| Civilisation: A Personal View by Kenneth Clark | |
![]() Title card from Episode 1, "The Skin of Our Teeth" |
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| Picture format | 4:3 |
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| Audio format | Mono |
| Episode duration | 50 minutes |
| Developer(s) | David Attenborough |
| Producer(s) | Michael
Gill Peter Montagnon |
| Presented by | Kenneth Clark |
| Music by | Edwin Astley |
| Country of origin | United Kingdom |
| Language(s) | English |
| First shown on | BBC Two |
| Original run | 23 February 1969– 18 May 1969 |
| No. of episodes | 13 |
| IMDb profile | |
Civilisation — in full Civilisation: A Personal View by Kenneth Clark — is a television documentary series outlining the history of Western art, architecture, and philosophy since the Dark Ages. The series was produced by the BBC and aired in 1969 on BBC Two. Both the television material and an accompanying book were written by art historian Kenneth Clark (1903-1983), who also presented the series. The series is considered to be a landmark in British Television's broadcasting of the visual arts.[1]
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Civilisation was one of the first UK documentary series in colour, and one of BBC2's first major productions, at the time of David Attenborough's controllership. One of Attenborough's aims of the series was that it should showcase colour television. For technical reasons, colour television was to come to BBC2 before BBC1 and, as a channel aimed at minority audiences, it was appropriate to commission a major series about the Arts.[2] It was Attenborough who prompted the title, but due to time constraints the series only covered Western Civilisation. Clark didn't "suppose that anyone could be so obtuse as to think I had forgotten about the great civilisations of the pre-Christian era and the east", though the title continued to worry him.[3]
The series was directed by Michael Gill, and co-produced by Gill and Peter Montagnon. At first, Clark's patrician attitudes annoyed Gill and the project was almost abandoned. However, Gill eventually formed a great respect for Clark's aesthetic judgment. During the filming on location, they formed an enduring friendship.[4] Civilisation was filmed in 35mm colour in order to ensure high quality images. The production was carried out over a three-year period with filming in eleven countries.[5]
The series was replayed on BBC Four and released on DVD in 2005. The DVD release included a short interview with David Attenborough about the commissioning and production of the series.
Clark attended an early public screening of one of the programmes and was received with huge applause and cheers. He was so overwhelmed by this recognition that he hid himself away in the lavatory and wept for fifteen minutes; he had long been respected in academic circles but was utterly taken aback by the response of the public at large.[2]
Further proof of the programme's popularity was given in anecdotal evidence of Civilisation parties. Since ownership of a colour television set was rare on the series' first broadcast, those that did own one found themselves popular hosts.[2]
The series had difficulty at first in finding a home on American television, but success was assured after the National Gallery of Art in Washington put it on at lunchtime in the gallery theatre. This seated 300 people, but on the first day 24,000 turned up.[4] In 1970, the newly-established Public Broadcasting Service aired the 13-part TV series in the US to high ratings.
The series won many awards and was sold to over sixty countries. The book which accompanied the series became a best seller in both the United States and the United Kingdom. The American sponsor Xerox paid $450,000 for a single film compilation of the series.[6]
The series has been criticised for using the universal title "Civilisation" when it actually dealt more narrowly with Christian civilisation in parts [7] of Western Europe. In this context, the series perceived Eurocentrism was viewed as bordering on racist with African works of art acknowledged, but seen as the products of superstition, rather than rational thought, and not evidence of civilisation.[8] However, in the first episode of the series, "The Skin of Our Teeth," Clark acknowledged the vitality of Viking art and the dynamism of Viking society, but also found that these were not enough to constitute what he meant by "civilisation." In the same episode, Clark made it clear that the series would be concerned with Western civilisation. Furthermore, the series subtitle, " A Personal View by Kenneth Clark" reinforced the subjectivity of the thoughts expressed therein.
The series' groundbreaking format, in which Clark travelled around the world to illustrate his thesis, became a template for such later programmes as The Ascent of Man by Jacob Bronowski, Connections by James Burke, Life on Earth and sequels by David Attenborough, Alistair Cooke's America: A Personal History of the United States, and Cosmos by Carl Sagan. John Berger's 1972 BBC series, Ways of Seeing, represents, in part, a response to Clark's views from a radical/Marxist viewpoint.
Clark earned a peerage on the strength of the series.[4]
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