
Mavericks of Empire
Alastair Sooke looks at great sculptors of the British Empire, mavericks who bucked prevailing trends, such as John Flaxman, Francis Chantrey and Alfred Gilbert.
By the middle of the 18th century, Britain was in possession of a vast empire. It required a new way of seeing ourselves and so we turned to the statues of ancient Greece and Rome to project the secular power and glory of the British Empire.
The message was clear: Britain was the new Rome, our generals and politicians on a par with the heroes of the ancient world. The flood of funds, both public and private, into sculptural projects unleashed a new golden age, yet it was also a remarkably unorthodox one. The greatest sculptors of the 18th and 19th centuries were those mavericks who bucked prevailing trends - geniuses like John Flaxman, Francis Chantrey and Alfred Gilbert.
Alastair Sooke tells the story of these mavericks and reveals the extraordinary technical breakthroughs behind their key works: carving in marble with a pointer machine and the primal power of the lost-wax technique.
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'The Three Graces' by Antonio Canova
Duration: 01:29
Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Presenter | Alastair Sooke |
| Executive Producer | Jonty Claypole |
| Series Producer | Mark Halliley |
| Director | Mark Halliley |
Broadcasts
- Wed 16 Feb 201121:00
- Thu 17 Feb 201100:55
- Sun 20 Feb 201120:00
- Tue 22 Feb 201123:25
- Tue 22 Mar 201102:35
- Mon 17 Sep 201823:00
- Wed 27 Mar 201902:00
- Thu 16 Jan 202000:00
- Tue 11 Aug 202001:00
- Mon 19 Jul 202121:45
- Fri 23 Jul 202101:30
- Mon 22 Nov 202100:25
- Tue 28 Feb 202301:00
- Tue 20 Aug 202400:00
