手机APP下载

您现在的位置: 首页 > 在线广播 > PBS高端访谈 > PBS访谈娱乐系列 > 正文

PBS高端访谈:山水画家的艺术展

来源:可可英语 编辑:Wendy   可可英语APP下载 |  可可官方微信:ikekenet
  


扫描二维码可进行跟读训练
  下载MP3到电脑  [F8键暂停/播放]   批量下载MP3到手机
8h7nshZ.7PY2oiS;wkF

CJp|[JUKsx-^

AMNA NAWAZ: And finally tonight, the mysterious meeting of land, sea, and sky through the eyes of 19th century American artist Winslow Homer. Special correspondent Jared Bowen examines at an exhibit of the landscape painter's enchantment with seascapes. It's part of our ongoing series on arts and culture, Canvas.

K(*(^wah=QzvNq

JARED BOWEN: Many an artist has heard the siren call of the sea. For Winslow Homer, it would change his life.

#TMmi]j9A+S#q

BILL CROSS, Curator: We think of him today principally as a marine painter. Until age 33, though, he had never shown a marine painting.

O~dCO2o1cF|#=swm

JARED BOWEN: Until then, Homer had been a well-known illustrator who'd captured the Civil War from the front lines. He was raised in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and was a New Yorker by the time he found the sea as a painter in 1869. He was enchanted, says curator Bill Cross.

g=lCdcVlNP-x|H2WU

BILL CROSS: The times of day, the times of tide, storms washing in and washing out, the mysterious meeting of land sea and sky was alluring to him, as it is to us.

qW@r)onSkP6HolC

OLIVER BARKER, Director, Cape Ann Museum: We have been able to assemble 51 works by Homer here at the Cape Ann Museum.

YQWz_q6&X2uZY5j5

JARED BOWEN: Oliver barker is the director of the Cape Ann Museum in Gloucester, where Homer at the Beach commemorates the 150th anniversary of the artist as a marine painter.

3vQrTpLpu9OPLeth]#

111.jpg

i(|=[qVOu-S

OLIVER BARKER: We know he came here on four separate occasions, initially to Manchester and then three separate occasions to Gloucester. And so it wasn't accidental.

;5@oY8[4B.R

JARED BOWEN: Homer initially sought out the sea up and down the East Coast. In New Jersey, he found heavily populated beaches, with crowds in wool bathing costumes like this one. But as he moved north, Homer found vastly different vistas. He discovered industry in a Gloucester shipyard and the solitude of rock-strewn beaches.

K&A@Xj]=9*

OLIVER BARKER: He was very inspired by the ordinary people of Gloucester. I think, as time went on, he started to show some of the beauty of the surrounding areas. There are these glorious sunsets.

,eMMJHlVEqD#5LU93T~

JARED BOWEN: This is the first marine painting Homer ever exhibited, inspired by Singing Beach in Manchester. It went on view in New York. And, says curator Bill Cross, the critics hated it.

kMK3p#-l]@c

BILL CROSS: He received disdain because he was ahead of his time.

|ZCFmXg!4UL8llfn-|x

JARED BOWEN: Homer had embarked on his marine painting after a lengthy trip to France, where he was exposed to all that was new in European painting, photography and Japanese prints, none of which had yet taken hold in America.

I;h*!b0T+lJ

BILL CROSS: Homer was using diffuse light, had little narrative content. And the critics wanted less sketchy paintings. They wanted a work that included figures.

22vnZL6@lQ[H_7%&3i2

JARED BOWEN: The hostile reviews continued with these two works called Low Tide. But, here, Homer's response was equally hostile and physical. I know this is a trick question, but one painting or two?

gjy;uHRo#ge%hJ9|

BILL CROSS: Both. BILL CROSS: Homer made his most ambitious painting based on his visits to Long Branch, New Jersey, in 1869, and exhibited that, to scorn.

dZw%P+WWYJZ

JARED BOWEN: Scorn from the critics?

Lpd%Ybfm#D7.R[hg.erd

BILL CROSS: Scorn from the critics. He removed the painting from the exhibition before the exhibition ended and took his own knife to it, dismembered the painting, and turned it into two works. Only once before in U.S. history have these two paintings been brought together in this way.

Y,JSUmwk2u&rIQ6U&sDp

JARED BOWEN: Part of the beauty of Homer's works, the light, the glint of the sea, and even a lot of the landscapes are still as they were. Living on Ten Pound Island in Gloucester Harbor, Homer painted some 100 watercolors over one summer. Today, he's known as one of the best watercolorists ever. But he had a profound role model, his mother.

C|pUdo(EB!jzr]

BILL CROSS: She exhibited her watercolors in New York before he did. And when he exhibited his watercolors for the first time, she was in the same exhibition.

NovOSh|h(2]

JARED BOWEN: Cross says the 11 years of works in these galleries are tantamount to an artist in a process of self-discovery, one that would result in the most significant works of his career. What made some of the greatest works?

uu1@*|8HavvP*d(nF

BILL CROSS: He was discovering these places in himself through the application of three essential lessons, travel widely, experiment boldly, and love deeply.

x05@YX1U-)V^J6gJ(5

JARED BOWEN: For the PBS NewsHour, I'm Jared Bowen of WGBH in Gloucester, Massachusetts.

=LQr;lfbaCQ))Z-

4yo|IlwJGiz|[-gsDRTdLI)x9=NR%Re~jROilm3+A@cl[t

重点单词   查看全部解释    
diffuse [di'fju:s,di'fju:z]

想一想再看

vt. 散播,使(气体或液体)慢慢混合
vi.

联想记忆
branch [brɑ:ntʃ]

想一想再看

n. 分支,树枝,分店,分部
v. 分支,分岔

 
scorn [skɔ:n]

想一想再看

n. 轻蔑,奚落,笑柄
v. 轻蔑,鄙视,嘲弄

联想记忆
attractive [ə'træktiv]

想一想再看

adj. 有吸引力的,引起注意的

联想记忆
alluring ['ə'ljuəriŋ]

想一想再看

adj. 迷人的,吸引人的;诱惑的,诱人的

联想记忆
exhibit [ig'zibit]

想一想再看

v. 陈列,展览,展示
n. 展品,展览

联想记忆
populated

想一想再看

adj. 粒子数增加的 v. 居住于…中;构成…的人口(

 
correspondent [.kɔri'spɔndənt]

想一想再看

n. 通讯记者,通信者
adj. 与 ...

联想记忆
narrative ['nærətiv]

想一想再看

n. 叙述,故事
adj. 叙事的,故事体的

 
separate ['sepəreit]

想一想再看

n. 分开,抽印本
adj. 分开的,各自的,

 

发布评论我来说2句

    最新文章

    可可英语官方微信(微信号:ikekenet)

    每天向大家推送短小精悍的英语学习资料.

    添加方式1.扫描上方可可官方微信二维码。
    添加方式2.搜索微信号ikekenet添加即可。