The art and architecture produced in a time of chaos.
This lecture traces the fall of the Roman Empire through its art and one of its heroines. At the centre of a perfect storm of Goths, Vandals, Huns and contesting Romans, stood an orphan girl of ‘nobility, beauty and chaste purity’, who became one of the world’s most powerful women. Not only did she leave her mark on the history of Rome, but she was also the driving force behind some of its most impressive art and architecture.
THE ARTS SOCIETY ACCREDITED LECTURER
Dr Stephen Kershaw
As a Classics Tutor for Oxford University Department for Continuing Education, Professor of History of Art for the European Studies Program of Rhodes College and The University of the South, he has spent much of the last 30 years travelling extensively in the world of the Greeks and Romans both physically and intellectually. He has published A Brief Guide to the Greek Myths (Robinson, 2007) and A Brief Guide to Classical Civilization (Robinson, 2010) and is currently working on A Brief Guide to the Roman Empire.
OTHER EVENTS
'Could it be magic?' - a surprising history.
The death of 3 artists, the birth of legends ... and conspiracy theories.

