

Simon Schama's Power of Art
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S1 F1 – Caravaggio
20. Oktober 200652 Min.Caravaggio didn’t just confine drama to his remarkable, shadowy masterpieces. His whole life was drama. He spent years on the run after killing someone during a duel, trying to paint his way out of trouble. And this passion for life spills out on to the canvas in his spellbinding, breathtaking works. Art expert Simon Schama explains how the great man changed the way the divine was witnessed.BBC Select kostenlos testenS1 F2 – Bernini
26. Oktober 200651 Min.The meeting of Heaven and Earth is illustrated by what can only be described as orgasmic bliss. For centuries, many tried to ignore the obvious sensual overtones of Bernini’s masterpiece, The Ecstasy of St Theresa. But one glimpse of the sculpture, and in particular the sainted nun’s facial expression, gives the game away. Art expert Simon Schama explores this wild mixture of sex and the sacred.BBC Select kostenlos testenS1 F3 – Rembrandt
2. November 200652 Min.Rembrandt needed a break. His career was on the skids, but a new, important commission was set to redeem him. The painting that became known as Claudius Civilis was supposed to be triumphant, but instead the painter made it ugly and vindictive. It practically ended his career, and the canvas was destroyed by Rembrandt’s own hand. Art expert Simon Schama tries to unravel the mystery behind it.BBC Select kostenlos testenS1 F4 – David
9. November 200651 Min.Jacques Louis David’s Death of Marat is the defining image of the French Revolution. But for decades it was hidden away, ignored and almost feared. The painting was unsaleable and the painter reviled. What made this brutal work so dangerous? And where does art end and propaganda begin? Acclaimed art historian Simon Schama tells the story of an artist, an artwork and a bloody revolution.BBC Select kostenlos testenS1 F5 – Turner
16. November 200650 Min.Simon Schama recounts moments of drama in the making of great works of art. How Britain's greatest painter, JMW Turner, created one his most powerful paintings: "The Slave Ship."BBC Select kostenlos testenS1 F6 – Van Gogh
23. November 200651 Min.It may have been his final painting. Certainly it was created in the last days of his life. But how much can be read into Van Gogh’s masterpiece, Wheat Field with Crows? He wrote of feeling like a bird trapped in a cage. But the painting also harnesses the rush of life that so many of his later works possessed. Art expert Simon Schama weighs up the despair and triumph contained in the painting.BBC Select kostenlos testenS1 F7 – Picasso
30. November 200651 Min.In this Power of Art episode, historian Simon Schama discovers what motivated Pablo Picasso to depict the full-on horror of war at Guernica. In 1937, the defenseless Basque town was bombed by Nazi air forces during the Spanish Civil War. There Schama reveals why Málaga-born Picasso, whose bohemian paintings had been void of contemporary political context to that point, came to create this visio...BBC Select kostenlos testenS1 F8 – Rothko
7. Dezember 200651 Min.Do paintings need to have human forms in them to represent humanity? Mark Rothko didn’t think so. In fact, he felt the people in paintings got in the way and that connection should be through a completely new language. He certainly achieved this with his masterful Seagram murals, a commission that was never delivered. Art historian Simon Schama tries to make sense of Rothko’s vision.BBC Select kostenlos testen