Episodes
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What Is Art Good For?
S1 E9 - 52m 50s
Explore art in the age of revolution, war and profound scientific change and consider the question: Should art create a separate realm, a place of escape, or should it plunge into the chaos, transforming the way we see and live in the world?
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The Cult of Progress
S1 E8 - 53m 18s
Examine the rise and fall of “progress” as an ideology, and see how the “civilizing” project that arose from Enlightenment ideas was fraught with contradictions that troubled European artists in different ways.
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Color and Light
S1 E7 - 52m 44s
Explore the story of light and color in art - both in the search for greater realism and spiritual ecstasy. Journey from Gothic cathedrals and Indian courtly painting to modern art.
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Paradise on Earth
S1 E6 - 53m
Explore one of humanity’s deepest artistic urges: the depiction of nature. But landscape painting is seldom a straightforward portrayal of observed nature; it's a projection of dreams, idylls, escapes and refuges—the elusive paradise on earth.
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Renaissances
S1 E5 - 53m 20s
Travel east and west to explore the connections and rivalries between Renaissance Italy and the Islamic empires that experienced their own cultural flowering in the 15th and 16th centuries. Both spheres were open to influences flowing both ways.
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Encounters
S1 E4 - 53m 30s
See how advances in seafaring and a thirst for trade and exploration sent human beings around the planet. Distant and disparate cultures met for the first time, and art became the great interface by which civilizations understood each other.
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God and Art
S1 E3 - 53m 20s
Trace the relationship between religion and art, which has inspired some of the most ingenious, affecting, majestic and breathtaking works of art ever made. Yet beneath great works of religious art often lie conflict, intrigue and divine mysteries.
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How Do We Look?
S1 E2 - 53m 20s
Explore the many functions of the human image in art. Portraits, paintings and sculptures, both life-size and colossal, perform a role—assuaging loss, expressing strength, inspiring fear—and were instrumental in depicting the human body today.
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The Second Moment of Creation
S1 E1 - 53m
Examine the formative role of art and the creative imagination in the forging of humanity itself. Images and artifacts found in Africa, Asia, Europe, Australia and South America testify to the urge to develop civilizations. Liev Schreiber narrates.
Extras + Features
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Flights of Fancy
S1 E9 - 3m 9s
In December 1942, a Jewish teacher brings art supplies to children held by Nazis. They created art that would give them a momentary escape, if only in their imaginations.
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The Multitudes of the Displaced
S1 E9 - 1m 43s
For artist Ai Weiwei, the calamity of our time is the disaster of the multitudes of displaced. Those who are uprooted, through no fault of their own, and cast adrift on an infinite ocean of terror and despair.
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Mondrian's New Visual Language
S1 E9 - 2m 20s
In the autumn of 1914, Mondrian had an epiphany that would bring true abstraction into the world.
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Episode 9 Preview | What Is Art Good For?
S1 E9 - 30s
Explore art in the age of revolution, war and profound scientific change and consider the question: Should art create a separate realm, a place of escape, or should it plunge into the chaos, transforming the way we see and live in the world?
-
Art from Fiery Immolation
S1 E9 - 3m 43s
Some of the strongest contemporary art has the magical power of transformation, turning the ephemeral and destructive into something more enduring.
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Capturing Unspoiled Landscape
S1 E8 - 4m 20s
Thomas Cole regarded the American landscape as being what he called the undefiled work of Gods.
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Otto Dix's Definitive Artistic Statement
S1 E8 - 3m 44s
Otto Dix and his generation had borne witness to the horrors of World War I. They'd also been witness to the death of the nineteenth century faith in an inevitable, unstoppable progress.
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Manet Twists the Conventions of Art
S1 E8 - 2m 30s
In what's considered his last great work, Edouard Manet created a masterpiece famed as a masterclass in visual subversion.
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Episode 8 Preview | The Cult of Progress
S1 E8 - 30s
Examine the rise and fall of “progress” as an ideology, and see how the “civilizing” project that arose from Enlightenment ideas was fraught with contradictions that troubled European artists in different ways.
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George Catlin's Indian Portraits
S1 E8 - 2m 18s
Catlin was by no means indifferent to the suffering of the people whose faces appear in these paintings. But he didn't produce them in order to take part in some campaign to save the native Americans, instead he said they must perish.
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Japan's 18th Century Commercial Art Revitalizes Color
S1 E7 - 1m 53s
Ukiyo-e began with only a few colors, but combined them in increasingly sophisticated ways to create vivid depictions of a rapidly growing urban life. Wildly popular in all its forms, it demonstrated that every day transitory objects could be considered art.
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Goya's Harmony and Chaos
S1 E7 - 2m 7s
In his 60s, Goya abandoned his role as court artist to bare witness to the irrational forces unleashed by Napoleon's invasion of Spain.
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