

Face of Britain by Simon Schama
Δωρεάν δοκιμή του BBC Select
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Σ1 Ε1 – The Face of Power
28 Σεπτεμβρίου 201550 λεπτάPortraits, especially of the powerful, can involve a battle for control between the artist and the subject. Historian Simon Schama explores the eternal power of portraiture. He investigates how a painting celebrating Winston Churchill's 80th birthday ended in disaster for both the painter and his sitter and how photography allowed Queen Victoria to rebrand the British monarchy as a modern family.Δωρεάν δοκιμή του BBC SelectΣ1 Ε2 – Faces of the People
28 Σεπτεμβρίου 201550 λεπτάWhile most portraits have been of the great and the good who pay to be flattered, some artists have taken all of humanity as their subject. Historian Simon Schama looks at those who have plunged into the crowd and given us the faces of the people. From Hogarth's portrayals of London’s rogues to the suffragette rampage against the nation's art galleries that unleashed the dark side of photography.Δωρεάν δοκιμή του BBC SelectΣ1 Ε3 – The Face of Fame
28 Σεπτεμβρίου 201550 λεπτάFrom images of naval hero Francis Drake to iconic photographs of Princess Diana, the craving for celebrity fuels the British psyche. Simon Schama looks at portraits of the famous and asks what the celebrated faces of Britain's past and present tell us about its national character. From Cecil Beaton’s seductive portraits of the rich to glossy magazines, how has celebrity culture changed?Δωρεάν δοκιμή του BBC SelectΣ1 Ε4 – The Look of Love
28 Σεπτεμβρίου 201550 λεπτάBy fixing the faces of loved ones in time through pictures, we can defy separation, distance, time, even death. Historian Simon Schama explores how love portraits allow us to fulfil our craving to keep the ones we love close to us. Francis Bacon's posthumous portraits of his lover and the final photograph of John Lennon and Yoko Ono show the power of portraiture to immortalize love.Δωρεάν δοκιμή του BBC SelectΣ1 Ε5 – The Face in the Mirror
28 Σεπτεμβρίου 201550 λεπτάWhat do self-portraits say about both the creative minds of the artists who produced them and the wider human condition? Historian Simon Schama explores the complex motivations behind some of our most intriguing self-portraits. From Tracy Emin's bed to Lucien Freud's examinations of his ageing body, he explores how all self-portraits stand on a knife-edge between self-indulgence and self-scrutiny.Δωρεάν δοκιμή του BBC Select