Civilisation

23 February 1969

Kenneth Clark at Notre-Dame de Paris during the production of episode one of Civilisation 'The Skin of our Teeth'.

Civilisation: A Personal View by Kenneth Clark began on 23 February 1969. The ground-breaking arts documentary series was written and presented by art historian Kenneth Clark as his personal view of Western civilisation. Shown on BBC Two in thirteen parts, it provided a brilliant demonstration of the benefit of colour television. The first episode only attracted one million viewers, but by the end of the first run Civilisation was being recognised as a television masterpiece, celebrated in a leader column in The Times newspaper.

Clark discusses Michelangelo's David in the episode 'The Hero as Artist' (TX 23 March 1969, BBC2).

Civilisation was one of the commissions David Attenborough made as Controller of BBC Two, rising above fears that static paintings were a bad subject for television. To bring the subject to life Clark spent three years making it, shooting on 35mm film in thirteen countries. The first part – 'The Skin of Our Teeth' – saw Clark pop up in Paris, Nimes, Iona, Oslo, Poitier and Ravenna. Clark also wrote the best-selling book which accompanied the series.

Civilisation's success started a trend for presenter-led factual series which continues to this day, from The Ascent of Man and Alistair Cooke's America to Simon Schama's A History of Britain, as well as Attenborough's Life on Earth. Ahead of the anniversary the BBC produced a new series– Civilisations - in 2018, which took a much broader view and gave voice to the opinions of three separate presenters; Schama, Mary Beard and David Olusoga.

February anniversaries

Search by Tag:

Rebuild Page

The page will automatically reload. You may need to reload again if the build takes longer than expected.

Useful links

Theme toggler

Select a theme and theme mode and click "Load theme" to load in your theme combination.

Theme:
Theme Mode: