Pieter
Bruegel the Elder’s The Hunters in the Snow is a study of apocalypse. In 1565,
the year the painting was completed, as a number of climatologists and
historians have noted, Europe was in the midst of the Little Ice Age.¹ People
starved. Agricultural communities regressed to hunting and gathering. Good
Christians regressed to survival of the fittest. Except for one dead fox and a
tiny, full-ish game bag, Bruegel’s hunters have come home empty-handed. They
pass a tavern whose sign shows Hubertus, the patron saint of hunting. The sign
hangs crookedly, one stiff gust away from falling.
The
Hunters in the Snow is also an extraordinarily gentle painting. For Nicolaes
Jonghelinck, the Antwerp banker who commissioned it, starvation was a distant
curiosity. Bruegel’s Low Land countryside was carefully scrubbed of all signs
of religious strife and simmering rebellion, leaving Jonghelinck to enjoy the
crisp harmonies of black trees on white snow and the ravishing bluish greens of
sky and ice. The final product must have seemed almost as anachronistically
tranquil in 1565 as it does today—so steeped in nostalgia it was destined to
end up on Christmas cards.
We tend
to like our old masters a little naughty, and Bruegel fits our preferences only
too well. He painted mud and blood and shit (his nickname was “the Turd”),
dressed Christ’s torturers as contemporary Habsburg soldiers, and left behind
so many dirty sketches his widow had to burn them. Hunters has its share of
sardonic touches (notice the chimney fire in the distance—the nasty joke of too
much heat in the midst of too much cold), but somehow they don’t overwhelm the
image. Even after you accept that you’re staring at a town on the brink of mass
starvation, you can let yourself be seduced by the beauty of the landscape. The
painting’s sentimentality doesn’t mask its “true” horror any more than its
horror masks an underlying sentimentality: each is as true as the other.
Some
paintings cry out for interpretation. Hunters, I think, cries out for something
more like resolution in a musical sense: counterpoint, improvisation,
variations on its themes. A number of famous poets—William Carlos Williams,
John Berryman, Walter de la Mare—wrote ekphrastic responses to Bruegel’s
painting, and they’re all kind of terrible. They trudge past the details of
Hunters, making a mockery of the painter’s light touch. At least part of the
problem with the literary interpretations of Hunters is language itself.
Viewers are free to glide over Bruegel’s image, drinking in its figures and
colors and themes in a single long gulp, but readers must settle for the
strictures of a beginning, middle, and end, with every element of the painting
assigned its own rank and value. Even W.H. Auden’s “Musée des Beaux Arts,”
probably the best Bruegel poem, can’t help falling into this trap. Auden lovers
remember the second stanza, about Bruegel’s Landscape with the Fall of Icarus,
but the first, modeled in part on the painter’s The Census at Bethlehem, may be
even more revealing:
About
suffering they were never wrong,
The old
Masters: how well they understood
Its
human position: how it takes place
While
someone else is eating or opening
a window
or just walking dully along;
How,
when the aged are reverently, passionately waiting
For the
miraculous birth, there always must be
Children
who did not specially want it to happen, skating
On a
pond at the edge of the wood:
Auden
praises Bruegel, in effect, for simultaneity, the strange tragicomedy that arises
from many different parts jostling for attention. But no poem, not even his,
can truly convey the sense of this simultaneity, because no reader can read two
words at the same time. When Auden makes words out of Bruegel’s paintings, he
winds up with something like tragicomedy, but perhaps closer to comedy than
tragedy: he begins with suffering and dilutes it with skating, rather than
beginning with skating and poisoning it with suffering. It’s lovely, but it’s
not quite Bruegel. In Hunters, neither ice skating nor suffering is allowed the
last word—or, to borrow from the Bruegel scholar Edward Snow, “It is difficult
. . . to know which is host and which is parasite in this symbiosis.”
Bruegel
seems like a better fit for a certain type of film than for poetry. His
indiscriminate eye; his contempt for obvious “takeaways”; his wide, lucid
images withholding judgment—in all these ways, he anticipates the “slow cinema”
of the last few decades. It seems appropriate that director Andrei Tarkovsky, a
pivotal figure in the flourishing of this kind of cinema, should be the first
major filmmaker to put Hunters to work onscreen.
Tarkovsky
left behind two unmistakable Hunters homages, one a long, aching look at the
image and the other a bizarre, fractured tableau vivant. Even if he’d shot
neither, people would compare his work to Bruegel’s. Andrei Rublev (1966) opens
with one of the most Bruegel-esque scenes ever filmed: medieval peasants build
a hot air balloon, launch it with one of their number tied beneath, and hoot
with delight as he floats off over the countryside before crashing Icarus-like
to earth. The scene ends with a zoom shot of the ground—Tarkovsky, like
Bruegel, is always looking down at his figures, so that they don’t seem to
reach up to the heavens so much as sink into the mud.
When
Tarkovsky sends his characters off into the heavens, they look back at terra
firma with a mixture of longing and pain, far more powerful than longing alone.
In Solaris (1972), the scientist Kris Kelvin (his surname echoing the
temperature scale) travels to a space station orbiting a distant planet. The
space station is decorated with Bruegel paintings that serve as constant,
bittersweet reminders of the world Kelvin, whose wife committed suicide, has
left behind. Like Auden, Tarkovsky admired the seductive clutter of Bruegel’s
work. In an interview with French film critic Michel Ciment, he noted that
“there’s something very Russian”—something very good, we can surmise—“about . .
. the way [his] pictures always have parallel action, with numerous characters
each busily going about their own business.”
How
strange, then, that in Solaris’s most famous scene Bruegel is stripped of
precisely that quality. The single wide shot of Hunters is broken into a series
of extreme close-ups: the camera follows Kelvin’s gaze slowly, almost tenderly,
across the surface of the painting, and the soundtrack fills with ambient
sounds, some familiar, some not. The paradox of the scene, or at least one of
many, is that by studying Bruegel’s painting so intimately, Tarkovsky makes it
seem not just strange but otherworldly. It’s as if the intensity of the
character’s nostalgia (or is it Tarkovsky’s?) brings Bruegel almost, but not
quite, to life—appropriately so, since Kelvin is standing next to a creature
who is almost but not quite his wife.
Would
this scene be half as powerful if it featured another painting—another Bruegel
painting, even? In Hunters, longing and horror are inextricably mixed, and no
director was better than Tarkovsky at exploring the relationship between the
two, showing how our secret desires lurch on like zombies long after we think
we’re through with them. A few minutes of screen time later, Kelvin’s “wife”
commits suicide once again by drinking liquid nitrogen, and it’s hard not to
look at her lifeless body, recall the gorgeous blue-greens of Bruegel’s frozen
ponds, and feel your heart being yanked in two directions at once. Horror and
longing are, if anything, more intricately bound in Tarkovsky’s second Hunters
homage, from The Mirror (1975), which intercuts a winter scene, nearly
identical to the one in the painting, with various enchanting or disturbing
images, including stock footage of Hitler and nuclear annihilation.
The Mirror - Andrei Tarkovsky
It’s
perfectly clear and perfectly mysterious, surprising but also frank in a way
that feels inevitable, as if Soviet scientists had invented a way to turn
dreams into movies and made a sleeping Tarkovsky their first test subject. It
reflects Tarkovsky’s belief that Bruegel and other old masters put aside “allegorical
tendentiousness” in favor of sheer “vividness,” so that they were precise about
the things they painted and enigmatic about the emotions the objects should
elicit. “A true artistic image,” he wrote in his book of reflections Sculpting
in Time, “gives the beholder a simultaneous experience of the most complex,
contradictory, sometimes even mutually exclusive feelings”—as apt a description
of Hunters as it is of his own films.
Since
the ‘70s, Hunters has made a number of
film cameos: in Alain Tanner’s In the White City (1983), in Lars von Trier’s
Melancholia (2011), in Abbas Kiarostami’s 24 Frames (2017). One reason there
haven’t been more, one suspects, is Tarkovsky’s beatification among cinephiles.
Using the painting, post-Solaris and Mirror, reminds viewers of Tarkovsky as
much as Bruegel, and only fools or geniuses would court that comparison.
I’m not
sure if von Trier is a genius or a fool, but in the first eight minutes of
Melancholia alone, he swaggers from one homage to another: Bruegel, Tarkovsky,
Alain Resnais, Henry Wallis, John Everett Millais, and so on—if you dare to
throw one master into the mix, you might as well throw them all. Like Hunters,
von Trier’s film is about an apocalyptic event that is both horrifying and
unspeakably beautiful: the collision of Earth with the rogue planet
Melancholia. The film has a hard, chilly virtuosity but none of the painting’s
taut neutrality—if Hunters holds horror and beauty side-by-side, Melancholia
mashes them together until it’s impossible to tell them apart. In the seconds
leading up to the apocalypse, the world becomes as beautiful as a painting. And
even this, von Trier hints, is just a preamble to the overwhelming beauty of
destruction, which no artist, not even Bruegel, could have imagined. Almost as
soon as Hunters appears onscreen, it bursts into flame.
In his
final film, 24 Frames, Kiarostami gives Bruegel the opposite treatment—his
Hunters is a quiet land of dogs and crackling fires. “I always wonder to what
extent the artist aims to depict the reality of a scene,” the film’s only
intertitle reads. “Painters capture only one frame of reality and nothing
before or after it.” And so, Kiarostami gives us a half-still,
half-computer-animated Hunters, with the hunters frozen in place but smoke rising
from chimneys and birds pecking around on the ground. The results are charming
but superfluous in a way that makes the original image seem more miraculously
whole. The film’s twenty-three other “frames” (discrete fixed-camera scenes)
are based on photographs, and one wonders if Hunters was left in as evidence of
a dead end—Kiarostami’s modest admission that, even with four-and-a-half
centuries of history on his side, he can’t add much to Bruegel beyond a few
puffs of smoke.
Kiarostami’s
is not the most ambitious reinterpretation of Hunters. But it is in some ways
the most characteristic of the bunch—the one that sums up the others’ successes
and failures. In some sense, every poem and film I’ve discussed fails to
capture the full meaning of Bruegel’s original, and succeeds, if it succeeds at
all, only by owning up to that failure.
No
modern viewer can see a sixteenth-century painting quite the same way its
original viewers did—as the period changes, so does the eye. But one important
reason Hunters remains alluring—and, perhaps, a reason it has enjoyed such a
warm friendship with poetry and film—is that a sense of failure, of the lost
meaning floating just out of reach, seems built into the painting. If we can’t
feel exactly what Bruegel’s contemporaries felt, we can still experience some
of the thwarted enlightenment the painting evokes. The art inspired by Hunters,
taken together, offers a rare strain of nostalgia, not for the world
Jonghelinck lived in or the one he imagined when he glanced at Bruegel’s work,
but the imaginary world Bruegel himself was hinting at: a place where horror is
alive and well but, tempered with beauty, at least adds up to something more
than itself.
Revisiting
poems and clips for this article, I imagined that I was watching a single
continuous film. The film is shot and narrated from the perspective of a
typical modern viewer—in my head he looks a little like Kris Kelvin. This
viewer studies Hunters carefully, marveling at little details and muttering
clever poetic observations. Slowly, his admiration changes to longing, then
confusion, then envy. He tries to make Bruegel’s painting come alive, first by
prodding and shaking it, then by using tricks of modern science. Nothing works.
In the end, the viewer burns the painting rather than have to look at it any
longer. In his dreams, he is haunted by the afterimage.
1 The
benchmark work on this topic is Hans Neuberger, “Climate in Art,” Weather, vol.
25, no. 2, February 1970, pp. 46-82, based on a survey of 12,000 museum-held
paintings created between 1400 and 1967. Notable subsequent analyses include
H.H. Lamb, Climate, History, and the Modern World, London, Routledge, 1982,
esp. “Artists’ Impressions,” pp. 233-35, where Bruegel’s Hunters is
specifically discussed; Brian M. Fagan, The Little Ice Age: How Climate Made
History, 1300-1850, New York, Basic Books, 2000; Peter J. Robinson, “Ice and
Snow in Paintings of Little Ice Age Winters,” Weather, vol. 60, no. 2, February
2005, pp. 37-41; and Philipp Blom, Nature’s Mutiny: How the Little Ice Age of
the Long Seventeenth Century Transformed the West and Shaped the Present, New
York, Liveright, 2019, esp. the chapter “A Picture of the World,” pp. 109-17.
Bruegel
as Cinema. By Jackson Arn. Art in America , December 1, 2020.
Interesting
website : Paintings in Film
This
website is about the intermedial [cross-genre media change, interaction between
whole genres, specifically painting and film] use of paintings as an integral
narrative part of feature films.
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