Sunday, November 11, 2012

Robert Hughes Demystifies Modern Art: From Cézanne to Andy Warhol


Art critic Robert Hughes offers his interpretations of modern art in this series of eight videos originally aired on the BBC and PBS in the 1980s. These are cool for any fans of art. This first video in the series is embedded below, and there are links to the others.

The full list of episodes:
  1. The mechanical paradise - The influence of technology on art from 1880 to 1918
  2. The powers that be - The relationship and conflicts between modern art and authority
  3. The landscape of pleasure - Artists' visions of paradise 1870s to 1950s
  4. Trouble in utopia - Modern architecture
  5. The threshold of liberty - Surrealism
  6. The view from the edge - Expressionism
  7. Culture as nature - Pop Art
  8. The future that was - The commercialization of Modern Art
Hughes actually released a book based on this series, The Shock of the New: Art and the century of change.

Robert Hughes, Famed Art Critic, Demystifies Modern Art: From Cézanne to Andy Warhol

April 17th, 2012


With the aid of YouTube, you can watch an episode of Robert Hughes’ documentary series The Shock of the New each week, just as it first aired on the BBC and PBS in 1980. But I defy you to watch “The Mechanical Paradise,” the first of its eight installments, and not plow through the rest in a day. Hughes, a prolific art critic who has written books on everything from Francisco Goya to America’s culture of complaint to the city of Barcelona to the history of his native Australia, has also hosted television programs about everything from Caravaggio to Utopian architecture to the Mona Lisa. The Shock of the New, a project which found expression as a book as well as these broadcasts, takes on the ambitious task of tracing the progress of modernism through visual art. But the roots of the movement run deeper into history, and so this first episode begins at the base of the Eiffel Tower, a monument to the accelerating scientific and technological progress of the late nineteenth century that would so disrupt the aesthetics of the twentieth.

As a reader of art criticism, I’ve long trusted Hughes’ writing on these subjects more than I do anyone else’s. Clear, bold, concrete, and always, in a bluntly stealthy way, more nuanced than it seems, Hughes’ textual persona stands against what, in his autobiography, he calls the “airy-fairy, metaphor-ridden kind of pseudo-poetry” that he sees as having flooded the field. As a guide through the history of artistic modernism, he proves as no-nonsense yet dryly entertaining on film as he is on the page. Whether turning our attention toward special details of Braque and Picasso’s canvasses or zipping around in a 1900s roadster, Hughes presents with the assurance of authority but not its intellectual overreach, pulling you along to Fernand Léger, the Futurists, and Marcel Duchamp. And as a viewer of television documentaries, I’ve long trusted the late seventies and early eighties as the form’s golden age. In this episode and beyond, The Shock of the New showcases what the productions of that era did best: a moody electronic score, archival clips creatively used, and extended sequences that give us time to really look. (Voiceover work by Judi Dench and Martin Jarvis doesn’t lose this chapter any points, either.)

All episodes of The Shock of the New: The Mechanical Paradise,” “The Powers That Be,” “The Landscape of Pleasure,” “Trouble in Utopia,” “The Threshold of Liberty,” “The View From the Edge,” “Culture as Nature,” “The Future That Was

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Colin Marshall hosts and produces Notebook on Cities and Culture. Follow him on Twitter at @colinmarshall.

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