• 2 days ago
アート音痴で悪いか?!2024年11月9日 天才・ピカソが絶賛!ルソーの絵の秘密を探る!
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00:00Three months later
00:03Even if you say,
00:04oh, it's beautiful,
00:06don't you think you'll never know
00:08what's so amazing about it?
00:10Do you think so too?
00:13This is a great picture!
00:14It is!
00:16If you look at a picture and ask someone
00:19in a super-experienced gallery,
00:24their eyes will change when they see the art.
00:26I thought I was tricked, so I went out with him for a bit.
00:30Is it bad to have a house like this?
00:42It's amazing as always.
00:45I don't know where I am.
00:47I don't know where to look.
00:49I'm so lucky.
00:52Everyone, welcome to this mysterious space.
00:56Mr. Tanaka, do you like art?
01:01I've been to see it before.
01:04I went to see it when the National Museum of Western Art was renovated.
01:08At first, I was nervous about whether or not I would get a voice guide.
01:15I feel like I can understand what I know.
01:19I feel like I can be underestimated.
01:22I often go to museums.
01:27But I don't know much about it.
01:29So I think the ones displayed here are good ones.
01:34This is a perfect gallery for those who don't know much about art.
01:44This is the painting you will enjoy today.
01:49It's here.
01:51This is a work of a single artist.
01:54If you like, you can stand up.
01:56It's at your feet.
01:58It's true.
01:59It's mysterious.
02:01But it has something in common.
02:03It's like Arima-kun.
02:07Everyone has big black eyes.
02:09It's like me.
02:12It's like me.
02:15Is this person also Tanaka-kun?
02:17It's small.
02:19Isn't this person big?
02:20It's big.
02:21It's big and small.
02:23These are all by Henri Rousseau, a French painter.
02:28It's a work of Rousseau.
02:30That old man.
02:32He has a nice beard.
02:34He has a beard like Dali.
02:38I don't think he is good at painting.
02:42Actually, the painters who painted Henri Rousseau won a lot of awards.
02:48Rousseau's paintings have wonderful colors.
02:53They are beautiful.
02:55How beautiful they are!
02:57I'm Pissarro, a painter.
02:59His paintings have accurate colors and rich colors.
03:04I've never seen a painting like this before.
03:08I want you to understand.
03:10The black he paints cannot be copied.
03:13Rousseau is a genius.
03:15It's a big hit.
03:19Here is a picture.
03:21Rousseau's work was auctioned in 2023.
03:25It's called Flamingo.
03:28What do you think of it?
03:30Flamingo is a painting that stands on its own.
03:36But it doesn't look like a flamingo at all.
03:40It doesn't look like a flamingo, but it looks like Rousseau.
03:44Is that so?
03:45Really?
03:46I want you to pay attention to how he draws the leaves.
03:50He draws the leaves very carefully.
03:52But he doesn't draw the branches at all.
03:55He draws the leaves.
03:57I like the leaves.
03:59Remember this. Rousseau likes the leaves.
04:03I see.
04:04This painting was auctioned last year.
04:07How much do you think this painting is?
04:12I think this painting is expensive.
04:15He is a famous person.
04:18I think it's 1 million yen.
04:20What?
04:211 million yen.
04:221 million yen?
04:24I think it's expensive.
04:26If it's 1 million yen, I'll buy it.
04:28I'll buy it.
04:30If it's 1 million yen, I'll buy it.
04:32Let's take a look at the answer.
04:34The answer is this.
04:40It's 6.5 billion yen.
04:44It's expensive.
04:456.5 billion yen?
04:47With this painting?
04:496.5 billion yen?
04:50It's about 6.5 billion yen in Japanese yen.
04:53It's rude to say this painting is expensive.
04:56Why do you want it so much?
04:58Because it's popular.
05:00Is it popular?
05:02It's very popular.
05:04Let's have Rousseau appear here.
05:09It's amazing.
05:11As everyone praised me,
05:15I am a genius painter, Rousseau.
05:19You can speak like that?
05:21I wanted to live as a painter from the beginning.
05:24If Ryo Ushin knew that I was talented,
05:28I would have become the greatest painter in France and become very poor.
05:35I don't know how to speak.
05:37It's a little light.
05:40You said you were praised.
05:43Did we praise you?
05:45We didn't praise you at all.
05:48Why is this 6.5 billion yen?
05:50I want to be praised more and more.
05:54I want to be praised as a painter from the beginning.
05:57To know the charm of Rousseau,
06:00please enjoy this first.
06:03Hello, I'm Kikorohi, a local guide.
06:06Rousseau's paintings are full of highlights.
06:10I don't know why, but can you tell me why?
06:13Most of the famous painters have studied at a painting school since they were young
06:18and have begun to walk the path of being a painter.
06:21In fact, Rousseau started painting when he was 40 years old.
06:27It's very late.
06:29He became a painter in his second career.
06:33It's like a painter without a plate.
06:37However, if you look at Rousseau's life,
06:40you can see why he started painting like this.
06:44Let's take a look.
06:47In 1844, Henri Rousseau was born in France.
06:52Almost no photos were taken 180 years ago,
06:56so this landscape was made by an A.I.
07:00At this time, Japan was at its peak.
07:03This is Okita Souji and Tame from Shinsengumi.
07:07This was also made by an A.I.,
07:10but the real face looked like this.
07:16Well, let's not talk about that.
07:18From now on, I will introduce Rousseau's reflection in a manga.
07:23His father was a brick craftsman,
07:26and Rousseau lived a very poor life.
07:29However,
07:33he loved to paint since he was a child.
07:38He dreamed of becoming a painter in the future.
07:41However, he couldn't go to a painting school because he was poor.
07:46At the age of 19, he started working at a lawyer's office.
07:51But here,
07:53he made a mistake.
08:01He was provoked by his colleagues,
08:03and he was arrested for embezzling money from his employer's house.
08:08He was told to go to prison for a month.
08:12He was a young man.
08:16He heard that if he went to the army, he could escape from the prison,
08:19and Rousseau volunteered to join the army.
08:21However,
08:24he couldn't go to the prison because he was poor.
08:28After that, he was sent to the army when he was released from the prison.
08:31He had a completely different life.
08:37After his release, Rousseau worked as a tax officer in Paris.
08:43But this was a very tough job.
08:47Isn't that right, Mr. Rousseau?
08:50Yes, it was a tough job.
08:54I worked 14 hours a day.
08:57I wanted to be a painter,
09:00but I couldn't because I was poor.
09:03But you worked hard because you had someone important to you, right?
09:06That's right.
09:08This is my wife, Clemence.
09:13At the age of 25, he fell in love with his landlord's daughter,
09:1719-year-old Clemence, and got married.
09:21It seems that he had a lot of affection for his wife.
09:26In the first year of marriage, he had his first son.
09:38He had seven children.
09:40He was a great man.
09:44Once he fell in love with Clemence,
09:47he seemed to be a very heavy-hearted person.
09:50When he went out with his family,
09:52a man he didn't know just looked at his wife.
09:57He was so jealous that he blamed his wife until late at night.
10:01It's a little heavy, isn't it?
10:04It's a little annoying.
10:06Even after 40 years old, he can't forget his dream of becoming a painter.
10:13At this time, Rousseau got a license to copy the paintings of the National Museum and the current Louvre Museum.
10:20He started painting on his own while working.
10:24He is a Japanese-style painter now.
10:28I wanted to enter the atelier of the Paris Art Academy,
10:33but I was caught by the age limit,
10:36so I started painting on my own.
10:41At that time, the entrance to become a painter was to enter an exhibition called a salon.
10:48The mainstream was a smooth touch painting with a motif of myths and sacred places like this.
10:5641-year-old Rousseau immediately challenged the salon for the first time.
11:00However,
11:04he failed.
11:08This is a picture drawn by Rousseau at the time,
11:11but he ignored the mainstream motif and brushstrokes in the salon.
11:16In his own style, he did not hang a brush or a stick in the salon.
11:20He continued to exhibit his works in exhibitions that anyone can exhibit if they pay a little money,
11:26which is called an indépendanté.
11:31The picture he published with full confidence was written in the newspaper.
11:36The picture of Rousseau is similar to a pencil sketch drawn by a six-year-old boy
11:40instead of a brush and a tongue instead of a palette.
11:46He was about an hour before the final work,
11:49but there was no one who did not shed tears.
11:53The final work is, of course, sarcastic,
11:56and it means that he laughed so much that he cried.
11:59He was completely dissed.
12:02But what about Rousseau himself?
12:05This reporter knows that it is a masterpiece.
12:10He scrapped the newspaper.
12:14He wrote,
12:16It's a stupid positive.
12:20After that, the picture of Rousseau became a little specialty of the exhibition,
12:25and the exhibition side was in a hurry to keep the dignity of the exhibition,
12:30and put the picture of Rousseau at the end of the hall.
12:33But...
12:36Where is the picture of Rousseau?
12:38Where is it?
12:42Oh, that's...
12:45There it is!
12:46Rousseau is coming this time, too!
12:50It's a masterpiece, really.
12:52The whirlpool of laughter shook the hall.
12:57But Rousseau didn't think he was being laughed at at all,
13:01and he was happy to have a copy of his own picture.
13:05It's a scary steel mentality.
13:09And one day, at another exhibition,
13:12there is a text in the newspaper that says,
13:14Rousseau won the prize.
13:17This is another person of the same name who won the prize.
13:21But Rousseau changed his mind that he had won the prize,
13:26and added the word,
13:28the winner of the exhibition, to his own title.
13:31This is more of a lie than a conviction.
13:37When Rousseau was 45 years old,
13:39the Paris Exhibition opened in France.
13:43The main attraction was the newly completed Eiffel Tower
13:47and the foreign pavilion.
13:49There were many people wearing ethnic costumes,
13:52and it was full of exotic feelings.
13:54Rousseau was very moved when he went to see the exhibition,
13:58and he drew this picture.
14:04The title is,
14:05Self-Portrait in the Landscape,
14:07and the background is the Eiffel Tower and Bangkok.
14:13But Rousseau is so big himself.
14:19Mr. Tanaka, Mr. Ota,
14:21I think you have a lot to say,
14:23a lot to say, and a lot to say,
14:26so I'll give it back to the gallery.
14:32I see.
14:33So that's what this picture was about.
14:36It's huge.
14:37He's a giant.
14:39Rousseau took great care of this picture,
14:45and he continued to draw it little by little.
14:48It's like Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa for Andy Rousseau.
14:52He continued to draw it in his lifetime.
14:54So it's full of things to say,
14:57and it's in a big traffic jam.
14:59Isn't he floating?
15:00I'm glad you noticed.
15:02There's a shadow.
15:04The floating legs that Mr. Tanaka pointed out.
15:07He's floating.
15:08He's very bad at drawing legs.
15:11He's bad at it.
15:12He's bad at it.
15:14He's bad at drawing legs.
15:15He's bad at drawing legs.
15:19I feel like I can draw it.
15:22It's hard.
15:23In fact, in the newspaper,
15:25it was written in a sarcastic way
15:28that it was a self-portrait of Rousseau.
15:31Mr. Rousseau is the inventor of painting.
15:34It was he who invented the landscape painting.
15:38I recommend him to get a patent for his invention.
15:43It's sarcastic, isn't it?
15:45It's sarcastic.
15:47So he accepted it as it is and was happy.
15:52He's a happy person.
15:55He's more of a siren.
15:58Is that so?
16:00But I'm the cutest siren in the universe.
16:04Look, it's the same person.
16:07It's true that this is the invention of mankind.
16:11But he's good at it,
16:15but he's not bad at it.
16:18He's a natural person.
16:20I've heard that before.
16:22He's a natural person.
16:24The difference between an amateur painter and a natural person is
16:29that an amateur painter improves as he draws.
16:35I see.
16:36He's getting better.
16:38He never changes.
16:40This is something only a natural person can do.
16:43His feet are always floating.
16:45His feet are always floating.
16:47His feet are not attached to the ground.
16:49I see.
16:55Excuse me, everyone.
16:58Here's the Henri Rousseau quiz.
17:01Rousseau, who is not good at drawing feet,
17:04succeeded in overcoming his weakness.
17:07How did he overcome his weakness?
17:10Please answer.
17:12His feet?
17:14How did he overcome his weakness?
17:18How did he overcome his weakness?
17:21His feet are not attached to the ground.
17:23I see.
17:25Rousseau, who is not good at drawing feet,
17:27how did he overcome his weakness?
17:31You don't want to draw because you're not good at drawing feet, right?
17:34That's why you're in the grass.
17:39There's always a desk in front of you.
17:41You don't want to show your feet.
17:43The answer is simple.
17:47He hides his feet with something.
17:50That's correct.
17:52What?
17:53Look.
17:55It's true.
17:57He doesn't have feet.
17:59That's strange.
18:01That's strange.
18:03He doesn't hide his feet.
18:05If he doesn't draw his wife's feet,
18:09he will get bored.
18:11So he draws a dog.
18:14He draws a dog's feet.
18:16A dog's feet are good.
18:18The girl's feet are like a空気椅子.
18:20That's right.
18:22He sits here.
18:24And the grass is too long.
18:29The doll is unique.
18:31It's scary.
18:33It's a scary doll.
18:35Was there such a doll?
18:37It's a cursed doll.
18:38Why does he open his cheeks like that?
18:40It's strange.
18:42It's strange.
18:44So, this is a picture of Rousseau,
18:46which is far from the standard of Kojima's painting.
18:49But Rousseau's uniqueness has been further accelerated.
18:53Let's take a look at this video.
18:56Can I continue talking about Rousseau?
18:59At the age of 44,
19:01something sad happens to Rousseau.
19:04His beloved wife, Clémence,
19:08died at the age of 38.
19:11At that time, she was diagnosed with a disease called Mount Fuji.
19:16In fact, her eldest son also died at the age of one.
19:19Of the seven children born,
19:21six died when they were young.
19:25That's tough.
19:27However,
19:29Rousseau, who is not blessed by his family,
19:31is still in love with his wife,
19:33even if she is a little nicer to him.
19:38Rousseau, who does not return home,
19:41leaves one of his three daughters at his relative's house.
19:46In the end, Rousseau is alone.
19:50Then, at the age of 49,
19:53he leaves his job as a tax officer in Paris
19:57because he has to pay his pension.
20:00From now on, I will draw a lot of pictures.
20:04Rousseau focuses on painting.
20:07However,
20:09there were many people who laughed at Rousseau's paintings,
20:12but there were few people who bought them.
20:14Poverty and poverty.
20:18In his poor life,
20:20what Rousseau painted was a picture of war.
20:23It was an exotic landscape and jungle
20:26that he saw when he was on a military expedition to Mexico.
20:29This is a picture of a sleeping gypsy woman.
20:33Don't you think it's a nice picture?
20:36Especially this color sense.
20:38It's nice, isn't it?
20:40At the age of 55,
20:42Rousseau falls in love again
20:44and marries his second wife, Josephine.
20:47Rousseau, who needed money,
20:49asked the mayor of Laval, his hometown,
20:52for 2,000 francs,
20:54which is about 2 million yen in Japanese yen.
20:58Well, it didn't sell after all.
21:01By the way, where do you think this picture is now?
21:05Actually,
21:07it's in New York.
21:11Moreover, Gohho and Monet
21:13are collecting famous paintings all over the world.
21:15This is a masterpiece of a modern New York art museum
21:18called the MoMA.
21:20It's too late to say that
21:22if you buy it, it will be very valuable.
21:26At that time,
21:27there were few people who knew the value of Rousseau's paintings.
21:31This is a work called
21:33The Painter and His Wife.
21:35It's Rousseau's portrait of his wife, Josephine.
21:38However,
21:40Josephine also dies at the age of 50,
21:44but someone finally appears to appreciate Rousseau's paintings.
21:49The first is Apollinaire,
21:51who was famous as a poet.
21:53The younger Apollinaire wanted to paint Rousseau,
21:56and he praised Rousseau's paintings every time he refused.
22:00The lover of Apollinaire is
22:02the painter Marie-Laurent.
22:05She is also known as the Kojica
22:07in the Paris society.
22:11One day,
22:12Rousseau decided to paint a portrait of them.
22:17Leave it to me!
22:18I'll draw it exactly like you!
22:21Rousseau carefully measured the size of their bodies
22:24and drew a picture.
22:26What did he get?
22:30Huh?
22:31It's Kojica!
22:33It's Kojica!
22:34It's Kojica!
22:36It's Kojica!
22:37It's Kojica!
22:38Huh?
22:39It's Kojica!
22:40Huh?
22:41What is this?
22:42Is this me?
22:44Roland, the slender beauty,
22:46is bigger than Apollinaire.
22:49And what about his feet?
22:51Of course!
22:53He was hiding them with his nose.
22:56Really?
22:58Roland, who was in a daze, asked Rousseau,
23:01Was it a little different from what I imagined?
23:04Okay!
23:05I'll redraw it!
23:07He redrew it.
23:08And what did he redraw?
23:12Huh?
23:13That's not what I meant!
23:19Rousseau drew a portrait with a completely different face and body shape.
23:23Roland, who was in a daze, asked,
23:26Was it a little different from what I imagined?
23:29Okay!
23:30I'll redraw it!
23:32He redrew it.
23:33And what did he redraw?
23:38Huh?
23:39What's different?
23:41This is the first and second one.
23:44Do you know what's different?
23:47Huh?
23:49This is Kojica's redrawing.
23:52There's no point in redrawing!
23:54Why did he redraw it?
23:57His nose is a little more polite.
23:59His nose is still polite.
24:02The leaves in the back are different.
24:04This is actually the nose of the foot.
24:08No, no, no.
24:09As you said earlier.
24:11Rousseau thought that the carnation symbolized the poet.
24:15He was supposed to draw a carnation,
24:18but it was a different kind of flower called the fragrance.
24:22So he said it wasn't right, and redrew it.
24:25And it's a carnation.
24:28The leaves are different, too.
24:30What I'm trying to say is,
24:32Since he had to re-draw his nose, people were rather surprised.
24:36That's right.
24:37I see.
24:38Right?
24:38I wonder why.
24:39It's not like that!
24:41You know, there's a common mistake in the correction department.
24:45It's like that, right?
24:46Yes, yes.
24:47He's the type of person that you can't see anything else other than that.
24:50He's straightforward.
24:51I think the key point here is to re-draw his nose.
24:54That's right.
24:55He's a genius, isn't he?
24:56That's right.
24:57Question 2
25:00Everyone, excuse me for interrupting.
25:04Here's another quiz.
25:07This is a picture of a two-shot with his second wife, Josephine.
25:11It's the same as before.
25:13It's hidden in a part of the picture.
25:16What is the picture here?
25:19What?
25:20In that part?
25:21What do you think it is, everyone?
25:23But if you think about it normally, it's a bird, right?
25:25Because it's in the sky.
25:27I don't think it's that.
25:29It's not the sun?
25:30The sun is here.
25:31Ah, the sun.
25:32I see.
25:33I don't think it's that.
25:37What do you think it is?
25:38It's not a flamingo.
25:41Why is it here?
25:43A flying flamingo.
25:44The correct answer is...
25:47This is a great picture!
25:49It's a great picture!
25:55Question 3
25:56This is a picture of a two-shot with his second wife, Josephine.
26:00What is the picture here?
26:04What?
26:05In that part?
26:06That's right.
26:07He must have drawn something he liked.
26:09He really likes his wife so much that he drew her face on top of the picture.
26:14He drew her face on top of the picture.
26:16He drew her face.
26:17That's scary.
26:18His love for her is too strong.
26:20The correct answer is...
26:22This is a picture of his second wife, Clemence, and him when he was young.
26:27That's amazing.
26:28I see.
26:29It's a bit complicated.
26:33This is a great picture.
26:35It's a great picture.
26:37This is a picture of his second wife and him when he was young.
26:40Is that true?
26:41That's scary.
26:42That's scary!
26:44This means that he hasn't forgotten his wife.
26:48That's a kind feeling.
26:51He has love for her.
26:53But what if he drew his wife?
26:55That's right.
26:56That's a bit...
26:57He can't draw her.
26:58He can't draw her.
26:59That's right.
27:02Another quiz.
27:03Let's move on to the next question.
27:06This is a picture of his family on a carriage that Russo drew to make a long-distance relationship.
27:12There is a picture next to it.
27:15What did Russo draw to make a long-distance relationship?
27:23I know this one.
27:24What did he draw to make a long-distance relationship?
27:26The man in the middle of the back seat has a lot of hair.
27:32He has a lot of hair.
27:34That's a long-distance relationship.
27:36That's a long-distance relationship.
27:37That's a long-distance relationship.
27:39But the most obvious difference is that cat.
27:44That's right.
27:48There is no cat.
27:49There is no cat.
27:50There is a cat.
27:51There is a cat.
27:52The correct answer is...
27:55The little animal in front of the carriage and the man on the carriage.
28:00Please take a close look.
28:03See?
28:04He has a lot of hair.
28:05He has a lot of hair.
28:06He has a lot of hair.
28:09He really has a lot of hair.
28:12Mr. Tanaka is correct.
28:14This is the family of a grocery store near Russo's house.
28:21Russo always buys pickles there.
28:25If Russo makes pickles into pickles, he will give them to me as a gift.
28:32He looks like a devil.
28:35That's a dog.
28:37That's a dog.
28:38That's not a patterned dress.
28:41That's a devil.
28:43It looks like a leopard print of a Osaka lady.
28:46I don't know what Russo's animal is.
28:50I don't know what it is.
28:51Look at this picture, for example.
28:54What is this lion being attacked?
28:57What is this?
28:59What is this?
29:00What do you think this is?
29:02His mouth looks like a piranha.
29:05A hippo?
29:06A hippo?
29:07A hippo?
29:08A hippo has a thin face.
29:11That's right.
29:12It looks like a boar, but it's not.
29:18In the first place, lions don't live in the jungle.
29:23I see.
29:24I see.
29:25I see.
29:26I see.
29:27I see.
29:28I see.
29:29I see.
29:30I see.
29:31I see.
29:32I see.
29:33I see.
29:35That's a tooth.
29:36That's a tooth.
29:37That's a tooth.
29:38That's amazing.
29:40That's amazing.
29:41It's amazing.
29:42I'm afraid it's a good picture overall.
29:47Please stay tuned for more of Russo's story.
29:51In fact, even after 60 years old, Russo is still a troublemaker.
29:57Russo was too poor, but he was suffering from poverty.
30:00He believed the story of an ex-banker, and was forced to do things like a money carrier.
30:07He was arrested again and imprisoned.
30:12He did things like a young man who applied for a dark part-time job.
30:19He was released a month later.
30:21Russo drew this picture.
30:26People playing football.
30:29It looks like a lot of fun,
30:31but it's a picture of prisoners playing in the prison.
30:37It's true that they're wearing prisoners' clothes,
30:39and they're the people who don't get along with the soldiers.
30:43However, Russo seemed to have fallen in love with the second prison,
30:47and he was encouraged by it.
30:51It's a picture of Pablo Picasso.
30:55Picasso is 37 years younger than Russo,
30:58but he was a huge fan of Russo.
31:02The young Picasso bought Russo's painting for 5 francs, about 5,000 yen.
31:09Picasso adored this painting.
31:12It seems that he kept it in his hand for the rest of his life.
31:16In order to encourage Russo,
31:19Picasso opened a nightclub called Yube to praise Russo in his atelier, Sentakusen.
31:25Picasso, Black, and Roland,
31:28the talented young artists,
31:31came together and said,
31:32Long live Russo!
31:35They were so excited to drink and sing.
31:40Russo performed his own song on his favorite violin,
31:44and he was so excited.
31:47He fell asleep at the end.
31:49He had the best day of his life.
31:53However, in fact,
31:55Russo's reputation began to explode in his later years.
32:00Especially the N-series, which Russo called a foreign landscape,
32:03and which was inspired by the jungle.
32:08This is a painting of a snake-user woman,
32:10which he painted when he was 63 years old.
32:13It was displayed at the Salon d'Automne,
32:16which is not an independent exhibition that anyone can exhibit,
32:19but only works that have passed the examination.
32:23Boral, the painter, bought more and more of Russo's paintings from this time.
32:27Cezanne, Degas, Gauguin, Goh, Renoir,
32:31and Picasso's talent
32:33were quickly recognized by him.
32:35He was a great painter.
32:37Russo's paintings were sold at a good price,
32:40and he thought,
32:42I'm finally getting out of poverty.
32:46Russo fell in love with a 54-year-old widow.
32:50He gave her a lot of money
32:52and gave her all his property,
32:54including the will.
32:58The title of the painting that Russo painted in his last year was...
33:08This is the culmination.
33:12Wow!
33:14The title of the painting that Russo painted in his last year was...
33:26This is the culmination.
33:28Wow!
33:30Don't you feel the charm that seems to be sucked in?
33:33It's just called Russo's culmination.
33:36It's wonderful.
33:38It's just called Russo's culmination.
33:40It's wonderful.
33:45However, at that time,
33:47he was diagnosed with a leg disease and was hospitalized.
33:51His condition worsened,
33:53and Russo lost his life.
33:55and Russo lost his life.
33:57He was 66 years old.
34:01In his last year,
34:03his paintings were sold at a good price,
34:05and he made a lot of money,
34:07but later on,
34:09his paintings were so bad
34:11that he couldn't even paint his own funeral.
34:13It's a Russo's story.
34:15Don't you think he's a cute guy?
34:21This is a painting called
34:23A Dream in Her Last Year.
34:25This is a painting called A Dream in Her Last Year.
34:26It's a masterpiece!
34:28See how it's colored beautifully?
34:32The color of the jungle was highly appreciated.
34:36When Russo was in the army, he went to the jungle in Mexico with Napoleon III's army
34:43and wrote this with the experience of that time.
34:46It's a good story.
34:47But everyone believed it.
34:49But after he died, I looked into it.
34:52Russo didn't go to Mexico.
34:54He didn't?
34:55He didn't leave France at all.
34:56He didn't?
34:57Really?
34:59It's natural.
35:02There are some strange metaphors.
35:05I don't understand.
35:07But this is amazing.
35:09He went to the shrimp farm and the jungle.
35:12There are some strange animals.
35:15It's a collection of Russo's works.
35:17Amazing.
35:19I wonder if the balance of the picture is taken.
35:23It's taken.
35:24I think so.
35:25I think Russo is not just a naturalist.
35:30There aren't many artists who can leave such a comprehensive work in the third year of his life.
35:38There is a peak period.
35:40It's normal to fall from there.
35:43He wrote the most amazing work in the third year of his life.
35:49Please look at this picture again.
35:53Russo World is still going on.
36:00Please look at this picture again.
36:03This is a work called Brave Pranksters.
36:06This is the best.
36:07There is an unknown animal.
36:10There is something like a magic hand.
36:13What is that?
36:14It's a magic hand.
36:16There is something like a rotor in the middle.
36:18What is that?
36:20Is it filled with water?
36:22Is it filled with water?
36:24What does that mean?
36:26There is a machine that injects fertilizers.
36:31It injects hyponex.
36:33It's a water dispenser.
36:35A water dispenser?
36:36Russo saw it at the botanical garden and drew it.
36:39I thought the water dispenser was also a plant, so I drew it.
36:42That's not true.
36:45But that's how the picture was taken.
36:50I think Russo was criticized for being too vivid and flashy at the time.
36:58But now, Russo's re-evaluation is exploding in the 1960s and 1970s when pop art was popular.
37:09There are a lot of illustrators who imitate Russo.
37:14But it's no good.
37:16If a bad person draws it, it will never be Russo.
37:21I feel like I understand something.
37:23But it's similar to Angles.
37:25Is that so?
37:26No matter how many years you do it, it's still bad.
37:30That's not a class.
37:32No one has evaluated it.
37:34If you die, please evaluate it.
37:38As a result, the balance of the whole picture was lost.
37:42This person has a great sense of color.
37:45If you pierce through the spear, a big reversal will occur.
37:50That's the most attractive part.
37:52Every picture is just a scratch.
37:56That's what the era was looking for.
37:58On the contrary, it was a boom era.
38:01On the contrary, it was amazing.
38:03When I first saw it, I wondered why this little girl wasn't so cute.
38:09I was curious about everything.
38:11Even if we look at it, it's very beautiful.
38:14I've been using colors for a long time.
38:18Now I'm a new person.
38:22I've seen it all over again.
38:25I've seen it all over again.
38:27I've seen it all over again.
38:31The 35th Takamatsu-no-Miya World Cultural Festival.
38:37This year, the award was awarded to artists who have achieved world-class achievements in the fields of painting, sculpture, architecture, music, theater, and video.
38:48This award is chosen from all over the world by people who represent the cultural arts of our time across borders and ethnic groups.
38:58This year, the award goes to the French conceptual artist Sophie Carl.
39:05This is her work.
39:08It's an art that a stranger takes a picture of her sleeping in her bed and expresses it with pictures and letters.
39:16Modern art is like anything to me.
39:20I've been thinking about it more and more.
39:23I don't know where the real thing comes from.
39:28It's not an illusion.
39:31When it comes to art, I feel like I don't know.
39:35In other words, it's up to you to decide whether you like it or not.
39:42Art is not for studying.
39:45It's for having fun.
39:49It's okay to be bad at art.
39:51We look forward to seeing you again.

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