Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated:
1
00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000
Downloaded from
YTS.MX
2
00:00:07,400 --> 00:01:25,066
♪
3
00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000
Official YIFY movies site:
YTS.MX
4
00:02:12,300 --> 00:02:15,366
TOM BENTON WAS A SMALL MAN
5
00:02:15,366 --> 00:02:20,166
WITH THE VIVACITY
AND THE PUGNACIOUSNESS
6
00:02:20,166 --> 00:02:22,500
OF A BANTAM ROOSTER.
7
00:02:22,500 --> 00:02:29,400
HE MADE GREAT USE OF THAT
WONDERFUL MOUSTACHE OF HIS
8
00:02:29,400 --> 00:02:32,066
VERY SPARKLING EYES
9
00:02:32,066 --> 00:02:35,766
NEVER SAW HIM AT A LOSS
FOR A WORD.
10
00:02:35,766 --> 00:02:40,333
HE HAD A GREAT PERSONA
OF THE HARD-DRINKING TOUGH GUY
11
00:02:40,333 --> 00:02:43,833
WHO HAPPENED TO BE
AN ARTIST, YOU KNOW?
12
00:02:43,833 --> 00:02:46,800
HIS PRIDE WAS TO BE ABLE
TO DRINK WITH ANYBODY
13
00:02:46,800 --> 00:02:52,633
AND FIGHT WITH ANYBODY AND FUCK
WITH ANYBODY, AND SO FORTH.
14
00:02:52,633 --> 00:02:54,666
REAL HE-MAN.
15
00:02:54,666 --> 00:02:57,500
THE SHEER PERVERSITY
OF TOM BENTON
16
00:02:57,500 --> 00:03:00,666
IN TERMS OF HIS OWN CULTURE
IS PRETTY WONDERFUL.
17
00:03:00,666 --> 00:03:03,266
THE FACT THAT HE LIKES
TO PUT PEOPLE ON;
18
00:03:03,266 --> 00:03:05,600
THE FACT THAT HE LIKES TO BE
AN OUTRAGEOUS OLD CUSS;
19
00:03:05,600 --> 00:03:09,500
THAT HE LIKES TO RUB
THEIR NOSE IN BARROOM NUDES;
20
00:03:09,500 --> 00:03:11,700
THE FACT THAT HE LIKES
TO CHALLENGE
21
00:03:11,700 --> 00:03:13,733
THE MORALITY OF HIS OWN PERIOD
22
00:03:13,733 --> 00:03:15,633
IS A LOT OF FUN.
23
00:03:15,633 --> 00:03:18,633
TOM BENTON LOOKED AT AMERICA
LIKE NOBODY DID.
24
00:03:18,633 --> 00:03:23,566
HE KNEW WHERE AMERICA WAS
AND HE KNEW WHAT AMERICA WAS
25
00:03:23,566 --> 00:03:27,066
BECAUSE HE WENT OUT
AND MIXED WITH THE PEOPLE
26
00:03:27,066 --> 00:03:29,300
SLEPT WITH THE PEOPLE,
ATE WITH THE PEOPLE
27
00:03:29,300 --> 00:03:33,066
DREW THE PEOPLE,
WON THEIR CONFIDENCE
28
00:03:33,066 --> 00:03:36,300
AND HE DIDN'T GIVE A DAMN
ABOUT HIGH SOCIETY.
29
00:03:36,300 --> 00:03:38,200
NOW, THAT IRRITATED
A LOT OF PEOPLE.
30
00:03:38,200 --> 00:03:41,166
25 YEARS AGO ONE NEVER DREAMED
31
00:03:41,166 --> 00:03:45,333
THERE WOULD BE
A REVIVAL OF BENTON.
32
00:03:45,333 --> 00:03:49,533
ALL OF THAT-- THE WHOLE
ATTITUDE TOWARD ART
33
00:03:49,533 --> 00:03:53,933
THAT'S EMBODIED IN HIS WORK,
EMBODIED IN HIS WRITING
34
00:03:53,933 --> 00:03:56,900
EMBODIED IN HIS CAREER
35
00:03:56,900 --> 00:03:58,933
SEEMED SAFELY DEAD.
36
00:03:58,933 --> 00:04:02,533
HE'S LOVED AS A PERSON
AND HE'S HATED AS A PERSON
37
00:04:02,533 --> 00:04:06,500
AND THEN THEY TRANSFER THIS
OVER TO HIS PAINTING.
38
00:04:06,500 --> 00:04:09,300
THOSE WHO LOVE HIM,
LOVE HIS PAINTING--
39
00:04:09,300 --> 00:04:10,666
AND THEY KNOW NOTHING
ABOUT ART USUALLY.
40
00:04:10,666 --> 00:04:13,533
AND THOSE WHO HATE HIM
ARE THE PEOPLE IN THE PROFESSION
41
00:04:13,533 --> 00:04:16,766
BECAUSE HE'S MADE COMMENTS,
PUBLIC COMMENTS
42
00:04:16,766 --> 00:04:17,533
STATEMENTS ABOUT THEM.
43
00:04:17,533 --> 00:04:19,266
SO THEY HATE THE MAN.
44
00:04:19,266 --> 00:04:22,400
THEREFORE THEY WON'T LOOK AT HIS
WORK AND THEY HATE HIS WORK.
45
00:04:22,400 --> 00:04:23,766
IT'S UNFORTUNATE.
46
00:04:28,666 --> 00:04:33,266
Narrator:
HE WAS A POLITICIAN'S SON
WHO SCORNED POLITICS
47
00:04:33,266 --> 00:04:37,700
YET STRUGGLED ALL HIS LIFE
TO BECOME A PUBLIC FIGURE.
48
00:04:37,700 --> 00:04:42,133
HE WAS A SOPHISTICATE
WHO PRETENDED TO BE SIMPLE;
49
00:04:42,133 --> 00:04:45,500
A REBEL WHO FLED
FROM HIS MIDWESTERN PAST
50
00:04:45,500 --> 00:04:48,900
AND THEN CAME
TO CELEBRATE IT IN HIS ART.
51
00:04:48,900 --> 00:04:52,700
HE SHOWED HOW AN AMERICAN
ARTIST COULD SUCCEED
52
00:04:52,700 --> 00:04:54,700
AND HOW HE COULD FAIL.
53
00:04:54,700 --> 00:04:56,933
HIS PAINTINGS HANG IN MUSEUMS
54
00:04:56,933 --> 00:05:01,500
BUT HIS FRIENDS STILL CELEBRATE
HIS BIRTHDAY EACH YEAR
55
00:05:01,500 --> 00:05:02,666
IN A KANSAS CITY SALOON.
56
00:05:04,700 --> 00:05:08,333
THOMAS HART BENTON, WHO
WILL BE 70 NEXT WEDNESDAY
57
00:05:08,333 --> 00:05:12,266
HAS BEEN DESCRIBED AS AMERICA'S
BEST-KNOWN CONTEMPORARY PAINTER
58
00:05:12,266 --> 00:05:13,900
WHO VIEWS HIS SUBJECT
59
00:05:13,900 --> 00:05:16,733
THROUGH THE EYES
OF A SOCIAL HISTORIAN.
60
00:05:16,733 --> 00:05:18,566
HE'S ALSO BEEN REFERRED TO
61
00:05:18,566 --> 00:05:21,633
AS RUGGED, OUTSPOKEN
AND UNCONVENTIONAL.
62
00:05:21,633 --> 00:05:23,566
MR. AND MRS. THOMAS HART BENTON
63
00:05:23,566 --> 00:05:26,200
LIVE IN THIS LARGE,
NATIVE-STONE HOUSE
64
00:05:26,200 --> 00:05:28,766
IN THE SOUTHWEST SECTION
OF KANSAS CITY.
65
00:05:28,766 --> 00:05:30,000
GOOD EVENING, TOM.
66
00:05:30,000 --> 00:05:31,000
GOOD EVENING, ED.
67
00:05:31,000 --> 00:05:32,000
HOW ARE YOU?
68
00:05:32,000 --> 00:05:32,766
PRETTY GOOD.
69
00:05:32,766 --> 00:05:35,700
WHAT DO YOU REMEMBER MOST
70
00:05:35,700 --> 00:05:38,533
ABOUT YOUR BOYHOOD
IN NEOSHO, MISSOURI?
71
00:05:38,533 --> 00:05:40,166
SHOWS IN THE BARN,
SWIMMING IN THE CREEKS
72
00:05:40,166 --> 00:05:42,700
RIDING HORSES, AND SO FORTH.
73
00:05:42,700 --> 00:05:45,233
WELL, IT WAS KIND OF
A COUNTRY JAKE'S LIFE.
74
00:05:45,233 --> 00:05:46,366
IT WAS EXTREMELY ENTERTAINING.
75
00:05:46,366 --> 00:05:49,533
YOU ALWAYS REMEMBER IT
WITH SOME REGRETS.
76
00:05:49,533 --> 00:05:52,600
MAYBE THE PROGRESS WE'VE HAD
HAS WIPED ALL THAT OUT
77
00:05:52,600 --> 00:05:55,566
AND OTHER PEOPLE WON'T
HAVE THE CHANCE TO REGRET IT
78
00:05:55,566 --> 00:05:58,800
BUT I REMEMBER IT, ANYHOW,
WITH A PLEASURABLE REGRET.
79
00:06:04,866 --> 00:06:08,566
Narrator:
HE WAS BORN IN NEOSHO,
MISSOURI, IN 1889
80
00:06:08,566 --> 00:06:11,633
THE FIRST AND SHORTEST
OF FOUR CHILDREN
81
00:06:11,633 --> 00:06:13,300
AND WAS NAMED
FOR HIS GREAT-UNCLE
82
00:06:13,300 --> 00:06:16,166
SENATOR THOMAS HART BENTON.
83
00:06:16,166 --> 00:06:19,533
HE WAS THE CHAMPION
OF MANIFEST DESTINY
84
00:06:19,533 --> 00:06:24,200
MISSOURI'S FIRST SENATOR,
A MAN WHO STOOD SIX FEET FOUR
85
00:06:24,200 --> 00:06:27,566
AND WHO WOUNDED ANDREW JACKSON
IN A DUEL.
86
00:06:27,566 --> 00:06:31,066
IT WAS A BIG NAME TO LIVE UP TO.
87
00:06:32,766 --> 00:06:36,733
TOM WAS VERY PUGNACIOUS,
EVEN AS A YOUNG PERSON.
88
00:06:36,733 --> 00:06:40,233
HE WAS VERY SURE
THAT HE WAS ALWAYS RIGHT
89
00:06:40,233 --> 00:06:43,466
AND HE WAS VERY TALKATIVE,
AND AT MEALS
90
00:06:43,466 --> 00:06:47,766
MY FATHER WOULD SOMETIMES
SEND HIM AWAY FROM THE TABLE
91
00:06:47,766 --> 00:06:50,866
BECAUSE HE INSISTED
ON WHAT "I" THINK
92
00:06:50,866 --> 00:06:53,933
AND WHAT "I" DO
AND WHAT "I" WILL DO
93
00:06:53,933 --> 00:06:58,000
AND IT WAS ALWAYS,
AS MY FATHER SAID, "I, I, I."
94
00:06:58,000 --> 00:07:00,866
AND MY FATHER
CALLED HIM "BIG I."
95
00:07:02,933 --> 00:07:05,933
Narrator:
HIS FATHER,
COLONEL MAECENAS BENTON
96
00:07:05,933 --> 00:07:08,633
WAS A COMBATIVE,
HARD-DRINKING POLITICIAN
97
00:07:08,633 --> 00:07:10,433
WHO WAS FOUR TIMES
ELECTED TO CONGRESS
98
00:07:10,433 --> 00:07:13,766
AS "THE LITTLE GIANT
OF THE OZARKS."
99
00:07:15,033 --> 00:07:19,200
T.H. Benton:
MY FATHER WAS A POLITICAL FIGURE
IN THE STATE
100
00:07:19,200 --> 00:07:21,333
AND WHEN I WAS A KID
HE USED TO TAKE ME
101
00:07:21,333 --> 00:07:24,833
ON HIS VARIOUS CAMPAIGNING TRIPS
102
00:07:24,833 --> 00:07:27,700
WHETHER HE WAS CAMPAIGNING
FOR HIMSELF
103
00:07:27,700 --> 00:07:30,866
OR FOR SOME OTHER CANDIDATE,
I WOULD GO.
104
00:07:30,866 --> 00:07:33,400
AND I GOT ACQUAINTED VERY EARLY
105
00:07:33,400 --> 00:07:37,433
WITH THE FLAMBOYANT EARLY
POLITICAL LIFE OF MISSOURI.
106
00:07:37,433 --> 00:07:40,066
Narrator:
BENTON'S MOTHER, ELIZABETH
107
00:07:40,066 --> 00:07:42,600
WAS 19 YEARS YOUNGER
THAN HIS FATHER
108
00:07:42,600 --> 00:07:45,400
A BEAUTIFUL, PIOUS,
HIGH-STRUNG TEXAN
109
00:07:45,400 --> 00:07:49,333
WITH ARTISTIC ASPIRATIONS
WHO LOVED WASHINGTON SOCIETY
110
00:07:49,333 --> 00:07:52,833
AND DESPISED HER HUSBAND'S
MISSOURI CONSTITUENTS.
111
00:07:52,833 --> 00:07:55,833
Woman:
HIS FATHER AND MOTHER
WERE TOTALLY INCOMPATIBLE
112
00:07:55,833 --> 00:08:00,900
AND THEY HAD IRRECONCILABLE
DIFFERENCES ALL THE TIME.
113
00:08:00,900 --> 00:08:08,433
AND IT ALMOST SEEMS AS THOUGH
TOM'S MOTHER WOULD SIDE WITH HIM
114
00:08:08,433 --> 00:08:13,000
AGAINST HIS FATHER,
JUST TO SPITE THE FATHER.
115
00:08:14,733 --> 00:08:20,166
Narrator:
FROM THE FIRST, TOM LOVED
TO DRAW-- RUSHING TRAINS
116
00:08:20,166 --> 00:08:23,300
INDIANS IN WAR PAINT.
117
00:08:24,433 --> 00:08:28,566
CUSTER'S LAST STAND
WAS A FAVORITE SUBJECT
118
00:08:28,566 --> 00:08:32,066
COPIED FROM A PRINT GLIMPSED
THROUGH THE SWINGING DOORS
119
00:08:32,066 --> 00:08:34,933
OF A MAIN STREET SALOON.
120
00:08:34,933 --> 00:08:37,600
HIS MOTHER ENCOURAGED HIS ART,
HIS FATHER DID NOT.
121
00:08:37,600 --> 00:08:42,100
HE WAS DETERMINED THAT HIS SON
WOULD BECOME A LAWYER
122
00:08:42,100 --> 00:08:43,266
AND A POLITICIAN.
123
00:08:43,266 --> 00:08:46,566
"THAT I SHOULD EVEN THINK
OF BECOMING AN ARTIST
124
00:08:46,566 --> 00:08:50,000
GAVE HIM A SENSE OF OUTRAGE,"
TOM REMEMBERED.
125
00:08:50,000 --> 00:08:52,566
IT WOULD NEVER DO FOR A BENTON
TO DESCEND SO LOW.
126
00:08:52,566 --> 00:08:58,300
Small:
HE STRUGGLED AGAINST
OUR FATHER ALL THE TIME.
127
00:08:58,300 --> 00:09:02,400
HE WASN'T STRUGGLING AGAINST
ANYBODY ELSE IN THE HOUSE.
128
00:09:02,400 --> 00:09:06,533
OUR FATHER HAD IDEAS ABOUT
WHAT HE WAS TO DO IN THE WORLD
129
00:09:06,533 --> 00:09:08,066
AND THEY WERE NOT TOM'S IDEAS.
130
00:09:08,066 --> 00:09:13,266
Narrator:
AT 17 TOM LEFT HOME
AND GOT A JOB AS A CARTOONIST
131
00:09:13,266 --> 00:09:17,066
LAMPOONING LOCAL CITIZENS
FOR THE JOPLIN AMERICAN.
132
00:09:17,066 --> 00:09:19,200
Man:
ONE NIGHT HE WAS SEATED
IN A SALOON
133
00:09:19,200 --> 00:09:21,600
LOOKING UP AT THE BAR.
134
00:09:21,600 --> 00:09:23,733
BEHIND THE BAR
AT THE HOUSE FLOOR SALOON
135
00:09:23,733 --> 00:09:28,100
THERE WAS THIS HUGE NAKED WOMAN
IN THE PAINTING
136
00:09:28,100 --> 00:09:30,000
AND THE OLDER MEN STARTED
KIDDING HIM.
137
00:09:30,000 --> 00:09:32,533
THEY SAID, "SHORTY, WHAT ARE YOU
STARING AT THAT PAINTING FOR?"
138
00:09:32,533 --> 00:09:36,066
IMPLYING THAT HE WAS STARING
AT THE NAKED WOMAN.
139
00:09:36,066 --> 00:09:37,366
AND HE GOT VERY EMBARRASSED
140
00:09:37,366 --> 00:09:39,566
AND HE SAID HE WAS AN ARTIST,
AND HE WAS JUST STUDYING
141
00:09:39,566 --> 00:09:42,666
THE ARTISTIC PROPORTIONS
OF THE PAINTING.
142
00:09:42,666 --> 00:09:47,600
T.H. Benton:
THE FELLOWS STARTED KIDDING ME,
AND I TOLD THEM I WAS AN ARTIST
143
00:09:47,600 --> 00:09:49,433
AND TO PROVE IT, THEY KNEW
144
00:09:49,433 --> 00:09:52,466
THAT THEY NEEDED
A DRAFTSMAN ON THE PAPER.
145
00:09:52,466 --> 00:09:54,933
SO THEY TOOK ME DOWN THERE
AND I GOT THE JOB.
146
00:09:54,933 --> 00:09:57,600
I WAS 17 YEARS OLD.
147
00:09:57,600 --> 00:10:00,466
I GOT $14 A WEEK;
THAT WAS A BIG SALARY.
148
00:10:00,466 --> 00:10:04,933
SO I THOUGHT THAT I BETTER STAY
WITH THE ARTS AND MAKE MONEY.
149
00:10:04,933 --> 00:10:08,500
THAT WAS ABOUT THE LAST MONEY
I MADE FOR 20 YEARS.
150
00:10:08,500 --> 00:10:12,133
Narrator:
HE NOW DEMANDED
TO GO TO ART SCHOOL
151
00:10:12,133 --> 00:10:16,200
BUT HIS FATHER PACKED HIM OFF
TO A MILITARY ACADEMY INSTEAD
152
00:10:16,200 --> 00:10:19,666
SURE IT WOULD DRIVE
THE ART OUT OF HIM.
153
00:10:19,666 --> 00:10:21,566
IT DID NOT.
154
00:10:21,566 --> 00:10:24,666
HE DID WELL AT ENGLISH
AND FOOTBALL
155
00:10:24,666 --> 00:10:28,466
AND SENT DOZENS
OF ILLUSTRATED LETTERS HOME.
156
00:10:28,466 --> 00:10:31,433
BUT HE PILED UP DEMERITS,
FAILED AT MATHEMATICS
157
00:10:31,433 --> 00:10:34,233
AND WAS ENCOURAGED
TO GO ELSEWHERE.
158
00:10:34,233 --> 00:10:37,200
FINALLY THE COLONEL GAVE IN
159
00:10:37,200 --> 00:10:41,666
AND TOM ENTERED THE PRESTIGIOUS
CHICAGO ART INSTITUTE.
160
00:10:41,666 --> 00:10:43,966
HE MADE A NOISY IMPRESSION.
161
00:10:43,966 --> 00:10:46,166
HE REFUSED TO DRAW PLASTER CASTS
162
00:10:46,166 --> 00:10:50,133
ELBOWED HIS WAY INTO CLASSES
RESERVED FOR OLDER STUDENTS
163
00:10:50,133 --> 00:10:54,000
AND ASSURED A FRIEND THAT
HIS PAINTINGS WOULD ONE DAY BE
164
00:10:54,000 --> 00:10:56,166
AS IMPORTANT
AS THE FUNNY PAPERS.
165
00:10:56,166 --> 00:10:59,366
WHEN AN OLDER STUDENT
TEASED HIM ABOUT HIS SIZE
166
00:10:59,366 --> 00:11:01,866
HE PUSHED HIM DOWN A COAL CHUTE.
167
00:11:04,666 --> 00:11:06,833
"I BECOME MORE
AND MORE CONSCIOUS"
168
00:11:06,833 --> 00:11:09,533
TOM WROTE TO HIS MOTHER
FROM CHICAGO, "THAT IN ME LIES
169
00:11:09,533 --> 00:11:13,166
"SOME UNEXPLAINABLE POWER,
WHICH SOMETIME IN THE FUTURE
170
00:11:13,166 --> 00:11:15,866
"I WILL BE ABLE TO UNCHAIN
171
00:11:15,866 --> 00:11:18,533
"AND WHICH WILL MAKE ME RISE
172
00:11:18,533 --> 00:11:22,033
FAR ABOVE THE LEVEL
OF THE ORDINARY MORTAL."
173
00:11:22,033 --> 00:11:24,033
HIS TEACHERS AGREED
174
00:11:24,033 --> 00:11:28,433
AND URGED HIS PARENTS
TO SEND HIM TO PARIS TO STUDY.
175
00:11:33,700 --> 00:11:35,666
IT WAS 1908.
176
00:11:35,666 --> 00:11:40,533
PARIS WAS THE HOME OF PICASSO,
BRAQUE, MATISSE-- ALL YOUNG MEN
177
00:11:40,533 --> 00:11:44,700
AND REVOLUTIONIZING
THE WAY ARTISTS SAW THE WORLD.
178
00:11:44,700 --> 00:11:47,833
"MY GENIUS NOTIONS WERE
DISPELLED IN A HURRY"
179
00:11:47,833 --> 00:11:49,033
BENTON REMEMBERED.
180
00:11:49,033 --> 00:11:51,700
"THE QUARTER WAS OVERRUN
WITH GENIUSES.
181
00:11:51,700 --> 00:11:56,200
"I WAS MERELY A ROUGHNECK
WITH A TALENT FOR FIGHTING
182
00:11:56,200 --> 00:11:57,900
BUT NOT FOR PAINTING."
183
00:11:57,900 --> 00:12:01,066
TOM RENTED A TINY STUDIO,
GREW A MOUSTACHE
184
00:12:01,066 --> 00:12:05,200
INSTALLED A MISTRESS,
AND SPENT HOURS AT THE LOUVRE.
185
00:12:05,200 --> 00:12:08,900
HE DISLIKED HIS CLASSES,
DISLIKED HIS OWN WORK
186
00:12:08,900 --> 00:12:12,066
DRANK AND TALKED A LOT.
187
00:12:12,066 --> 00:12:14,800
HE WAS KNOWN IN PARIS
AS "LE PETIT BALZAC."
188
00:12:14,800 --> 00:12:19,900
WHEN HIS MOTHER CAME TO VISIT
AND FOUND OUT ABOUT THE MISTRESS
189
00:12:19,900 --> 00:12:21,766
SHE TOOK HER BOY HOME.
190
00:12:21,766 --> 00:12:25,533
HE RETURNED TO MISSOURI
WEARING A STYLISH BLACK SUIT
191
00:12:25,533 --> 00:12:27,933
AND FLOURISHING A WALKING STICK.
192
00:12:27,933 --> 00:12:30,800
NEOSHO HAD NEVER SEEN
ANYTHING LIKE HIM.
193
00:12:30,800 --> 00:12:33,166
THE COLONEL SENT HIM
TO NEW YORK.
194
00:12:34,133 --> 00:12:37,033
Small:
HE ONCE SAID
195
00:12:37,033 --> 00:12:40,600
THAT THE ARTIST'S LIFE
WAS THE BEST IN THE WORLD
196
00:12:40,600 --> 00:12:44,033
IF YOU COULD GET THROUGH
THE FIRST 40 YEARS.
197
00:12:44,033 --> 00:12:49,000
Narrator:
IN NEW YORK, BENTON HAD
FEW PROSPECTS AND NO MONEY.
198
00:12:49,000 --> 00:12:51,100
HE STOLE PAINTS FROM MACY'S
199
00:12:51,100 --> 00:12:53,966
FAILED AT PORTRAITS
AND CALENDAR ART
200
00:12:53,966 --> 00:12:56,966
PAINTED MOVIE SETS,
WORKED AS AN EXTRA
201
00:12:56,966 --> 00:12:58,966
SERVED A STINT IN THE NAVY
202
00:12:58,966 --> 00:13:02,866
AND SURVIVED A STABBING
BY AN IRATE GIRLFRIEND.
203
00:13:02,866 --> 00:13:05,900
HE ENTERED THE WORLD
OF RADICAL ART AND POLITICS
204
00:13:05,900 --> 00:13:10,700
GETTING TO KNOW ALFRED STIEGLITZ
AND THE EDITOR MAX EASTMAN.
205
00:13:10,700 --> 00:13:15,900
HE JOINED THE JOHN REED CLUB
AND THE PEOPLE'S ART GUILD
206
00:13:15,900 --> 00:13:17,933
AND BEFRIENDED COMMUNISTS
207
00:13:17,933 --> 00:13:22,000
BUT ALWAYS REMAINED
ON THE OUTER EDGES OF THINGS.
208
00:13:22,000 --> 00:13:26,133
A FRIEND REMEMBERED
THAT HE NEVER SMILED.
209
00:13:26,133 --> 00:13:28,533
ALWAYS HE CONTINUED TO PAINT.
210
00:13:28,533 --> 00:13:32,533
HE IMITATED PISSARRO,
CEZANNE AND KANDINSKY.
211
00:13:32,533 --> 00:13:36,033
HE TRIED IMPRESSIONISM,
POINTILLISM, CUBISM
212
00:13:36,033 --> 00:13:38,200
CONSTRUCTIVISM, SYMBOLISM,
SYNCHRONISM--
213
00:13:38,200 --> 00:13:40,633
NONE OF IT SATISFIED HIM.
214
00:13:40,633 --> 00:13:44,433
"I SPENT 15 YEARS
ON MY BEAM-END," HE REMEMBERED
215
00:13:44,433 --> 00:13:47,566
"ROCKED BY EVERY WAVE
THAT CAME ALONG.
216
00:13:47,566 --> 00:13:52,800
I FLOUNDERED, WITHOUT A COMPASS,
IN EVERY DIRECTION."
217
00:13:52,800 --> 00:13:57,166
Kramer:
BENTON'S WORK AS
A MODERNIST, I THOUGHT
218
00:13:57,166 --> 00:13:59,300
WAS REALLY VERY STRONG.
219
00:13:59,300 --> 00:14:02,566
I WOULD NEVER HAVE PUT HIM
UP IN THE FIRST CLASS
220
00:14:02,566 --> 00:14:04,466
BUT IT WAS APPRENTICE WORK
221
00:14:04,466 --> 00:14:08,233
IT WAS THE WORK OF A YOUNG
ARTIST DISCOVERING NEW IDEAS
222
00:14:08,233 --> 00:14:10,900
WHICH CLEARLY SCARED
THE LIFE OUT OF HIM
223
00:14:10,900 --> 00:14:13,100
BECAUSE HE MADE CERTAIN LATER ON
224
00:14:13,100 --> 00:14:16,666
THAT HE NEVER HAD TO DEAL
WITH A NEW IDEA EVER AGAIN.
225
00:14:16,666 --> 00:14:19,733
Narrator:
BENTON EXPERIMENTED MOST
WITH SYNCHRONISM
226
00:14:19,733 --> 00:14:20,900
COMBINING BRILLIANT COLOR
227
00:14:20,900 --> 00:14:24,866
WITH THE EXPLODED FORMS
OF THE CUBISTS.
228
00:14:24,866 --> 00:14:28,600
BUT HE WAS ALSO DRAWN
TO THE COMPOSITIONAL PRINCIPLES
229
00:14:28,600 --> 00:14:30,400
OF RENAISSANCE MASTERS:
230
00:14:30,400 --> 00:14:34,100
RUBENS, EL GRECO, TINTORETTO--
231
00:14:34,100 --> 00:14:36,900
ESPECIALLY TINTORETTO.
232
00:14:36,900 --> 00:14:43,066
IN ABOUT 1919, IT WAS REALLY
THE BREAKTHROUGH FOR TOM BENTON
233
00:14:43,066 --> 00:14:46,466
WHEN HE FOUND A WAY
TO BUILD CLAY MODELS
234
00:14:46,466 --> 00:14:48,966
AS A BASIS FOR HIS PAINTINGS.
235
00:14:48,966 --> 00:14:51,200
IN HIS STUDIES
HE DISCOVERED TINTORETTO
236
00:14:51,200 --> 00:14:53,733
AND TINTORETTO'S
MAKING OF LITTLE WAX FIGURES
237
00:14:53,733 --> 00:14:56,333
AND PUTTING THEM ON A STAGE
AND LIGHTING THEM
238
00:14:56,333 --> 00:14:57,866
ACHIEVING AN EFFECT
239
00:14:57,866 --> 00:15:01,100
THAT HE COULD THEN GET
INTO HIS PAINTINGS.
240
00:15:01,100 --> 00:15:04,533
ONCE HE HAD THIS BASIS
FOR HIS PAINTINGS
241
00:15:04,533 --> 00:15:06,766
HE COULD THEN APPLY IT
TO JUST A PARADE
242
00:15:06,766 --> 00:15:11,166
OF HISTORICAL RECOLLECTIONS,
AND THE AMERICAN MYTHS
243
00:15:11,166 --> 00:15:14,366
THAT HE INCORPORATED
IN HIS GREAT MURALS--
244
00:15:14,366 --> 00:15:17,400
ALL THROUGH THE PROJECTION
OF THREE-DIMENSIONAL FORM
245
00:15:17,400 --> 00:15:21,266
BASED ON THOSE THREE-
DIMENSIONAL MODELS
246
00:15:21,266 --> 00:15:23,333
AND FOR THE NEXT 55 YEARS
247
00:15:23,333 --> 00:15:28,233
TOM BENTON DIDN'T DO A PAINTING
UNLESS HE FIRST DID IT IN CLAY.
248
00:15:35,433 --> 00:15:38,166
Man:
HE MADE THE DECISION
249
00:15:38,166 --> 00:15:40,600
AFTER HE'D REALLY GOTTEN
INVOLVED IN CONTENT
250
00:15:40,600 --> 00:15:45,000
AND BEGAN TO THINK ABOUT
THE IMPORTANCE OF MEANING
251
00:15:45,000 --> 00:15:47,200
TO HIS AUDIENCES
AND TO HIMSELF--
252
00:15:47,200 --> 00:15:49,833
WHAT HE WANTED TO SAY
WITH HIS PAINTING.
253
00:15:49,833 --> 00:15:53,600
HE ABANDONED THE MORE
THEORETICAL ASPECTS OF THINGS
254
00:15:53,600 --> 00:15:57,233
AND BEGAN TO DEAL WITH MORE
THREE-DIMENSIONAL, BAROQUE
255
00:15:57,233 --> 00:15:59,433
STORYTELLING KINDS OF THINGS.
256
00:15:59,433 --> 00:16:04,466
Narrator:
"I PROCLAIMED HERESIES AROUND
NEW YORK," BENTON REMEMBERED.
257
00:16:04,466 --> 00:16:07,366
"I WANTED MORE
THAN ANYTHING ELSE
258
00:16:07,366 --> 00:16:11,700
"TO MAKE PICTURES, THE IMAGERY
OF WHICH WOULD CARRY
259
00:16:11,700 --> 00:16:15,733
UNMISTAKABLE AMERICAN MEANINGS
FOR AMERICANS."
260
00:16:15,733 --> 00:16:17,566
HE BELIEVED IN AMERICA--
261
00:16:17,566 --> 00:16:20,233
IN THE SPIRIT THAT WAS
IN THE COUNTRY
262
00:16:20,233 --> 00:16:24,233
AND HE FELT THAT THE ART
SHOULD COME FROM THE COUNTRY.
263
00:16:24,233 --> 00:16:29,233
TO BE CLEAR, LIKE
THE AMERICAN SOUL IS
264
00:16:29,233 --> 00:16:33,700
AND ARTICULATE IN A SIMPLER WAY
265
00:16:33,700 --> 00:16:37,966
NOT ABSTRACT,
BUT DOWN TO EARTH, AND REAL.
266
00:16:37,966 --> 00:16:42,866
Narrator:
"I SET OUT PAINTING AMERICAN
HISTORIES," BENTON SAID
267
00:16:42,866 --> 00:16:47,333
"IN DEFIANCE OF ALL THE
CONVENTIONS OF OUR ART WORLD."
268
00:16:47,333 --> 00:16:51,800
AND HE STARTED WORK
ON A SERIES OF BIG CANVASES
269
00:16:51,800 --> 00:16:55,533
WHICH HE CALLED
"THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL EPIC."
270
00:16:57,900 --> 00:17:03,000
E. Piacenza:
HISTORY WAS NOT FACTS TO HIM,
BUT TRANSLATED
271
00:17:03,000 --> 00:17:08,933
INTO THE ACTIVITIES
OF PEOPLE DOING THINGS.
272
00:17:08,933 --> 00:17:10,566
HISTORY HAD TO BE ALIVE.
273
00:17:10,566 --> 00:17:13,766
IT HAD TO BE COLORFUL,
IT HAD TO BE MOVING
274
00:17:13,766 --> 00:17:15,433
IT HAD TO SAY SOMETHING.
275
00:17:15,433 --> 00:17:19,100
OH, DEAR, I SEE
LEAPING FIGURES, YES
276
00:17:19,100 --> 00:17:23,266
AND I SEE INDIANS WITH
TOMAHAWKS AND SO ON.
277
00:17:23,266 --> 00:17:25,166
HE LIKED THAT.
278
00:17:25,166 --> 00:17:28,300
THOSE THAT WENT INTO
THE LORE AND LEGEND
279
00:17:28,300 --> 00:17:31,733
OF AMERICAN HISTORY, YES.
280
00:17:31,733 --> 00:17:35,166
HE WAS TRYING TO PUT ART
TO SOME HUMAN END;
281
00:17:35,166 --> 00:17:38,666
TO SERVE SOME HUMAN PURPOSE;
282
00:17:38,666 --> 00:17:42,666
TO MAKE AMERICANS
SOMEHOW OR OTHER ALIVE
283
00:17:42,666 --> 00:17:46,733
TO SOME DEEP DIMENSION
OF THEIR OWN REALITY.
284
00:17:46,733 --> 00:17:52,300
I THINK THAT'S A GREAT PURPOSE
FOR ART TO SERVE.
285
00:17:52,300 --> 00:17:54,600
HE WANTED PEOPLE
WHO WOULD READ FUNNY PAPERS
286
00:17:54,600 --> 00:17:58,033
TO LIKE THE PICTURES,
HE REALLY DID.
287
00:17:59,766 --> 00:18:05,200
Narrator:
IN 1924, BENTON WAS
CALLED HOME TO NEOSHO.
288
00:18:05,200 --> 00:18:07,633
HIS FATHER HAD THROAT CANCER.
289
00:18:07,633 --> 00:18:10,400
THEY RECONCILED
THEIR DIFFERENCES
290
00:18:10,400 --> 00:18:12,766
AT THE OLD MAN'S BEDSIDE.
291
00:18:12,766 --> 00:18:16,766
"I CANNOT SAY WHAT HAPPENED TO
ME WHILE I WATCHED MY FATHER DIE
292
00:18:16,766 --> 00:18:22,000
AND LISTENED TO THE VOICES
OF HIS FRIENDS," BENTON WROTE
293
00:18:22,000 --> 00:18:24,866
"BUT I KNOW THAT
WHEN I GOT BACK EAST
294
00:18:24,866 --> 00:18:27,333
"I WAS MOVED BY A GREAT DESIRE
295
00:18:27,333 --> 00:18:30,500
TO PICK UP THE THREADS
OF MY CHILDHOOD."
296
00:18:30,500 --> 00:18:33,400
I'M NOT A PSYCHO-BIOGRAPHER,
BUT I DO THINK
297
00:18:33,400 --> 00:18:35,566
A GOOD DEAL OF BENTON'S
ADULT CHARACTER GREW
298
00:18:35,566 --> 00:18:38,900
FROM HIS RELATIONSHIP
WITH HIS FATHER
299
00:18:38,900 --> 00:18:43,266
WHO WAS A POPULIST SENATOR, WHO
DID NOT LIKE EASTERN INTERESTS
300
00:18:43,266 --> 00:18:44,400
NOR INTERNATIONAL INTERESTS
301
00:18:44,400 --> 00:18:46,733
AND DID NOT LIKE
MODERN ART AT ALL
302
00:18:46,733 --> 00:18:50,766
AND BENTON BECAME, IN EFFECT,
LIKE HIS FATHER
303
00:18:50,766 --> 00:18:52,266
AFTER HIS FATHER DIED.
304
00:18:52,266 --> 00:18:53,766
Narrator:
FROM THEN ON
305
00:18:53,766 --> 00:18:57,233
HE WOULD ROAM THE AMERICAN
COUNTRYSIDE WHENEVER HE COULD--
306
00:18:57,233 --> 00:18:59,333
NORTH, SOUTH, EAST, WEST.
307
00:18:59,333 --> 00:19:02,600
"I STUCK MY NOSE INTO
EVERYTHING," HE SAID
308
00:19:02,600 --> 00:19:05,066
AND HE PRODUCED
THOUSANDS OF DRAWINGS
309
00:19:05,066 --> 00:19:07,566
OF THE PEOPLE HE MET
AND THE PLACES HE SAW.
310
00:19:07,566 --> 00:19:10,933
A FRIEND CALLED THEM
"A MOUNTAIN OF AMERICANA."
311
00:19:10,933 --> 00:19:15,700
HE WOULD MINE THAT MOUNTAIN
ALL HIS LIFE.
312
00:19:15,700 --> 00:19:19,566
AFTER PARIS AND SO ON,
HE'D BEEN THROUGHOUT AMERICA
313
00:19:19,566 --> 00:19:24,033
JUST MAKING DRAWINGS OF THE LIFE
OF PEOPLE OUT IN THE MIDWEST--
314
00:19:24,033 --> 00:19:29,866
DRAWINGS WHICH TO ME
HAD THE CHARACTER OF MARK TWAIN
315
00:19:29,866 --> 00:19:32,100
IN LITERATURE--
316
00:19:32,100 --> 00:19:35,033
I MEAN, RIGHT OUT
OF AMERICAN LIFE
317
00:19:35,033 --> 00:19:38,666
AND A PART OF AMERICAN LIFE THAT
HAD NOT BEEN PUT INTO THE ARTS.
318
00:19:43,233 --> 00:19:47,200
Narrator:
WHILE TEACHING NIGHT CLASSES
AT A PUBLIC SCHOOL
319
00:19:47,200 --> 00:19:50,333
BENTON FELL IN LOVE
WITH A BEAUTIFUL STUDENT
320
00:19:50,333 --> 00:19:51,533
RITA PIACENZA.
321
00:19:51,533 --> 00:19:55,566
SHE WAS AN ITALIAN IMMIGRANT
AND A ROMAN CATHOLIC.
322
00:19:55,566 --> 00:19:59,000
BENTON'S FAMILY WAS APPALLED;
SO WAS HERS.
323
00:19:59,000 --> 00:20:02,766
Man:
WE THOUGHT THAT
HE DIDN'T HAVE A JOB
324
00:20:02,766 --> 00:20:06,366
THAT HE WAS PAINTING,
HE COULDN'T SELL
325
00:20:06,366 --> 00:20:10,400
AND RITA HAD TO SUPPORT HIM.
326
00:20:10,400 --> 00:20:16,133
YOU KNOW, ITALIANS, THEY EXPECT
THE MAN TO SUPPORT THE WIFE
327
00:20:16,133 --> 00:20:17,400
NOT THE WIFE
TO SUPPORT THE HUSBAND.
328
00:20:17,400 --> 00:20:21,033
Narrator:
THEY GOT MARRIED ANYWAY.
329
00:20:21,033 --> 00:20:23,633
RITA MADE HATS
WHILE TOM PAINTED.
330
00:20:31,333 --> 00:20:32,633
T.H. Benton:
NOW, WE LED A SIMPLE LIFE.
331
00:20:32,633 --> 00:20:36,800
MY GOD, I LIVED IN
NEW YORK CITY AT THE TIME
332
00:20:36,800 --> 00:20:39,733
IN A FLAT THAT HAD NO HEAT.
333
00:20:39,733 --> 00:20:43,233
I HAD TO CARRY COAL
UP FIVE FLIGHTS OF STAIRS
334
00:20:43,233 --> 00:20:46,566
AND WE HAD KEROSENE LAMPS.
335
00:20:46,566 --> 00:20:50,733
THAT'S RIGHT IN THE MIDDLE
OF NEW YORK CITY.
336
00:20:50,733 --> 00:20:54,766
Narrator:
WHEN THEIR FIRST CHILD--
THOMAS PIACENZA BENTON
337
00:20:54,766 --> 00:20:58,866
KNOWN AS T.P.-- WAS BORN,
HE SLEPT IN A DRESSER DRAWER.
338
00:20:58,866 --> 00:21:03,133
Man:
MY MOTHER VISITED THEIR
APARTMENT, WHICH I GUESS
339
00:21:03,133 --> 00:21:07,433
WAS VERY CLOSE TO THE...
FULL-FLEDGED DEFINITION
340
00:21:07,433 --> 00:21:12,800
OF ABJECT SQUALOR AND CHAOS,
AND NO ADORNMENTS, NO AMENITIES
341
00:21:12,800 --> 00:21:17,133
AND MY MOTHER SAID TO RITA,
"I DON'T UNDERSTAND
342
00:21:17,133 --> 00:21:20,866
HOW YOU CAN LIVE
UNDER THESE CONDITIONS";
343
00:21:20,866 --> 00:21:24,300
TO WHICH RITA REPLIED,
WITH CONFIDENCE
344
00:21:24,300 --> 00:21:28,666
AND A TOUCH OF HAUTEUR,
"MY HUSBAND IS A GENIUS."
345
00:21:28,666 --> 00:21:33,866
Bennett:
OH, BOY-- RITA BENTON?
346
00:21:33,866 --> 00:21:36,533
BOY! WHAT A WOMAN.
347
00:21:36,533 --> 00:21:39,233
MORE FIRE IN THAT
FAT ITALIAN LADY
348
00:21:39,233 --> 00:21:43,133
THAN I EVER SAW IN ANY WOMAN
349
00:21:43,133 --> 00:21:46,166
AND I LOVED RITA, AND I THINK
350
00:21:46,166 --> 00:21:50,133
ANYBODY WHO KNEW RITA
LOVED RITA BENTON.
351
00:21:52,133 --> 00:21:57,633
Narrator:
BENTON WAS OFTEN AWAY SKETCHING
FOR MONTHS AT A TIME
352
00:21:57,633 --> 00:22:00,533
AND HATED INTERRUPTIONS
WHEN AT HOME.
353
00:22:00,533 --> 00:22:05,733
"TOM IS THE WORST HUSBAND AND
WORST FATHER THAT EVER LIVED"
354
00:22:05,733 --> 00:22:08,533
RITA ONCE TOLD A FRIEND.
355
00:22:08,533 --> 00:22:12,200
"NO AMERICAN WOMAN COULD
HAVE BEEN MARRIED TO TOM."
356
00:22:12,200 --> 00:22:15,600
E. Piacenza:
TOM WOULD GET DISCOURAGED,
AND HE'D TEAR UP A PAINTING
357
00:22:15,600 --> 00:22:19,533
AND RITA WOULD HAVE HIM
OUT IN HIS STUDIO
358
00:22:19,533 --> 00:22:22,033
THE NEXT MORNING,
PAINTING AGAIN
359
00:22:22,033 --> 00:22:24,366
AND SHE ENCOURAGED HIM GREATLY.
360
00:22:24,366 --> 00:22:26,366
SHE'D LOOK AT HIS PAINTING
361
00:22:26,366 --> 00:22:30,533
AND SHE'D SAY,
"TOM, IT'S FANTASTIC."
362
00:22:30,533 --> 00:22:33,166
WELL, HE TOLD ME THAT
IF IT WASN'T FOR...
363
00:22:33,166 --> 00:22:35,733
"IT'S BEEN VERY HARD
364
00:22:35,733 --> 00:22:38,433
"TO LIVE WITH YOUR SISTER
ALL THESE YEARS.
365
00:22:38,433 --> 00:22:41,300
"THAT'S A HARD WOMAN
TO GET ALONG.
366
00:22:41,300 --> 00:22:44,433
"BUT IF IT WASN'T FOR HER--
367
00:22:44,433 --> 00:22:46,700
"I WAS A BUM, I WOULD
STILL BE A BUM
368
00:22:46,700 --> 00:22:50,866
AND I WOULDN'T HAVE
A DIME TO MY NAME."
369
00:22:54,566 --> 00:22:58,033
Narrator:
IN 1929 RITA SOMEHOW TALKED
370
00:22:58,033 --> 00:23:02,033
THE PRESIDENT OF THE NEW SCHOOL
FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH
371
00:23:02,033 --> 00:23:03,100
IN GREENWICH VILLAGE
372
00:23:03,100 --> 00:23:06,333
INTO LETTING TOM PAINT
NINE MURAL PANELS
373
00:23:06,333 --> 00:23:08,066
FOR A BOARDROOM THERE.
374
00:23:08,066 --> 00:23:09,566
IT WAS HIS FIRST BIG COMMISSION.
375
00:23:09,566 --> 00:23:13,500
HIS ONLY PAYMENT WAS
THE PRICE OF THE EGGS
376
00:23:13,500 --> 00:23:16,200
THAT WENT INTO
PREPARING HIS PAINT.
377
00:23:17,266 --> 00:23:21,233
"AMERICA TODAY" WAS THE THEME.
378
00:23:24,166 --> 00:23:28,766
"IT MAY NOT BE ART," BENTON
SAID, "BUT IT IS HISTORY."
379
00:23:38,366 --> 00:23:41,133
WHAT'S WONDERFUL
ABOUT "AMERICA TODAY"
380
00:23:41,133 --> 00:23:43,500
IS THE COMPLEXITY
AND THE ENERGY--
381
00:23:43,500 --> 00:23:45,900
A HUGE, BRAWLING
NUMBER OF FIGURES
382
00:23:45,900 --> 00:23:48,233
ALL JOSTLING ONE ANOTHER
FOR YOUR ATTENTION.
383
00:23:48,233 --> 00:23:50,933
I LIKE THE ENERGY LEVEL.
384
00:23:50,933 --> 00:23:54,066
"AMERICA TODAY"--
AMERICA TODAY, TODAY, MODERN.
385
00:23:54,066 --> 00:24:00,566
Adams:
"AMERICA TODAY" IS PROBABLY
BENTON'S MOST MUSCULAR PAINTING.
386
00:24:00,566 --> 00:24:03,533
THE WAY IT WAS SET UP
IN THE NEW SCHOOL
387
00:24:03,533 --> 00:24:07,500
IT WAS SO CLOSE TO YOU THAT
YOU WERE CONFRONTING FIGURES
388
00:24:07,500 --> 00:24:09,866
THAT SEEMED BIGGER THAN YOU WERE
389
00:24:09,866 --> 00:24:12,400
WITH THESE VERY HOT,
AGGRESSIVE COLORS
390
00:24:12,400 --> 00:24:14,300
THESE PURPLES AND ORANGES.
391
00:24:14,300 --> 00:24:18,300
Goodrich:
IT WAS A NEW TECHNIQUE
COMPLETELY IN MURAL PAINTING
392
00:24:18,300 --> 00:24:19,466
OF ACTUALLY TAKING REALITY
393
00:24:19,466 --> 00:24:24,566
AND MAKING MURAL ART
DIRECTLY OUT OF IT.
394
00:24:24,566 --> 00:24:27,633
HERE'S A MAN WHO TOOK
THE WHOLE FACE OF AMERICA
395
00:24:27,633 --> 00:24:33,000
AND TRIED TO MAKE
A WORK OF ART OUT OF IT.
396
00:24:33,000 --> 00:24:37,400
IT WAS TOO CROWDED, NO QUESTION,
ARTISTICALLY SPEAKING
397
00:24:37,400 --> 00:24:41,233
BUT AFTER ALL,
A SUPERABUNDANCE OF VITALITY
398
00:24:41,233 --> 00:24:44,400
IS SOMETHING YOU
DON'T JUST SLOUGH OFF.
399
00:24:44,400 --> 00:24:47,400
Marling:
HE SHOWS YOU PRIZEFIGHTING.
400
00:24:47,400 --> 00:24:49,866
HE SHOWS YOU LADIES
GOING TO THE MOVIES
401
00:24:49,866 --> 00:24:51,900
SNEAKING OFF FOR THE AFTERNOON.
402
00:24:51,900 --> 00:24:54,333
HE SHOWS YOU PREACHERS
YOWLING ON STREET CORNERS
403
00:24:54,333 --> 00:24:56,800
AND SALVATION ARMY BANDS.
404
00:24:56,800 --> 00:25:01,133
ALMOST EVERYTHING BECOMES A KIND
OF GAUDY ENTERTAINMENT
405
00:25:01,133 --> 00:25:04,033
THAT BENTON LOOKS AT.
406
00:25:08,266 --> 00:25:12,333
Adams:
IN "AMERICA TODAY,"
BENTON HAS SLIPPED IN
407
00:25:12,333 --> 00:25:16,133
ALL KINDS OF SLY REFERENCES
ABOUT HIS NEW YORK FRIENDS.
408
00:25:16,133 --> 00:25:19,866
THERE'S A SCENE WHERE HIS
ONETIME FRIEND, MAX EASTMAN
409
00:25:19,866 --> 00:25:22,333
IS SHOWN OGLING
A GIRL IN THE SUBWAY
410
00:25:22,333 --> 00:25:24,333
BUT NOT GIVING UP HIS SEAT
411
00:25:24,333 --> 00:25:26,566
AND TO MAKE IT
EVEN MORE SALACIOUS
412
00:25:26,566 --> 00:25:28,900
THE HEAD OF THE GIRL
IN THE SUBWAY
413
00:25:28,900 --> 00:25:32,000
IS A NOTORIOUS STRIPPER
WHO WOULD HAVE BEEN
414
00:25:32,000 --> 00:25:35,566
PRETTY WELL KNOWN
TO THE NEW YORKERS OF THE TIME.
415
00:25:37,033 --> 00:25:38,900
Narrator:
ABSTRACTIONISTS DENOUNCED BENTON
416
00:25:38,900 --> 00:25:42,400
FOR TRYING TO TELL STORIES
WITH HIS PAINTINGS.
417
00:25:42,400 --> 00:25:45,566
SOCIAL REALISTS DENOUNCED
HIS STORYTELLING
418
00:25:45,566 --> 00:25:48,900
FOR NOT BLAMING CAPITALISM
FOR THE DEPRESSION.
419
00:25:48,900 --> 00:25:50,733
BENTON WAS UNMOVED.
420
00:25:50,733 --> 00:25:55,700
IT WAS THE SHEER ENERGY
OF AMERICA THAT COMPELLED HIM.
421
00:25:55,700 --> 00:25:59,366
Adams:
THERE'S A MAGICAL PERIOD
IN BENTON'S WORK
422
00:25:59,366 --> 00:26:01,433
FROM ABOUT 1928 TO 1938
423
00:26:01,433 --> 00:26:06,233
WHERE IT SEEMED AS THOUGH HE
COULD DO NO WRONG AS A PAINTER.
424
00:26:06,233 --> 00:26:09,133
ONE AFTER ANOTHER,
HE WAS TURNING OUT
425
00:26:09,133 --> 00:26:10,666
INCREDIBLY MEMORABLE PAINTINGS
426
00:26:10,666 --> 00:26:15,366
WHICH I WOULD CHARACTERIZE
AS MASTERPIECES
427
00:26:15,366 --> 00:26:20,700
AND THERE'S SOMETHING COMPULSIVE
ABOUT HIM IN THAT PERIOD.
428
00:26:20,700 --> 00:26:23,966
IN THE INDIANA MURAL,
FOR EXAMPLE
429
00:26:23,966 --> 00:26:29,600
HE WAS PAINTING A WALL
12 FEET HIGH AND 250 FEET LONG--
430
00:26:29,600 --> 00:26:33,433
THAT'S TO SAY, A WALL
THE SIZE OF A CITY BLOCK--
431
00:26:33,433 --> 00:26:38,033
WHICH HE PAINTED
IN LESS THAN A YEAR
432
00:26:38,033 --> 00:26:39,733
WITH HUNDREDS OF FIGURES.
433
00:26:48,000 --> 00:26:54,633
Field:
BENTON'S MURALS HAVE REALLY
A REMARKABLE UNIQUENESS.
434
00:26:54,633 --> 00:26:57,866
THEY SEEM TO LEAP
OUT OF THE WALLS.
435
00:26:57,866 --> 00:27:00,000
PART OF THIS IS DUE TO COLOR.
436
00:27:00,000 --> 00:27:03,900
PART OF THIS IS DUE TO
A REMARKABLE DEPTH PERCEPTION
437
00:27:03,900 --> 00:27:05,933
THAT HE COULD PUT ON CANVAS
438
00:27:05,933 --> 00:27:08,433
IN MANY INSTANCES,
BIGGER THAN LIFE.
439
00:27:08,433 --> 00:27:10,966
THESE THINGS TOGETHER
TOLD A STORY
440
00:27:10,966 --> 00:27:13,666
THAT LEAPS OUT AT YOU
FROM THE WALLS.
441
00:27:13,666 --> 00:27:20,566
Scott:
ANOTHER THING HAD TO DO WITH
THE PERSPECTIVES HE USED
442
00:27:20,566 --> 00:27:22,033
THAT HE USED
A HIGH HORIZON LINE--
443
00:27:22,033 --> 00:27:26,033
IF YOU KNOW WHAT I'M TALKING
ABOUT, THE LEVEL OF THE EYE--
444
00:27:26,033 --> 00:27:31,733
WOULD BE HIGH IN THE PICTURE
AND YOU LOOKED DOWN ON THINGS.
445
00:27:31,733 --> 00:27:35,400
BUT PERSPECTIVE IMPLIES
ONE VANISHING POINT.
446
00:27:35,400 --> 00:27:36,633
TOM TOOK LIBERTIES WITH THAT.
447
00:27:36,633 --> 00:27:40,466
HE WOULD MOVE
THE VANISHING POINT ALONG
448
00:27:40,466 --> 00:27:42,933
ON THE SAME HORIZON LINE
449
00:27:42,933 --> 00:27:46,933
SO THAT YOU COULD HAVE
A SHIFTING VANISHING POINT.
450
00:27:46,933 --> 00:27:51,033
Narrator:
BENTON'S VAST MURAL
FOR THE INDIANA EXHIBIT
451
00:27:51,033 --> 00:27:53,533
AT THE 1933 CHICAGO WORLD'S FAIR
452
00:27:53,533 --> 00:27:56,700
WON HIM PLENTY OF ATTENTION
BUT FEW FRIENDS IN INDIANA
453
00:27:56,700 --> 00:28:00,933
BECAUSE IT INCLUDED
A COAL MINERS' STRIKE
454
00:28:00,933 --> 00:28:02,600
AND A KU KLUX KLAN RALLY.
455
00:28:02,600 --> 00:28:06,900
NEW YORK CRITICS
DENOUNCED IT, TOO.
456
00:28:06,900 --> 00:28:09,466
Goodrich:
HE MADE HIS ENEMIES, OF COURSE.
457
00:28:09,466 --> 00:28:13,500
ON THE ONE HAND, THERE WERE
THE SOPHISTICATED PEOPLE
458
00:28:13,500 --> 00:28:16,433
WHO THOUGHT IN TERMS
OF INTERNATIONAL ART
459
00:28:16,433 --> 00:28:18,333
PARTICULARLY FRENCH ART;
460
00:28:18,333 --> 00:28:21,933
AND THE OTHER WAS
THE SOCIAL CONTENT SCHOOL
461
00:28:21,933 --> 00:28:26,233
REPRESENTED BY PEOPLE LIKE
STUART DAVIS AND BEN SHAHN
462
00:28:26,233 --> 00:28:28,566
AND SO ON.
463
00:28:28,566 --> 00:28:31,966
IN THOSE DAYS, THE ART WORLD
WAS VERY LIVELY--
464
00:28:31,966 --> 00:28:37,033
AN AWFUL LOT GOING ON, ALL KINDS
OF FIGHTS; IT WAS KIND OF FUN.
465
00:28:37,033 --> 00:28:39,666
I LIKE REALISM IN AMERICAN ART
466
00:28:39,666 --> 00:28:42,400
BUT I DON'T LIKE
BENTON'S WORK AT ALL.
467
00:28:42,400 --> 00:28:47,366
HIS COLOR WAS BAD, AND...
468
00:28:48,733 --> 00:28:50,166
HE DIDN'T DRAW WELL.
469
00:28:50,166 --> 00:28:52,733
I DON'T KNOW WHY
HE BECAME AN ARTIST.
470
00:28:52,733 --> 00:28:54,766
TO ME, THERE ISN'T ANY ENERGY
471
00:28:54,766 --> 00:28:57,266
IN THOSE PAINTINGS
OF AMERICA TODAY.
472
00:28:57,266 --> 00:28:59,900
IT'S A KIND OF CARTOON VERSION
473
00:28:59,900 --> 00:29:03,000
OF WHAT AMERICA WAS
AT THAT TIME.
474
00:29:03,000 --> 00:29:04,266
I REMEMBER SOMETHING
475
00:29:04,266 --> 00:29:09,166
ABOUT WHAT AMERICAN CITY LIFE
WAS LIKE IN THE '30s.
476
00:29:09,166 --> 00:29:13,700
IT BORE ABSOLUTELY NO RELATION
TO BENTON'S VISION OF IT.
477
00:29:13,700 --> 00:29:17,366
Narrator:
BENTON NOW TOOK TO LECTURING
ON ART AND POLITICS.
478
00:29:17,366 --> 00:29:20,433
ONCE, AT THE JOHN REED CLUB
479
00:29:20,433 --> 00:29:23,233
AN AGITATED PARTY MEMBER
THREW A CHAIR AT HIM.
480
00:29:23,233 --> 00:29:26,100
I THINK HE WAS LOOKING
481
00:29:26,100 --> 00:29:30,166
FOR THE CHAPLIN AUDIENCE,
ALMOST, IN A SENSE.
482
00:29:30,166 --> 00:29:33,866
HE FELT THAT HE COULD SET
CERTAIN STRINGS VIBRATING
483
00:29:33,866 --> 00:29:38,833
AMONG AMERICAN PEOPLE, THAT
WOULD GIVE ART THE IMMEDIACY
484
00:29:38,833 --> 00:29:43,000
THAT PERHAPS IT HAD
IN THE RENAISSANCE
485
00:29:43,000 --> 00:29:46,733
WHERE IT BECAME
A FIGHTING THING, YOU KNOW.
486
00:29:46,733 --> 00:29:49,533
WHEN SOMEBODY FINISHED SOMETHING
487
00:29:49,533 --> 00:29:53,966
THE WHOLE DAMN POPULATION
WOULD TURN OUT TO SEE IT.
488
00:29:53,966 --> 00:29:58,900
THE THING ABOUT ART TO ME
IS ENERGY, POWER
489
00:29:58,900 --> 00:30:03,800
PLASTIC POWER
IN THE WORK OF ART ITSELF.
490
00:30:03,800 --> 00:30:08,200
AND HE HAD THAT QUALITY,
NO QUESTION.
491
00:30:10,666 --> 00:30:12,833
Narrator:
BENTON WAS NOT THE ONLY PAINTER
492
00:30:12,833 --> 00:30:16,700
WHO WAS AT ODDS WITH
THE NEW YORK ART WORLD
493
00:30:16,700 --> 00:30:21,066
AND WHO DREAMED OF ESTABLISHING
A DISTINCTIVELY AMERICAN ART.
494
00:30:21,066 --> 00:30:22,700
GRANT WOOD, AN IOWAN
495
00:30:22,700 --> 00:30:28,566
AND JOHN STEUART CURRY OF KANSAS
ALREADY WORKED IN THE MIDWEST.
496
00:30:39,966 --> 00:30:43,500
Man:
AT THAT TIME, I CONSIDERED THEM
497
00:30:43,500 --> 00:30:46,166
THREE IMPORTANT AMERICAN ARTISTS
498
00:30:46,166 --> 00:30:47,833
AND HE WAS ONE OF THEM--
499
00:30:47,833 --> 00:30:50,666
THOMAS BENTON, GRANT WOOD
AND STEUART CURRY.
500
00:30:50,666 --> 00:30:54,033
THEY WERE THE GREAT AMERICAN
ARTISTS IN THOSE DAYS.
501
00:30:54,033 --> 00:30:58,300
Narrator:
POLITICAL AND AESTHETIC CRITICS
ALIKE DENOUNCED THEM
502
00:30:58,300 --> 00:30:59,866
AS MERE REGIONALISTS
503
00:30:59,866 --> 00:31:03,966
BY WHICH THEY MEANT
ISOLATIONIST, CHAUVINISTIC.
504
00:31:03,966 --> 00:31:07,733
BUT BENTON, WOOD AND CURRY
CAME TO BE PROUD OF THE NAME
505
00:31:07,733 --> 00:31:10,633
AND WHEN TIME MAGAZINE
WROTE THEM UP IN 1934
506
00:31:10,633 --> 00:31:14,800
WITH BENTON'S SELF-PORTRAIT
ON THE COVER
507
00:31:14,800 --> 00:31:18,566
THEY BECAME THE NATION'S
BEST-KNOWN PAINTERS.
508
00:31:18,566 --> 00:31:23,900
Goodrich:
BENTON WAS HEAD AND SHOULDERS
ABOVE THE WHOLE REGIONAL SCHOOL.
509
00:31:23,900 --> 00:31:27,433
I MEAN, AS MUCH AS I LIKE
GRANT WOOD'S WORK
510
00:31:27,433 --> 00:31:30,433
I DON'T THINK IT HAS
THE SAME QUALITY
511
00:31:30,433 --> 00:31:33,266
NOR JOHN STEUART CURRY,
WHO WAS MY GOOD FRIEND.
512
00:31:33,266 --> 00:31:36,066
THEY WERE FINE PAINTERS.
513
00:31:36,066 --> 00:31:38,666
GRANT WOOD WAS, IN A WAY,
AN INNOVATOR, TOO
514
00:31:38,666 --> 00:31:42,566
BUT NOT TO THE EXTENT
THAT BENTON WAS.
515
00:31:42,566 --> 00:31:46,300
THOMAS BENTON, I THINK,
TRANSCENDED ILLUSTRATION.
516
00:31:46,300 --> 00:31:49,733
I MEAN, HE TRANSCENDED IT.
517
00:31:49,733 --> 00:31:52,600
AND HE HAD A STYLE OF HIS OWN
518
00:31:52,600 --> 00:31:57,266
A VERY IMPETUOUS KIND OF STYLE
VERY MUCH HIS OWN.
519
00:31:57,266 --> 00:32:01,233
NOBODY ELSE PAINTED LIKE HIM,
THE SAME SPIRIT.
520
00:32:01,233 --> 00:32:03,600
Adams:
HE CALLED HIMSELF A REGIONALIST
521
00:32:03,600 --> 00:32:06,700
BUT HE DIDN'T PAINT ONE REGION
OF THE COUNTRY.
522
00:32:06,700 --> 00:32:09,266
HE REALLY ROAMED
THE WHOLE COUNTRY
523
00:32:09,266 --> 00:32:11,466
FROM NEW YORK TO HOLLYWOOD
524
00:32:11,466 --> 00:32:15,666
FROM THE OBSCURE PARTS OF
THE OZARKS IN THE DEEP SOUTH
525
00:32:15,666 --> 00:32:19,333
TO THE BIG, OPEN SPACES
OF THE GREAT PLAINS.
526
00:32:19,333 --> 00:32:23,166
BENTON REALLY GOT
ALL OVER AMERICA.
527
00:32:24,666 --> 00:32:28,033
Narrator:
IN 1935, BENTON PUBLISHED
A FURIOUS ASSAULT
528
00:32:28,033 --> 00:32:30,966
ON THE CITY WHERE
HE HAD LIVED AND WORKED
529
00:32:30,966 --> 00:32:32,500
FOR ALMOST 25 YEARS.
530
00:32:32,500 --> 00:32:35,666
THE HOPE OF AMERICAN ART NOW
LAY IN THE HEARTLAND, HE SAID.
531
00:32:35,666 --> 00:32:39,500
THE NEW YORK ART WORLD
WAS MORBIDLY NARROW
532
00:32:39,500 --> 00:32:41,933
AND HIGHLY CRITICAL
OF INNOVATION
533
00:32:41,933 --> 00:32:43,900
AND UNDER THE DOMINATION
OF HOMOSEXUALS.
534
00:32:43,900 --> 00:32:47,466
Campanella:
HE KNEW HOW TO GET
ONTO THE FRONT PAGE.
535
00:32:47,466 --> 00:32:50,466
IT'S BETTER TO BE CALLED
A LOUSE, ANYTHING
536
00:32:50,466 --> 00:32:52,466
THAN NOT BE MENTIONED AT ALL.
537
00:32:52,466 --> 00:32:53,633
I MEAN, HE BECAME PUBLIC NEWS--
538
00:32:53,633 --> 00:32:57,166
NOT ON THE ART PAGE,
ON THE FRONT PAGE.
539
00:32:57,166 --> 00:33:03,400
Kramer:
WHAT I SEE IN HIS ART
IS THE WORK OF A MAN
540
00:33:03,400 --> 00:33:07,666
WHO REALLY SHRANK AWAY
FROM WHAT I CONSIDERED
541
00:33:07,666 --> 00:33:11,733
THE LARGEST TASKS OF ART
IN THIS CENTURY.
542
00:33:11,733 --> 00:33:16,600
HE HAD A GLIMPSE OF IT
IN PARIS AND IN NEW YORK.
543
00:33:16,600 --> 00:33:20,600
HE MADE AN ATTEMPT AT IT,
AND HE WASN'T EQUAL TO IT.
544
00:33:20,600 --> 00:33:25,033
SO HE PACKED HIS BAGS
AND WENT BACK
545
00:33:25,033 --> 00:33:30,166
TO WHERE HE COULD BE
A BIG FIGURE IN A SMALL WORLD.
546
00:33:38,366 --> 00:33:42,933
Small:
I OFTEN SAY THERE AREN'T
ANY REAL NEW YORKERS.
547
00:33:42,933 --> 00:33:45,233
THEY ALL CAME FROM
THE MIDDLE WEST.
548
00:33:45,233 --> 00:33:48,200
( she laughs )
549
00:33:48,200 --> 00:33:51,200
THAT'S NOT STRICTLY TRUE,
BUT IT'S AMAZING.
550
00:33:51,200 --> 00:33:56,766
THERE'S A GREAT DEAL OF FORCE
IN THE MIDDLE WEST.
551
00:33:56,766 --> 00:33:59,433
IT IS THE UNITED STATES.
552
00:33:59,433 --> 00:34:02,633
THE SHORES ARE THE BORDERS.
553
00:34:02,633 --> 00:34:06,800
THINGS GO ON
IN VERY LIVELY FASHION
554
00:34:06,800 --> 00:34:10,700
IN SAN FRANCISCO
AND NEW YORK CITY
555
00:34:10,700 --> 00:34:14,733
BUT THEY AREN'T
THE UNITED STATES.
556
00:34:14,733 --> 00:34:18,400
Narrator:
NOW AT AGE 45, BENTON
WENT HOME TO MISSOURI
557
00:34:18,400 --> 00:34:21,400
TO BECOME HEAD
OF THE PAINTING DEPARTMENT
558
00:34:21,400 --> 00:34:22,833
AT THE KANSAS CITY
ART INSTITUTE.
559
00:34:22,833 --> 00:34:26,100
Adams:
IT'S THE STORY
OF THE HERO'S RETURN.
560
00:34:26,100 --> 00:34:29,966
IT'S THE STORY OF THE TEENAGE
BOY WHO LEFT HIS HOME TOWN
561
00:34:29,966 --> 00:34:32,433
TO PURSUE OTHER
DIRECTIONS IN LIFE
562
00:34:32,433 --> 00:34:36,466
TO REJECT THE POLITICAL WORLD
OF HIS FATHER
563
00:34:36,466 --> 00:34:40,433
AND THEN EVENTUALLY
CAME BACK HOME AGAIN
564
00:34:40,433 --> 00:34:42,966
BUT CAME BACK HOME
ON HIS OWN TERMS.
565
00:34:42,966 --> 00:34:47,066
TOM, WHAT IS IT THAT TOOK
YOU BACK TO KANSAS CITY
566
00:34:47,066 --> 00:34:49,800
AFTER SPENDING SO MUCH
TIME IN NEW YORK?
567
00:34:49,800 --> 00:34:53,466
WELL, THE FIRST THING WAS
THAT THE STATE OF MISSOURI
568
00:34:53,466 --> 00:34:56,333
RAISED ENOUGH MONEY FOR ME
TO PAINT A MURAL
569
00:34:56,333 --> 00:34:57,733
IN THE STATE CAPITOL.
570
00:34:57,733 --> 00:35:00,700
I THOUGHT THAT WOULD TAKE
A COUPLE OF YEARS
571
00:35:00,700 --> 00:35:02,800
SO WE MOVED OUT HERE
TO DO IT.
572
00:35:02,800 --> 00:35:04,333
THERE ARE OTHER REASONS,
HOWEVER--
573
00:35:04,333 --> 00:35:06,666
I WAS A LITTLE FED UP
574
00:35:06,666 --> 00:35:08,800
WITH THE CONSTANT
QUARRELING AND BICKERING
575
00:35:08,800 --> 00:35:12,333
AND THE AESTHETIC
ATMOSPHERE OF NEW YORK
576
00:35:12,333 --> 00:35:14,566
IN WHICH, AS AN ARTIST,
I WAS FORCED TO LIVE.
577
00:35:14,566 --> 00:35:17,866
SO, PARTLY THE RETURN
WAS A FLIGHT
578
00:35:17,866 --> 00:35:20,233
FROM THE VARIOUS
IDIOCIES OF THAT.
579
00:35:57,066 --> 00:36:03,566
T.H. Benton:
I WAS COMMISSIONED
TO MAKE A HISTORY OF MISSOURI
580
00:36:03,566 --> 00:36:07,500
BUT A PARTICULAR KIND--
A SOCIAL HISTORY
581
00:36:07,500 --> 00:36:12,033
A HISTORY OF THE LIFE
OF THE PEOPLE OF MISSOURI
582
00:36:12,033 --> 00:36:15,200
THOSE WHO ACTUALLY
MADE MISSOURI.
583
00:36:27,200 --> 00:36:29,600
MOST MURALS ARE PAINTED
WITH ONE SUBJECT
584
00:36:29,600 --> 00:36:32,833
AND THIS MURAL IS DIFFERENT
585
00:36:32,833 --> 00:36:37,466
IN THE FACT THAT IT DEALS WITH
A MULTIPLICITY OF SUBJECTS.
586
00:36:37,466 --> 00:36:41,066
AND IT WAS A CONSIDERABLE
TECHNICAL PROBLEM
587
00:36:41,066 --> 00:36:43,033
TO GET THEM ALL IN HERE.
588
00:37:08,733 --> 00:37:14,466
Newsreel announcer:
ALL MISSOURI GETS EXCITED
ABOUT THE STATEHOUSE MURALS.
589
00:37:14,466 --> 00:37:16,600
THE PAINTINGS
BY THOMAS HART BENTON
590
00:37:16,600 --> 00:37:17,666
HAVE DRAWN 30,000 SPECTATORS.
591
00:37:17,666 --> 00:37:20,666
Campanella:
HE PLANNED HIS LIFE
592
00:37:20,666 --> 00:37:25,000
AND AS A POLITICIAN,
HE KNEW HOW TO GO ABOUT IT.
593
00:37:25,000 --> 00:37:27,533
HE TOLD ME THE WAY
HE GOT HIS MURAL:
594
00:37:27,533 --> 00:37:29,800
HE WAS WITH SOME
OF THE POLITICIANS
595
00:37:29,800 --> 00:37:32,600
AND IT WAS AT A PARTY,
AND THEY WERE DRUNK
596
00:37:32,600 --> 00:37:34,733
AND HE JUST SLIPPED IT TO THEM:
597
00:37:34,733 --> 00:37:36,433
"WHAT YOU NEED IS
A MURAL BY BENTON!"
598
00:37:36,433 --> 00:37:39,266
SO THEY SAID,
"YES, YES, YES!"
599
00:37:39,266 --> 00:37:42,566
THE NEXT DAY, HE SHOWED UP AND
SAID, "WHERE'S THE CONTRACT?"
600
00:37:42,566 --> 00:37:45,566
AND THEY SAID, "WHAT CONTRACT?"
601
00:37:45,566 --> 00:37:46,800
THEY HAD FORGOTTEN.
602
00:37:46,800 --> 00:37:49,766
BUT HE PUT IT OVER,
AND GOT THE CONTRACT.
603
00:37:49,766 --> 00:37:52,800
HE MADE THE COMMISSION; THEY
DIDN'T COME LOOKING FOR HIM.
604
00:37:52,800 --> 00:37:56,166
AND THAT'S THE WAY
HE'S DONE HIS LIFE.
605
00:37:59,666 --> 00:38:03,266
Narrator:
IT WAS HIS MASTERPIECE.
606
00:38:03,266 --> 00:38:06,100
HE COVERED
THE JEFFERSON CITY WALLS
607
00:38:06,100 --> 00:38:08,400
WITH FAMILIAR SCENES AND PEOPLE:
608
00:38:08,400 --> 00:38:11,266
HIS BROTHER PLEADS A CASE
BEFORE A JURY;
609
00:38:11,266 --> 00:38:13,266
HIS FATHER HARANGUES A CROWD
610
00:38:13,266 --> 00:38:15,800
THAT INCLUDES HIS
OLD LAW PARTNER.
611
00:38:15,800 --> 00:38:20,633
Piacenza:
EVERYTHING IN THAT MURAL
RELATES TO HIS BOYHOOD.
612
00:38:20,633 --> 00:38:24,366
AND HE SAID AT THE TIME
HE DID IT:
613
00:38:24,366 --> 00:38:27,833
"IT'S LIKE LIVING
MY BOYHOOD OVER AGAIN."
614
00:38:32,566 --> 00:38:37,100
Adams:
THE JEFFERSON CITY MURAL IS
AN EXTREMELY PERSONAL STATEMENT
615
00:38:37,100 --> 00:38:40,833
BECAUSE HE'S REPRESENTING
A SOCIAL HISTORY OF MISSOURI
616
00:38:40,833 --> 00:38:44,133
AND BY IMPLICATION,
A SOCIAL HISTORY OF AMERICA.
617
00:38:44,133 --> 00:38:48,166
BUT HE GIVES HIS OWN FAMILY
A VERY CENTRAL PLACE IN IT
618
00:38:48,166 --> 00:38:51,800
AND INTERESTINGLY, NOT THE MOST
FAMOUS MEMBER OF HIS FAMILY
619
00:38:51,800 --> 00:38:55,800
NOT HIS NAMESAKE,
SENATOR THOMAS HART BENTON
620
00:38:55,800 --> 00:38:58,666
BUT IT'S HIS FATHER
AND HIS BROTHER
621
00:38:58,666 --> 00:39:02,233
WHO DOMINATE THE CENTRAL
SECTION OF THAT MURAL
622
00:39:02,233 --> 00:39:03,933
THE HUGE 40-FOOT WALL.
623
00:39:03,933 --> 00:39:07,500
Narrator:
BENTON'S VERSION OF MISSOURI'S
MORE DISTANT PAST
624
00:39:07,500 --> 00:39:10,433
WAS FILLED WITH HARD TRUTHS
625
00:39:10,433 --> 00:39:14,800
AND THE ENDURING MYTHS
OF THE STATE: HUCK FINN
626
00:39:14,800 --> 00:39:16,800
JESSE JAMES
627
00:39:16,800 --> 00:39:20,133
AND THE LEGEND
OF FRANKIE AND JOHNNY.
628
00:39:20,133 --> 00:39:24,733
Field:
AND THIS PICTURE BECAME
QUITE CONTROVERSIAL
629
00:39:24,733 --> 00:39:27,200
BUT IT GENERALLY IS CREDITED
630
00:39:27,200 --> 00:39:30,366
THAT FRANKIE GOT
HER REVENGE ON JOHNNY
631
00:39:30,366 --> 00:39:35,800
IN SOME OF THE LESS RESPECTABLE
AREAS OF THE TOWN OF ST. LOUIS.
632
00:39:35,800 --> 00:39:37,933
Narrator:
BENTON PUT EVERYTHING IN.
633
00:39:37,933 --> 00:39:40,633
EVEN THE PRINT OF
"CUSTER'S LAST STAND"
634
00:39:40,633 --> 00:39:41,700
WHICH INSPIRED HIM AS A BOY
635
00:39:41,700 --> 00:39:45,333
IS ON THE WALL
IN "FRANKIE AND JOHNNY."
636
00:39:52,800 --> 00:39:56,733
POLITICIANS AND CLERGYMEN
OBJECTED TO HIS PORTRAYAL
637
00:39:56,733 --> 00:40:00,166
OF A LYNCHING OR
THE PRESENCE OF LOWLIFES
638
00:40:00,166 --> 00:40:01,766
A BARE-BOTTOMED BABY
639
00:40:01,766 --> 00:40:05,800
AND THE NOTORIOUS BOSS OF
KANSAS CITY, TOM PENDERGAST.
640
00:40:05,800 --> 00:40:08,466
Larson:
HE TELLS A TRUTHFUL STORY THERE
641
00:40:08,466 --> 00:40:11,266
AND HE'S NOT AFRAID
TO TELL THE UNDERSIDE
642
00:40:11,266 --> 00:40:14,100
THE DARK SIDE OF THE HISTORY
OF THE STATE.
643
00:40:14,100 --> 00:40:18,000
AND WHEN HE DOES THINGS TO
SUGGEST THAT THERE WAS POVERTY
644
00:40:18,000 --> 00:40:21,133
DURING THE DEPRESSION,
THAT THERE WAS SLAVERY
645
00:40:21,133 --> 00:40:23,333
THAT THE MORMONS
WERE PERSECUTED
646
00:40:23,333 --> 00:40:25,233
THAT THE INDIANS WERE CHEATED
647
00:40:25,233 --> 00:40:26,633
THAT THERE WAS
HYPOCRISY GOING ON
648
00:40:26,633 --> 00:40:30,366
IN TERMS OF POLITICS
AND RELIGION AND LAW--
649
00:40:30,366 --> 00:40:32,600
HE'S TELLING IT LIKE IT IS
650
00:40:32,600 --> 00:40:35,233
AND HE DOES IT BEAUTIFULLY.
651
00:40:47,000 --> 00:40:50,266
Bennett:
PEOPLE SAY WE'RE A BUNCH
OF LITTLE BENTONS--
652
00:40:50,266 --> 00:40:53,633
WELL, WE WERE.
653
00:40:53,633 --> 00:40:55,666
TOM SAID TO US:
654
00:40:55,666 --> 00:41:00,000
"I'M GOING TO TEACH YOU GUYS
THE TOOLS OF THIS TRADE.
655
00:41:00,000 --> 00:41:03,100
"THEN YOU GO OUT
AND GO YOUR OWN WAY.
656
00:41:03,100 --> 00:41:08,133
BUT WHILE YOU'RE HERE, I'M
GOING TO TEACH YOU WHAT I KNOW."
657
00:41:08,133 --> 00:41:10,300
TOM'S PHRASE WAS "GRAND DESIGN":
658
00:41:10,300 --> 00:41:12,866
"YOU GOT TO GET
THE GRAND DESIGN FIRST.
659
00:41:12,866 --> 00:41:15,666
"DON'T GET INTO DETAIL,
AND THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER
660
00:41:15,666 --> 00:41:18,666
"UNTIL YOU'VE GOT
A GRAND DESIGN.
661
00:41:18,666 --> 00:41:21,033
"WHEN YOU'VE GOT
THE GRAND DESIGN
662
00:41:21,033 --> 00:41:23,066
NOW YOU CAN MAKE A PAINTING."
663
00:41:23,066 --> 00:41:25,200
JUST AS THE STUDENTS WANTED
664
00:41:25,200 --> 00:41:28,200
TO BE ASSOCIATED
WITH THE GREAT PAINTER
665
00:41:28,200 --> 00:41:33,266
BENTON WANTED TO BE ONE OF THE
STUDENTS, OR ONE OF THE WORKMEN.
666
00:41:33,266 --> 00:41:36,600
HE WANTED TO BE A MAN
APPLYING HIS TRADE.
667
00:41:36,600 --> 00:41:39,900
Narrator:
STUDENTS HAD ALWAYS
SOUGHT HIM OUT.
668
00:41:39,900 --> 00:41:43,866
ONE OF THE FIRST WAS A YOUNG MAN
NAMED JACKSON POLLOCK
669
00:41:43,866 --> 00:41:45,866
WHO BECAME ALMOST A SON
TO THE BENTONS.
670
00:41:45,866 --> 00:41:49,633
T.H. Benton:
I MADE FRIENDS
OUT OF MY STUDENTS.
671
00:41:49,633 --> 00:41:53,000
THEY WERE MY ONLY ASSOCIATES,
AND JACK WAS ONE OF THEM.
672
00:41:53,000 --> 00:41:55,000
HE'D COME TO MARTHA'S VINEYARD
673
00:41:55,000 --> 00:41:58,333
AND HELP ME WITH THE CHORES
THERE AND THE WORK.
674
00:41:58,333 --> 00:42:01,366
WE HAD A LITTLE HOUSE
WE USED TO PUT HIM IN.
675
00:42:01,366 --> 00:42:05,100
WE HAD OTHER STUDENTS,
BUT WE CALLED IT JACK'S HOUSE.
676
00:42:05,100 --> 00:42:07,666
Narrator:
POLLOCK OFTEN POSED
FOR HIS TEACHER
677
00:42:07,666 --> 00:42:12,966
AND FOR A TIME
EMULATED HIS STYLE.
678
00:42:12,966 --> 00:42:16,233
THERE WAS A GUY WHO CAME
INTO THE CLASS ONE TIME
679
00:42:16,233 --> 00:42:18,366
IN THE BEGINNING OF A SEMESTER.
680
00:42:18,366 --> 00:42:22,066
AND HE SAT DOWN, AND HERE'S
A MODEL, AND THE WHOLE THING.
681
00:42:22,066 --> 00:42:25,433
AND THIS GUY GETS SOME PURPLE,
AND HE PUTS A BIG GLOB OF YELLOW
682
00:42:25,433 --> 00:42:27,233
AND TOM SAYS, "THAT'S IT."
683
00:42:27,233 --> 00:42:31,333
HE SAID, "NO BUGHOUSE ART, NO
BUGHOUSE PAINTING IN MY CLASS."
684
00:42:31,333 --> 00:42:32,833
HE SAYS, "YOU'RE OUT."
685
00:42:32,833 --> 00:42:35,766
THE GUY LASTED ABOUT
AS LONG AS IT TOOK HIM
686
00:42:35,766 --> 00:42:39,300
TO PUT ABOUT FOUR
OR FIVE BLOBS OF COLOR.
687
00:42:39,300 --> 00:42:41,466
HE JUST... HE WAS REAL.
688
00:42:41,466 --> 00:42:43,400
TOM BENTON WAS REAL.
689
00:42:43,400 --> 00:42:46,966
THERE WASN'T ANYTHING
PHONY ABOUT HIM.
690
00:42:46,966 --> 00:42:51,733
THEN HE CAME HERE TO HIS HOME,
AND HE PROSPERED
691
00:42:51,733 --> 00:42:57,733
AND, IN MY OPINION, HE DECAYED,
BUT HE BECAME VERY POPULAR.
692
00:42:57,733 --> 00:43:02,666
HIS WORK BECAME SLICKER,
SMOOTHER, MORE DETAILED
693
00:43:02,666 --> 00:43:04,466
AND HE BECAME MORE LONELY.
694
00:43:04,466 --> 00:43:07,233
OF COURSE, HE FELT
695
00:43:07,233 --> 00:43:10,900
A NEW LIFE WAS GOING
TO BE BORN IN KANSAS CITY.
696
00:43:10,900 --> 00:43:15,300
HE THOUGHT THIS WAS GOING TO BE
THE ATHENS OF THE COUNTRY.
697
00:43:15,300 --> 00:43:20,266
HE WAS TIRED OF THE DOMINATION
OF THE PARIS SCHOOL IN NEW YORK.
698
00:43:20,266 --> 00:43:25,000
HE FELT THAT HE WOULD FIND AN
IMMEDIATE HOME IN KANSAS CITY.
699
00:43:25,000 --> 00:43:28,700
HE WAS TRYING TO BE, AS IT WERE,
TINTORETTO IN KANSAS.
700
00:43:28,700 --> 00:43:33,400
HE WAS USING
16th-, 17th-CENTURY STRATEGIES
701
00:43:33,400 --> 00:43:35,800
FOR A 20th-CENTURY COUNTRY
702
00:43:35,800 --> 00:43:40,333
AND USING, AS IT WERE,
THE DYNAMISMS OF HIGH ART
703
00:43:40,333 --> 00:43:45,166
IN ORDER TO PRESENT A COMMON
MESSAGE TO COMMON PEOPLE.
704
00:43:45,166 --> 00:43:48,466
THE DISTANCE WAS,
I THINK, TOO GREAT.
705
00:43:48,466 --> 00:43:50,733
Campanella:
I THINK SOMEWHERE
EARLY IN HIS LIFE
706
00:43:50,733 --> 00:43:53,700
HE SAYS, "I'M A MISSOURIAN,"
AND HE WENT BACK
707
00:43:53,700 --> 00:43:57,700
AND HE WENT THROUGH
THE OZARKS AND SKETCHED.
708
00:43:57,700 --> 00:43:59,633
HE WANTED TO GET
THE FEELING OF THIS.
709
00:43:59,633 --> 00:44:02,866
HE WORKED VERY HARD AT IT.
710
00:44:02,866 --> 00:44:05,133
HE CAME UP WITH
SOMETHING STIMULATING.
711
00:44:05,133 --> 00:44:10,733
IF YOU LOOK AT THE EARLY WORK,
IT IS STIMULATING IN APPROACH.
712
00:44:10,733 --> 00:44:12,066
HE PAINTS RAPIDLY.
713
00:44:12,066 --> 00:44:14,600
HE PAINTS WITH
A LOT OF DECISION.
714
00:44:14,600 --> 00:44:15,933
HE THEN GETS IT.
715
00:44:15,933 --> 00:44:20,000
AND THE UNFORTUNATE THING,
LIKE IT HAPPENS SO OFTEN
716
00:44:20,000 --> 00:44:21,600
MAYBE SUCCESS IS A DEADLY THING.
717
00:44:21,600 --> 00:44:25,100
THEN WHAT TO DO
WITH THE SUCCESS?
718
00:44:25,100 --> 00:44:27,300
HE DIDN'T KNOW WHAT
TO PAINT AFTER THAT.
719
00:44:27,300 --> 00:44:29,900
HE PAINTED SUCCESS.
720
00:44:29,900 --> 00:44:34,333
Baigell:
MANY OF HIS TRIPS THROUGH
THE SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHWEST
721
00:44:34,333 --> 00:44:35,900
AND THROUGH APPALACHIA
722
00:44:35,900 --> 00:44:39,700
TOOK ON THE AURA OF A POLITICAL
TOUR AS HE WROTE ABOUT IT
723
00:44:39,700 --> 00:44:40,866
AS IF HE WERE HIS FATHER
724
00:44:40,866 --> 00:44:44,233
VISITING HIS CONSTITUENTS
AROUND AMERICA
725
00:44:44,233 --> 00:44:47,500
STEPPING INTO THEIR LIVES,
TALKING TO THEM.
726
00:44:47,500 --> 00:44:49,733
BUT BENTON WAS NOT ONE OF THEM.
727
00:44:49,733 --> 00:44:51,933
HE SPOKE FRENCH, READ WIDELY
728
00:44:51,933 --> 00:44:55,033
AT THE SAME TIME,
TRIED TO BE A HAYSEED
729
00:44:55,033 --> 00:44:57,333
TRIED TO BE ONE OF THE PEOPLE
730
00:44:57,333 --> 00:45:00,266
BUT WAS REALLY NOT
ONE OF THE PEOPLE.
731
00:45:00,266 --> 00:45:05,933
YOU SEE, TOM BENTON, HE LIKED
TO BE A HAIL-FELLOW-WELL-MET
732
00:45:05,933 --> 00:45:09,466
AND ONE OF THE GANG,
BUT HE WASN'T--
733
00:45:09,466 --> 00:45:13,300
TOM BENTON WAS AN ARISTOCRAT.
734
00:45:14,833 --> 00:45:18,833
Field:
"THERE IS ABOUT
THE MISSOURI LANDSCAPE
735
00:45:18,833 --> 00:45:21,566
"SOMETHING INTIMATE
AND KNOWN TO ME.
736
00:45:21,566 --> 00:45:24,800
"WHILE I DRIVE AROUND THE CURVE
OF A COUNTRY ROAD
737
00:45:24,800 --> 00:45:26,900
"I SEEM TO KNOW WHAT
IS GOING TO BE THERE
738
00:45:26,900 --> 00:45:30,166
"WHAT THE CREEK BEDS
AND THE SYCAMORES
739
00:45:30,166 --> 00:45:32,900
"AND WALNUTS LINING THEM
WILL LOOK LIKE
740
00:45:32,900 --> 00:45:34,900
"AND WHAT THE COLOR
OF THE BLUFFS WILL BE.
741
00:45:34,900 --> 00:45:38,833
"FEELING SO, I DON'T BELIEVE
I SHALL EVER EAT THE WORDS
742
00:45:38,833 --> 00:45:41,800
"OF THE ESSAY I WROTE
WHEN I LEFT NEW YORK.
743
00:45:41,800 --> 00:45:44,800
"IT WILL TAKE CONSIDERABLE
PRESSURE ANYHOW
744
00:45:44,800 --> 00:45:48,133
TO MAKE ME EAT THEM ALL
AND GO BACK."
745
00:45:48,133 --> 00:45:52,333
Narrator:
IN 1938, BENTON PUBLISHED
AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY.
746
00:45:52,333 --> 00:45:56,566
IT SPARED NEITHER ENEMIES,
NOR FRIENDS, NOR HIMSELF.
747
00:45:56,566 --> 00:46:01,800
A REVIEWER PRONOUNCED IT
"ALL MISSOURI, NO COMPROMISE."
748
00:46:01,800 --> 00:46:07,433
James:
ARTIST IN AMERICA IS ONE
OF THE BEST BOOKS OF ITS DECADE.
749
00:46:07,433 --> 00:46:11,333
IT'S APPALLING TO ME, IT MADE
ME RATHER ANGRY AT MYSELF
750
00:46:11,333 --> 00:46:14,133
TO SEE THAT THIS MAN
WHO WAS A PAINTER
751
00:46:14,133 --> 00:46:16,200
COULD HANDLE LANGUAGE THAT WELL.
752
00:46:16,200 --> 00:46:22,033
I THINK HIS AUTOBIOGRAPHY IS A
REALLY SPLENDIDLY WRITTEN MEMOIR
753
00:46:22,033 --> 00:46:24,900
AND WHAT I PARTICULARLY
ADMIRE ABOUT IT
754
00:46:24,900 --> 00:46:29,133
ARE THESE VERY SHORT,
TOUGH SENTENCES.
755
00:46:29,133 --> 00:46:34,666
I MEAN, EVERY SENTENCE IS REALLY
LIKE A KIND OF BULL'S EYE.
756
00:46:34,666 --> 00:46:37,233
I THINK THAT BENTON
REALLY MISSED HIS VOCATION.
757
00:46:37,233 --> 00:46:42,466
HE REALLY SHOULD HAVE BEEN
A WRITER, RATHER THAN A PAINTER.
758
00:46:42,466 --> 00:46:45,000
Narrator:
BENTON'S FRANK AUTOBIOGRAPHY
759
00:46:45,000 --> 00:46:47,000
OUTRAGED COMMUNITY LEADERS
IN KANSAS CITY
760
00:46:47,000 --> 00:46:51,166
WHO DEMANDED HE BE FIRED
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE.
761
00:46:51,166 --> 00:46:55,533
THE CONTROVERSY GREW HOTTER
AFTER BENTON PAINTED TWO NUDES.
762
00:46:55,533 --> 00:46:57,500
BOTH PICTURES WERE
REALISTIC AND DETAILED
763
00:46:57,500 --> 00:46:59,866
IN THREE-DIMENSIONAL COMPOSITION
764
00:46:59,866 --> 00:47:03,633
"WHICH SO PROJECTED
THE LADIES," HE SAID
765
00:47:03,633 --> 00:47:06,266
"THAT THEIR NUDITY WAS
IN QUITE POSITIVE EVIDENCE."
766
00:47:06,266 --> 00:47:11,200
WHEN "SUSANNAH AND THE ELDERS"
WAS FIRST SHOWN IN ST. LOUIS
767
00:47:11,200 --> 00:47:15,166
CLERGYMEN WERE OUTRAGED THAT
A NUDE WITH RED FINGERNAILS
768
00:47:15,166 --> 00:47:18,700
SHOULD REPRESENT A FIGURE
FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT.
769
00:47:18,700 --> 00:47:21,200
VELVET ROPES HAD TO BE PUT UP
770
00:47:21,200 --> 00:47:24,900
TO KEEP MALE VISITORS
FROM GETTING TOO CLOSE.
771
00:47:28,233 --> 00:47:32,133
"PERSEPHONE" CAUSED
AN EVEN BIGGER STIR.
772
00:47:32,133 --> 00:47:36,466
Kramer:
THAT'S PURE KITSCH,
"PERSEPHONE" IS KITSCH.
773
00:47:36,466 --> 00:47:40,266
IT'S LIKE GIRLIE PICTURES
THAT USED TO APPEAR
774
00:47:40,266 --> 00:47:42,066
IN ESQUIRE OF AN EARLIER PERIOD.
775
00:47:42,066 --> 00:47:47,800
THAT CERTAINLY HAS TO BE ONE
OF HIS VERY WORST PAINTINGS.
776
00:47:47,800 --> 00:47:49,700
Marling:
"PERSEPHONE"...
777
00:47:49,700 --> 00:47:53,600
"PERSEPHONE" IS JUST A GLORIOUS
AND WONDERFUL PAINTING.
778
00:47:53,600 --> 00:47:57,300
SHE'S ONE OF THE GREAT WORKS
OF AMERICAN PORNOGRAPHY.
779
00:47:57,300 --> 00:47:59,500
SHE INVITES YOU TO HAVE EMOTIONS
780
00:47:59,500 --> 00:48:03,866
THAT YOU'RE NOT SUPPOSED TO HAVE
IN FRONT OF WORKS OF ART
781
00:48:03,866 --> 00:48:06,933
AND THEN DENIES YOU
THE ABILITY TO FULFILL THEM.
782
00:48:06,933 --> 00:48:09,600
IT'S JUST A KIND
OF GREAT EXPERIENCE
783
00:48:09,600 --> 00:48:12,500
TO WALK INTO SOME
STUFFY OLD ART GALLERY
784
00:48:12,500 --> 00:48:16,066
AND ALL OF A SUDDEN COME
INTO CONTACT WITH THAT LADY;
785
00:48:16,066 --> 00:48:19,433
BESIDES WHICH, THERE'S
THIS WONDERFUL OLD LECH
786
00:48:19,433 --> 00:48:20,800
PEERING AROUND
THE CORNER AT HER!
787
00:48:20,800 --> 00:48:24,166
"PERSEPHONE" IS A PRETTY
LUSCIOUS PAINTING
788
00:48:24,166 --> 00:48:29,866
AND ALSO, I THINK IT'S AN
EMOTIONALLY COMPLICATED PAINTING
789
00:48:29,866 --> 00:48:31,866
IN A WAY THAT'S
QUITE FASCINATING
790
00:48:31,866 --> 00:48:36,733
BECAUSE IT'S REALLY ABOUT
ALL THOSE COMPLEXITIES
791
00:48:36,733 --> 00:48:39,233
OF A MAN LUSTING AFTER A WOMAN
792
00:48:39,233 --> 00:48:43,433
BOTH THE WAY THAT THAT'S
A WAY OF CONQUERING WOMEN
793
00:48:43,433 --> 00:48:45,600
BUT ALSO IT SUGGESTS
SOME OF THE WAYS
794
00:48:45,600 --> 00:48:49,366
IN WHICH MEN FEEL
VERY VULNERABLE.
795
00:48:50,933 --> 00:48:54,433
Field:
HIS FAVORITE PAINTING
WAS "PERSEPHONE"
796
00:48:54,433 --> 00:48:55,933
BECAUSE HE GOT SO MUCH MILEAGE
797
00:48:55,933 --> 00:48:59,600
OUT OF WANTING IT HUNG
IN A SALOON OR A BROTHEL
798
00:48:59,600 --> 00:49:02,066
RATHER THAN A MUSEUM.
799
00:49:02,066 --> 00:49:05,700
Narrator:
THE SHOWMAN BILLY ROSE
MADE IT POSSIBLE
800
00:49:05,700 --> 00:49:08,366
AND "PERSEPHONE" HUNG FOR A TIME
801
00:49:08,366 --> 00:49:12,433
IN HIS MANHATTAN NIGHTCLUB,
THE DIAMOND HORSESHOE.
802
00:49:15,566 --> 00:49:19,833
BENTON TOLD REPORTERS THAT THE
AVERAGE MUSEUM IS A GRAVEYARD
803
00:49:19,833 --> 00:49:23,933
RUN BY A PRETTY BOY
WITH A CURVING WRIST.
804
00:49:26,133 --> 00:49:27,533
THAT DID IT.
805
00:49:27,533 --> 00:49:31,333
THE KANSAS CITY ART
INSTITUTE FIRED HIM.
806
00:49:31,333 --> 00:49:35,000
Medearis:
WHY DID TOM BENTON GET FIRED?
807
00:49:35,000 --> 00:49:36,233
WELL, RITA SAID
808
00:49:36,233 --> 00:49:39,533
THAT YOU GIVE TOM BENTON
A COUPLE OF HIGHBALLS
809
00:49:39,533 --> 00:49:41,866
AND A COUPLE OF REPORTERS,
AND HE WOULD TAKE OFF.
810
00:49:41,866 --> 00:49:46,266
HE FELT THAT THEY HAD
A BUNCH OF FAKES THERE.
811
00:49:46,266 --> 00:49:50,966
HE WAS VERY HARSH ON WHAT HE
CALLED "THE LIMP WRIST CROWD"
812
00:49:50,966 --> 00:49:54,433
AND ACTUALLY MADE IT
RATHER TOUGH FOR THEM.
813
00:49:54,433 --> 00:49:56,800
SOME OF THEM WERE
A BIT LACKING IN TALENT
814
00:49:56,800 --> 00:50:00,466
BUT OTHERS WERE VERY,
VERY IMPORTANT
815
00:50:00,466 --> 00:50:03,400
AND EXCELLENT CURATORS,
IT TURNS OUT.
816
00:50:03,400 --> 00:50:06,666
IT WASN'T THE BEST ASPECT OF TOM
817
00:50:06,666 --> 00:50:10,233
THAT HE WOULD TAKE OUT
AFTER THAT.
818
00:50:16,733 --> 00:50:22,600
( airplanes flying overhead )
819
00:50:24,666 --> 00:50:31,666
Franklin D. Roosevelt:
DECEMBER 7, 1941--
820
00:50:31,666 --> 00:50:35,133
A DATE WHICH
WILL LIVE IN INFAMY.
821
00:50:36,400 --> 00:50:41,266
Narrator:
AMERICA, TOM BENTON'S AMERICA,
WAS UNDER ATTACK.
822
00:50:41,266 --> 00:50:45,866
"ART IS UNIMPORTANT ALONGSIDE
LIFE," HE TOLD A REPORTER.
823
00:50:45,866 --> 00:50:49,266
"EVEN THE STATUE OF LIBERTY
SHOULD BE MELTED DOWN
824
00:50:49,266 --> 00:50:51,700
TO MAKE BULLETS."
825
00:50:51,700 --> 00:50:55,000
WITHIN WEEKS, HE HAD PAINTED
"THE YEAR OF PERIL"
826
00:50:55,000 --> 00:50:56,566
A SERIES OF TEN HUGE
WAR PAINTINGS.
827
00:50:56,566 --> 00:50:59,400
THEY WERE INTENDED, HE SAID
828
00:50:59,400 --> 00:51:02,600
TO AWAKEN AMERICANS
TO THE DANGER THEY FACED
829
00:51:02,600 --> 00:51:07,000
TO PULL THEM OUT OF THEIR SHELLS
OF PRETENSE AND MAKE-BELIEVE.
830
00:51:10,966 --> 00:51:15,600
Newsreel announcer:
A GREAT AMERICAN ARTIST,
THOMAS HART BENTON
831
00:51:15,600 --> 00:51:17,266
PORTRAYS WORLD WAR II.
832
00:51:17,266 --> 00:51:19,766
I MADE THESE PAINTINGS
BECAUSE OF A CONVICTION
833
00:51:19,766 --> 00:51:23,500
OBTAINED BY TRAVELING
AROUND THE COUNTRY
834
00:51:23,500 --> 00:51:24,833
TO LECTURE
FOLLOWING PEARL HARBOR.
835
00:51:24,833 --> 00:51:29,066
I SAW THAT TOO MANY PEOPLE
ARE OVER-OPTIMISTIC
836
00:51:29,066 --> 00:51:30,733
AND UNDER THE IMPRESSION
837
00:51:30,733 --> 00:51:34,000
THAT THEIR LIVES COULD
GO ON MUCH AS USUAL.
838
00:51:34,000 --> 00:51:37,600
Newsreel announcer:
NEW YORK GALLERIES FIRST
SEE BENTON'S SERIES
839
00:51:37,600 --> 00:51:40,400
CALLED "THE YEAR OF PERIL."
840
00:51:40,400 --> 00:51:42,066
THIS IS "EXTERMINATE"
841
00:51:42,066 --> 00:51:44,933
A PLEA THAT AMERICA
OUTMATCH THE AXIS.
842
00:51:44,933 --> 00:51:46,466
THIS IS CALLED "AGAIN."
843
00:51:46,466 --> 00:51:48,100
BENTON SAYS IT PORTRAYS
844
00:51:48,100 --> 00:51:52,133
THE RECURRENCE OF EVIL
PEOPLES MAD WITH POWER.
845
00:51:53,633 --> 00:51:56,833
"THE SOWERS"-- AND BENTON ASKS
846
00:51:56,833 --> 00:52:01,000
"ARE WE TO STAND BY
AND LET THEM REAP?"
847
00:52:01,000 --> 00:52:06,466
"THE YEAR OF PERIL" IS A KIND
OF ALMOST PSYCHOTIC OUTBURST
848
00:52:06,466 --> 00:52:07,633
IN BENTON'S WORK.
849
00:52:07,633 --> 00:52:10,600
HE SOMEHOW JUST TOTALLY
WENT OFF THE DEEP END
850
00:52:10,600 --> 00:52:12,833
IN THOSE PAINTINGS.
851
00:52:12,833 --> 00:52:15,933
HE CLEARLY WAS UPSET
ABOUT PEARL HARBOR
852
00:52:15,933 --> 00:52:20,166
AND THAT JUST SORT OF UNLOOSED
ALL KINDS OF GARBAGE
853
00:52:20,166 --> 00:52:22,000
THAT WAS INSIDE HIS MIND.
854
00:52:22,000 --> 00:52:25,166
SO IT JUST CAME OUT
ALL OVER THE CANVAS.
855
00:52:25,166 --> 00:52:27,866
Narrator:
CRITICS CALLED
THE WAR SERIES "CARTOONS"
856
00:52:27,866 --> 00:52:31,833
BUT 75,000 PEOPLE
CAME OUT TO SEE THEM
857
00:52:31,833 --> 00:52:34,900
WHEN THEY WERE EXHIBITED
IN NEW YORK
858
00:52:34,900 --> 00:52:38,766
AND 26 MILLION COPIES WERE
PRINTED UP AS POSTERS.
859
00:52:38,766 --> 00:52:42,833
Kramer:
BUT OF COURSE, THERE'S
NO SHORTAGE OF PEOPLE
860
00:52:42,833 --> 00:52:46,300
WHO ARE CAPABLE OF BEING MOVED
BY BAD ART.
861
00:52:46,300 --> 00:52:51,133
THE WORLD IS FULL OF BAD ART,
AND PEOPLE LOVE IT.
862
00:52:51,133 --> 00:52:55,133
I DON'T THINK
POPULARITY CAN BE CITED
863
00:52:55,133 --> 00:52:57,866
AS A STANDARD OF
ACHIEVEMENT IN ART.
864
00:53:02,633 --> 00:53:06,100
Baigell:
THE REASON WHY HIS WORK
DECLINED, WHICH HE ADMITTED
865
00:53:06,100 --> 00:53:10,933
WAS THAT WORLD WAR II KNOCKED
THE BOTTOM OUT OF ANYBODY
866
00:53:10,933 --> 00:53:13,966
WHO WAS CONCERNED
JUST WITH AMERICAN ART.
867
00:53:13,966 --> 00:53:16,900
THE 1940s WAS A PERIOD
OF GLOBAL WARFARE
868
00:53:16,900 --> 00:53:18,866
AND TO BE CONCERNED
WITH HOW ONE FELT
869
00:53:18,866 --> 00:53:22,633
IN A CERTAIN CITY
OR PLACE IN AMERICA
870
00:53:22,633 --> 00:53:24,866
HE THOUGHT WAS IRRELEVANT,
AND HE KNEW THIS.
871
00:53:29,066 --> 00:53:32,833
Narrator:
A NEW, DISTINCTIVELY AMERICAN
KIND OF PAINTING
872
00:53:32,833 --> 00:53:34,333
CAME OUT OF THE WAR--
873
00:53:34,333 --> 00:53:38,733
THE NEW YORK SCHOOL
OF ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM.
874
00:53:38,733 --> 00:53:42,966
IT REPRESENTED EVERYTHING
BENTON DESPISED.
875
00:53:45,700 --> 00:53:50,400
T.H. Benton:
WHO ARE THE ONES WHO PATRONIZE
AND SUPPORT MODERN ART?
876
00:53:50,400 --> 00:53:52,966
IT IS SUPPORTED BY
THE SONS AND THE DAUGHTERS--
877
00:53:52,966 --> 00:53:57,500
MOSTLY THE DAUGHTERS--
OF 19th-CENTURY MILLIONAIRES
878
00:53:57,500 --> 00:53:59,900
WHO HAVE A LOT
OF SURPLUS CAPITAL
879
00:53:59,900 --> 00:54:02,333
AND WHO CAN AFFORD TO PUT IT OUT
880
00:54:02,333 --> 00:54:05,200
AMUSING THEMSELVES
WITH OBSCURE ISSUES!
881
00:54:05,200 --> 00:54:06,466
WHY DO THEY SUPPORT IT?
882
00:54:06,466 --> 00:54:10,400
FOR THE SIMPLE REASON
THEY CAN AFFORD TO HIDE
883
00:54:10,400 --> 00:54:13,300
THEIR ABSOLUTELY
CONSERVATIVE OPINIONS
884
00:54:13,300 --> 00:54:17,566
BY BEING VERY RADICAL ABOUT
SOMETHING THAT DON'T COUNT!
885
00:54:17,566 --> 00:54:20,733
I THINK BENTON HAD A LOT
OF QUARRELS WITH MODERN ART
886
00:54:20,733 --> 00:54:23,100
BUT I SUPPOSE THE BASIC ONE WAS
887
00:54:23,100 --> 00:54:27,766
THAT HE THOUGHT IT APPEALED
TO A PRIVILEGED ELITE
888
00:54:27,766 --> 00:54:29,933
AND HE WANTED TO MAKE ART
889
00:54:29,933 --> 00:54:33,100
THAT HAD A LARGER AND MORE
UNIVERSAL STATEMENT TO IT
890
00:54:33,100 --> 00:54:38,500
AND THAT DEALT WITH MORE
POWERFUL REALITIES OF DAILY LIFE
891
00:54:38,500 --> 00:54:40,966
THAT WASN'T QUITE SO
PRECIOUS AND ESOTERIC.
892
00:54:40,966 --> 00:54:45,533
I'M SURE THAT THE MOVEMENT
HAD PASSED HIM BY.
893
00:54:45,533 --> 00:54:49,900
CERTAINLY THE REGIONAL PAINTERS,
THE MIDWESTERN SCHOOL
894
00:54:49,900 --> 00:54:51,666
HAD VANISHED BY THEN.
895
00:54:51,666 --> 00:54:55,866
AND YOU KNOW, THE NEW YORK
SCHOOL WAS SUDDENLY DOING
896
00:54:55,866 --> 00:54:58,900
WHAT TOM BENTON WANTED
TO DO HIMSELF--
897
00:54:58,900 --> 00:55:01,800
THEY WERE CHASING PARIS
OUT OF THIS COUNTRY
898
00:55:01,800 --> 00:55:04,833
AND BECOMING THE WORLD CENTER.
899
00:55:04,833 --> 00:55:09,733
Narrator:
BENTON WAS 56 AT THE WAR'S END,
AND INCREASINGLY ISOLATED.
900
00:55:09,733 --> 00:55:13,066
GRANT WOOD HAD DIED IN 1942.
901
00:55:13,066 --> 00:55:16,400
JOHN STEUART CURRY
FOLLOWED IN 1946.
902
00:55:16,400 --> 00:55:23,100
REGIONALISM WAS DEAD, TOO,
AND REALISM, OUT OF FASHION.
903
00:55:23,100 --> 00:55:27,100
Campanella:
THE SO-CALLED EUROPEAN
ABSTRACTIONISTS TOOK OVER
904
00:55:27,100 --> 00:55:28,600
AND HE WAS LOST.
905
00:55:28,600 --> 00:55:30,700
HE HAD NOBODY TO FIGHT WITH.
906
00:55:30,700 --> 00:55:33,633
THE U.S. ART MARKET
NO LONGER WAS INTERESTED
907
00:55:33,633 --> 00:55:35,200
IN THE AMERICAN SCENE.
908
00:55:35,200 --> 00:55:37,966
THEY WERE INTERESTED
IN THIS NEW THING
909
00:55:37,966 --> 00:55:41,033
CALLED ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM,
MINIMALISM, ACTION PAINTING.
910
00:55:43,533 --> 00:55:45,966
Narrator:
CRITICS NOW DISMISSED
BENTON'S PAINTING
911
00:55:45,966 --> 00:55:50,033
AS SENTIMENTAL, OLD-FASHIONED,
HOKEY BAROQUE.
912
00:55:50,033 --> 00:55:51,200
HE NO LONGER HAD A GALLERY.
913
00:55:51,200 --> 00:55:55,733
THE WHITNEY MUSEUM ASKED HIM
TO FIND A NEW HOME
914
00:55:55,733 --> 00:55:59,600
FOR THE MURALS HE HAD PAINTED
FOR THEM IN THE '30s.
915
00:55:59,600 --> 00:56:02,333
THEY DIDN'T HAVE ROOM
FOR HIS WORK.
916
00:56:20,100 --> 00:56:24,033
Kramer:
THERE IS A COLOSSAL IRONY
IN THE FACT
917
00:56:24,033 --> 00:56:28,166
THAT BENTON'S MOST FAMOUS
STUDENT, JACKSON POLLOCK
918
00:56:28,166 --> 00:56:33,866
WENT ON TO PRODUCE THE KIND
OF AVANT-GARDE, ABSTRACT ART
919
00:56:33,866 --> 00:56:37,933
THAT BENTON HIMSELF
MOST ARTICULATELY ABOMINATED.
920
00:56:37,933 --> 00:56:39,166
ONE COULD ALMOST BELIEVE
921
00:56:39,166 --> 00:56:43,366
THAT THERE WAS A KIND
OF POETIC JUSTICE THERE
922
00:56:43,366 --> 00:56:48,300
THAT EVERYTHING BENTON REJECTED,
POLLOCK EXALTED.
923
00:56:48,300 --> 00:56:51,966
Narrator:
THE MOST PUBLICIZED
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONIST
924
00:56:51,966 --> 00:56:54,133
WAS BENTON'S OLD STUDENT,
JACKSON POLLOCK
925
00:56:54,133 --> 00:56:58,800
WHO CLAIMED HE LEARNED NOTHING
FROM HIS OLD TEACHER.
926
00:56:58,800 --> 00:57:02,966
BENTON, HE SAID, "HAD COME
FACE TO FACE WITH MICHELANGELO
927
00:57:02,966 --> 00:57:04,566
AND LOST."
928
00:57:04,566 --> 00:57:07,366
"JACK NEVER DID ANYTHING
THAT WAS UGLY"
929
00:57:07,366 --> 00:57:09,166
BENTON LOYALLY TOLD VISITORS
930
00:57:09,166 --> 00:57:13,266
BUT HE WAS PRIVATELY HURT
BY HIS STUDENT'S GREAT SUCCESS.
931
00:57:13,266 --> 00:57:18,833
HE ONCE SAID THAT THE ONLY THING
HE TAUGHT JACKSON POLLOCK
932
00:57:18,833 --> 00:57:21,700
WAS HOW TO DRINK A FIFTH A DAY.
933
00:57:21,700 --> 00:57:23,366
BUT IN MY OPINION
934
00:57:23,366 --> 00:57:27,233
THERE WOULDN'T HAVE BEEN
A JACKSON POLLOCK
935
00:57:27,233 --> 00:57:30,400
IF THERE HADN'T BEEN
A TOM BENTON.
936
00:57:30,400 --> 00:57:35,700
THERE WOULDN'T HAVE BEEN
A PAINTING LIKE "AUTUMN RHYTHM"
937
00:57:35,700 --> 00:57:38,733
IF THERE HADN'T BEEN TOM BENTON
938
00:57:38,733 --> 00:57:43,933
AND, THROUGH HIM, MICHELANGELO,
AND RUBENS, AND OTHERS.
939
00:57:43,933 --> 00:57:50,433
POLLOCK REBELLED AGAINST ALL
THE DISCIPLINE OF REPRESENTATION
940
00:57:50,433 --> 00:57:53,666
BUT HE NEVER FORGOT THE MELODY.
941
00:57:53,666 --> 00:57:55,333
Small:
HE USED TO CALL TOM
942
00:57:55,333 --> 00:57:58,200
IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT,
IT ALWAYS WAS
943
00:57:58,200 --> 00:58:02,733
ASKING-- WELL, REALLY
BEGGING FOR TOM'S APPROVAL.
944
00:58:02,733 --> 00:58:06,266
HE FELT ATTACHED TO HIM
ALWAYS, I THINK.
945
00:58:06,266 --> 00:58:07,600
AND TOM NEVER GAVE IT.
946
00:58:07,600 --> 00:58:12,966
HE SAID, "JACK, IT'S ALL RIGHT,
WHATEVER YOU WANT TO DO.
947
00:58:12,966 --> 00:58:16,066
"IT'S SUCCESSFUL,
YOU'RE SUCCESSFUL.
948
00:58:16,066 --> 00:58:20,133
DON'T BOTHER YOURSELF
ABOUT IT, IT'S ALL RIGHT."
949
00:58:22,500 --> 00:58:25,266
Announcer:
ONE EVENING,
AFTER BUSINESS HOURS
950
00:58:25,266 --> 00:58:28,933
TWO MEN ON THE MAIN FLOOR
OF A GREAT MIDWESTERN STORE
951
00:58:28,933 --> 00:58:30,200
DISCUSS THE MAKING OF A MURAL
952
00:58:30,200 --> 00:58:34,166
TO ADORN THE SPACE ABOVE
THE ELEVATOR ENTRANCES.
953
00:58:34,166 --> 00:58:38,233
THEY ARE THE PRESIDENT OF
THE STORE AND THOMAS HART BENTON
954
00:58:38,233 --> 00:58:39,600
ONE OF AMERICA'S
LEADING PAINTERS.
955
00:58:39,600 --> 00:58:42,266
HAVING DECIDED ON A SUBJECT
956
00:58:42,266 --> 00:58:45,333
THEY AGREE ON AN IMMEDIATE
START OF THE WORK.
957
00:58:45,333 --> 00:58:48,900
Narrator:
BENTON TOOK WORK WHEREVER
HE COULD FIND IT.
958
00:58:48,900 --> 00:58:52,533
HE ILLUSTRATED BOOKS BY
MARK TWAIN AND JOHN STEINBECK
959
00:58:52,533 --> 00:58:55,133
TRIED ADVERTISING ART,
WORKED WITH WALT DISNEY
960
00:58:55,133 --> 00:58:58,866
ON SETS FOR AN OPERETTA
ABOUT DAVY CROCKETT
961
00:58:58,866 --> 00:59:01,100
AND QUIT WHEN DISNEY INSISTED
ON A HAPPY ENDING.
962
00:59:01,100 --> 00:59:06,633
HE PAINTED SMALL MURALS FOR
A KANSAS CITY DEPARTMENT STORE
963
00:59:06,633 --> 00:59:07,633
AND THE FASHIONABLE
AND EXCLUSIVE
964
00:59:07,633 --> 00:59:10,500
KANSAS CITY RIVER CLUB.
965
00:59:13,933 --> 00:59:19,766
EACH MURAL, HE ASSURED FRIENDS,
WOULD BE HIS LAST.
966
00:59:19,766 --> 00:59:23,800
Announcer:
AND NOW FRAMED AND MOUNTED
ON THE STORE'S WALL
967
00:59:23,800 --> 00:59:26,700
THE MURAL FULFILLS
ITS FUNCTION...
968
00:59:29,600 --> 00:59:35,333
A LASTING CONTRIBUTION TO THE
ART OF AMERICA AND OF THE WORLD.
969
00:59:36,633 --> 00:59:41,500
HE SOMEHOW LOST TOUCH
WITH THE CHANGES
970
00:59:41,500 --> 00:59:45,466
THAT AMERICA HAD GONE THROUGH.
971
00:59:45,466 --> 00:59:49,433
IT WAS A DIFFERENT KIND
OF SOCIETY, AND I THINK
972
00:59:49,433 --> 00:59:53,366
THAT BENTON WENT ON PAINTING
SOME WONDERFUL PAINTINGS
973
00:59:53,366 --> 00:59:54,566
THROUGHOUT HIS CAREER
974
00:59:54,566 --> 00:59:59,100
BUT THERE ISN'T QUITE
THAT SAME MAGICAL CONNECTION
975
00:59:59,100 --> 01:00:03,833
WITH HIS OWN CONCERNS AND
WITH THE IDENTITY OF AMERICA.
976
01:00:03,833 --> 01:00:08,533
WHEN HE MOVED TO THE LEFT
APPARENTLY IN THE '20s
977
01:00:08,533 --> 01:00:11,833
IT WAS AS AGAINST
THE "BOOB-OISIE"
978
01:00:11,833 --> 01:00:17,200
THEN IN THE LEFT, HE FOUND IT
STIFLING AND INHOSPITABLE
979
01:00:17,200 --> 01:00:19,366
SO HE FIGHTS THEM, TOO.
980
01:00:19,366 --> 01:00:22,733
AND HE IS FIGHTING CONSTANT
BATTLES BETWEEN RIGHT AND LEFT
981
01:00:22,733 --> 01:00:26,000
FINDING, CHARTING HIS OWN COURSE
982
01:00:26,000 --> 01:00:29,600
FOR THIS MIDDLE AMERICAN ATHENS
THAT HE DREAMED OF.
983
01:00:29,600 --> 01:00:32,266
IT MUST HAVE BEEN
DAMN DISAPPOINTING
984
01:00:32,266 --> 01:00:34,233
NOT TO HAVE HAD THAT HAPPEN.
985
01:00:36,200 --> 01:00:39,633
J. Benton:
I THINK WHAT HURT
MY FATHER THE MOST--
986
01:00:39,633 --> 01:00:41,966
AND HE USED TO TALK
TO ME ABOUT IT--
987
01:00:41,966 --> 01:00:43,800
WAS LONELINESS.
988
01:00:46,000 --> 01:00:48,000
HE SAID IT WAS
HIS GREAT MOTIVATOR.
989
01:00:50,466 --> 01:00:55,833
Ives:
♪ THE SANDS HAVE BEEN WHOOSHED
FROM THE FOOTPRINTS ♪
990
01:00:55,833 --> 01:01:01,833
♪ OF THE STRANGER
ON GALILEE'S SHORE ♪
991
01:01:01,833 --> 01:01:04,866
♪ AND THE VOICE THAT SUBDUED ♪
992
01:01:04,866 --> 01:01:07,633
♪ THE ROUGH BILLOWS ♪
993
01:01:07,633 --> 01:01:13,366
♪ WILL BE HEARD
IN JUDEA NO MORE ♪
994
01:01:13,366 --> 01:01:18,366
♪ BUT THE PATH
OF THAT LONE GALILEAN ♪
995
01:01:18,366 --> 01:01:22,066
♪ WITH JOY I WILL FOLLOW TODAY ♪
996
01:01:22,066 --> 01:01:28,600
♪ THE TOILS OF THE ROAD
WILL SEEM NOTHING ♪
997
01:01:28,600 --> 01:01:33,766
♪ WHEN I GET
TO THE END OF THE WAY... ♪
998
01:01:33,766 --> 01:01:38,833
♪ THE TOILS OF THE ROAD
WILL SEEM NOTHING ♪
999
01:01:38,833 --> 01:01:42,633
♪ WHEN I GET
TO THE END OF THE WAY. ♪
1000
01:01:48,200 --> 01:01:51,000
Narrator:
BENTON SPENT NEARLY EVERY SUMMER
1001
01:01:51,000 --> 01:01:54,366
IN THE TOWN OF CHILMARK
ON MARTHA'S VINEYARD.
1002
01:01:54,366 --> 01:01:58,466
HIS FAMILY HAD GROWN
TO INCLUDE A DAUGHTER, JESSIE.
1003
01:01:58,466 --> 01:02:01,566
J. Benton:
HE HAD A WONDERFUL KIND
OF GRUFFLY VOICE.
1004
01:02:01,566 --> 01:02:05,900
HE WAS VERY HANDSOME.
1005
01:02:05,900 --> 01:02:08,933
HE HAD A VERY RICH FACE
1006
01:02:08,933 --> 01:02:13,233
AND WONDERFUL HAIR,
BLACK AS COULD BE.
1007
01:02:13,233 --> 01:02:15,600
HE WAS 50 YEARS OLD
WHEN I WAS BORN.
1008
01:02:15,600 --> 01:02:16,833
I THOUGHT HE WAS IN HIS 20s.
1009
01:02:16,833 --> 01:02:21,766
OTHER PEOPLE'S FATHERS
WERE ALWAYS SO OLD
1010
01:02:21,766 --> 01:02:23,900
AND KIND OF DRIED UP.
1011
01:02:23,900 --> 01:02:27,666
AND HE WAS SO YOUNG AND VIBRANT.
1012
01:02:31,433 --> 01:02:38,000
HE LIKED TO TALK BIG,
AND HE HAD MILLIONS OF FRIENDS
1013
01:02:38,000 --> 01:02:42,066
AND... BUT EVERY DAY AT HOME
IT WAS LIKE SILENCE.
1014
01:02:42,066 --> 01:02:47,233
WE HAD TO BE QUIET, MY BROTHER
AND I, MOST OF THE TIME.
1015
01:02:47,233 --> 01:02:51,533
THE HOUSE WAS VERY STILL
BECAUSE HE WAS VERY INTENSE
1016
01:02:51,533 --> 01:02:52,800
AND HE THOUGHT ABOUT THINGS
1017
01:02:52,800 --> 01:02:55,966
AND THOUGHT ABOUT HIS PAINTINGS
1018
01:02:55,966 --> 01:02:59,500
AND... I USED TO LOVE
TO GO IN THAT STUDIO
1019
01:02:59,500 --> 01:03:01,100
BECAUSE OF THE SMELLS
OF THE PAINT
1020
01:03:01,100 --> 01:03:04,866
MY FATHER USED
TO WHISTLE WHEN HE PAINTED.
1021
01:03:04,866 --> 01:03:05,900
HE'D GO:
1022
01:03:05,900 --> 01:03:07,633
( whistles )
1023
01:03:07,633 --> 01:03:09,233
ALWAYS, CONSTANTLY.
1024
01:03:09,233 --> 01:03:11,233
IT WAS RICH BEING IN THERE
1025
01:03:11,233 --> 01:03:15,400
AND I USED TO SIT ON THE FLOOR
AND PAINT MY PICTURES
1026
01:03:15,400 --> 01:03:19,900
WHICH HE WOULD PUT UP ON
THE WALLS-- IF THEY WERE GOOD.
1027
01:03:19,900 --> 01:03:24,300
Narrator:
WHEN HE WAS NOT PAINTING,
HE MADE MUSIC
1028
01:03:24,300 --> 01:03:27,333
WITH HIS FAMILY,
FRIENDS AND STUDENTS.
1029
01:03:27,333 --> 01:03:30,300
( cheerful guitar
and flute music )
1030
01:03:33,533 --> 01:03:36,200
YOU SEE, THE BENTON THAT
HE BECAME HERE WAS A ROUTINE.
1031
01:03:36,200 --> 01:03:40,466
HE GOT UP IN THE MORNING EARLY,
WENT TO HIS STUDIO
1032
01:03:40,466 --> 01:03:42,233
NOBODY'S TO COME INTO
HIS STUDIO BY 5:00.
1033
01:03:42,233 --> 01:03:46,900
HE THEN COMES OUT, HE MEETS
HIS FRIENDS, HE HAS HIS DRINKS
1034
01:03:46,900 --> 01:03:50,000
HE EATS, SO FORTH,
AND GOES TO BED
1035
01:03:50,000 --> 01:03:53,066
AND HE DOES THIS
TIME AND TIME...
1036
01:03:53,066 --> 01:03:56,066
THOSE HOURS IN HIS STUDIO,
HE IS ALL ALONE.
1037
01:04:01,166 --> 01:04:05,366
T.H. Benton:
THE SUBJECT MATTER
THAT FORMED THE CONTENT
1038
01:04:05,366 --> 01:04:07,066
OF MOST OF MY PICTURES
1039
01:04:07,066 --> 01:04:09,966
JUST DIED OUT
AFTER THE SECOND WORLD WAR.
1040
01:04:09,966 --> 01:04:13,233
SMALL TOWNS EVERYWHERES
WERE GETTING TO BE
1041
01:04:13,233 --> 01:04:14,866
PRACTICALLY THE SAME.
1042
01:04:14,866 --> 01:04:18,600
THIS IS WHAT SENT ME CHASING
HERE, BEGINNING IN THE '50s
1043
01:04:18,600 --> 01:04:21,433
OUT IN THE LANDSCAPE
OF THE UNITED STATES
1044
01:04:21,433 --> 01:04:23,733
TO SEE IF I COULD
FIND THE COUNTRY
1045
01:04:23,733 --> 01:04:26,800
NOT THE TOWNS OR THE LIFE,
BUT IN THE COUNTRY
1046
01:04:26,800 --> 01:04:29,333
SOMETHING I COULD
IDENTIFY MYSELF WITH.
1047
01:04:29,333 --> 01:04:30,700
I FOUND ENOUGH.
1048
01:04:30,700 --> 01:04:34,366
HE TOLD REXINE ONE TIME,
HE SAID-- THAT'S MY WIFE--
1049
01:04:34,366 --> 01:04:37,266
HE SAID, "DO YOU KNOW
WHAT I LIKE TO DO?
1050
01:04:37,266 --> 01:04:39,266
"I LIKE TO FLOAT THE BUFFALO
1051
01:04:39,266 --> 01:04:41,933
AND CAMP ON A SANDBAR
AND GET DRUNK."
1052
01:04:44,766 --> 01:04:47,266
Narrator:
HE BEGAN TRAVELING AGAIN
1053
01:04:47,266 --> 01:04:50,800
SKETCHING THE GREAT PLAINS AND
THE ROCKIES, FLOATING DOWNRIVER
1054
01:04:50,800 --> 01:04:54,533
TURNING MORE
AND MORE TO LANDSCAPE.
1055
01:04:54,533 --> 01:04:58,833
IN NATURE, HE FOUND NEW
CHALLENGES AND A NEW SERENITY.
1056
01:05:03,233 --> 01:05:05,666
J. Benton:
I LOVE HIS MOUNTAIN PICTURES.
1057
01:05:05,666 --> 01:05:08,466
HE TOOK MANY YEARS
TO PAINT THE MOUNTAINS.
1058
01:05:08,466 --> 01:05:12,166
HE SAID IT WAS THE DAMNEDEST
HARDEST THING HE EVER DID--
1059
01:05:12,166 --> 01:05:14,466
MOUNTAINS ARE IMPOSSIBLE
TO PAINT.
1060
01:05:14,466 --> 01:05:17,700
AND IT TOOK HIM YEARS
TO FINALLY PAINT A PICTURE
1061
01:05:17,700 --> 01:05:19,633
THAT HE WAS SATISFIED WITH.
1062
01:05:19,633 --> 01:05:23,100
THAT'S WHY HE PAID NO ATTENTION
TO THESE CRITICS--
1063
01:05:23,100 --> 01:05:25,433
HE WOULD GET THINGS HE HAD TO DO
1064
01:05:25,433 --> 01:05:28,400
AND WHILE THEY QUIBBLED
OVER "PERSEPHONE"
1065
01:05:28,400 --> 01:05:31,066
HE WAS IN WYOMING
PAINTING THE TETONS
1066
01:05:31,066 --> 01:05:33,066
FOR THREE, FOUR, FIVE YEARS.
1067
01:05:34,366 --> 01:05:39,433
Campanella:
AS HE GROWS OLDER
AND HE GETS INTO DETAIL
1068
01:05:39,433 --> 01:05:42,333
HE'S PROJECTING HIMSELF
INTO THE CANVAS.
1069
01:05:42,333 --> 01:05:44,166
HE'S NOT PROJECTING HIMSELF
INTO LIFE.
1070
01:05:44,166 --> 01:05:48,466
HE GETS LIFE AND HE PUTS IT
DOWN IN HIS EARLY YEARS.
1071
01:05:48,466 --> 01:05:51,800
IN HIS LATE YEARS
HE'S PAINTING INTO HIS PICTURE;
1072
01:05:51,800 --> 01:05:54,166
HE'S LOSING HIMSELF
IN HIS PAINTING.
1073
01:05:54,166 --> 01:05:55,766
WHY? HE'S A LONELY MAN.
1074
01:05:55,766 --> 01:05:58,366
THE ONLY FRIEND HE'S GOT
IS HIS PAINTING
1075
01:05:58,366 --> 01:05:59,600
AND HE PUTS A LOT INTO IT.
1076
01:05:59,600 --> 01:06:03,633
NO ONE ELSE IS ALLOWED
IN HIS PAINTING, IN A SENSE.
1077
01:06:03,633 --> 01:06:06,766
THE MODERN WORLD WANTS
TO LOOK INTO THE PAINTING
1078
01:06:06,766 --> 01:06:08,366
AND SEE WHAT THEY WANT.
1079
01:06:08,366 --> 01:06:10,433
YOU LOOK INTO A BENTON PAINTING
1080
01:06:10,433 --> 01:06:13,366
IN THE END YOU'LL SEE
A VERY QUIET, POETIC MAN.
1081
01:06:13,366 --> 01:06:16,566
YOU'RE EITHER WITH HIM
OR YOU'RE NOT WITH HIM.
1082
01:06:22,200 --> 01:06:26,266
BUT THE DEDICATION TO HIS CRAFT
IS HONORABLE.
1083
01:06:26,266 --> 01:06:27,733
TO ME IT'S INSPIRING.
1084
01:06:27,733 --> 01:06:30,266
HE WORKED AT HIS BUSINESS,
HE WORKED AT HIS CRAFT.
1085
01:06:30,266 --> 01:06:34,500
BY CRAFT I MEAN THE BUSINESS
OF PUTTING DOWN PAINT
1086
01:06:34,500 --> 01:06:37,766
DESIGNING THE PICTURE,
COMPLETING THE PICTURE.
1087
01:06:37,766 --> 01:06:40,766
IT WAS A DAY-TO-DAY JOB,
THOUGH PEOPLE THINK
1088
01:06:40,766 --> 01:06:43,866
IT'S SOME EMOTIONAL THING
COMES OUT OF THE SKY.
1089
01:06:43,866 --> 01:06:47,166
TO HIS WIFE, HE'S MAKING
PICTURES TO SELL.
1090
01:06:47,166 --> 01:06:49,200
TO HIM, HE'S MAKING
ANOTHER PAINTING
1091
01:06:49,200 --> 01:06:54,366
WHICH HE FEELS IS MORE PERFECT
THAN THE ONE BEFORE IT.
1092
01:06:57,066 --> 01:07:00,666
Narrator:
"THE ONLY WAY AN ARTIST
CAN PERSONALLY FAIL"
1093
01:07:00,666 --> 01:07:03,133
BENTON SAID, "IS TO QUIT WORK."
1094
01:07:03,133 --> 01:07:05,666
THOMAS HART BENTON NEVER QUIT.
1095
01:07:05,666 --> 01:07:07,233
NEITHER DID RITA.
1096
01:07:07,233 --> 01:07:08,966
Woman:
THEY FED EACH OTHER.
1097
01:07:08,966 --> 01:07:10,000
THEY KEPT ONE ANOTHER GOING.
1098
01:07:10,000 --> 01:07:13,333
Man:
"TOM, STRAIGHTEN YOUR SHOULDERS.
1099
01:07:13,333 --> 01:07:15,166
YOU ACT LIKE AN OLD MAN."
1100
01:07:15,166 --> 01:07:16,500
HE'D STRAIGHTEN UP.
1101
01:07:16,500 --> 01:07:18,133
BUT SHE WAS THE ONE...
1102
01:07:18,133 --> 01:07:20,233
SHE'D GO OUT
TO THE STUDIO
1103
01:07:20,233 --> 01:07:22,433
WE'D GO OUT THERE
ON SUNDAY
1104
01:07:22,433 --> 01:07:24,900
TO SEE WHAT HIS LATEST
PROJECT OR PAINTING
1105
01:07:24,900 --> 01:07:26,633
AND SHE WOULD
JUST LOOK AT--
1106
01:07:26,633 --> 01:07:29,100
"TOM, YOU'RE
MAGNIFICENT!"
1107
01:07:29,100 --> 01:07:32,500
BUT SHE'D JUST
KEEP PUSHING AND
PUSHING HIM, YOU KNOW
1108
01:07:32,500 --> 01:07:33,533
AND FEEDING HIS EGO.
1109
01:07:33,533 --> 01:07:35,966
AND SHE WOULD ALSO SAY
1110
01:07:35,966 --> 01:07:38,333
"IF YOU WANT HIM
TO DO SOMETHING
1111
01:07:38,333 --> 01:07:40,900
DON'T TELL HIM
YOU WANT HIM TO DO IT"
1112
01:07:40,900 --> 01:07:43,166
BECAUSE, SHE SAID,
"HE'S STUBBORN
1113
01:07:43,166 --> 01:07:47,066
"AND IF HE THINKS YOU WANT HIM
TO DO IT, HE WON'T DO IT.
1114
01:07:47,066 --> 01:07:48,766
HE WANTS TO GET THE IDEA."
1115
01:07:48,766 --> 01:07:51,300
SO SHE WOULD
MANIPULATE AROUND HIM.
1116
01:07:51,300 --> 01:07:54,066
T.H. Benton:
NOW I'M GOING TO INTRODUCE YOU
1117
01:07:54,066 --> 01:07:57,766
TO MRS. BENTON, RITA
1118
01:07:57,766 --> 01:08:00,300
AND JESSIE,
OUR DAUGHTER.
1119
01:08:00,300 --> 01:08:01,700
Murrow:
GOOD EVENING, MRS. BENTON.
1120
01:08:01,700 --> 01:08:04,500
GOOD EVENING, MR. MURROW.
1121
01:08:04,500 --> 01:08:05,700
GOOD EVENING.
1122
01:08:05,700 --> 01:08:07,166
Murrow:
MRS. BENTON
1123
01:08:07,166 --> 01:08:09,700
ARE YOU CALLED ON
TO ASSIST TOM?
1124
01:08:09,700 --> 01:08:12,300
NO, I NEVER ASSIST HIM
IN HIS WORK.
1125
01:08:12,300 --> 01:08:16,800
YOU HANDLE THE BUSINESS
AFFAIRS, IS THAT RIGHT?
1126
01:08:16,800 --> 01:08:18,966
THAT'S RIGHT--
OCCASIONALLY I MAKE FRAMES.
1127
01:08:18,966 --> 01:08:21,733
J. Benton:
SHE NEVER FALTERED
1128
01:08:21,733 --> 01:08:25,200
FROM HER ONE PURPOSE,
WHICH WAS HE WAS A GREAT ARTIST
1129
01:08:25,200 --> 01:08:28,700
AND SHE SAVED ALL THE MONEY
AND ALL THE PAINTINGS.
1130
01:08:28,700 --> 01:08:31,666
SOMETIMES MY FATHER WOULDN'T
LIKE A PAINTING
1131
01:08:31,666 --> 01:08:34,200
SO HE'D PAINT ANOTHER
PAINTING OVER IT.
1132
01:08:34,200 --> 01:08:36,200
BUT SHE'D RUN IN THE STUDIO
AND STEAL THEM
1133
01:08:36,200 --> 01:08:40,666
BEFORE HE COULD DO THAT
SO SHE COULD SELL THEM.
1134
01:08:40,666 --> 01:08:43,800
I DON'T THINK HE WOULD
HAVE LIVED WITHOUT HER.
1135
01:08:43,800 --> 01:08:47,700
THE INCOMES, OF COURSE,
WOULD VARY YEAR TO YEAR.
1136
01:08:47,700 --> 01:08:49,300
SOMETIMES WE WERE VERY POOR.
1137
01:08:49,300 --> 01:08:54,433
SOMETIMES WE HAD LOTS OF MONEY
IF WE SOLD A PAINTING
1138
01:08:54,433 --> 01:08:56,766
BUT THE LIFE IN THE HOUSE
NEVER CHANGED
1139
01:08:56,766 --> 01:09:00,500
AND THAT WAS MY MOTHER'S GENIUS.
1140
01:09:00,500 --> 01:09:02,566
SHE KEPT IT ALL SMOOTH.
1141
01:09:02,566 --> 01:09:05,066
Man:
HE DIDN'T LIKE
THE BUSINESS PART.
1142
01:09:05,066 --> 01:09:06,733
RITA TOOK CARE OF THAT.
1143
01:09:06,733 --> 01:09:10,900
IF YOU WANTED TO BUY A PAINTING,
HE'D SAY, "I DON'T DO THAT.
1144
01:09:10,900 --> 01:09:13,566
"YOU WANT A PAINTING,
YOU TALK TO RITA.
1145
01:09:13,566 --> 01:09:15,100
SHE MIGHT SELL YOU ONE."
1146
01:09:15,100 --> 01:09:18,666
Woman:
SHE ALWAYS WATCHED OVER TOM
AND TOOK CARE OF HIM
1147
01:09:18,666 --> 01:09:19,933
AND PROTECTED HIM.
1148
01:09:19,933 --> 01:09:22,666
AND ON THIS PARTICULAR OCCASION
1149
01:09:22,666 --> 01:09:27,500
A MAN CAME TO THE ISLAND
AND CAME TO THEIR HOUSE AND SAID
1150
01:09:27,500 --> 01:09:31,833
"OH, MRS. BENTON, I WANT
SO MUCH TO BECOME A PART
1151
01:09:31,833 --> 01:09:35,266
"OF THE ART COLONY
ON MARTHA'S VINEYARD.
1152
01:09:35,266 --> 01:09:37,733
COULD YOU TELL ME ABOUT IT?"
1153
01:09:37,733 --> 01:09:42,566
AND RITA LOOKED AT HIM
RATHER COLDLY AND SAID
1154
01:09:42,566 --> 01:09:48,133
"THERE IS NO ARTIST ON THIS
ISLAND BUT THOMAS HART BENTON"
1155
01:09:48,133 --> 01:09:53,433
WHICH TOOK CARE
OF THAT VERY COMPLETELY.
1156
01:09:53,433 --> 01:09:59,066
Murrow:
TELL ME, WHAT THOMAS HART BENTON
CREATION IS IN THE WORKS NOW?
1157
01:09:59,066 --> 01:10:01,466
WELL, THERE'S PLENTY
IN THE WORKS.
1158
01:10:01,466 --> 01:10:03,966
IF YOU WANT TO SEE IT,
YOU FOLLOW ME.
1159
01:10:03,966 --> 01:10:05,266
Murrow:
GOOD.
1160
01:10:05,266 --> 01:10:08,100
JESSIE AND RITA,
WE'LL SEE YOU LATER.
1161
01:10:08,100 --> 01:10:09,733
WE'RE OUT TO THE STUDIO.
1162
01:10:09,733 --> 01:10:11,066
LOOK OUT, JOE.
1163
01:10:11,066 --> 01:10:14,433
Murrow:
HOW MUCH TIME DO YOU SPEND
IN YOUR STUDIO?
1164
01:10:14,433 --> 01:10:18,633
T.H. Benton:
WELL, I SPEND ALL
THE DAYLIGHT HOURS THERE, ED.
1165
01:10:18,633 --> 01:10:19,833
EVERY DAY, SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.
1166
01:10:19,833 --> 01:10:22,200
I HAVE TO TO GET THE STUFF DONE.
1167
01:10:22,200 --> 01:10:26,600
Murrow:
DID YOU HAVE YOUNG
APPRENTICE ARTISTS HELP YOU?
1168
01:10:26,600 --> 01:10:29,233
T.H. Benton:
I HAVE NO APPRENTICE ARTISTS.
1169
01:10:29,233 --> 01:10:31,733
YOUNG ARTISTS NOW
ARE TAUGHT IN SCHOOL
1170
01:10:31,733 --> 01:10:34,466
THAT THEIR INDIVIDUAL SOULS
ARE SO IMPORTANT
1171
01:10:34,466 --> 01:10:38,500
THEY MIGHT DAMAGE THEM IF THEY
HELPED AN OLD FELLOW LIKE ME--
1172
01:10:38,500 --> 01:10:39,666
OLD-FASHIONED PAINTER.
1173
01:10:39,666 --> 01:10:43,766
THAT'S THE GREAT TROUBLE
WITH MODERN TEACHING--
1174
01:10:43,766 --> 01:10:46,333
EVERYBODY HAS
TOO MUCH OF A SOUL.
1175
01:10:46,333 --> 01:10:49,633
Murrow:
THIS STUDIO REALLY
LOOKS WORKED IN.
1176
01:10:49,633 --> 01:10:51,333
IT IS WORKED IN.
1177
01:10:51,333 --> 01:10:56,333
TWO PROJECTS, BIG PROJECTS
GOING ON HERE AT ONCE.
1178
01:10:56,333 --> 01:10:58,966
HERE IS ONE--
THE CARTOON, RATHER--
1179
01:10:58,966 --> 01:11:02,200
FOR THE NEW YORK STATE
POWER AUTHORITY.
1180
01:11:02,200 --> 01:11:05,700
THIS PICTURE FINISHED
WILL BE SEVEN FEET HIGH
1181
01:11:05,700 --> 01:11:07,433
AND 20 FEET LONG.
1182
01:11:07,433 --> 01:11:10,033
OVER HERE,
YOU SEE ONE ALSO IN PROCESS
1183
01:11:10,033 --> 01:11:12,133
FOR THE TRUMAN MEMORIAL LIBRARY.
1184
01:11:12,133 --> 01:11:15,300
THIS IS 20 FEET HIGH AND
32 FEET LONG WHEN IT'S FINISHED.
1185
01:11:15,300 --> 01:11:18,633
SO THESE ARE THINGS
THAT COST YOU A LITTLE WORK.
1186
01:11:18,633 --> 01:11:23,866
Narrator:
IN 1959, HARRY S. TRUMAN
ASKED BENTON TO PAINT A MURAL
1187
01:11:23,866 --> 01:11:27,600
FOR HIS PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY
AT INDEPENDENCE, MISSOURI.
1188
01:11:27,600 --> 01:11:32,666
TRUMAN CALLED BENTON "THE BEST
DAMN PAINTER IN AMERICA."
1189
01:11:32,666 --> 01:11:34,666
J. Benton:
I NEVER KNEW HIM
1190
01:11:34,666 --> 01:11:38,633
BUT HE WAS LIKE
AN OLD-TIME MISSOURI POLITICIAN
1191
01:11:38,633 --> 01:11:43,300
AND MY FATHER WAS AN OLD-TIME
MISSOURI POLITICIAN, TOO.
1192
01:11:43,300 --> 01:11:46,800
YOU KNOW, HE WAS SO
INTERESTED IN POLITICS
1193
01:11:46,800 --> 01:11:49,966
THAT I THINK I KNEW
MORE ABOUT POLITICS
1194
01:11:49,966 --> 01:11:54,000
BY THE TIME I WAS A TEENAGER
THAN I KNEW ABOUT ART.
1195
01:11:54,000 --> 01:11:58,300
Kramer:
TRUMAN THOUGHT HIGHLY
OF BENTON, VERY HIGHLY
1196
01:11:58,300 --> 01:12:02,066
AND HE ALSO DESCRIBED ABSTRACT
PAINTING AS SCRAMBLED EGGS.
1197
01:12:02,066 --> 01:12:06,400
I ADMIRED HARRY TRUMAN
VERY MUCH AS A PRESIDENT
1198
01:12:06,400 --> 01:12:09,100
BUT HE'D BE ONE OF
THE LAST PEOPLE IN THE WORLD
1199
01:12:09,100 --> 01:12:13,433
WHOSE AESTHETIC JUDGMENTS
I'D TAKE SERIOUSLY.
1200
01:12:13,433 --> 01:12:16,633
Small:
HE INTERESTED TOM TREMENDOUSLY
1201
01:12:16,633 --> 01:12:19,966
BECAUSE HE WAS
A GREAT READER OF HISTORY
1202
01:12:19,966 --> 01:12:22,500
AND HE KNEW
HIS UNITED STATES HISTORY
1203
01:12:22,500 --> 01:12:24,766
BACKWARDS AND FORWARDS
AND SIDEWAYS
1204
01:12:24,766 --> 01:12:28,233
AND THEY BOTH LIKED
THE SAME KIND OF WHISKEY
1205
01:12:28,233 --> 01:12:30,366
AND THEY LIKED
EACH OTHER VERY MUCH.
1206
01:12:30,366 --> 01:12:35,066
T.H. Benton:
YOU DON'T GENERALLY SEE
A MURAL ALL AT ONCE
1207
01:12:35,066 --> 01:12:37,566
OR YOU MAY SEE IT ALL AT ONCE
1208
01:12:37,566 --> 01:12:39,666
BUT YOU'RE LIKELY TO EXPLOIT IT
1209
01:12:39,666 --> 01:12:42,933
BY LOOKING AT ONE PART
AND FOLLOWING IT ALONG.
1210
01:12:42,933 --> 01:12:44,466
YOU MUST DESIGN A MURAL
1211
01:12:44,466 --> 01:12:48,500
KNOWING THAT THE EYE IS GOING
TO BE MOVING OVER THESE SPACES
1212
01:12:48,500 --> 01:12:51,900
AND YOU ARRANGE IT SO THE EYE
FOLLOWS CERTAIN LINES
1213
01:12:51,900 --> 01:12:54,000
AND YOU HAVE
A SENSE OF UNITY
1214
01:12:54,000 --> 01:12:56,033
WHEN YOU GET THROUGH WITH IT.
1215
01:12:56,033 --> 01:12:58,433
Narrator:
THE TRUMAN MURAL
MADE BENTON BIG NEWS AGAIN
1216
01:12:58,433 --> 01:13:00,733
AND HE LOVED IT.
1217
01:13:00,733 --> 01:13:04,100
HE TOURED EUROPE, ATTENDED
NEW SHOWS OF HIS OLD WORK
1218
01:13:04,100 --> 01:13:06,633
WON ELECTION TO THE AMERICAN
ACADEMY OF ARTS AND LETTERS
1219
01:13:06,633 --> 01:13:08,233
AND LEFT THE BANQUET
1220
01:13:08,233 --> 01:13:11,233
BECAUSE HE DIDN'T LIKE
ITS PRESIDENT'S SPEECH.
1221
01:13:11,233 --> 01:13:16,166
ASKED TO LECTURE ON THE AMERICAN
ARTIST, HE STRODE ON STAGE
1222
01:13:16,166 --> 01:13:18,066
ANNOUNCED THAT
"THE ONLY AMERICAN ARTIST
1223
01:13:18,066 --> 01:13:21,600
THAT INTERESTS ME
IS THOMAS HART BENTON"
1224
01:13:21,600 --> 01:13:23,533
AND SAT DOWN.
1225
01:13:23,533 --> 01:13:28,466
BUT HE DID MAKE HIS PEACE WITH
THE MUSEUM WHICH HAD FIRED HIM.
1226
01:13:28,466 --> 01:13:30,800
Man:
I SAID, "IN ANY DIVORCE
THERE ARE TWO SIDES."
1227
01:13:30,800 --> 01:13:33,666
"WELL," HE SAID, "I BUY THAT."
1228
01:13:33,666 --> 01:13:37,600
I SAID, "THEY'D LIKE TO MAKE UP,
AND MAYBE YOU WOULD TOO.
1229
01:13:37,600 --> 01:13:38,700
I'D LIKE TO GET YOU TOGETHER."
1230
01:13:38,700 --> 01:13:41,466
HE TURNED TO ME AND HE SAID
1231
01:13:41,466 --> 01:13:44,500
"OKAY, JUST BRING
THE SONS OF BITCHES OVER."
1232
01:13:44,500 --> 01:13:47,966
Narrator:
HE COULD NOW EVEN AFFORD
QUALIFIED SYMPATHY
1233
01:13:47,966 --> 01:13:51,733
FOR THE ABSTRACTIONISTS WHO HAD
SO RECENTLY ECLIPSED HIM.
1234
01:13:51,733 --> 01:13:54,733
"THE HUMAN FIGURE IS COMING
BACK INTO FASHION"
1235
01:13:54,733 --> 01:13:56,066
HE TOLD A REPORTER
1236
01:13:56,066 --> 01:13:58,800
"AND WHAT ARE ALL THOSE SONS
OF BITCHES GOING TO DO NOW?
1237
01:13:58,800 --> 01:14:02,033
THEY NEVER LEARNED HOW TO DRAW."
1238
01:14:02,033 --> 01:14:06,833
PARTICULARLY DURING THE YEARS
OF POLLOCK'S GREAT TRIUMPHS
1239
01:14:06,833 --> 01:14:09,866
BENTON WAS VERY MUCH
ON THE ASH HEAP
1240
01:14:09,866 --> 01:14:12,166
BUT I THINK
HE'S BEEN COMING UP SINCE.
1241
01:14:12,166 --> 01:14:15,266
I THINK HE'S
AN INTERESTING PAINTING.
1242
01:14:15,266 --> 01:14:19,900
REPRESENTATION IS BECOMING
RESPECTABLE AGAIN.
1243
01:14:19,900 --> 01:14:23,766
Narrator:
AT 82, HE PAINTED
TURN-OF-THE-CENTURY JOPLIN
1244
01:14:23,766 --> 01:14:25,233
AND WAS HONORED
BY A "TOM BENTON DAY"
1245
01:14:25,233 --> 01:14:29,733
IN THE TOWN WHERE HE FIRST
EARNED MONEY AS AN ARTIST.
1246
01:14:29,733 --> 01:14:34,133
"OLD AGE IS A WONDERFUL THING,"
HE TOLD THE CROWD.
1247
01:14:34,133 --> 01:14:36,500
"YOU OUTLIVE YOUR ENEMIES."
1248
01:14:49,066 --> 01:14:53,533
IN 1974, BENTON UNDERTOOK
ONE MORE MURAL
1249
01:14:53,533 --> 01:14:58,333
FOR THE COUNTRY MUSIC
FOUNDATION OF AMERICA.
1250
01:15:01,500 --> 01:15:06,533
T.H. Benton:
WELL, I DON'T THINK
THE ARTIST CAN AT ANY TIME
1251
01:15:06,533 --> 01:15:09,233
HELP BUT EXPRESSING
HIS OWN INNER SELF.
1252
01:15:09,233 --> 01:15:11,233
I THINK THE LESS ATTENTION
HE PAYS TO THAT
1253
01:15:11,233 --> 01:15:15,066
THE BETTER OFF HE IS, BECAUSE
HE CAN'T HELP THAT ANYHOW.
1254
01:15:15,066 --> 01:15:20,566
IT WOULD BE MY FEELING
ABOUT THINGS
1255
01:15:20,566 --> 01:15:23,266
THAT IF HE CAN GET OUT
OF RETIREMENT
1256
01:15:23,266 --> 01:15:26,466
AND INTO THE WORLD OF MEN,
HE'S BETTER OFF.
1257
01:16:03,233 --> 01:16:08,300
Small:
HE ALWAYS WENT TO THE STUDIO
AFTER DINNER IN THE EVENING
1258
01:16:08,300 --> 01:16:10,700
AND ON THIS PARTICULAR EVENING
1259
01:16:10,700 --> 01:16:15,333
HIS WIFE THOUGHT THAT HE HAD
STAYED AN AWFULLY LONG TIME.
1260
01:16:15,333 --> 01:16:17,000
SHE WENT OUT.
1261
01:16:17,000 --> 01:16:19,500
AND HE HAD SAID
BEFORE HE LEFT THE HOUSE
1262
01:16:19,500 --> 01:16:25,566
HE SAID, "I THINK IT'S FINISHED,
I'M GOING TO SIGN IT TONIGHT."
1263
01:16:25,566 --> 01:16:27,566
WHEN SHE WENT OUT
1264
01:16:27,566 --> 01:16:31,366
HE WAS LYING BESIDE
THE RIGHT-HAND LOWER CORNER
1265
01:16:31,366 --> 01:16:35,266
WITH HIS SPECTACLES ON,
BUT HE HAD NOT SIGNED IT.
1266
01:16:35,266 --> 01:16:39,100
HE APPARENTLY DIED JUST
AS HE WAS PREPARING TO SIGN IT.
1267
01:16:42,933 --> 01:16:45,466
HE DIED SO BEAUTIFULLY,
YOU KNOW.
1268
01:16:46,933 --> 01:16:50,800
HE WENT OUT TO SEE HIS MURAL
1269
01:16:50,800 --> 01:16:54,500
AND HE HAD JUST
FINISHED IT THAT DAY
1270
01:16:54,500 --> 01:16:57,533
AND HE WAS GOING OUT TO SIGN IT
1271
01:16:57,533 --> 01:17:02,566
AND HE DECIDED NOT TO SIGN IT,
OR HE DIDN'T GET TO SIGN IT
1272
01:17:02,566 --> 01:17:09,333
BECAUSE, AS THE DOCTOR SAID,
HE WAS STRUCK BY LIGHTNING.
1273
01:17:09,333 --> 01:17:10,666
I WAS REALLY UPSET.
1274
01:17:10,666 --> 01:17:13,433
IN FACT, WHEN THEY
INTERRUPTED THE THING
1275
01:17:13,433 --> 01:17:16,600
AND THEY SAID,
"WE'RE SORRY TO ANNOUNCE..."
1276
01:17:16,600 --> 01:17:18,633
I SAID TO MY WIFE, "TOM DIED."
1277
01:17:18,633 --> 01:17:19,300
AND HE DID.
1278
01:17:20,833 --> 01:17:23,566
( sobs quietly )
1279
01:17:23,566 --> 01:17:24,833
NOTHING LOST, NOTHING LOST.
1280
01:17:24,833 --> 01:17:28,033
TOM BENTON FINISHED A PAINTING
1281
01:17:28,033 --> 01:17:30,733
CAME IN THE HOUSE,
HAD HIS DINNER
1282
01:17:30,733 --> 01:17:33,933
AND WENT OUT
TO SIT IN HIS LITTLE CHAIR
1283
01:17:33,933 --> 01:17:37,333
AND CHECKED HIS PAINTING
AND FELL OVER DEAD.
1284
01:17:37,333 --> 01:17:40,500
IT'S AS COMPLETE A LIFE
AS YOU CAN HAVE.
1285
01:17:40,500 --> 01:17:47,500
Narrator:
THOMAS HART BENTON DIED
ON JANUARY 19, 1975.
1286
01:17:47,500 --> 01:17:49,966
HE WAS 85 YEARS OLD.
1287
01:17:49,966 --> 01:17:52,300
Man:
I CALLED RITA.
1288
01:17:52,300 --> 01:17:57,700
I SAID, "I THOUGHT THAT TOM
WAS GOING TO LIVE FOREVER
1289
01:17:57,700 --> 01:18:00,200
OR HE'D OUTLIVE US ALL."
1290
01:18:00,200 --> 01:18:05,333
AND I HEAR HER COME BACK
WITH THIS FURIOUS LINE--
1291
01:18:05,333 --> 01:18:08,733
"HE WASN'T SUPPOSED
TO HAVE DIED!
1292
01:18:08,733 --> 01:18:12,133
HE WASN'T SUPPOSED
TO HAVE DIED..."
1293
01:18:12,133 --> 01:18:14,666
J. Benton:
OH, MY MOTHER.
1294
01:18:14,666 --> 01:18:18,366
IT WAS TERRIBLE.
1295
01:18:18,366 --> 01:18:22,500
SHE DIED THREE MONTHS LATER.
1296
01:18:22,500 --> 01:18:29,100
SHE COULDN'T--
SHE COULDN'T LIVE WITHOUT HIM.
1297
01:19:18,633 --> 01:19:20,266
O'Maley:
WE'RE HERE TO CELEBRATE
1298
01:19:20,266 --> 01:19:24,333
THE 98th BIRTHDAY
OF THE LATE THOMAS HART BENTON
1299
01:19:24,333 --> 01:19:27,633
WHICH WE HAVE DONE EVERY YEAR
SINCE HIS DEATH.
1300
01:19:31,600 --> 01:19:36,366
J. Benton:
THE BENTON BOURBON
BIRTHDAY BASH--
1301
01:19:36,366 --> 01:19:38,500
IT EMBARRASSES ME A LITTLE BIT.
1302
01:19:38,500 --> 01:19:44,000
ALL HIS FRIENDS AND
I GUESS ADMIRERS GET TOGETHER
1303
01:19:44,000 --> 01:19:48,400
AND HAVE A PARTY,
AND THEY ALL GO TO KELLY'S BAR
1304
01:19:48,400 --> 01:19:51,633
WHICH I DON'T THINK
MY FATHER EVER WENT TO.
1305
01:19:51,633 --> 01:19:54,633
MY FATHER HATED BARS.
1306
01:19:54,633 --> 01:19:57,566
HE LIKED HIS PAINTINGS IN BARS.
1307
01:19:57,566 --> 01:20:00,933
( banjo playing,
crowd chattering )
1308
01:20:13,533 --> 01:20:15,866
♪ LADIES AND GENTLEMEN,
LISTEN TO MY SONG ♪
1309
01:20:15,866 --> 01:20:18,833
♪ SING INTO THE NIGHT THOUGH
YOU MIGHT BELIEVE IT'S WRONG ♪
1310
01:20:18,833 --> 01:20:20,866
♪ MAY MAKE YOU MAD
BUT I MEAN NO HARM ♪
1311
01:20:20,866 --> 01:20:22,366
♪ JUST A BLOCK OF LETTUCE
ON THE BENTON FARM ♪
1312
01:20:22,366 --> 01:20:27,366
♪ HARD TIMES IN THE COUNTRY
DOWN ON BENTON'S FARM. ♪
1313
01:20:27,366 --> 01:20:29,766
( banjo and fiddle interlude )
1314
01:20:36,566 --> 01:20:37,333
HELLO.
1315
01:20:37,333 --> 01:20:39,100
Man:
WHY ARE
YOU HERE?
1316
01:20:39,100 --> 01:20:42,533
WE'RE HERE FOR THE BENTON BASH.
1317
01:20:42,533 --> 01:20:47,266
♪ HARD TIMES IN THE COUNTRY,
OUT ON BENTON'S FARM ♪
1318
01:20:47,266 --> 01:20:52,833
♪ HARD TIMES IN THE COUNTRY,
DOWN ON BENTON'S FARM. ♪
1319
01:20:54,166 --> 01:20:57,200
( song ends;
applause and whistling )
1320
01:21:01,800 --> 01:21:06,700
IT'S ALWAYS DIFFICULT TO SUM UP
THE WORK OF ANY ARTIST
1321
01:21:06,700 --> 01:21:10,166
WHO HAS DIFFERENT FACES--
1322
01:21:10,166 --> 01:21:13,866
THAT HE WAS
A REMARKABLE DESIGNER
1323
01:21:13,866 --> 01:21:15,133
A COMPOSER IN FORM;
1324
01:21:15,133 --> 01:21:21,733
THAT THERE WAS AN ELEMENT
OF REALITY IN HIS WORK
1325
01:21:21,733 --> 01:21:25,066
OF SUBSTANCE, OF WEIGHT;
1326
01:21:25,066 --> 01:21:28,700
A FEELING THAT
HIS ART EXISTED PHYSICALLY
1327
01:21:28,700 --> 01:21:32,933
AND THAT, TO ME, IS ONE
OF THE GREATEST ATTRIBUTES
1328
01:21:32,933 --> 01:21:34,466
PAINTING CAN HAVE.
1329
01:21:34,466 --> 01:21:39,566
WELL, OF COURSE, BEAUTY IS
IN THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER
1330
01:21:39,566 --> 01:21:41,633
BUT HE PAINTED BEAUTY.
1331
01:21:41,633 --> 01:21:45,666
IT COULD BE AN OLD FARMER,
IT COULD BE HOGS
1332
01:21:45,666 --> 01:21:49,100
IT COULD BE
AN OLD BEAT-UP STEAMBOAT
1333
01:21:49,100 --> 01:21:54,966
BUT HE SAW THE BEAUTY OF THE...
OH, THE NEED OF THESE THINGS.
1334
01:21:54,966 --> 01:22:00,066
THERE ISN'T ANY BEAUTY
UNLESS THERE ARE FULFILLED NEEDS
1335
01:22:00,066 --> 01:22:04,666
AND THERE IS NEED
FOR PEOPLE THAT PICK COTTON
1336
01:22:04,666 --> 01:22:07,233
THERE WAS A NEED FOR PEOPLE
1337
01:22:07,233 --> 01:22:09,933
THAT WENT AROUND
DOING MINSTREL SHOWS.
1338
01:22:09,933 --> 01:22:13,300
PEOPLE NEEDED THAT,
AND HE WAS THERE
1339
01:22:13,300 --> 01:22:19,333
AND HE SAW THE BEAUTY OF IT,
AND HE RECORDED IT FOR US.
1340
01:22:19,333 --> 01:22:23,966
I THINK THAT PEOPLE
HAD GREAT RESPECT FOR TOM.
1341
01:22:23,966 --> 01:22:28,300
MAYBE THEY DIDN'T ALWAYS
LIKE WHAT HE DID
1342
01:22:28,300 --> 01:22:32,700
BUT SOMEHOW THERE WAS
A FEELING OF RESPECT
1343
01:22:32,700 --> 01:22:36,266
FOR WHAT HE REPRESENTED
IN PAINTING
1344
01:22:36,266 --> 01:22:37,600
AND THAT WAS LASTING.
1345
01:22:37,600 --> 01:22:39,000
THAT WAS GOOD.
1346
01:22:39,000 --> 01:22:42,166
A PAINTER DOESN'T
MAKE UP STORIES.
1347
01:22:42,166 --> 01:22:45,433
A REAL PAINTER, HE GOES OUT,
HE SEES AMERICA.
1348
01:22:45,433 --> 01:22:48,300
HE DOESN'T TALK AMERICA,
HE SEES AMERICA.
1349
01:22:48,300 --> 01:22:50,066
THE CRITICS TALK AMERICA
1350
01:22:50,066 --> 01:22:52,600
THE CRITICS TALK ALL THE ARTS
SINCE WORLD WAR II.
1351
01:22:52,600 --> 01:22:55,133
HE SEES IT.
1352
01:22:55,133 --> 01:22:58,466
NUMBER ONE, TO UNDERSTAND BENTON
YOU HAVE TO SEE AMERICA, TOO.
1353
01:22:58,466 --> 01:23:03,266
NOW, SHORTLY AFTER WE CAME HERE
WE WENT DOWN TO ARKANSAS
1354
01:23:03,266 --> 01:23:06,066
AND BY JESUS, I LOOKED AROUND
AND I SAID
1355
01:23:06,066 --> 01:23:08,233
"BENTONISM-- THIS IS BENTON.
1356
01:23:08,233 --> 01:23:11,600
HE DIDN'T DO A DAMN THING,
HE PAINTED WHAT HE SAW."
1357
01:23:11,600 --> 01:24:54,166
♪
1358
01:24:54,166 --> 01:24:58,000
Man:
HOW SHALL WE REMEMBER BENTON?
1359
01:24:58,000 --> 01:25:01,400
I THINK WE WILL REMEMBER
TOM BENTON
1360
01:25:01,400 --> 01:25:04,966
AS AN ARTIST
WHO GOT AWAY WITH MURDER.
1361
01:25:04,966 --> 01:25:06,266
( laughs )
1362
01:25:06,266 --> 01:25:10,166
Marling:
I LIKE TOM BENTON'S FEISTINESS.
1363
01:25:10,166 --> 01:25:12,166
I LIKE TOM BENTON'S
ENGAGEMENT WITH LIFE.
1364
01:25:12,166 --> 01:25:15,700
I LIKE TOM BENTON'S
LUST FOR LIVING.
1365
01:25:15,700 --> 01:25:17,333
I LIKE HIS CARRYING ON.
1366
01:25:17,333 --> 01:25:18,233
I LIKE HIS EXCESSES.
1367
01:25:18,233 --> 01:25:21,166
THAT'S TREMENDOUSLY AMERICAN.
1368
01:26:34,633 --> 01:26:38,233
Interviewer:
IF YOU COULD
LIVE, INHABIT
1369
01:26:38,233 --> 01:26:40,133
ONE BENTON
PAINTING
1370
01:26:40,133 --> 01:26:43,866
WHICH PAINTING
WOULD YOU, LLOYD
GOODRICH, INHABIT?
1371
01:26:43,866 --> 01:26:48,200
"PERSEPHONE"-- AFTER ALL,
WHO COULD RESIST THAT GIRL?
104691
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.