
Painting Paradise
Andrew Graham-Dixon unravels the mysteries of the art of the pre-perspective era. He traces the beginnings of Christian art in Rome, Egypt and medieval France.
How should art depict the relationship between man and God? How can art best express eternal values? Can you, and should you, portray the face of Christ? For over a thousand years these were some of the questions which taxed the minds of the greatest artists of the early West. In this three-part series, art historian Andrew Graham-Dixon sets out to unravel the mysteries of the art of the pre-perspective era. Why has this world been so frequently misunderstood and underrated? His journey takes him from the mysterious catacombs of ancient Rome to Coptic Egypt, to the Orthodox Christian world of Istanbul and then onwards to medieval Italy and France.
In the first episode, Andrew Graham-Dixon traces the beginnings of Christian art in the declining Roman Empire, Egypt and medieval France, and reveals the ideas which lay behind the transition from classical art to the first icons.
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Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Presenter | Andrew Graham-Dixon |
| Producer | David Berry |
Broadcasts
- Wed 17 Jan 200721:00
- Wed 17 Jan 200723:30
- Thu 18 Jan 200703:00
- Sun 21 Jan 200719:00
- Mon 22 Jan 200701:50
- Mon 6 Aug 200723:35BBC Two except East & Yorkshire
- Tue 18 Dec 200720:00
- Wed 19 Dec 200703:20
- Sun 16 Mar 200801:40
- Thu 2 Oct 200802:00
- Mon 16 Nov 200923:05
- Fri 19 Mar 201000:45