Simon Schama’s Power of Art | Episode 1 | BBC Select

BBC Select Jun 15, 2023 Art is so much more than pretty pictures. It has the power to move, shock, inform and transform. In this groundbreaking and award-winning series, art historian Simon Schama attempts to illustrate the sheer force of the visual image via eight iconic masterpieces. These works were often derided or dismissed when first created, but they went on to change the way we look at the world. BBC Select is the new home for documentaries. Available in the U.S and Canada. Find out more and start your free trial: https://bit.ly/3kwM3bU

Episodes

1. Caravaggio (David with the Head of Goliath)

The host looked at what made Caravaggio paint this work and the message Caravaggio intended to show in his work. The episode reveals to viewers that Caravaggio was charged with murder and became a criminal, with Schama suggesting that this led to the darker themes found in his work.[1] He details that the artwork’s intended message was as a plea for forgiveness from the Pope to remove the death by decapitation sentencing that Caravaggio had received following the murder of Ranuccio Tomassoni in 1606.[2]

2. Bernini (Ecstasy of St Theresa)

The work was constructed in Santa Maria della Vittoria, Rome over a five-year period between 1647 and 1652,[3] depicting Teresa of Àvila. The narrator describes that he sought to portray the Saint’s overpowering joy or ecstasy in her servitude to God. The influence behind such a work came as a result of Bernini’s passion and devout belief in Christianity. This religious belief saw him place the work at the back of the chapel and construct a hidden window above where rays of sunlight dawned on the marble sculpture so as to give it a heavenly, religious touch.[4]

3. Rembrandt (The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilius)

Schama outlines that the painting was commissioned by the Amsterdam City Council for the new Town Hall (Cavalli-Björkman, Görel, and Margaretha Rossholm-Lagerlöf 135–136). It was originally appointed to Govert Flinck who died before the project was undertaken. The project was then divided up, with Rembrandt being commissioned to paint a scene from the rebellion of the Batavians (former inhabitants of Holland) against the Romans. The host notes, the work was painted after the death of his wife and three of his children, describing that the etched, darker brushwork was influenced by this. This style was also common in the Baroque period and Rembrandt’s style as a whole.

4. David (Death of Marat)

The episode analyses how the artwork was as a tribute to his late friend and French Revolution leader, Jean-Paul Marat, who had been murdered by Charlotte Corday. The stylistic features of the work incorporated the history of the Roman and Greek empires. This was to symbolise to the people of the French Revolution that a future similar to these empires lay in front of them. While also forewarning what a misuse of freedom could lead to (death of their leader).[1]

5. Turner (The Slave Ship)

Schama outlines the inspiration behind such a painting. Turner was compelled to paint the work after reading The History and Abolition of the Slave Trade by Thomas Clarkson, he learned of the Zong massacre in 1781, when more than 130 slaves were ordered to be thrown overboard in order to collect insurance payments.[5] The episode examines the development of Turner from a landscape painter to a symbolic expressionist painter, connecting the original landscape and transforming it into a more abstract piece that links together the natural environment. Specifically, it is noted how he transformed the natural environment using water colours, so that, “The storm is partially lulled, and the torn and streaming rain clouds are moving in scarlet lines to lose themselves in the hollow of the night.”[6]

6. Van Gogh (Wheatfield with Crows)

This work was one of Vincent van Gogh’s final works and was completed in July 1890, before he died on 29 July 1890. The episode details the effect Van Gogh’s lack of wealth had on his work, where this combined with his undiagnosed epilepsy, saw him end up in a mental asylum. It was here that Van Gogh was inspired to, “Sadness, extreme loneliness,”[7] while also wanting to show what he considered, “Healthy and fortifying about the countryside.”[7] Schama examines the subject matter of the work, where, “The menacing sky, the crows and the dead-end path are said to refer to the end of his life approaching.”[8]

7. Picasso (Guernica)

Schama outlines how the artwork was crafted in response to the bombing of a defenceless city,[9] Guernica, by Nazi planes during the Spanish Civil War. The work is one of Picasso’s cubist works, where its subject matter revolved around, “The most notorious bombing of the century.”[10] The artwork spans 7.77m wide and 3.49 high. The episode outlines that the message intended from the artwork was to exemplify the horrors and damages of war and act as an anti-war symbol. And that the size of the artwork aids to engulf the majority of the viewer’s field of vision and exemplify this message.

8. Rothko (Black on Maroon)

This early Rothko work was completed in order to fulfil a commission for the Four Seasons in New York. Rothko withheld the work from installation at the restaurant,[11] as he did not want his work as a background to the wealthy.[12] Schama outlines this and the inspirations surrounding Rothko and this work, specifically outlining his upbringing as a Russian emigrant. Rothko initially gained inspiration as an abstract expressionist. Heavily influenced by philosophy and mythology, these two influences culminated in Rothko using colour to form a different medium, liberating colour from the objects, so that objects no longer have colour, but the painting as a whole, does.[1]

(Wikipedia.org)

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