11 episodes

The podcast companion to the series exploring thousands of years of visual culture.

The Civilisations Podcast BBC Radio

    • Religion & Spirituality
    • 3.6 • 14 Ratings

The podcast companion to the series exploring thousands of years of visual culture.

    Episode 10: David Olusoga

    Episode 10: David Olusoga

    David Olusoga talks to Viv Jones about the making of Civilisations. They discuss his two episodes, First Contact and The Cult of Progress. David says that the great arts and history documentaries he watched growing up inspired him to become a historian and filmmaker, and he talks about the power of television to change lives.

    • 30 min
    Episode 9: Simon Schama

    Episode 9: Simon Schama

    Simon Schama talks to Viv Jones about the making of Civilisations. They discuss the highs and lows of filming such an ambitious global series, from being granted rare access to breathtaking cave paintings, to coming face-to-face with a bolting horse in the ancient city of Petra.

    • 27 min
    Episode 8: Matika Wilbur, Chip Colwell and Ernest House Jr.

    Episode 8: Matika Wilbur, Chip Colwell and Ernest House Jr.

    In the 8th programme in the Civilisations TV series, David Olusoga looks at how artists reacted to the colonialism of the 19th century. He travels to America to see art by both white and Native American artists who were documenting the displacement and suffering of Native peoples. A common view at the time was that indigenous Americans would disappear completely.
    For the podcast, Viv Jones speaks to three people who are working to remind the world that Native Americans are not a people of the past. In spite of all that their communities have had to overcome their beliefs, religions and arts are still very much alive today.
    Matika Wilbur is photographing every tribe in the United States to ensure that stereotypes of Native Americans are replaced with images that represent their true diversity today. Her project, which has taken her to every state, is called Project 562.
    Chip Colwell is Senior Curator of Anthropology at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science. He describes himself as a ‘living paradox’ because his role sometimes requires him to give the items in his museum’s collection away. America’s museums are expected to return Native American cultural items - including stolen art, sacred objects and human remains - to groups that have an appropriate claim to them. Chip is working with Ernest House Jr., Executive Director of the Colorado Commission of Indian Affairs, on a project that will help tribes find out whether their cultural items are now in European museums.

    • 33 min
    Episode 7: Colourful Stories

    Episode 7: Colourful Stories

    Unusual stories of the bizarre and gruesome things that have been used as paint pigments from Kassia St Clair, author of The Secret Lives of Colour. Plus, why did Van Gogh create portraits of the man who sold him his paints? Nienke Bakker, Curator of Paintings at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, brings us the story of Père Tanguy whose arts supply shop was at the heart of the Paris art scene. Produced and presented by Viv Jones.

    • 23 min
    Episode 6: How Civilisations Collapse and Understanding the Aztecs

    Episode 6: How Civilisations Collapse and Understanding the Aztecs

    Contrary to myth and misconception, the Aztecs were not a bloodthirsty, inhumane, deeply patriarchal and authoritarian society. Viv Jones is disabused of everything she thought she knew about this sophisticated civilisation by Dr Caroline Dodds Pennock.
    Dr Guy Middleton calls himself a 'collapsologist'. He attempts to solve the mystery of why and how past civilisations collapsed. Guy says that often popular explanations say more about the fears we have in our own time than about the archaeological evidence past peoples left behind.

    • 32 min
    Episode 5: Caravaggio

    Episode 5: Caravaggio

    Viv Jones delves into the BBC archives to find out how Caravaggio’s tempestuous life - of brawls, duels, and prison escapes - is reflected in his provocative paintings. Featuring archive interviews with his biographers Helen Langdon and Andrew Graham-Dixon, curator Letizia Treves, historian Jerry Brotton and the director Martin Scorsese.

    • 20 min

Customer Reviews

3.6 out of 5
14 Ratings

14 Ratings

The Reel Noiresque ,

Appalling presenter and no substance.

The presenter is infantile in both her self-absorption (a handwritten letter from Attenborough, pleading her mum by interviewing Mary Beard,) and she is so childish around her interviewees.

Bentolido ,

Not about civilisations at all.

Viv Jones just gushes at everyone she interviews and asks no pertinent questions about the development of CIVILISATIONS. It's really just a bunch of interviews with people who like history. You'd expect a podcast of this title to actually discuss different civilisations and how they developed and affected our modern world. Instead it's a cheap advertisement for a TV show. It's poorly presented and utter garbage. Viv, have a listen to Melvyn Bragg and you might learn something about how to run a history podcast.

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