Connections: Privilege

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Art preparator Theresa King-Dickinson ruminates on the universal privilege of art appreciation.

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00:00:00:0000 My name is Theresa King-Dickinson, and I am an art preparator for the European Paintings department.

00:10:40:280 When you hear the word privilege you have an assumption about a

00:12:30:150 certain amount of entitlement and the haves and the have-nots.

00:16:30:150 I think people think of the Museum and think that, “I don't want to go there,” or “only

00:36:00:900 certain people go to the Museum.” And for me, privilege is the privilege that I have

00:40:00:900 to have these relationships with artists, to be here and have these works evoke emotion within me.

00:37:10:250 And I think it's an innate privilege that everyone should

00:37:00:0000 have their own say about the work. When I approach art

00:41:00:0000 I come to it, first impression, walk up to something and take a

00:47:00:0000 look. And as I walk closer, I usually start to feel a relationship

00:52:00:0000 towards the sitter. It becomes personal, and it starts to speak to me, the work.

01:01:50:290 Juan de Pareja is looking directly at you, and I know that Juan de Pareja was the

01:07:50:290 slave of Velázquez, but he also was his friend and companion, his assistant in

01:13:50:290 the studio, actually. And I think sometimes knowing the background to the painting

01:19:50:290 and then looking at the work, I'm not so sure that this man could ever have been

01:25:50:290 enslaved by anyone. There are no threads of slavery in his body. He just says

01:32:50:290 beauty and he is full of selfness, he knows who he is. And myself being a person of color, I often

01:41:10:250 look for works with people of color in them, and there are few at the

01:56:00:900 Museum, just because in history there are not that many that have been

02:00:00:900 preserved, and certainly we do have a large collection of works on view.

02:04:00:900 I look at works and I wonder, you know, what was your day like, you know, who are you? I look at

01:56:50:170 this portrait of this woman with this very big, ostentatious dress.

02:02:20:200 And because I am looking at this picture in terms of someone who looks

02:07:20:200 like me, that has my skin tone, that is part of my race, I see him.

02:12:20:200 I look at him, and I wonder is he fearful? Is he okay? Is he taken care of as

02:16:10:190 best he can be, because he certainly isn't part of the family. And you think

02:21:10:190 about the time period, and you think about what went on. It breaks my heart. You

02:26:10:190 have no clue what journey he's taken, and you don't know where he ends up either.

02:31:10:190 Saint Maurice. The ornaments on his armor just say so much about his

02:33:00:0000 personality. And he is certainly a soldier in arms, but wow, he is the

02:39:00:0000 pimp of the sixteenth century. You know, this man of color, well he made out okay.

02:48:40:280 There are pieces of art where all the features of African Americans are over-the-top and

02:53:40:160 turned into something else. Here it's done just so, to let you understand what certain peoples

03:01:40:160 look like, but certainly to keep their beauty intact. And she is stunning, and regal almost.

03:09:40:160 She was a slave, I'm sure. But there was a certain air of just herself,

03:12:00:0000 that she was happy in who she was. It didn't matter her place in

03:17:00:0000 life, what rung on the ladder she stood, she had a major presence.

03:22:00:0000 The Bashi-Bazouk talks to me in a sense of strength that you must have in order to survive in

03:31:50:230 this world. Supposedly Bashi-Bazouk is a soldier that's sort of a renegade, so you sort of say

03:37:50:230 to yourself, “Oh I'm not supposed to like him.” But then when I look, I go, my God, he is bursting

03:43:50:230 out of the frame and he's just telling you that he is proud of who he is and his station in life.

03:49:50:230 You meet very different people every day. You know, you hear people say, “It's my

03:51:50:110 privilege to have met you.” That's a relationship that the artist wants you to have.

03:56:50:110 And what you take away from it is very important.