In Search of England
James Fox examines British art in the interwar years. How did artists react to the erosion of British power, financial crisis and the prospect of another war?
The inter-war years were a period of alarming national change. With a generation of youth lost to the trenches and the cracks in the Empire growing fast, the nation's confidence was in tatters. If we were no longer a mighty Imperial power, what were we? John Nash's mesmerising visions of rural arcadia, Stanley Spencer's glimpses of everyday divinity, Alfred Munnings' prelapsarian nostalgia, Paul Nash's timeless mysticism, John Piper's crumbling ruins, even William Coldstream's blunt celebration of working-class life - all, in their own way, were attempts to answer this question. And, as a reprise of war grew ever more likely, they struggled more urgently than ever to create an image of Britain we could fight for.
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Clips
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Stanley Spencer's 'The Resurrection, Cookham'
Duration: 01:53
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Alfred Munning's love of horses
Duration: 01:00
Music Played
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Max Richter
Written on the Sky
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | James Fox |
Presenter | James Fox |
Director | Matthew Hill |
Director | Matthew Hill |
Producer | Matthew Hill |
Producer | Matthew Hill |
Executive Producer | Jonty Claypole |
Executive Producer | Jonty Claypole |