Stourton's book was published in 2017
I knew Kenneth Clark (1903-83) from watching his Civilisation series on tv in 1969 and from his involvement with one of my favourite art historians Bernard Berenson. And more recently I read Kenneth Clark: Life, Art and Civilisation by James Stourton (Collins, 2016).
Born in 1903 into a wealthy textile-based family, Clark progressed through Winchester and Oxford Uni, helped by supportive nannies and teachers. Then he was mentored by Bernard Berenson in Florence.
Stourton’s book analysed Clark’s mixed experiences. Clark was a product of the Edwardian wealthy classes and by 28 he’d became Keeper of Fine Art at the Ashmolean. And King George V (1910-35) personally encouraged Clark to become Keeper of the King’s Pictures. His classy family background and education ensured a successful career.
Stourton analysed Clark’s emotional and intellectual contradictions. He loved his wife Jane (d1976) who had also read history at Oxford; they married in 1927 and had 3 children. Jane won his praise early on for her elegance and her role as a hostess, despite her temper and booze. Meanwhile Clark’s mistresses fared no better than the wife. Independent women rarely appeared in Civilisation, neither as creative artists nor as patrons. When a woman seemed unfitting, she was described as an unstable spouse of a long-suffering husband who was forced to seek solace elsewhere. Clark’s tv presentation of women as objects of desire or inspiration was close to how his own women were portrayed.
The Civilisation programme had focused largely on Europe, but Clark saw 2 big problems: 1]he loathed the megalomania of Versailles and wanted to exclude it from Civilisation and 2]the series avoided Spain because it was still ruled by Franco. I Helen have another problem - why did BBC make a series that excluded the cultures of the Far East, India, Africa and Central-South America? His omissions were not because of other cultures’ inferiority, but because of his ignorance. Yet despite the concentration on Europe, Clark’s tastes since childhood had been far from Eurocentric.
Clark became Director of the National Gallery in 1938. He had the National Gallery’s masterpieces evacuated to the Welsh mines; and he reinvented the remaining gallery as a cultural centre in wartime London, including concerts and temporary exhibitions. And great acquisitions of art by Bosch, Rubens, Rembrandt, Hogarth and Ingres were protected. Yet the staff were almost entirely against him, which led to his resignation as soon as the war ended.
Clark defined civilised values as moral virtues, using the Enlightenment’s rationality and the Victorians’ humanitarianism as great examples. But contrary evidence from his own life suggested that civilisation may have been implicated in acquisitive vice.
In 1954 Clark accepted the chairmanship of the Independent Television Authority and, to the dismay of the BBC, defended the crudity of the new commercial channel. But Clark was a natural on screen and he’d already made dozens of programmes for ITV.
Pazzi Chapel in one of the cloisters
in the complex of the Cathedra of Santa Croce, Florence
Expressing Renaissance values-peace, harmony, order, noble striving
Clark presented his history at a time when TV still had interest in educating and exciting millions. So TV history did not need to be uber-scholarly, but it had to express Clark’s love for the arts in clear English. He was Chancellor of the University of York from 1967-78.
He was 66 when he made Civilisation. I don’t remember my opinion of Clark way back in Feb 1969, but in the first episode he must have looked posh and confident. Although some were critical, the programme succeeded; Clark’s tv programme earned him a life peerage in 1969.
1968-9 was an awful time in human history, and Clark was afraid that western civilisation might vanish. His programme appeared while Czechoslovakia was invaded, Vietnam’s wars intensified, civil unrest in Paris was chaotic and Martin Luther King was murdered. Sadly for Kenneth, his tough right-wing son Alan Clark became a Thatcher minister in 1983, the year Kenneth died.
Civilisation by Kenneth Clark
published in 1970
Clark studied da Vinci’s works in Royal Collection Windsor Castle,
and then Christ Mocked, by Hieronymus Bosch
The National Gallery
Despite criticisms, he was one of the most influential figure in C20th British art. In 2014 The Tate organised "Kenneth Clark: Looking for Civilisation", an exhibition that examined his role as a patron, collector, art historian, public servant and popular broadcaster.
Read Michael Prodger, "In Defence of Civilisation", in History Today, 2014. Richard Nilsen, A Civilised TV series, 2014. And The Ideal Museum: Art Historian Kenneth Clark on the Formation of Western Institutions, in 1954 in ARTnews.
I loved Civilisation. I watched the series a few years ago when I discovered it was available via an archive channel I had at the time. He was a man of his time who knew what he liked and he passed it on to those who were interested. There would never have been time to show every single piece of cultural heritage so he confined himself to what he liked and considered accessible in understanding to the ordinary person. He does come across as dated now in terms of presentation and some of his views but he was ahead of his time and set the ball rolling for many others to follow in his footsteps on television.
ReplyDeleteAt a time when there were fewer channels and less choice, more people might have been influenced by or exposed to his views. We have lost much in the mad scramble for more 'entertainment' at all hours of the day and night. Fortunately, there are many ways to access informative, educational series.
ReplyDeleteHaven't heard of the man Hels.
ReplyDeleteInteresting read and I continue to learn more from you - thank you.
So interesting that he saved the National Gallery artworks during the war by evacuating them to the Welsh mines, yet he was still disliked by his staff.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if there was a published catalogue from when The Tate put on the exhibition "Kenneth Clark: Looking for Civilisation"? Since Clark had passed away 31 years earlier, the 2014 show would have been targeted at people who had never seen his tv shows.
ReplyDeleteNever heard of the man o r the civilisation program but both sound interesting
ReplyDeleteI saw the name before. Thanks for your post that I learnt about this history.
ReplyDeleteYears ago I didn't think that blogging would provide many references to excellent films, books, tv series etc and historical material. But sometimes wonderful material appears and I too am grateful.
DeleteHello Hels, I have found that quite a few brilliant curators have strong and sometimes arrogant personalities that might get them disliked by some. The way to judge them is on their scholarship, intuition, and results, so Clark seems to have passed the test.
ReplyDelete.
By coincidence, I am currently reading a book of art essays by the Australian critic Robert Hughes. Although his writing style is a bit dense, he certainly knows his onions, and is often able brilliantly to weave together historic information with his own intuitions. Although I think he lived in America and Europe when he wrote these essays, Australia was still close to his heart, and he gives many Australian examples and parallels in his studies of the great artists and the then-current art scene.
--Jim
I'm trying to remember what I read or watched by Kenneth Clark. I think it might have had something to do with art. I'm sure when it is about 2 AM I will wake up and it will come to me. :) Does that happen to you also?
ReplyDeleteErika
DeleteI had a great memory until Covid and retirement, and since then even material that I knew well takes ages to pop into my brain. So I am with you! The art historian Kenneth Clarke explored the evolution of Western culture from the collapse of Rome to the Romantics.
Honestly I do find it Viscerally difficult to get past his pompous ignorant and entitled treatment of women . It takes a real effort to appreciate him as a human . I do remember watching it when I was child and being enthralled .
ReplyDeleteDid You know that Bernard Berenson was Schiaparelli's daughters father in law ?? I know its a bit of a "who cares fact " but I guess it shows how concentrated these genes were / are
Rachel
ReplyDeleteAgreed. There would never have been enough time to show cultural heritages from all around the world and from different centuries. So I think you are correct in that he confined himself to what he knew best and what ordinary viewers would most appreciate. My only complaint was that the programme should have been called European Civilisation, if they knew in advance that the focus was going to be on Europe.
jabblog
ReplyDeletethe arrival of Foxtel was fortunate for me :) I now read the tv programme first thing in the morning and record JUST the series that are learned, historically fascinating and provide proper credits for me to follow up. DOCOS, BBC First, BBC 2, History, Discovery, Earth, Animal Planet, Real Life Medical etc. often have excellent material, including Civilisation and The Ascent of Man.
Margaret
ReplyDeleteTo save having to locate the old tv series, you might like to read Kevin McMahon's 'When People Wanted Civilisation: Reassessing Kenneth Clark' in
https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/when-people-wanted-civilisation-reassessing-kenneth-clark/
Handmade
ReplyDeleteWhen Clark was Director of the National Gallery just before WW2 erupted, he was _very_ wise in having the National Gallery’s masterpieces evacuated to the Welsh mines. And in having art by Bosch, Rubens, Rembrandt, Hogarth well protected.
If the staff disliked his style, it certainly wasn't because he saved the National Gallery's treasures from German bombing.
Joe
ReplyDeletepreferences in art, music, literature, tv programmes etc change every generation or two. So whereas people were passionate about Art Nouveau from 1880 until 1910, the Deco artists and fans from WW1 on wouldn't touch oldfashioned and weak Art Nouveau with a barge pole.
And when two new generations of people saw the Tate Exhibition in 2014, they curators would have had a lot of historical explaining to do. So the Tate catalogue was important: https://www.tate.org.uk/press/press-releases/kenneth-clark-looking-civilisation
Jo-Anne
ReplyDeleteeven if you had seen the series back in 1969, our brains have softened since then and some memories have fallen out. In fact had to read Kenneth Clark: Life, Art and Civilisation by James Stourton a few years ago, to remind myself of the 1969 programme.
Parnassus
ReplyDeletehave a look at BBC Kenneth Clark's Civilisation, Episode 1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DMpoGi1MckQ
If you see it as scholarly, then you will really enjoy seeing the rest of the episodes.
If you see it as arrogant and snobbish, then one episode will certainly have been enough.
Robert Hughes' history series on tv were very understandable and popular here. But unfortunately I am not a fan of modern art, so I didn't not enjoy The Shock of the New.
mem
ReplyDeleteBernard Berenson was born in Lithuania in 1865 without very much money. So he would have been very happy to marry in the US or UK into class.
I cannot find anything about Bernard Berenson's relationship to Schiaparelli's daughter's father in law. But Mary Berenson had two daughters with her _first_ husband Frank Costelloe. Mary became related to the Bloomsbury Group of English stars: one daughter married Adrian Stephen, Virginia Woolf's brother, and the other married Oliver Strachey, Lytton Strachey’s brother. How cool is that?
Thank you, dear Helen, for your interesting story!
ReplyDeleteIrina
ReplyDeleteEvery culture has had to deal with changing tastes, training, skills, incomes, fans, publicity and government support. It is interesting to see how Clark coped, and how his community coped.
So I have checked this out apparently Bernard Berenson was the great uncle of Gogo Schiapparelli 's first husband whose name was also Berenson . Not as close as I had supposed.
ReplyDeletemem
ReplyDeletethank you. It is always important to have famous people you can invite to your weddings and family dinner parties, even if they are distant cousins :)
I never heard of him, in 68 and 69 I fell in love with my husband and we married in 69. It was normal that during this time I only had hearts in my eyes !
ReplyDeleteGattina,
ReplyDeleteI met my then boyfriend, now husband in 1969 also :) But two things saved my passion for cultural history. Firstly we were both undergraduate university students still, so I had to pay attention to Civilisation and similar tv series. Secondly he lived in Sydney and I lived in Melbourne, 900 ks away. As there was no computer connection back then, and long distance phone calls were too expensive, I focused on getting good uni results all year.
Boa tarde e uma excelente quinta-feira. Obrigado pela excelente matéria e explicações. Aproveito para desejar um bom final de semana.
ReplyDeleteHi Hels
ReplyDeleteThanks for the youtube link to Ken Clark's documentary series on youtube. I will watch it.
For me, I really love Robert Hughes. I was quite sad to see of his passing a few years back. For a time when I was younger, I even tried to mimic his Aussie accent (which to my ears, sounded a little bit patrician).
I enjoy Alastair Sooke, and especially Simon Schama.
I really cannot stomach John Berger too much as I think he squeezes Marxism into his analysis. But that was probably the fashion at that time.
"Clark presented his history at a time when TV still had interest in educating and exciting millions."
TV standards were so much better than today. The entire linguistic register was significantly higher than today and people were expected to have a much broader knowledge base. I was recently reading some Tom Paine and I was astonished (in the introduction) to find out that in his day Paine was attacked for his "plebian" or common-day vernacular and prose style. And yet, today, his prose would be deemed ornate and "posh".
Luiz
ReplyDeleteMany thanks. I hope you can get access to the tv series. Kenneth Clark: Life, Art and Civilisation by James Stourton is also excellent.
Liam
ReplyDeleteWhen I lived in Israel for 3 years, our neighbours were all South Africans. I too wanted to speak in English with their unique accent, and managed reasonably well. For a short time.
Simon Schama specialises in the very subjects I taught: art history, Dutch history, Jewish history and other European histories. Not only are his tv documentaries wonderful; so are his books. You have good taste :)
Hi Hels - I came across this again recently ... and started to watch - when the autumn and winter comes I must finish the series ... thanks for the reminder - cheers Hilary
ReplyDeleteHilary
Deleteit is fascinating to think about re-reading old books and re-viewing old tv series. Since 1969, research has produced new findings, nations have changed and cultures appeal to citizens differently. So I will be keen to hear how you find the old series now, in 2024.