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(piano playing)
Dr. Zucker: We're in the National Gallery in London
and we're looking at a Jan van Eyck,
Portrait of a Man with a red turbine.
Dr. Harris: This is thought by many art historians
to be a self portrait of the great Northern Renaissance artist.
Dr. Zucker: He's looking directly at us,
but I think for me probably the most convincing evidence
is not so much in the face, but actually in the frame.
Dr. Harris: The frame has a very interesting inscription,
and in fact, van Eyck often put inscriptions
in the paintings and in the frames in different ways
that art historians are still theorizing about,
but this painting has an inscription at the top
that has van Eyck's personal motto,
"As I can," written in Greek letters.
Dr. Zucker: It's wildly complicated,
so, As I can, is coming from a motto
that scribes often put at the end of a manuscript
that they had just copied which would have been
a little bit longer.
It would have said, "As I can, not as I would."
Which means this is the best I can do,
I wish I could do better.
Dr. Harris: Right, a sort of humble thing to say,
but van Eyck hasn't taken the, I wish I could do better part.
he just said, "As I can."
Dr. Zucker: Which seems anything but humble
especially as the I in the middle of the phrase
can be a kind of play on van Eyck's name.
Dr. Harris: As Eyck can, as I can.
It does seem as though van Eyck is showing off here what he can do.
Dr. Zucker: One art historian has suggested that
this was kind of a portfolio piece,
that this was a show piece.
That the artist would actually use this as a way
of selling his abilities to potential patrons;
you can compare this painting to my own face.
Dr. Harris: Right, here I am standing before you,
here is the painting and this is how real I can paint.
We do have this interest in artists making their paintings
look so believable in the Northern Renaissance in the 15th Century.
Dr. Zucker: There is a wonderful kind of self consciousness here,
not only in the inscription,
but in a way that the figure looks directly out at us.
Dr. Harris: I don't feel him so much look out at us,
it does seem like a self portrait to me,
I feel him look at himself in a mirror.
I can almost feel his right hand lifted
as he's painting this panel.
Dr. Zucker: Look at the unsparing way
that he's represented himself.
If you look very closely you can just see his beard
that has begun to grow, so you see a stubble.
If you look at his eye, the red veins are there,
perhaps from close looking himself.
We have to look as closely and there really is this wonderful intimacy.
Dr. Harris: The wrinkles, the saggy skin,
the beginning of the way the cheeks are dropping on either side of his face.
Dr. Zucker: He's not idealizing himself in any way,
but there's age of the human body,
and then there's also a sense of the history.
He's taken his hat and he's wrapped it up
so that it becomes a kind of a turbine.
This is referenced back to the ancient world, certainly to the east.
Dr. Harris: You have that in the lettering, too.
Dr. Zucker: Right where you have Greek letters.
And you have a mix of Greek and Arabic in the date down below.
Dr. Harris: This was a very unusual thing to do,
van Eyck signed his name along the bottom,
Jan van Eyck me fecit in Latin, made me.
Then it has a very specific date,
in 1433 on the 21st of October.
This very specific dating is unusual in the 15th Century
and it suggests, I think, that van Eyck was aware
of time in a particular way
and of his place in history in a particular way.
Dr. Zucker: One scholar has pointed out
that the typeface that he's used,
not the language, but the typeface
is actually an archaic typeface that would have been
recognized as old fashioned.
I think you're right, I think there's a real sense
that the artist was using history in a very conscienc way
that prompts the viewer to think historically.
Dr. Harris: To think about the passage of time.
It's amazing to me, too, that those letters on the frame
are not actually inscribed.
He's painted them illusionistically
to appear as though they were carved into the frame,
but that's just paint.
There's a real showing off of the illusions that the artist could create.
Dr. Zucker: This is a painting where I get the sense
that the artist is looking at us through history
and he knew he would be doing that
when he painted this more than 500 years ago.
Dr. Harris: Yeah, I get the same feeling.
(piano playing)