Find out when Art That Made Us is on TV today, tonight and this week at the UK TV Listings Guide.
Art That Made Us is scheduled to air at these times (may include spoilers):
An alternative history of the British Isles told through 1,500 years of art, with leading creatives exploring key cultural works that have shaped British art and culture. This first edition examines the turbulent era that followed the Roman occupation of Britain, with sculptor Antony Gormley examining Spong Man, a clay figure that once sat on a fifth-century funerary urn, and actor Michael Sheen performing Y Gododdin, a seventh-century Welsh poem of resistance against the Anglo-Saxons
More details for Art That Made Us, Mon 6, 11:00 pm
An alternative history of the British Isles told through 1,500 years of art, with leading creatives exploring key cultural works that have shaped British art and culture. This first edition examines the turbulent era that followed the Roman occupation of Britain, with sculptor Antony Gormley examining Spong Man, a clay figure that once sat on a fifth-century funerary urn, and actor Michael Sheen performing Y Gododdin, a seventh-century Welsh poem of resistance against the Anglo-Saxons
More details for Art That Made Us, Wed 8, 2:20 am
Contemporary artists and performers, alongside historians and curators,examine the creative renewal in literature, music and art in the aftermath of the Black Death, with survivors finding their voice, questioning authority and challenging status and class. Above all, writing in English was revived by works including Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, William Langland's satire The Vision of Piers Plowman and breakthrough works by women like the spirited pilgrim Margery Kempe
More details for Art That Made Us, Mon 13, 11:30 pm
Contemporary artists and performers, alongside historians and curators,examine the creative renewal in literature, music and art in the aftermath of the Black Death, with survivors finding their voice, questioning authority and challenging status and class. Above all, writing in English was revived by works including Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, William Langland's satire The Vision of Piers Plowman and breakthrough works by women like the spirited pilgrim Margery Kempe
More details for Art That Made Us, Tue 14, 2:30 am