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(piano jazz music)
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- [Female Narrator] We're in probably the most
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crowded gallery at the Uffizi
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here in in Florence.
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This is the room that contains Botticelli's
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fabulously beautiful Birth of Venus.
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- [Male Narrator] And you can hear the hub-bub around us.
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But it's interesting that
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the Birth of Venus is a painting
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that we actually know very little about.
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We don't know who it was painted for.
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We don't know where it was originally intended to be seen,
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the subject, a full length, nude female
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is highly unusual especially for the 15th century.
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- [Female Narrator] We do see nudes in medieval art
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and even in renaissance art before this.
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But the nudes are usually Adam and Eve.
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- [Male Narrator] And beginning in the 15th century
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artists do begin to experiment with introducing
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heroic male nudity within a biblical context.
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Think for instance of Donatello's David.
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But here we have something exceptional.
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This is an almost life size, full-length, female nude.
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That is fully pagan in its subject matter.
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- [Female Narrator] Pagan and undoubtedly
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the Goddess of love.
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Although the artists of the renaissance are looking back
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to ancient Greek and Roman sculpture
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many of which were nudes,
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they've in the past transformed them into
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a Christian biblical subject.
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Here Venus remains Venus.
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- [Male Narrator] In fact nudity in Christian art
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was often an expression of something traumatic.
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We see Christ almost nude on the cross.
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Or we see the sinful being led into hell.
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What makes this painting so exceptional
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is that it is perhaps one of the first
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almost life size representations of a female nude
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that is fully mythological in its subject matter.
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- [Female Narrator] She covers her body very much the way
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Eve covered hers when she was expelled
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from the Garden of Eden
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but here we have a gesture of modesty.
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Not one of shame.
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Venus floats on a seashell.
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She's born from the sea.
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- [Male Narrator] And because
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we're talking about classical mythology
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she can be born fully grown.
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- [Female Narrator] And here she is blown
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by the west wind Zephr and we see his body
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entwined with the body of Chloris.
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- [Male Narrator] On the right we see an attendant
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who is ready to wrap the newborn goddess.
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Although all of these figure clearly represent
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Botticelli's incredibly sophisticated understanding
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of the human body.
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Look at the wonderful sway of Venus.
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Or the complex intertwining of the two figures on the left.
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And despite the fact that we see a very deep space
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the canvas feels flat.
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And this is the result of a number of things.
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For one thing, the emphasis on pattern.
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Botticelli has strewn the left side of the canvas
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with flowers which are very close to the foreground.
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On the right side we have flowers again but now,
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they're part of the dress worn by the attendant
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and part of the cloth that she carries.
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The rhythmic alteration of light and dark
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in the scallop shell
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seems to push the back forward.
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And even the little v's that refer to the waves of the sea
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create a sense of two dimensionality.
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So that the entire canvas,
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although depicting a deep space
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is also so heavily patterned
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that it reminds us of its own two dimensionality.
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- [Female Narrator] And the figures all
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occupy the same plane.
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That is one figure isn't behind another
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or deeper in space than another
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and so it does read very flatly
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but I would also argue that although Botticelli does have
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an understanding of human anatomy
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and we can see that clearly in the body of Venus
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or in the figure of the west wind,
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or the way that we see the drapery
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wrapping around the figure of the nymph on the right
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the figures are weightless,
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they don't stand firmly on the ground
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the way that often expect
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renaissance figures to stand
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and the figure of Venus forms this serpentine shape
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that actually I think would be an impossible to stand.
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- [Male Narrator] Certainly when you're surfing to shore
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on a seashell.
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Look for example,
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the way that the artist has highlighted her golden hair
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with actual lines of gold.
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Gold that also appears in the foliage to the upper right
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and can be seen in the trunks of the trees
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that form the grove at the right.
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- [Female Narrator] Venus tilts her head slightly,
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her hair blows in the wind
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and surround the curve of her body
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and is brought down in front of her
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to cover her modestly.
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Although there may be meaning behind this painting
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that connects classical mythology to certain Christian ideas
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via a philosophy called Neoplatonism,
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what we're looking at essentially
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is still a beautiful and erotic image.
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This is a celebration of both beauty and of love.
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And we can think about that in both a secular context
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and a Christian one.
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(piano jazz outro)