The various tv series he did while director of the National Gallery taught me a lot – I especially remember one about how technology affected art – different brushes, pigments, textures & qualities of paint & surfaces for painting on.
And now we have an ambitious radio series A History of the World in 100 Objects - a story of endless connections.
He has a gift for phrase making:
Packing for a journey starts with a toothbrush & ends with excess baggage.
If you can shape a stone you can shape a sentence.
There is a clear purpose behind all this, one which might even lead to accusations of special pleading about the right to hold, the rightness of holding all these objects in a British museum for the higher purpose of teaching us that we are all connected, people are people across time & space, not insuperably divided by ethnicity & culture; a point of view which is close to my own heart.
He may even be subtly reassuring us, get over your guilt about buying too much stuff; the things we make make us human.
Almost makes me want to go back to Toynbee, Wells & Childe to compare & contrast
Links
The Outline Of History - Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind HG Wells
Vere Gordon Childe - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arnold Toynbee Study of History
The Outline Of History - Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind HG Wells
Vere Gordon Childe - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arnold Toynbee Study of History
Related post
The affect of art on science
The affect of art on science