All language subtitles for Thomas.Hart.Benton.1989.1080p.WEBRip.x264.AAC-[YTS.MX].srt

af Afrikaans
ak Akan
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bem Bemba
bn Bengali
bh Bihari
bs Bosnian
br Breton
bg Bulgarian
km Cambodian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
chr Cherokee
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
ee Ewe
fo Faroese
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gaa Ga
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gn Guarani
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ia Interlingua
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
rw Kinyarwanda
rn Kirundi
kg Kongo
ko Korean
kri Krio (Sierra Leone)
ku Kurdish
ckb Kurdish (Soranî)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Laothian
la Latin
lv Latvian
ln Lingala
lt Lithuanian
loz Lozi
lg Luganda
ach Luo
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mfe Mauritian Creole
mo Moldavian
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
sr-ME Montenegrin
ne Nepali
pcm Nigerian Pidgin
nso Northern Sotho
no Norwegian
nn Norwegian (Nynorsk)
oc Occitan
or Oriya
om Oromo
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt-BR Portuguese (Brazil) Download
pt Portuguese (Portugal)
pa Punjabi
qu Quechua
ro Romanian
rm Romansh
nyn Runyakitara
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
sh Serbo-Croatian
st Sesotho
tn Setswana
crs Seychellois Creole
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhalese
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish Download
es-419 Spanish (Latin American)
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
tt Tatar
te Telugu
th Thai
ti Tigrinya
to Tonga
lua Tshiluba
tum Tumbuka
tr Turkish
tk Turkmen
tw Twi
ug Uighur
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
wo Wolof
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
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.