Mad Meg — David Teniers the Younger

Portrait of Dancer Anita Berber — Otto Dix

Portrait of Dancer Anita Berber -- Otto Dix (1925)

Jacob’s Ladder — William Blake

Darwin — Peter Greenaway

Pink Car Crash — Andy Warhol

Opus 161 — Thomas Wilfred

Mute the video. Thomas Wilfred’s Opus 161 played the divine light (?) in Terrence Malick’s film The Tree of Life.

Ghosts Before Breakfast — Hans Richter

White Flag — Jasper Johns

Paralytic Child Walking on All Fours (from Muybridge) — Francis Bacon

Boy Bitten by Lizard — Caravaggio

Bad Dad

Saturn Devouring His Son -- Goya

Nine Classic Paintings Revisited — Peter Greenaway Lectures on Art, Education, and More

(Via the nice people of Open Culture).

“Don’t Take Any Notice of What I’m Going to Say Because I Don’t Know What I’m Talking About” — Tom Stoppard on the Artist’s Bladder

Blockhead Folly — Goya

“I Don’t Usually Have Guests This Deep” — Werner Herzog Visits Stephen Colbert

Vodpod videos no longer available.

“How to Recognize a Piece of Art” — Roberto Bolaño on the Power of Translation

A sample of Roberto Bolaño’s short essay “Translation Is an Anvil” (from New Directions’ forthcoming Between Parentheses, a collection of Bolaño’s essays, newspaper columns, and other ephemera)——

How to recognize a work of art? How to separate it, even if just for a moment, from its critical apparatus, its exegetes, its tireless plagiarizers, its belittlers, its final lonely fate? Easy. Let it be translated. Let its translator be far from brilliant. Rip pages from it at random. Leave it lying in an attic. If after all of this a kid comes along and reads it, and after reading makes it his own, and is faithful to it (or unfaithful, whichever) and reinterprets it and accompanies it on its  voyage to the edge, and both are enriched and the kid adds an ounce of value to its original value, then we have something before us, a machine or a book, capable of speaking to all human beings; not a plowed field but a mountain, not the image of a dark forest but the dark forest, not a flock of birds but the Nightingale.

Head of Medusa — Peter Paul Rubens