ART GALLERY STRIKE
Cut to Art Gallery. A large sign
says: 'Italian Masters of the Renaissance'. Two art critics wandering
through. They stop in front of a large Titian canvas. The canvas is about ten
foot high by six foot wide.
First Critic: (M.P.)
Aren't they marvellous? The strength and boldness... life and power in those
colours.
Second Critic: (E.I.)
This must be Titian's masterpiece.
First Critic: Oh indeed - if
only for the composition alone. The strength of those foreground figures ... the
firmness of the line...
Second Critic: Yes, the
confidence of the master at the height of his powers.
At this point a man in a country
smock and straw hat and a straw in his mouth comes up to the painting and with a
very businesslike manner presses the nipple of a nude in the painting. Ding dong
sound of a front doorbell. He stands tapping his feet and whistling soundlessly
besides the painting. He nods at the critics. Cut to the top of the painting to
see that one of the figures has disappeared leaving a blank. The camera pans
down the painting as we hear footsteps; as if coming down a lot of stone steps.
Eventually the camera comes to rest beside where the country bumpkin is standing
and a door opens in the painting. We do, not see who has opened it, but can
assume it is the cherub.
Cherub: (T.G.)
Yes?
Bumpkin: (T.J.)
Hello sonny, your dad in?
Cherub: Yes.
Bumpkin: Could I speak to him please?
It's the man from 'The Haywain'.
Cherub: Who?
Bumpkin: The man from 'The Haywain'
by Constable.
Cherub: Dad... it's the man from 'The
Haywain’ by Constable to see you.
Solomon: (G.C.)
Coming.
Sound of footsteps. Cut to another
close up on the painting and we see the main figure disappearing. This figure
suddenly puts his head round the door.
Solomon: Hello? How are you? Come on
in.
Bumpkin: No, no can't stop, just
passing by, actually.
Solomon: Oh, where are you now?
Bumpkin: Well may you ask. We just
been moved in next to a room full of Brueghels... terrible bloody din. Skating
all hours of the night. Anyway, I just dropped in to tell you there's been a
walk-out in the Impressionists.
Solomon: Walk-out, eh?
Bumpkin: Yeah. It started with the 'Déjeuner
Sur L'Herbe' lot, evidently they were moved away from above the radiator or
something. Anyway, the Impressionists are all out. Gainsborough's Blue Boy's
brought out the eighteenth-century English portraits, the Flemish School's
solid, and the German woodcuts are at a meeting now.
Solomon: Right. Then I'll get the
Renaissance School out.
Bumpkin: OK, meeting 4.30 - 'Bridge
at Arles'.
Solomon: OK, cheerio - good luck,
son.
Bumpkin: OK.
The door shuts and we hear Solomon's
voice over.
Solomon: Right - everybody out.
We see various famous paintings whose
characters suddenly disappear.
Voices: I'm off. I'm off. I'm off,
dear. (etc.)
Mix through to front room of a
suburban house. A man is sawing his wife in two in the classic long box.
Radio: (M.P.)
Here is the News... (the man
pauses for a moment and looks at radio, then resumes sawing; we zoom in to close
up on the radio. There is a window behind it; as the radio talks, a group of
paintings with picket signs pass by) by an almost unanimous vote, paintings in
the National Gallery voted to continue the strike that has emptied frames for
the last week. The man from Constable's 'Haywain' said last night that there was
no chance of a return to the pictures before the weekend. Sir Kenneth Clarke has
said he will talk to any painting if it can help bring a speedy end to the
strike (a ghastly scream out of vision; the sawing stops abruptly) At Sotheby's,
prices dropped dramatically as leading figures left their paintings. (Cut to
Sotheby's)
Auctioneer: (J.C.)
What am I bid for
Vermeer's 'Lady Who Used to be at a Window'? Do I hear two bob?
Voice: Two bob!
Auctioneer: Gone. Now what am I bid
for another great bargain? Edward Landseer's 'Nothing at Bay'.
Pull out to reveal man standing
beside auctioneer with the painting (the stag is missing). Cut to a group of
famous characters from famous paintings who are clustered round the camera.
Botticelli's Venus is in the centre jabbing her fingers at camera.
Venus: All we bloody want is a little
bit of bloody consultation.
Fade sound of them all shouting and
jostling etc. Bring up sound of radio out of vision.
Radio: At a mass meeting at Brentford Football Ground, other works of art voted to come out in support of the paintings. (still in animation cut to Brentford football ground with famous statues in the stands) The vote was unanimous. (they all put their hands up) with one abstention. (cut to close up of 'Venus De Milo'; cut to TV Centre and slow zoom in) Meanwhile, at Television Centre work began again on a sketch about Ypres. A spokesman for the sketch said: he fully expected it to be more sensible this time.