Joe Hendren

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Sunday, June 24, 2007

The power of Guernica

I have been enjoying Simon Schama's BBC series The Power of Art, which has been screening in New Zealand late on Sunday nights.

Previously the history of art hasn't been a subject that has held my attention for very long, but I really appreciate the way Schama, a historian by trade, places the art in its historical context and explains how each of the works fits into the life of the artist.

Tonight he looked at Pablo Picasso, and the pinnacle of his artistic career, Guernica. This work was the reaction of a politically aware artist to the air bombing of the Basque town of Guenica by German and Italian fascist forces during the Spanish Civil War. The town had no obvious military targets - it was nothing more than an act of state terrorism, dropping bombs on a civilian population.

Picasso created the work to "clearly express my abhorrence of the military caste which has sunk Spain in an ocean of pain and death."

Despite a "polite" response at the time, the painting later came to be seen as a prophecy. Like Winston Churchill, Picasso gained a lot more credit for his stand against fascism after the horrors of World War II.

Schama also shows how Guernica gained an uncanny modern relevance in the lead up to the war in Iraq. Following Colin Powell's presentation to the United Nations where he told a whole lot of lies on behalf of the Bush Administration, Powell and John Negroponte held a press conference where they made the case for war. At the last moment, someone noticed a reproduction of Guernica on the wall, and officials from the Bush Administration demanded the tapestry be covered up in order that it did not upset people. While they did not burn the work, the effect of the large blue curtain was the same.

Now why would the Bush Administration not want their warmongering associated with an image of screaming women and children? Perhaps the image was just little bit too apt, especially for a military caste which has created an ocean of pain and death.

For Schama this episode was a good example of the power of art. The most powerful country in the world cowered in the face of Picasso's masterpiece.

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4 Comments:

At 10:24 pm, Blogger Oliver Woods said...

Excellent post, Joe. It's actually quite amazing about Guernica: I suspect that the Basque village would've never come to international prominence and as a symbol of the barbarism of Spanish Fascism and German Nazism had it not been for Picasso's painting. The power of art is definitely underrated..

 
At 10:44 pm, Blogger Joe Hendren said...

Thanks Oliver. When I first saw your new blog I wondered if you might have been oliver woods :)

I find it quite interesting that it was art that came to define the spanish civil war rather than battles, or memories of key historical events. I am thinking of Orwell's Homage to Catalonia here too.

I can't help but think this is partly due to the way the Allies were so tepid in their response to Franco's takeover, with the right wing leadership of the world maintaining the policy of appeasement. They supported a military coup in preference to a democratically elected government.

New Zealand was the only country apart from the USSR to raise a protest in 1936/7 - and I am quite proud of our first labour government for doing so. It was a significant step towards a more independent foreign policy.

When I was in Barcelona a couple of years ago I went looking for stuff relating to the Civil war (museums, walks etc) - I was surprised how little there was - yet there is still a massive monument to Franco near Torledo.

 
At 12:12 am, Blogger Oliver Woods said...

I agree that it's hard to find many remanants of the Franco's Spain, thank God really - is that monument you're talking about perhaps el Valle de los Caidos (or something to that effect) near Toledo?

It really was pretty pathetic the international political response, though as you said we should be proud of our Government raising the protest, and don't forget Mexico supported the Republic both morally and financially :D.

 
At 7:29 pm, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I just watched that episode of the Simon's Power of Art. Simon says it was the press that covered Guernica up, not the Bush administration.

 

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