Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,901 playable programmes from the BBC

Civilisation: 12: The Fallacies of Hope

on BBC One London

A personal view by Kenneth Clark

'Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive' wrote Wordsworth of the early days of the French Revolution, but the storming of the Bastille led to the Terror, the dictatorship of Napoleon and the 19th-century bureaucracies.
Kenneth Clark traces the progressive disillusionment of the artists of the Romantic Movement through the music of Beethoven, the poetry of Byron, the paintings of Gericault, Turner and Delacroix, and the sculpture of Rodin. 'The 19th century revealed a split in the European mind as great as that which afflicted Christendom in the 16th century, and even more destructive. On the one hand was the new middle class created by the industrial revolution... Sandwiched between a corrupt aristocracy and a brutalised poor it had produced a defensive morality, conventional, complacent, hypocritical. On the other hand were the finer spirits - poets, painters, novelists, who were still heirs of the Romantic Movement, still haunted by disaster.
If ever a man deserves an Oscar for presentation on TV it is Sir Kenneth Clark for the series 'Civilisation.' Every one was a masterpiece. Never a dull moment and every detail explained minutely. (Daily Express)

Contributors

Presenter:
Kenneth Clark
Stills photography director:
Ann Turner
Director/producer:
Michael Gill
Producer:
Peter Montagnon

BBC One London

About BBC One

BBC One is a TV channel that started broadcasting on the 20th April 1964. It replaced BBC Television.

Appears in

Suggest an Edit

We are trying to reflect the information printed in the Radio Times magazine.

  • Press the 'Suggest an Edit' button
  • Type in any changes to the title, synopsis or contributor information using the Radio Times Style Guide for reference.
  • Click the Submit Edits button.
    Your changes will be sent for verification and if accepted, will appear in due course More