. These vast monumental figures, perhaps four or five times life size and with that nice hint that they’d been even bigger if they bothered to stand up for you, simply dominate. They take over your field of vision. It’s an assertion of the power of the pharaoh through his huge, superhuman, enthroned body.
33’31”
If early Athenian pottery reflects how man and women were expected to live within the social context of the city, its statues attempt to embody the interior life within.
The beginning of the fifth century BCE saw an amazing transformation in Greek sculpture. Rigid figures with the fixed gaze of phrasikleia give way to daring new experiments in the human form. One of the first of these is known as the Kritios boy, and he would transform how we see the sculpted human body.
The Kritios boy show us that you can signal anteriority through the person’s movement, through their stance. But particularly, if you lose the archaic smile, and you have an expression which isn’t necessarily blank, that immediately invites you, the spectator, to psychologise it. So with that one step, the statue acquires not just a body that is an organism rather than a mechanism, but also what we would probably call, a soul.
41’57’’
“This was quite simply the most sublime statue of antiquity to have escaped destruction. An eternal springtide, clothes the alluring virility of his mature years with a pleasing youth and plays with soft tenderness upon the lofty structure of his limbs."
49’46’’
We still have a lot of really unexamined assumptions about what constitutes a beautiful or desirable body. We have a lot of unexamined assumptions about what constitutes an attractive, or aesthetically appealing way to look. And you have only to open up the pages of a women’s magazine, as people are commonly pointing out, to see how incredibly narrow the space is in a certain kind of western aesthetic consciousness, for what a woman can look like. Similar kinds of things can be applied to men as well.
Reinforced by commercial interests, the cult of youth and beauty begun by the ancient Greeks, is perhaps more powerful than ever today.
E03 Picturing Paradise
6’34’’
http://collection.sina.com.cn/zgsh/20121116/152092655.shtml
What makes Li Cheng’s painting a masterpiece, is that it literally rises above royal propaganda.
As our eye ascends through the painting, so our whole approach to it also ascends to a higher order of question. And Li Cheng has changed the wash of the ink. It’s lighter, finer, more ethereal. It suggests deep distance. But depths of our own response as well as physical depths. What is nature? What lies beyond surface appearance? What truly moves the universe? And how above all, does the dialogue between flowing water and the adamant face of that eroded rock, bring us harmony?
18’56’’
But renaissance humanism took a different attitude to the serpent of temptation.
This is Villa Barbaro. … A place where renaissance ideals of culture and sophistication could meet the earthy pleasures of the country. A building of harmony, grace and pleasure, where it would be forever summer.
Leonardo Da Vinci wrote something fascinating. He says, “one of the values of painting is it can show you the beauty of nature and perhaps your lover in nature, in the middle of winter.” When you’re stuck inside, you’re stuck indoors, but you can remember what the meadows and what lovely picnics were like last summer by looking at a painting of it.
If you extend that into a kind of a theory of landscape art, you might say that the first way that people express the desire to escape into landscape is by actually creating escapist worlds.
30’41”
//www.wikiart.org/en/pieter-bruegel-the-elder/hunters-in-the-snow-1565
Bruegel painted these compendious, visually inexhaustible masterpieces after the longest, bleakest, coldest Flemish winter anyone could remember. Let’s just think for a minute the way in which Bruegel makes us look at these pictures. On the one hand, they are an invitation into a wealth of detail, wherever our eye travels, it picks out these lovely minutiae of work and play. The skaters gliding across the ice. Our eye travels from one kind of landscape, a village huddled on the hill, to a completely different one. A frozen mountain or a storm tossed estuary out to the broad open sea. But there are moments as well when the pure compositional muscle that Bruegel can command makes everything come together in one great universal vision. It makes us stop. It makes us have a moment of contemplation. And then If we’re very, very lucky, like these wonderful paintings, it all seems to add up. A whole of the human condition and our special little place within it.
40’30”
There were a few kind of particular characteristics that marked out the American approach to the landscape. One of those was a sense of inferiority and competition with Europe that Americans in the 18thcentury and the early 19thcentury, were the poor country cousins. And they were on the outermost fringe of an European world in which they had been taught that Rome is the centre of all art, that the best landscapes, the tallest mountains are to be found in Switzerland. And here are Americans, on the threshold really of their own great continent, which they are beginning increasingly to move west across, trying to say, “wait, you know what, we have really high mountains also. And we have really big animals that we can celebrate in the same terms you guys are using but with our characters instead.” And I think that was out of inferiority in a funny sense, that a kind of American pride in the American landscape was born.
43’21”
More and more (Ansel) Adam’s photographs became preachy. But those vision sermons were radiant, mystical, ecstatic. They were passionate statements about how humanity could be redeemed through the encounter with nature.
But throughout, he remains steadfast that his job in life is to give visual form to that silken cord, tying together the fate of man with the fate of the earth.
E04 The Eye of Faith
43’49’’
What all of these movements within religions have in common is that they come along saying we have a purer form of faith than the one that is currently being practiced, and if your fundamental goal is purity, then one of the central things you might try to do would be to eliminate opulent aesthetic or potentially sinful representations of things to act as intermediaries, because then maybe you’re just worshipping the object, you’re not actually worshipping the divine. So it makes sense that protestants in the Reformation went into the monasteries and stripped everything out saying “it’s time to get rid of these images.”
51’35’’
We passionately want to rediscover the spiritual in art, we passionately want to discover that kind of power and purpose that religious art has. Whether it’s reinventing Christian art in cathedrals or whether it’s reinventing Islamic art, it’s about wanting to resacralise art, wanting to rediscover that wonderful, almost magical, charismatic purpose that religious art has.
For much of history, art has been religious art. For some, the creative impulse has been the very expression of divinity. For others, a challenge to God’s authority. For those that believe, religious art has always been transformative; yet for everyone, art retains a primal, spiritual feeling, a way to express the mysterious and it speaks to our earliest human drive to touch and define a world beyond our own.
E05 The Triumph of Art
50’49’’
Out there the western hurly burly is getting ready to make terrible mischief to smash its way into the domed heavenly vault, to stick its bloody great brutal boots right into the paradise garden. It’ll make an empire based on machines, money and muskets. Then slowly but surely, the Moghul Empire will disappear entirely inside its courtly refinement, becoming inextricably just a cultural ornament.
After centuries of extraordinary flowering, the eastern Renaissance was transformed by the twin forces of empire and colonialism. The delicate blooms and glowing jewels survived in what Europeans wore on their bodies and how they decorate their homes. While painters were mislabeled as miniaturists, as they were forced at least for a time, to rely on the patronage of their new British rulers. Western art critics increasingly called the artistic beauty of the east decorative, to distinguish it from pictures they put in frames where Europeans consider real art. But it was in the east, that the ancient meaning of ars, craft was preserved in all its splendor and still is. Because here, unlike in the west, the Renaissance wasn’t about the rebirth of classical knowledge. Unlike Europe, the east had never lost touch with its ancient heritage. A rich heritage which it continues to celebrate and share with the world to this day.
E06 First Contact
28’07’’
//theartsdesk.com/tv/civilisations-first-contact-bbc-two-review-david-olusoga-goes-gold
What’s regarded as his greatest work, cracked ice, combined everything Okyo knew from both eastern and western traditions.
It’s so subtle, so minimal, a work of art that almost feels like it isn’t there. And everything about it feels ephemeral and frail. It’s painted on paper not canvas as in the west, and great expanses of it are just white blank areas that seem almost untouched by the artist. And yet all of that belies the fact that this is one of the most sophisticated works of cultural synthesis that I know. It shows a sheet of ice, presumably on a lake, and these broken jagged cracks in the ice disappeared into the mist. The effect is three-dimensional space. Now, that is European vanishing point perspective. And yet, this is one of Okyo’s masterworks, just could not be more Japanese, because it’s a philosophical contemplation of two concepts, fundamental to Buddism, imperfection and impermanence. Imperfection because these lines are uncontrolled and irregular; Impermanence because of course the ice will melt. And those two are just as fundamental to Japanese art, as the classical Greek roman ideas of beauty and perfection are to European art.
So this is Okyo incorporating European ideas into his art, but in ways that are in keeping with Japanese philosophy and Japanese tastes.
32’11’’
In this frenzy of trade and wealth, Dutch art also became the object of conspicuous consumption. A modern commercial art market was born, supplying landscapes, still lifes, portraits and scenes from Dutch life to the aspirational new merchant class. What they wanted in their art was not the pomp of monarchy, or the flamboyance of the catholic church, but a new type of realism, one that reflect their protestant desire to portray the world as it truly was, often with warts and all moral lessons.
With art from renaissance, it’s about beauty. Dutch art, it’s not about that, it’s about reality. So you do paint rotten fruits, and you do paint fat ladies that just woke up in their bed. And you do look at dirty dogs in the street. Because it’s about nature in every sense, and not just in the sense that you want it to be, but in the sense it is.
33’22’’
One of the star artists of this golden age of Dutch painting was Vermeer. Jan Vermeer is not an artist known for his epic landscapes. Most of his paintings are famously intimate, set within a neat, ordered, almost claustrophobic world of the Dutch home.
What Jan Vermeer specialized in was the art of everyday life and his world was an interior world. What he captured on canvas were simple fleeting moments. A woman reading a letter is bathed in a delicate light that pours from a side window. But that only serves to emphasize the fact that we are in an enclosed room and the rest of the world is hidden from sight, that it’s somewhere out there. But if you look a little more closely at the details, what you realise is that Vermeer’s seemingly interior domestic space is infused with the globalism of the Dutch golden age.
From the innovative pottery of his hometown of Delft, which mimicked Chinese porcelain, to prized rugs from the orient, and a geographer wearing a fashionable Japanese robe, Vermeer captures a world built on encounters with distant civilizations and peoples.
50’05’’
Hundreds of public buildings built in the British neoclassical tradition would follow. They represented not only a separation of cultures that had before freely intermingled, they also marked the passing of the age of discovery. The world had entered an age of high empire, in which to justify their exploitations and conquests, European powers would willfully overlook the achievements of other civilisations. It was a story that would be repeated around the globe and we are only just emerging from its cultural legacy today.
In a wonderful twist, Richard Wellesley’s government house is used by the government of Bengal. It has been taken back by Indians for their own government. And so we have to unthink some of the inevitability that we tend to ascribe to encounters that ultimately led to European dominance. If you look at the history of European encounters with the non-European world, you find a huge range of ways that they took shape.
And although there is a history that has to be told, a story that is one of imperialism, but a story that is also one of globalization, one of increasing interconnection across different parts of the world that has yielded the world in which we live today.
Our modern world of digital communication has massively broaden the scope of our encounters, both with foreign cultures and civilisations and within the different cultural groupings of our own. And by connecting new audience with traditional artistic practices, the global art market continues to transform new encounters into new kinds of art. From the reemergence of the long overlooked sacred art, like that of North American first nations, the indigenous people of Australia and the carvings of the African Makonde people, to new artists such as Ghanaian born sculptor El Anatsui, who sews together bottle tops into large scale assemblages that comment on consumption, waste and the environment. Today, in our increasingly globalized civilization, the sheer variety of our encounters both foreign and at home continues to be a major source of inspiration, shaping both our art and our world.
01消失文明(克里特迈锡尼) 西班牙 埃及 米诺斯 迈锡尼 佩特拉 三星堆 玛雅 02雕塑(古希腊罗马) 奥尔梅克 门农 闺秀雕像 阿泰米多乌斯木乃伊画像 兵马俑 拉美西斯二世 北方天使视界线 帕加马祭坛 希腊坛男女画像 帕特农神庙 健陀罗 温克尔曼阿波罗 奥尔梅克 美第奇维纳斯像 帝国化全球化 03风景画(文艺复兴宗教改革) 巨石半圆山的容姿 李成《晴峦萧寺图》 乔仲常 17世纪波斯地毯 达尔埃莱·巴尔巴罗别墅文艺复兴欢乐宫 Andrea Palladio 威尼斯画派委罗内塞 德国《风景与伐木工》 Pieter Bruegel 荷兰Ruisdael 英国John Constable J.M.W.Turner 美国Thomas Cole 哈德逊河画派 04基督教 狮身人雕像 乌尔王军旗
英国西尔布利山巨石阵 埃及金字塔 雅典卫城 吴哥窟印度教佛教 阿旃陀石窟《本生经》 意大利加文那San Vitale church 土耳其Sancaklar Mosque 伊斯兰书法 蓝色清真寺 英国博得利图书馆肯尼科特《圣经》 《格拉纳达的投降》 天主教:埃尔·格列柯 卡拉瓦乔 委拉斯开兹 墨西哥鬼节 《新西班牙诸物志》 圣母玛利亚崇拜 《玛卡雷纳的希望圣母像》 最后的晚餐 印度威力清真寺 英国伊利大教堂 圣保罗大教堂 05文艺复兴 米开朗琪罗 米玛·希兰 苏莱曼清真寺 圣彼得大教堂 Donato Bramante Benvenuto Cellini《盐具》 佛罗伦萨多纳泰罗《朱迪斯与赫洛夫尼斯》 《珀修斯与美杜莎》 阿克巴大帝拉合尔城市 卡拉瓦乔 简特内斯基 Velazquez 伦勃朗
泰姬陵 Itimid Ud Daula 帝国主义殖民主义16世纪 东方装饰艺术 06大航海后的全球化17世纪 贝宁青铜器 伊费 蒙特祖玛送给科尔特斯羽蛇神像 《佛罗伦丁法典》 埃尔·格列柯 日本南蛮屏风 圆山应举 扬·维梅尔 约翰·佐法尼 威廉·Fraser 07颜色全球化18世纪 亚眠大教堂 沙特尔大教堂 圣扎卡利亚教堂 乔治亚·贝里尼 提香 提埃坡罗 戈雅 浮世绘 葛饰北斋 德加莫奈 马蒂斯 马克·罗斯科 伊芙·克莱因 08工业化文明思索19世纪 约瑟夫·莱特 德拉克洛瓦 托马斯·科尔 穿越平民的移民者 乔治·凯瑟琳 戈特夫里德·林道 相机 印象派 《包厢》 莫奈 高更 0920世纪 蒙特里安 安塞尔姆·基弗 卡拉·沃克 艾尔·安纳祖 米歇·Rovner
第一集,我第一次听到纪录片大量的提及三星堆文化,讲到了玛雅文明,这是我常听到的,还有几个文明真的是不太了解。看到很多文明遗址的震撼,因为是国外的感触真的比较少。先这样吧👏👏。 第二集是女性科学家讲的,可能还是由于我外国文明了解太少,观看起来理解困难,也记不太住,总觉得可以和河森堡最新一期的了不起的博物馆的雅典博物馆配合食用比较好,大致还是介绍了墨西哥也就是中美洲的文明以及雅典雕塑作品。真的太美了太厉害了。就公元前三世纪四世纪都能制作出这么精美的雕塑。唯一有印象的还是秦始皇兵马俑,但由于是bbc制作的所以很难在情感上产生共鸣。这个图是别人制作的,相当于第一集的总结。我再接下去看,希望今晚之前能刷完剩下的7集
第一集题为“the second moment of creation”,不禁让我思考这到底指的是什么,为什么这么说。
我想,创造力最开始来自宇宙的诞生,是big bang或是cosmic dawn。随之而来的是人类的诞生。
从石器时代开始,人类就在不断的迸发出创作的灵感,也许起初是源于某些仪式,又或是功能性的记录。但它们渐渐成为艺术与文化的表达,为世人留下文明的丰碑。
人类不断创作出意义和秩序,而工具也不再单纯有使用价值,它们还需要兼具精神层面的交流,并符合时代的审美标准。
每一个失落或繁荣的文明,都是文化的里程碑,它们时而颠覆着现代人的认知,又不时吸引我们向前看。文化所传达出的跨越时空的相似性,让我们理解过去,也指引未来。
个人觉得,如果把这一部的名字由CIVILISATIONS(文明)改成CULTURE(文化)会更切题一些,这是一部以Art-making为主题的优秀作品!!膜拜!!
8.5/10。2018/4/4
BBC的纪录片向来有口皆碑,题材广泛、制作精良是它的特色。
从横跨几千年的历史文化,到神秘广阔的宇宙星辰,BBC的纪录片总是一次次地打动我们。
正如《地球脉动》和《人类星球》这样的佳作,几乎每一帧都美到窒息。
最近,BBC又推出了一部高逼格神作。
全片涵盖6个大陆,31个国家,介绍超过500件艺术品。
将人类各个时期,不同大陆的历史文化艺术通通串联起来,看过的人都大呼过瘾。
无论你是文物爱好者还是历史达人,这部纪录片都能让你在养眼之余还非常涨知识。
今天就来聊聊,这部讲述人类艺术创造力的新作——
导演:阿什利·格辛/马修·希尔/蒂姆·尼尔
编剧:西蒙·沙玛/玛丽·比尔德/戴维·奥卢索加
主演:西蒙·沙玛/玛丽·比尔德/戴维·奥卢索加
首播:2018-03-01(英国)
集数:9
单集片长:60分钟
BBC、Nutopia 影视制作公司、美国公共电视网(PBS)共同出品,豆瓣9.2分。
全片共 9 集,每集时长为 1 小时左右。
宗旨就是透过艺术之眼,探索“人类创造的起源”、“观看艺术的方式”以及“全球文明的进程”。
纪录片主讲人,是三位致力于普及艺术知识的公共学者——
哥伦比亚大学艺术史教授Simon Schama,剑桥大学的古典学教授Mary Beard,以及尼日利亚裔英国历史学家David Olusoga 。
虽然今天,人类的艺术成就浩如星海,但这一切都始于数万年前的一个掌印——
我们的一位远古祖先,不知出于什么原因,在洞穴的岩壁上勾勒出掌印。
这是历史上最早的壁画,可以说是人类艺术的第一笔。
这就是人类文明觉醒的起点,超越衣食住行的生存需求,人们有了创造的冲动。
艺术的存在,让我们摆脱日常琐事,感受体会作为人的意义。
文化与社会也因此诞生,创造了伟大的文明。
画画是人本能的表达形式,而壁画则是人类最早期的艺术。
即便间隔数万年,艺术家的手法也不会改变。
像是毕加索,就深受远古洞穴壁画的影响。
而远古人类第一次对美的追求,体现在下面这个小小的人脸雕像上 。
现在看起来虽然工艺粗糙,五官模糊,但要知道它可是2万多年前的产物。
制作者显然被一位美人打动,试图努力雕刻出她的样子。
在墨西哥出土的玛雅文明,也让人看到了其天真淳朴,充满创意的一面。
这些小人塑像,实在是太可爱了。
但还有很多出土文物,在现代人看来相当神秘。
像中国古老文明的代表三星堆青铜人头像、青铜面具。
那巨大的眼睛和耳朵,令人印象深刻。
1986年,三星堆遗址在一处建筑工地被发现。
发掘出的考古坑中包含数百枚象牙、祭祀牲畜的遗骸,以及数目惊人的面具。
三星堆距今已有5000至3000年历史,被称为20世纪人类最伟大的考古发现之一。
甚至还有人推测,三星堆和外星文明有关。
而秦始皇陵兵马俑,更是20世纪最伟大的考古发现。
这些真人大小,气势磅礴的军队,是世界上最大的雕像群。
其工艺和规模即便在今天,也是难以想象的。
中国在公元前200多年,由秦始皇实现了大一统。
而这项工程在秦始皇十几岁的时候,就开始动工了。
我们今天看到的,只是7000具陶俑中的一小部分。
中国古代贵族原本是用活人陪葬,但秦始皇却使用了真人大小的兵马俑。
据说他的陵墓内部也模仿现实世界,其间有日月星辰和山川河流。
秦始皇陵兵马俑,无疑是权力的象征。
而3000年前古埃及的雕像艺术,也同样是权力的象征。
古埃及的雕像往往都十分巨大,就为了使人产生望而生畏的臣服感。
然而尴尬的是,考古学家发现,拉美西斯二世的雕像比其他法老王都多。
原因竟然是他会篡改其他人的雕塑,在上面刻上自己的名字。
而人像雕塑的的技艺,在古希腊时期已经接近完美。
此时的人像越来越栩栩如生,每块肌肉,每个动作都完全复制真实的人。
而这种写实风格,通过丝绸之路影响了佛教的造像艺术。
传入阿富汗之后,又影响了早期的伊斯兰艺术。
世界文化互相影响,融会贯通。
而在绘画领域,纪录片中首先介绍的就是中国古代的山水画卷。
在古代战乱纷争不断的中国,文人创作出追求平静的山水风景画。
中国的水墨山水画,自成一体。
在此之前,绘画是没有以风景为主题的,风景只是一种陪衬。
直到宋朝,才开始出现了专门描绘风景的山水画。
风景画并不是对自然世界的描写,而是一种意境的表达。
让人对自然产生思考,以追求人和自然的和谐境界。
中国水墨山水画具有很深的哲学意味,已经打破了对于自然的模仿。
而日本绘画最具代表性的,当属浮世绘。
最初,是描绘市井生活和娱乐风月场所的木版画。
主题多是歌舞伎或妓女,还有春宫图。
色彩艳丽,具有装饰性。
而梵高深受日本版画影响,他本人就临摹过不少浮世绘作品。
梵高比同时代的印象派画家更奔放,喜欢表现出浓重的色彩。
甚至直接把颜料挤在画布上,用画笔粗犷地涂抹。
人类文明在建筑领域,也留下了很多宏伟的作品。
约旦的佩特拉古墓,就是在山岳表面雕凿而成。
地理位置空前绝后,与山体合二为一。
鲜为人知的是,不仅埃及有金字塔,玛雅文明也有金字塔。
玛雅文明的统治者向人民保证会祈求雨神每年降雨,而金字塔是给雨神祭祀的祭台。
不过,当旱灾来临后,玛雅文明就衰落消亡了。
建筑奇迹一直在被人类刷新。
由米开朗基罗设计的圣彼得大教堂,作为世界上最大的教堂,占地23,000平方米,可容纳超过六万人,是当时世界上最高的建筑。
米开朗基罗也因为设计出世界上最伟大的圆顶建筑,被同代人尊称为“圣者“。
宗教,往往催生伟大的艺术作品。
西班牙塞维利亚的玛格丽娜圣母像,就是一件十分动人的作品。
雕像为大理石制作,眼泪由玻璃制作。
但手却是木制的,也因此人们认为木头比大理石更有温度。
这部纪录片包含的信息量实在太大,由于文章篇幅有限,只能介绍一小部分。
在此,我十分推荐各位亲自去感受下这趟“全球文化之旅”。
这些保存至今的文物让我们现代人看到了古人的智慧和艺术造诣,不得不说是一种幸运。
然而,还有有大量的文物在战火中被破坏损毁。
巴米扬大佛,就曾被塔利班份子的炮火损毁殆尽。
短短几个小时之间,伊斯兰国就将人类文明的杰作毁于一旦。
2005年当他们夺下巴尔米拉这座古老的贸易之城之后,巴尔米拉数世纪以来那些关于希腊人、罗马人、波斯人、阿拉伯人以及犹太人的遗产,在短短几小时之内化为断壁残垣。
讽刺的是,一些艺术品恰恰因为早期被劫掠,而逃脱了被毁的厄运。
在日内瓦艺术与历史博物馆,有几件巴尔米拉的工艺品被保存了下来。
我们可以花许多时间争论,文明是什么亦或不是什么。
但当它的对立面出现时,在种种暴虐、残忍、偏执和毁灭欲中,我们立刻就会明白何为文明。
从人类残破的肢体,文明的顷刻陨落,我们会真切知晓文明到底为何物。
所有文明最终都对无法实现的目标汲汲以求,那就是征服时间。
为此,它们致力于更大、更高、更壮观,以为这样就能通往不朽。
然而事与愿违,即便是人口最稠密的城市,其市集、寺庙、宫殿和坟墓也终归会被废弃。
然后,不眠不休铁面无私的大自然母亲开始接管此地,用沙尘掩埋,以植被覆盖。
自此,文明便会淡出公众视线、彻底消亡。
每一个失落或繁荣的文明,都是文化的里程碑。
它们时而颠覆着现代人的认知,又不时吸引我们向前看。
文化所传达出的跨越时空的相似性,让我们理解过去,也指引未来。
文明是一个很宏大的词汇,但文明真正的力量,却来自那些简单的小东西。
像是壶,印刷品,挂毯以及雕刻品,或者源自那些恢宏的建筑和精美的画作。
它不是出自国家意志,或者某个富裕阶层的要求。
它更多的来自于那些天赋异禀的艺术家们,为全人类创造艺术的内心渴求。
这些经由自由心灵、敏锐洞察力、无与伦比的创造力所创作出来的最美好的东西,注定将被永久地保存下去。
用来对抗这个,同样被我们创造出来的充满暴力、战争、迁徙、破坏、死亡的,满目疮痍的世界。
在这部纪录片里,我们会看到这些人类创造的奇迹如何开拓我们的眼界,激发我们的思考,以及带给我们感动。
有句话说:艺术即历史,它记录了帝国的兴衰、世界的演变、以及全球范围的新思想、新世界的贸易路线。
虽然人生苦短,但艺术却让我们得以目睹那些相对不朽的事物。
艺术是文明的基石,是对人性的一种表达方式。
*本文作者:RAMA
1.纳巴泰人的香薰是树脂
2.玛雅文明也是象形文字
3.埃及门农雕像起风时会唱歌,不是每天都有,如果有机会去蹲守一个月或半年,听一下。
4.公元前600年的希腊雅典陶器上的图画就已经告诫人们控制酒量,人和动物之间的界限在哪?喝多少酒会变成野兽。
5公元前550年古希腊大理石雕像《佛雷斯科莱》和观众是有互动的,她面带微笑的看向正前方,挑战着我们去回看她,她手里有一朵花,看不出来这是给她自己的还是要给我们的,有涂料痕迹说明雕塑曾经是有颜色的。
6.和自然界相似风景画一直是化解人世间种种动乱纷争的一剂良药,然而,与其说是对世界的客观描绘,风景画更多的是表达我们对世界的愿景。有时它传达了自然与人类之间的一种和谐感,有时它是丹青勾勒的家国故土,有时它是经纬编织的梦中天堂,又有时它是透镜折射的刹那风光,但最重要的它是一个理解我们文明的方法,让我们感悟大千世界中最令人恐惧却又最令人振奋的真相,浩瀚宇宙中我们生存的地方。
7.元代王蒙《青卞隐居图》解读得太好了,在配乐的烘托下几个特写镜头和全貌,展现了动荡焦躁不安敏感紧张的情绪,在这样的山水间隐居的人也像要面临山崩地裂大山压顶的危险。这是一幅心像画,他的不祥感并非无缘无故,不久之后他被政敌迫害死在狱中。有时无边无际的风景使你心荡神驰,但有时重重山墙也会将你围困,阻绝一切光亮。
8.1565年雅科波·丁托列托《耶稣受难》尺寸巨大,画家所做的就是模糊观者和画作之间的界限,如果我们站在画前,几乎就会感觉你成了中央场景周围人群的一份子,这里再三强调的是,耶稣被钉死在十字架上,既是一件发生于过去的历史事件,也是一件宗教事件,于是时间和空间的屏障被打破。
9.伊斯兰国家也有自己的书法,文字转化为图像装饰在清真寺里。
10.印度的泰姬陵和小泰姬陵非常典雅精致,记得有空去看看。
11.非洲贝宁国的青铜雕塑在大英博物馆,BBC很客观的反思了不同文明的碰撞,葡萄牙人是贸易往来,英国却是殖民掠夺。
12.18世纪晚期,圆山应举《冰图屏风》表达了佛教中,缺憾与无常的概念,无常是因为这些线条是不受控制且不规则的,缺憾是因为冰终将融化。
13.日本艺术将莫奈引向无限多可能性的连作创作方式,将不同时间与不同光线下的同一事物绘入作品中,这不是单调乏味的重复,反而引领了艺术新潮流。
14.最强大的当代艺术品具有神奇的转化之力,它能将昨晚生命短暂的废物、宿醉的纪念品转化为某种永恒的真正保持传统的东西,最灵巧的双手,可以将破坏的对象转化为创造的基础。
15.米哈尔·罗夫纳 照片上的无数个渺小的动态个体不停前行,无法安顿下来,文明预设了一个固定的城市人口,但罗夫纳的作品呈现了人们迁移的处境,永远在各个地方之间辗转。而其他的则像天书一样,但当你近看的时候,你发现这些字符就是人类,我们就是我们所写,我们的语言定义了我们。
16.卡萨特《包厢》画的歌剧院中一位装扮优雅的女性,用观剧镜凝视舞台,但她自己也没有逃过一位坐在远处的男性的注意,他透过观剧镜盯着她仔细观察,就像观赏画作的我们一样,这也许是在隐晦地批评这种具体化的男性审视目光,正是这目光造就了19世纪艺术品中大量的女性裸体。
17.《亚维农的少女》毕加索将西方对于艺术的观念画在了她们头上,他想要表达的不仅仅是美学上的美丽,还有可怕的关于性、暴力甚至是死亡的原始感觉,这样的手法之所以能成功,部分是因为那些第一次看到这幅画的人会在脑海中,将非洲面具和他们所认为的原始文明联系起来,正是这些东西显而易见的威胁感,使它们看上去如此令人震惊,而我们感受到的其背后文化的野蛮感,增强了人们对于欧洲文化所谓优越性的认同。
文明,一个具有极端自反性的词汇,囊括了一切美与创造,也同时与最耸人听闻的杀戮与毁灭共存。而生命的一个巨大撕裂,也许是任何人以自己为原点活着,所有一切宏大与壮丽,都经由这个自我折射出来,自我凌驾于一切。然而不管是对于宏观的宇宙发展史,还是对于另一个人一个生命一块石头一滴水,他都是那么微不足道,毫无意义。#2018279#
文明包罗万象,但文明的真正力量就体现在简单的东西上。这些力量,并非来自对地位和财务的追求和渴望,而是来自世界各地艺术大师强烈的使命感。在下一个千年,它们将成为有力的证明。成为我们人类能够创造出来的最美好的东西。它们是自由思想和敏锐视角的产物。闪耀着永不熄灭的人类共通的人性之光。
艺术是隐蔽的尊严
復活的藝術史感謝BBC 感謝三位介紹人
As unmistakable evidence of the best things that our species was capable of creating things that have been made by the liberated thought, the acute vision and the unquenchable creative fire of our shared humanity.
这对艺术品的鉴赏,比阅读理解不知道高到哪里去了
bbc教人如何跪着看系列
浮光掠影,尤其是解说员们如此动情声色,不太理解。
有人在记录解读人类文明,有人在摆拍吃食推广微商生意。文化自信!
伟大的人类,文明是世间的奇迹。看到那个3.5厘米的玛瑙露出的真面目时,真的理解了什么叫喜极而泣。。
开篇谴责恐怖主义破坏文物,弹幕喷BBC双标,难道破坏文物不应该被谴责么?英国是曾经破坏过别人的文物,1 那是曾经,2 保护更多,3 那是破坏敌国的不是祖国的。然后喷子看看你们自己。
不是传统的文明史叙述,而是用艺术史、艺术的诸多形式来展现人类的文明的精神史诗。文明无法再次重现,而艺术品成为最凝缩、最精华的文明产物以展现文明的荣耀与风采。艺术即文明。
B站av21129693Ep1开头删了ISIS毁坏,Ep3删了文革中的木心。
Overwhelmingly powerful. 自从“开悟”到艺术与历史密不可分相互推进的神奇关系之后仿佛打开了新的世界...好喜欢这个Simon哦可以顺着补一些他讲的纪录片了!
人类之所以为人类
看完第一集,由我最喜欢的Simon Schama撰稿解说,很精彩。看之前我曾想他会如何开场,没想到他由IS摧毁帕尔米拉城并处死82岁的博物馆馆长Khaled Alasaad说起。他说,我们可以花大把的时间讨论什么是文明什么不是,但当文明的对立面暴露出它所有的一切暴虐残忍偏狭和破坏欲时,我们就了解了什么是文明。
感谢BBC让我对人类文明有了一个更深入的认知。有人言辞激烈地说里面关于中国的东西太少了,实在没必要。第一这是部国际性的片子,不可能一直围绕一个国家讲;第二毕竟它是以西方的角度去拍摄的,难免会有偏见,要批判地去看它。第三不应该期待别人改变,我们应该自己拍去告诉全世界中国文化之美。
BBC系列品質 不僅依賴編導能力、文獻功底、專家意見、攝製團隊的經驗和充足的經費他們最寶貴的資源是邀請的這些講述人是各自學術領域的佼佼者 含著深情和熱情將這些或熟悉或陌生的古文明和藝術引入普通人的視野 不自視甚高 用平視的角度和巧妙的切入點講述 很有人文關懷 永遠能夠成功激發我的探索精神 好的紀錄片應該是一個引路人 一個嚮導 為實地拜訪做一個鋪墊。人文題材紀錄片 華麗的嗓音念旁白錦上添花而已。
欧洲博物馆里面的东西也太……美……了……
题目叫文明,我觉得更适合叫艺术。从西方人的视角,世界的艺术分为西方和其他,中国的艺术只是其他中的一部分,若论在这部纪录片里面占据的篇幅,可能还不及伊斯兰文明。且不论这种观点是否得当,但至少可以得出一点,当你拓展视野后就会发现,中华文明再博大精深、再源远流长,他也只是世界文明中的一个支流,且这个支流因为永续不竭、缺乏变化,显得有些单调,因此我们完全不必太自信过头。