The Spanish selection for the 89th Academy Awards for Best Foreign Film,…
Guernica: The Last Exile
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The story of the historic arrival of Picasso's iconic mural, 'Guernica', in Spain, just seven months after the 1981 coup d'état attempt. The painting, a powerful symbol of the horrors of the Spanish Civil War and the brutal attacks by fascist aircraft on civilians, made its way to Spain following a complex and secretive political operation.
For the first time, witnesses and key figures from that pivotal moment share their stories, shedding light on the intricate journey that brought 'Guernica' to its homeland. This moment not only marked the culmination of Spain's Transition to democracy but also restored one of Picasso's most significant works to the nation, reinforcing the enduring power of art in shaping history.
“A reminder of the persistence of historical memory and the role of art as a witness to conflict and hope.” - Furano, Moviementarios
“The multiple facets of 'Guernica': from icon of exiles to guardian of democracy.” – Nora G. Fornés, El País
“Picasso's “Guernica”, a return that closed the circle of the Spanish Civil War and exile in 1981.” – José Luis Picón, Infobae
Credits and citation support are not available for this title yet.
A MARC record for this title is not available yet.
Distributor subjects
History; Fascism + Repression; Exile; International Relations; Communications + Journalism; Iberian Studies; Political Science; Short Films; Visual ArtsKeywords
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Pablo Picasso paints Guernica in Paris
between May and June 1937.
00:00:15.625 --> 00:00:18.417
The outbreak of the civil war in 1936
and Franco's long dictatorship
00:00:18.583 --> 00:00:22.292
for almost 40 years meant that the
painting did not enter Spain until 1981.
00:00:22.875 --> 00:00:25.708
I grew up hearing about Guernica.
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My father, Javier Tusell,
00:00:29.292 --> 00:00:32.500
was appointed Director General
of Fine Arts in 1979.
00:00:29.917 --> 00:00:32.917
Genoveva Tusell and Javier Tusell
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Between 1979 and 1981, at home
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Genoveva Tusell - Author of "El Guernica Recovered".
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there was talk of nothing
else but Guernica.
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'I went to New York
because of Guernica.'
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'The Guernica, the Guernica.'
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And at six years old I ended up
deciding that Guernica
00:00:47.333 --> 00:00:50.500
was something that my father had made.
That he had painted Guernica.
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It was only later that
I truly realized the importance
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of what I had experienced, and that
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I had been able to witness
firsthand a historic event
00:01:01.875 --> 00:01:04.833
for our country:
The Guernica's arrival in Spain.
00:01:06.292 --> 00:01:10.333
As the museum's director,
the Guernica is a big responsibility
00:01:10.375 --> 00:01:13.000
because it is, let's say, the key
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Manuel Borja Villel - Director of the Reina Sofía Museum since 2006
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from which our entire collection
is built around.
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It is a symbol of the recovery
of our democratic freedoms
00:01:21.792 --> 00:01:25.750
and of the reconciliation
between all spaniards.
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Marisa Flórez - Photojournalist for EL PAÍS since 1976
00:01:26.999 --> 00:01:30.083
The emotion that you keep
getting from all those
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disemboweled, dying figures
has never been achieved by anyone else
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Ángeles García - Journalist for EL PAÍS since 1976
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in such powerful way.
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I believe it depicts the suffering
of the spanish people bombarded by fascism.
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And this is very important because it
had a significance back then
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and a significance today as well
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where there's a new
cultural war phenomenon,
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advocated by elements that come
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Severiano Hernández - Deputy Director General of Spanish State Archives
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from the same people
that bombed Guernica.
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But in this sense,
Guernica's arrival
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Álvaro Martínez Novillo, Javier Tusell and Íñigo Cavero.
Photograph by Jesús González.
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in Spain in 1981 also means
to bring closure,
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not only the closure of a chapter
such as the Civil War
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and all the years of dictatorship,
but also to welcome the great masterpiece
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of our most international artist.
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Guernica: the last exile
00:02:21.000 --> 00:02:24.000
Guernica: the last exile
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Pablo Picasso working on Guernica in 1937.
00:02:32.875 --> 00:02:33.999
He absorbs everything
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that has been explored before,
and then reinvents it all.
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He was a genius since
he was very young.
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Picasso and Miró at the Spanish Pavilion in Paris, 1937.
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In the late 20's and early 30's
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a new generation of artists
begins to emerge.
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They produce a type of work
that is far
00:02:53.333 --> 00:02:55.375
from what he was doing at that time.
00:02:56.000 --> 00:02:59.000
Spanish Pavilion at the International Exposition of Paris, 1937.
00:02:56.625 --> 00:03:00.333
When Picasso got commissioned
by the Republic,
00:03:00.833 --> 00:03:04.667
his was to be the key work,
the most outstanding work of the Pavilion
00:03:04.708 --> 00:03:08.958
of the Spanish Republic at the 1937 Paris
International Exhibit.
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Picasso was already close
with the Government of the Republic.
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Guernica during the initial phase of creation in 1937.
00:03:12.958 --> 00:03:16.792
He'd also been appointed director
of the Prado Museum in 1936,
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and the work was comissioned with the purpose of
showing what was happening in Spain.
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It's true that it took Picasso some time
to find the subject matter for the painting
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and it is told that it was
by looking at the photographs
00:03:29.667 --> 00:03:33.583
of the bombing of Guernica
that he finally found his inspiration.
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On April 26, 1937, in the course of
the Spanish Civil War,
the German Condor Legion and the
Italian Legionary Aviation, fighting on behalf
00:03:41.792 --> 00:03:47.542
of the rebel side against the government
of the Second Republic, launched an attack on the civilian
population of Guernica that almost
completely devastated it.
00:03:47.708 --> 00:03:52.625
When he first presented the painting in Paris,
not everybody liked it.
00:03:52.708 --> 00:03:56.750
Many considered it too avant-garde.
00:03:56.999 --> 00:04:02.208
For others, on the other hand,
it was too political and not artistic enough.
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Guernica at the International Exposition in Paris in 1937.
00:04:02.625 --> 00:04:07.833
From 1938, Guernica was
on loan to be exhibited
00:04:07.917 --> 00:04:10.875
in a series of shows
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whose purpose was to raise funds for the
refugees of the Republic.
00:04:15.417 --> 00:04:18.750
This way, the painting visited
different European cities
00:04:18.792 --> 00:04:21.125
before finally travelling to New York.
00:04:21.167 --> 00:04:24.500
That's when it ended up
being deposited there.
00:04:28.042 --> 00:04:30.417
The curious thing about Guernica is,
that it's a work of art
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which meaning
has been mutating over the years.
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It has been changing.
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The history of Guernica is, in a way,
the history of the culture wars.
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It's clearly a propaganda
element for the Republic.
00:04:49.625 --> 00:04:54.625
It was meant to show the horrors
of the Civil War.
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The disasters of war - Francisco de Goya
00:05:04.833 --> 00:05:05.792
On the other hand,
00:05:05.833 --> 00:05:11.125
is a work that the exiles take
as a symbol of all the spaniards
00:05:11.167 --> 00:05:14.208
that had to abandon their own country.
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I think Franco merely
00:05:18.000 --> 00:05:21.000
Álvaro Martínez Novillo
Art critic and Deputy Director General of Plastic Arts in 1981.
00:05:18.500 --> 00:05:22.583
thought of Picasso
as a communist and that's it.
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That he was a communist,
therefore his work propaganda.
00:05:27.292 --> 00:05:30.833
Communist propaganda, etc.
00:05:32.833 --> 00:05:36.917
Within the richness of
our State archives
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Francisco Franco and Serrano Suñer, 1938
00:05:36.958 --> 00:05:40.958
I have been able to find
files, folders
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named 'Secret files.
Spanish reds in France. Picasso.'
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At that time, there were a lot of
secret files that did
00:05:49.625 --> 00:05:54.167
follow the artist's activities
in France.
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The recognition of the Spanish artist
came very late, and in this sense,
00:05:59.958 --> 00:06:03.333
the recovery of Guernica
and its arrival in 1981,
00:06:03.375 --> 00:06:06.708
somewhat alleviated this situation.
00:06:06.917 --> 00:06:08.999
This was done at a very
decisive moment,
00:06:09.000 --> 00:06:12.000
Adolfo Suárez and Landelino Lavilla in 1978. Archive of Diario 16.
00:06:09.417 --> 00:06:14.208
which was the Transition.
And it's entrusted to a man who really
00:06:15.042 --> 00:06:17.542
deserves all the recognition
00:06:17.583 --> 00:06:20.625
that is Álvaro Martínez Novillo.
00:06:20.667 --> 00:06:24.125
From that moment on
a research process is carried out
00:06:24.875 --> 00:06:29.667
in an attempt to locate all the documents
existing on the subject.
00:06:34.083 --> 00:06:38.458
There was a clear
willingness by the government
00:06:38.500 --> 00:06:41.583
of the Republic to pay for the painting.
Therefore, it belonged to the Spanish State.
00:06:41.875 --> 00:06:45.125
It should be noted that
the artist died in 1973
00:06:45.167 --> 00:06:51.292
but it's not until 1979 that everything
with Picasso's will is solved.
00:06:51.333 --> 00:06:53.458
It takes six years until
his will gets settled.
00:06:53.792 --> 00:06:56.458
And through a letter, in 1979,
00:06:56.875 --> 00:06:59.625
Claude Picasso demands
00:07:00.250 --> 00:07:04.083
that the family must be consulted
00:07:04.125 --> 00:07:07.542
in any matter regarding Guernica.
00:07:07.667 --> 00:07:10.625
Negotiations are carried out
in different areas.
00:07:10.667 --> 00:07:14.167
On one hand, it's true
that it's necessary to demonstrate
00:07:14.583 --> 00:07:15.958
that Spain is a true democracy.
00:07:15.999 --> 00:07:18.042
And this is achieved by
00:07:18.083 --> 00:07:21.458
approving the new Constitution, convening
the first democratic elections.
00:07:21.958 --> 00:07:25.250
On the other hand, there's also another
very important aspect of the negotiations,
00:07:25.292 --> 00:07:28.292
which is to prove that the painting
is indeed Spanish property.
00:07:28.542 --> 00:07:34.125
Picasso never denied that
the Republic had paid for it.
00:07:34.583 --> 00:07:40.333
What happened was that it got paid
from an account with which the embassy
00:07:40.792 --> 00:07:45.458
paid expenses of espionage,
00:07:46.583 --> 00:07:49.625
the influencing of the media,
among other things.
00:07:50.000 --> 00:07:52.542
Now, the receipt has never been found.
00:07:57.000 --> 00:08:00.000
Headquarters of the National Historical Archive, Madrid.
00:08:00.375 --> 00:08:02.000
At that moment,
00:08:02.042 --> 00:08:05.208
the work of one diplomat was decisive:
00:08:05.250 --> 00:08:07.500
Rafael Fernández Quintanilla.
00:08:10.250 --> 00:08:14.500
Fernández Quintanilla contacted
the family of Luis Araquistáin
00:08:13.000 --> 00:08:16.000
Luis Araquistáin - Ambassador of Spain in France 1936 - 1937
00:08:14.708 --> 00:08:18.333
who had been ambassador
of the Republic, in Paris.
00:08:20.208 --> 00:08:25.125
Several documents were bought,
that were key for proving the ownership.
00:08:25.167 --> 00:08:29.292
These documents are, for example,
letters from Luis Araquistáin,
00:08:29.708 --> 00:08:31.292
others from Max Aub.
00:08:32.292 --> 00:08:34.999
But most importantly,
there's a document deposited in
00:08:35.000 --> 00:08:37.750
the National Historical Archive,
which is decisive:
00:08:37.792 --> 00:08:40.708
A list of
propaganda expenses
00:08:41.125 --> 00:08:44.458
from the Spanish Embassy in Paris.
00:08:44.500 --> 00:08:46.333
At the end of the list
00:08:46.375 --> 00:08:50.292
there's an annotation that reads
'Pablo Picasso (Guernica)'
00:08:50.333 --> 00:08:53.375
followed by the amount
of 150,000 francs,
00:08:53.417 --> 00:08:56.999
which is what he got payed
for his work.
00:08:58.542 --> 00:09:01.833
This way it was proven
that the Spanish State
00:09:01.875 --> 00:09:05.000
was indeed
the owner of the work.
00:09:06.250 --> 00:09:10.208
From there, arrangements are made
with the United States,
00:09:10.625 --> 00:09:14.208
and basically, a political apparatus
is put together for the recovery
00:09:14.250 --> 00:09:18.625
of such an emblematic work
with big significance
00:09:18.667 --> 00:09:21.917
for the Transition,
as well as to try to achieve
00:09:21.958 --> 00:09:25.083
the recognition of the suffering
of the Spanish people.
00:09:25.375 --> 00:09:29.750
Well, when the February 23, 1981,
coup d'état took place,
00:09:29.792 --> 00:09:33.250
evidently all personnel
within the Ministry of Culture,
00:09:33.625 --> 00:09:34.667
which had been working
on the negotiations,
00:09:34.708 --> 00:09:36.625
were certain that, at that moment,
00:09:36.667 --> 00:09:40.167
they had definitely lost the work.
00:09:40.375 --> 00:09:44.500
Surprisingly, in the end
the effect was just the opposite.
00:09:53.000 --> 00:09:57.375
One week before its arrival,
we went to New York
00:09:57.417 --> 00:10:02.000
to do the status report of the
00:10:02.125 --> 00:10:04.833
Guernica and its complementary pieces.
00:10:05.000 --> 00:10:06.125
There were
00:10:06.875 --> 00:10:08.917
around 70 pieces.
00:10:08.958 --> 00:10:12.999
That is to say, among drawings,
engravings, other oil paintings,
00:10:13.000 --> 00:10:16.667
other pieces... basically,
00:10:17.417 --> 00:10:21.125
Picasso made a whole lot
00:10:21.875 --> 00:10:25.167
and that lot itself is
a donation from Picasso.
00:10:26.917 --> 00:10:33.083
The MoMA museum
opened at its regular time
00:10:33.208 --> 00:10:34.958
and I believe it closed
at around eight.
00:10:34.999 --> 00:10:37.917
It was at that time that
the MoMA's management
00:10:37.958 --> 00:10:42.208
informs all its personnel
that they're going to proceed to
00:10:43.333 --> 00:10:44.417
roll up Guernica
00:10:44.458 --> 00:10:47.292
because it's about
to be returned to Spain.
00:10:49.000 --> 00:10:51.000
Dismantling of Guernica at the MOMA in New York, 1981.
00:10:49.083 --> 00:10:53.000
The frame was removed,
the painting rolled up in a
00:10:53.042 --> 00:10:54.958
custom-made wooden roll
00:10:55.042 --> 00:10:57.208
and slipped into a box.
00:10:57.292 --> 00:11:00.250
Keep in mind that it wasn't only
Guernica that was being returned,
00:11:00.292 --> 00:11:01.500
it also would have to travel along
00:11:01.542 --> 00:11:06.250
with a series of works that accompany Guernica:
the sketches, as well as
00:11:06.292 --> 00:11:09.999
what's called the postscripts,
which are a series of works that keep
00:11:10.000 --> 00:11:14.750
a thematic relationship with Guernica
and that have accompanied it
00:11:14.917 --> 00:11:18.625
since it arrived in the United States,
making it an indissoluble whole.
00:11:18.708 --> 00:11:22.083
When we heard that
Guernica and the rest
00:11:22.125 --> 00:11:25.875
of the pieces were safe
00:11:25.917 --> 00:11:27.125
in the storage,
00:11:27.167 --> 00:11:30.458
it was really a tremendous relief.
00:11:30.792 --> 00:11:35.000
It was September 10, 1981.
00:11:36.292 --> 00:11:38.875
I got up very early,
at six in the morning,
00:11:38.917 --> 00:11:41.875
because the night before,
the day before,
00:11:42.750 --> 00:11:47.333
we had officially found out
that Guernica was returning to Spain.
00:11:47.000 --> 00:11:51.000
Arrival of Guernica in Madrid, 1981. Photograph by Marisa Flórez.
00:11:49.042 --> 00:11:52.500
Well, at six in the morning
I was already on my feet,
00:11:52.542 --> 00:11:55.792
nervous and, to tell you the truth,
with a lot of expectation
00:11:55.833 --> 00:12:01.333
and very excited to be able
to cover such a moment.
00:12:01.375 --> 00:12:05.542
I left for the airport
with plenty of time
00:12:02.000 --> 00:12:05.000
Arrival of Guernica in Madrid, 1981. Photograph by Marisa Flórez.
00:12:05.667 --> 00:12:08.708
because I knew of the extraordinary
security measures.
00:12:08.750 --> 00:12:12.458
There was security everywhere,
and once we arrived,
00:12:13.083 --> 00:12:17.417
once I arrived at the runway
of the airport
00:12:17.583 --> 00:12:22.708
they made us go
towards the cargo terminal area.
00:12:23.625 --> 00:12:26.042
Well, there was an incredible
atmosphere there.
00:12:25.000 --> 00:12:27.000
Arrival of Guernica in Madrid, 1981. Photograph by Jesús González.
00:12:26.083 --> 00:12:28.208
All the media was there.
00:12:29.333 --> 00:12:30.000
I don't know...
00:12:30.042 --> 00:12:33.125
It felt like a state of anxiety and,
at the same time,
00:12:33.708 --> 00:12:37.542
excitement
for what we were about to witness.
00:12:38.417 --> 00:12:42.042
The hold of the airplane opened
00:12:39.000 --> 00:12:41.000
Álvaro Martínez Novillo, Javier Tusell and Íñigo Cavero.
Photograph by Jesús González.
00:12:42.417 --> 00:12:45.083
and the big wooden box appeared.
00:12:45.208 --> 00:12:48.875
That moment was... well,
everyone that was there
00:12:48.917 --> 00:12:50.042
started to applaud.
00:12:50.083 --> 00:12:53.999
I think it was from nervousness,
from the excitement, from everything.
00:12:51.000 --> 00:12:54.000
Arrival of Guernica in Madrid, 1981. Photograph by Marisa Flórez.
00:13:07.792 --> 00:13:09.750
Immediately after,
00:13:09.792 --> 00:13:13.000
the shipment headed for the Casón.
00:13:13.458 --> 00:13:17.458
I rode along on a motorcycle,
chasing the caravan
00:13:17.500 --> 00:13:22.042
which was not easy with all the security
measures that were in place.
00:13:22.125 --> 00:13:26.208
I tried to take several photos
from the highway bridges
00:13:26.583 --> 00:13:31.500
where I could see the caravan
heading towards Madrid and towards the Casón.
00:13:31.583 --> 00:13:35.999
And the truth is, it was a very, very impressive image,
because such a caravan
00:13:36.000 --> 00:13:39.000
Arrival of Guernica in Madrid, 1981. Photograph by Marisa Flórez.
00:13:36.167 --> 00:13:40.125
would only take place
when a foreign head of State came.
00:13:49.000 --> 00:13:52.000
Javier Tusell at the Casón del Buen Retiro in Madrid.
Photograph by Jesús González.
00:13:52.333 --> 00:13:53.999
It was in October
00:13:54.000 --> 00:13:58.708
when it finally was taken out of the box.
The frame was put back on
00:13:59.083 --> 00:14:03.750
and it became the exhibition
called Picasso Legacy.
00:14:03.792 --> 00:14:06.708
The Guernica exhibition
was inaugurated
00:14:07.083 --> 00:14:10.999
in October, 1981, coinciding with
00:14:11.417 --> 00:14:14.917
the commemoration of
the artist's centennial.
00:14:17.000 --> 00:14:19.000
Guernica at the Casón del Buen Retiro, 1981. Photograph by Marisa Flórez
00:14:19.708 --> 00:14:20.625
Well, the first time I saw it
00:14:20.667 --> 00:14:23.792
was at the Casón del Buen Retiro,
when I first arrived in Madrid.
00:14:23.000 --> 00:14:25.000
Jorge García - Head of Restoration of the Reina Sofía Museum
00:14:23.833 --> 00:14:25.958
At first, there was
a lot of expectation.
00:14:25.999 --> 00:14:27.250
Of course there was.
00:14:27.375 --> 00:14:31.625
You have this work here that
wasn't clear if it was ever going to arrive or not,
00:14:32.167 --> 00:14:35.542
and that year,
although there were long queues, I managed
00:14:35.583 --> 00:14:39.375
to go inside the Casón del Buen Retiro
and see it, there, inside that urn
00:14:39.417 --> 00:14:43.292
flanked by the Guardia Civil
and the flags and everything.
00:14:41.000 --> 00:14:43.000
Guernica at the Casón del Buen Retiro, 1981. Photograph by Marisa Flórez
00:14:50.792 --> 00:14:54.042
There was another photograph
that I was able to take
00:14:54.208 --> 00:14:56.875
which was of the Guardia Civil
00:14:56.958 --> 00:15:00.083
guarding Guernica with a machine gun.
00:15:02.000 --> 00:15:05.000
Guernica at the Casón del Buen Retiro, 1981. Photograph by Marisa Flórez
00:15:02.125 --> 00:15:05.875
A shocking image because
it was the first time that
00:15:06.083 --> 00:15:10.208
the Guardia Civil guarded a painting
00:15:10.250 --> 00:15:13.125
inside of a museum in Spain.
00:15:27.417 --> 00:15:29.500
Guernica
00:15:29.542 --> 00:15:33.042
was a painting
about the conscience of Francoism.
00:15:37.250 --> 00:15:40.292
The fact that Guernica is in Spain
is a way of reminding us
00:15:40.333 --> 00:15:45.167
of our own past, of always having
to pay attention
00:15:45.208 --> 00:15:49.500
to our history, to keep in mind
that we've lived through a civil war.
00:15:50.208 --> 00:15:53.208
And all the suffering
that civil war brought.
00:15:53.250 --> 00:15:56.500
Followed by a very long dictatorship.
00:15:59.458 --> 00:16:02.250
It seems to me that, because Guernica
00:16:02.875 --> 00:16:06.750
is a brilliant work done
by a brilliant man,
00:16:06.792 --> 00:16:09.000
it embodies the values
00:16:10.417 --> 00:16:12.042
of the people of Spain.
00:16:12.083 --> 00:16:16.917
But it also embodies the struggle
of the best of this people
00:16:17.458 --> 00:16:20.500
for the defense of democracy,
and freedom.
00:16:20.917 --> 00:16:24.333
And when we're talking about 'this people'
we're also talking about Europe.
00:16:24.375 --> 00:16:28.458
Because, we must not forget
that what Spain went through
00:16:28.583 --> 00:16:32.875
was precisely the prelude to a war
00:16:32.999 --> 00:16:35.958
that affected practically the entire
00:16:35.999 --> 00:16:37.875
European territory.
00:16:44.417 --> 00:16:46.917
Guernica is there, reminding us
00:16:46.958 --> 00:16:49.875
of all those events in our history,
and reminding us
00:16:49.917 --> 00:16:53.833
that we have to fight
so that none of that ever happens again.
00:17:09.625 --> 00:17:10.958
I believe that, right now,
00:17:10.999 --> 00:17:14.999
Guernica continues to be
the best testimony of what
00:17:15.000 --> 00:17:18.000
Severiano Hernández - Deputy Director General of the State Archives
00:17:15.833 --> 00:17:19.167
the struggle for the values
of democracy is,
00:17:19.417 --> 00:17:23.708
the struggle for freedom and, above all,
the fight to crush fascism.
Distributor: Pragda Films
Length: 19 minutes
Date: 2022
Genre: Expository
Language: Spanish
Grade: Middle School, High School, College, Adult
Color/BW:
Closed Captioning: Available
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