All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 Edvard Munch: The Scream

    • December 8, 2001
    • BBC Two

    Tells the life-story of the painting more widely reproduced than any other, even the Mona Lisa. It shows exactly how and why the Norwegian expressionist Edvard Munch arrived at his extraordinary image and how that image of the screaming person has reverberated down the decades to become an icon in modern culture.

  • S01E02 Sandro Botticelli: La Primavera

    • February 23, 2004
    • BBC Two
  • S01E03 Paolo Uccello: The Battle of San Romano

    • April 16, 2005
    • BBC Two

    Among the greatest of all depictions of battle, these three panels were break throughs in painting technique, so that contemporaries must have viewed them in awe. Also they were the victims of an audacious art crime.

  • S01E04 Michelangelo: David

    • December 15, 2001
    • BBC Two

    Michelangelo's large-scale marble sculpture, represents the biblical figure of David, a favoured subject in the art world of Florence at the end of the 15th century. This episode begins in a marble quarry, and slowly reveals how the artist managed to capture the human body in exquisitely fine detail, when so many other before him tried and failed.

  • S01E05 Leonardo da Vinci: The Last Supper

    • April 13, 2006
    • BBC Two

    The story of probably the most renowned painting in the world. The Last Supper revolutionized Western art and its power reverberates to this day in the courts and the bookshops and cinemas. Just how Leonardo Da Vinci broke with traditions in creating his supremely dynamic masterpiece is recounted, together with the tale of his disastrous attempt to use a new technique in wall-painting.

  • S01E06 Piero della Francesca: The Resurrection

    • April 17, 2006
    • BBC Two

    The first moment in the Christmas story is the arrival of the Archangel Gabriel to tell Mary that she has been chosen to give birth to the son of God. Many painters have depicted this event, none better than the great Flemish painter Jan Van Eyck. As befits a man who seems to mixed espionage in with painting for his patron, Eyck’s picture is full of symbols and half-concealed messages. It has an extraordinary after-life - sold by the Soviets against the wishes of the Hermitage and bought by a secretive American millionaire who hid it away in a cellar.

Season 3

  • S03E08 Edgar Degas: La Petite Danseuse de Quatorze Ans

    • April 24, 2004
    • BBC Two

    The statue of the young girl in a real ballet dress is often seen today just as a pretty image of dancer making one of the classic moves of ballet. But to the people who first saw the statue when it was unveiled it was a dangerous, even disgraceful, portrayal of a degenerate girl little more than a whore. The programme reveals the story of the real woman who Degas used as a model and includes revelations about how the statue as actually made.