Catherine Bott and Lucie Skeaping present a series of programmes examining the many links between art and early music
Catherine Bott and Lucie Skeaping begin a series exploring some of the many links between art and early music. They examine some of the wider connections between the two.
DetailsLucie Skeaping explores traditional dress and custom in late 16th-Century Venice, illustrating various styles with music by Andrea and Giovanni Gabrieli.
DetailsCatherine Bott and art historian Michael Rosenthal explore what Thomas Gainsborough's paintings of musical subjects reveal about the role of music in late 18th century England.
DetailsLucie Skeaping visits King's College, Cambridge's chapel to see the stained glass and the stories it contains, viewed through the music of its time.
DetailsLucie Skeaping and theatre historian Iain Mackintosh visit the Baroque theatre at Cesky Krumlov castle in the Czech Republic.
DetailsLucie Skeaping visits the Bate Collection of historical instruments in Oxford and sees some of the most interesting exhibits, including a 17th-Century recorder.
DetailsCatherine Bott travels to Tivoli to explore the fountains in the gardens of Cardinal Ippolito II's Villa d'Este and the music written to honour him.
DetailsCatherine Bott travels to Nuremberg to explore the influence of 16th-Century German artist Albrecht Durer on early music and the culture of his time.
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