Fascinated by Waldemar Januszczak's (WJ) two-page spread in Sunday's (7Feb) ST Culture magazine, headed Unearthly delights - 'Move over, Leonardo - the hardcore art of Hieronymus Bosch is what the Renaissance was really about' and the mounting of an exhibition, 20 paintings of Hieronymus Bosch - Visions of Genius, Noordbrabants Museum,
's-Hertogenbosch, Holland, from 13 Feb-8 May 2016.
Fortuitously, this will also be accompanied by a 4 part series,
The Renaissance Unchained, 60 mins each. presented by JW; Part I, BBC 4, 9pm, Mon, 15 Feb, as scheduled in the Radio Times. In turn, this also refers to a feature item, page 29, headed with the programme title, and WEDNESDAY,(sic) 9pm, BBC4! Oh dear, oh dear! I'll stick with the Monday schedule as the Wed programming features the Bermuda Triangle. I'll leave it to the editorial staff to apportion a victim for this blunder as I was more amused by the arguments with 'the BBC promotion people' because they didn't want to put images of nudity out before the watershed. A 15th-century manuscript...! Mumbled expletives here.
The gist of the opener is WJ's assertion that we've had it wrong for centuries, thanks to a 'Michelangelo groupie' who wrote "the most influential art book ever written". Vasari's, Lives of the Artists, ignored the bubbling cauldron of Northern creativity that gave us Van Eyck and his ilk, when it was the Flemish artists who re-energised art in the 1400s.
Surprisingly, - perhaps Tony Hall's plans for coverage of the arts is beginning to bear fruit - the documentary feature will be followed at 10pm with Botticelli's Venus: The Making of an Icon, (30 mins), presented by Sam Roddick.
I predict a lively discussion in the press over the next four weeks.
The Renaissance Unchained will also be repeated at 02.50am, Tues, 16 Feb, BBC4.
's-Hertogenbosch, Holland, from 13 Feb-8 May 2016.
Fortuitously, this will also be accompanied by a 4 part series,
The Renaissance Unchained, 60 mins each. presented by JW; Part I, BBC 4, 9pm, Mon, 15 Feb, as scheduled in the Radio Times. In turn, this also refers to a feature item, page 29, headed with the programme title, and WEDNESDAY,(sic) 9pm, BBC4! Oh dear, oh dear! I'll stick with the Monday schedule as the Wed programming features the Bermuda Triangle. I'll leave it to the editorial staff to apportion a victim for this blunder as I was more amused by the arguments with 'the BBC promotion people' because they didn't want to put images of nudity out before the watershed. A 15th-century manuscript...! Mumbled expletives here.
The gist of the opener is WJ's assertion that we've had it wrong for centuries, thanks to a 'Michelangelo groupie' who wrote "the most influential art book ever written". Vasari's, Lives of the Artists, ignored the bubbling cauldron of Northern creativity that gave us Van Eyck and his ilk, when it was the Flemish artists who re-energised art in the 1400s.
Surprisingly, - perhaps Tony Hall's plans for coverage of the arts is beginning to bear fruit - the documentary feature will be followed at 10pm with Botticelli's Venus: The Making of an Icon, (30 mins), presented by Sam Roddick.
I predict a lively discussion in the press over the next four weeks.
The Renaissance Unchained will also be repeated at 02.50am, Tues, 16 Feb, BBC4.
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