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- A tribute to one of Britain's most acclaimed actors.
- On the 90th anniversary of its construction, a team of dedicated filmmakers rebuilds America's original electric recording device - and captures "lightning-in-a-bottle" single-take performances from some of today's top musicians.
- 1975–9.0 (10)TV Episode
- Part 2 of an in-depth interview exploring Welles' achievements and frustrations during his life in film and theatre.
- Part 1 of an in-depth interview exploring Welles' achievements and frustrations during his life in film and theatre.
- Arena documentary chronicles the life and work of one of Britain's greatest actors.
- Using a star-studded array of interviewees and taking its cue from a letter from the philosopher and critic Roland Barthes, this acclaimed Arena documentary offers a captivating portrait of an intriguing director.
- Tells the story behind Lou Reed's song Walk on the Wild Side. The characters named in it were people who frequented Andy Warhol's studio in the late 1960s. Holly Woodlawn and Joe Dallesandro are the only "superstars" who have survived and they are interviewed in the programme. The programme presents a snapshot of a certain moment in the life of New York's underground culture.
- BAFTA and BPG Award winning second part of the film star's life from the release of VICTIM (1961) to the author's death in 1999.
- After years of telling the story of Christian art, Sister Wendy Beckett tells her own.
- 1975– 1h 9m8.3 (37)TV EpisodeThe life and time of comedy genius Peter Sellers, told with the help of his extraordinary collections of home movies and featuring interviews with family, friends and colleagues.
- A documentary about and an interview with Hollywood actress Bette Davis about her life and career from the late 1920s to the 1980s on stage and mostly before the camera.
- Documentary looking at the short but brilliant career of legendary rock 'n' roll star Buddy Holly. Features interviews with contemporaries and fans including Paul McCartney.
- Documentary about the early female movie stars: Greta Garbo, Marlene Dietrich, Rita Hayworth, Marilyn Monroe - immortal goddesses made by Hollywood to reign over the silver screen.
- A haunting film about Britain and the nuclear age, from the first bomb tests to our potentially futile preparations for attack during the Cold War.
- Comprising many short segments about the state of the video industry, both real and imagined, many featuring cameos by celebrities.
- BAFTA and BPG Award winning first part of a televisual life of the film actor who died in 1999, drawing on new video footage from the archive of Bogarde's long-term partner and manager Anthony Forwood.
- Documentary telling the story of the day Amy Winehouse recorded a stunning acoustic performance in a church in the small Irish fishing village of Dingle in 2006.
- Peter Hall, Richard Eyre, Trevor Nunn and Nicholas Hytner talk about running the new National Theatre from its opening in 1976 to the fulfilment of Olivier's original dream.
- Documentary about the Tube, the world's oldest underground system, with its own unwritten rules of behaviour and protocol, and used by three million passengers every day.
- In June 2009, a group Britain's leading actors gathered for one night only to perform a celebration of the work of Harold Pinter at the National Theatre, directed by Ian Rickson.
- First of two documentaries celebrating the National Theatre's 50th anniversary, with contributions from artistic directors, playwrights and stars such as Dame Joan Plowright.
- Pop Artist Peter Blake's fascination with masked wrestler Kendo Nagasaki.
- 1975– 2h 20m7.7 (58)TV Episode
- A documentary which goes on an imaginative tour from the Colorado grave where Dick is buried to the suburbs of California where he lived and worked. Talks to his ex-wives, friends and biographers.
- Exploring the relationship of artist Stanley Spencer's daughters, Unity and Shirin, as they try to understand and reclaim their father and investigate their family's archaeology.
- A look behind the scenes during the making of The Shining (1980).
- Documentary showcasing the life and works of surrealist artist Salvador Dali.
- A rare insight into the work of Cindy Sherman, one of the world's leading, and most elusive, contemporary artists.
- An insight into the private obsessions and insecurities of the author of Lord of the Flies. With contributions from his daughter and son and bestselling author Stephen King.
- The story of original influencer Coco Chanel, whose designs still represent the zenith of female sexuality, style and power.
- 1975– 1h 35m7.6 (20)TV Episode
- Arena explores the rise of the legendary crooner Frank Sinatra from his early family background to overwhelming showbusiness success. Interviews with friends, family and associates reveal a star-studded career in music and film.
- 1975– 1h 30m7.6 (9)TV EpisodeMartin Scorsese's portrait of George Harrison, which traces his life from his beginnings in Liverpool to becoming a world-famous musician, philanthropist and filmmaker.
- 1975– 1h 48m7.6 (9)TV EpisodeThe second and concluding part of Martin Scorsese's portrait of George Harrison.
- Television documentary celebrating the life and career of legendary British blonde bombshell Diana Dors, who died in 1984. Friends remember her affectionately and film clips illustrate her big screen movie roles.
- 1975– 1h7.5 (35)TV EpisodeDetailing the life of an influential 1960s British record producer, the first to top both the UK and US pop music charts with the same record.
- A profile of legendary music producer Sir George Martin with the help of his son Giles and wife Judy with contributions from Sir Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Michael Palin, Howard Goodall, Cilla Black, Bernard Cribbins and Rolf Harris.
- In his late eighties, film director Nicolas Roeg looks back over his career.
- A 1982 film made to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Roy Plomley's classic radio programme.
- A profile of the famous Swedish film director Ingmar Bergman through the eyes of three people who interviewed him.
- A profile of the musician Brian Eno.
- An outline and retrospective of the heavy metal genre that swept the world in the 1980s.
- 1975– 1h 29m7.4 (19)TV EpisodeFeaturing interviews and exclusive archive footage, this documentary tells the extraordinary story of a music icon: the self-proclaimed architect of rock 'n' roll.
- Edward Said, a Palestinan writer, academic and exile, talks about his book "Culture and Imperialism" and explains how the attitudes forged over the last 200 years continue to enforce the relationship between the west and the developing world.
- Louise Brooks made her screen debut in the silent "The Street of Forgotten Men", in an uncredited role in 1925. Soon, however, she was playing the female lead in a number of silent light comedies and flapper films.
- In 1987, Robert Crumb presents himself: raised by a Marine father, educated in Catholic schools, married at 21 in Cleveland where he worked for a greeting card company, dropping acid in 1965, heading to San Francisco and getting in on the formation of Zap Comix, gaining celebrity, loving old time jazz, starting a band, living in a commune, meeting Aline Kominsky who became his second wife and his partner in art, having a daughter, and developing a more realistic drawing style. The confessions include his loneliness, his obsessions with women, his bewilderment by fame, his sense of the disintegration of Sixties' subculture, his nervous breakdown in 1973, and his peace now.
- BBC documentary that catches scenes in the famous Chelsea Hotel in New York City.
- A remarkable guided tour through the culinary world of Elvis Presley.
- Detailed interview with Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger looking back at their long career as influential British film-makers and their unusual partnership. Includes clips from many of their films.
- 1975–7.1 (20)TV Episode
- The year 1977 was a crucial one in the life of reggae superstar Bob Marley. Forced to leave Jamaica he made an album in London, Exodus, that propelled his music and message of Rastafari across the planet.
- 1975– 1h 37m7.1 (10)TV EpisodeMartin Scorsese's documentary film charting literary, political and cultural history as per the New York Review of Books, America's leading journal of ideas since 1963.
- The first bio-film of the world's most read author and the creator of Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot. With dramatic reconstructions and contemporary archive, it unravels a life as mysterious as Agatha Christie's and the shared obsession with murder.
- A Bob Dylan performance of songs expressing his new-found Christianity in the late 70s, enhanced by a series of sermons between the songs, written by the actor Michael Shannon.
- International EMMY and RTS nominated portrait of the artist Francis Bacon.
- A profile of the legendary comedy actor Eric Sykes.
- About Yukio Mishima that highlights the many known major aspects of his life and personality. Mishima was a pen name he adopted en route to his chosen life as a writer.
- A tribute to the Liverpudlian comic Ken Dodd. He discusses his 50-year career and the influences of his comedy style.
- Peggy Sue Gerron Rackham tells how Buddy Holly's songs Peggy Sue and Peggy Sue Got Married came to be written. She went to the same high school as Holly and married drummer Jerry Allison. Other people recall the era, including Donna Fox who inspired Ritchie Valens' song, Donna.
- Arena spends the summer with super cool self-confessed rock chick, Chrissie Hynde - shopping for clothes in Paris, hanging out with Sandra Bernhard in New York, life in London and a special trip back to her home town of Akron, Ohio.
- 1975– 1h6.9 (13)TV EpisodeFrankie Howard looks back on his life and career.
- 1975– 1h 30m6.9 (13)TV EpisodeA programme making the case for the greatness of British films of the 40s, 50s and 60s.
- A film profile of the controversial Babyshambles singer Pete Doherty.
- An in-depth look at the life and work of T.S. Eliot, one of the 20th century's most important literary figures.
- 1975– 55m6.8 (48)TV EpisodeArena presents the greatest Beatles story never told - the making of Magical Mystery Tour - full of fabulous Beatles archive material never shown before anywhere in the world.
- An exploration into the history of Shakespeare's plays, from the silent era to the modern day featuring archive interviews with movie directors including Laurence Olivier, Orson Welles, Franco Zeffirelli, Kenneth Branagh and more.
- A TV special that follows British rock group Dire Straits on a successful tour and also during the recording of their third album "Making Movies". Features live performances, some tracks rehearsals, and interviews with the band and their manager.
- The home movies of Derek Jarman, chronicling his life.
- Documentary telling the story of the genesis of the satirical puppet show Spitting Image, with contributions from caricaturists Peter Fluck and Roger Law and producer John Lloyd.
- A tribute to the British filmmaker Alan Clarke (1935-1990).
- Once dubbed the 'king of cool', a look behind the silky voice as Tony Bennett - civil rights activist, jazz enthusiast, painter and New Yorker - takes a tour around his native city.
- A documentary looking at the tribute bands who play at and the life that revolves the Limelight Club in a converted Methodist church in Crewe in the north west of England.
- Reenactments of passages from the controversial Kenneth Anger collection of tawdry gossip about the golden age of Hollywood.
- 1975– 1h 46m4.9 (106)TV EpisodeInternational EMMY and Prix Italia winning profile of one of Italy's finest directors, Luchino Visconti.
- Veteran entertainer Charlie Drake looks back over his life and career.
- BAFTA Award winning profile of the actor-director Lord Attenborough as he turns 80.
- Documentary celebrating some of the most memorable Arena programmes of the past 30 years.
- This is the story of Radio Caroline the legendary pirate radio station that helped to reinvent the 60s and lead to an explosion of popular music and the opening up of the airwaves. It shows how charismatic club owner and artist manager Ronan O'Rahilly desperate at the lack of space on the air ways to hear the new emerging music came up with a plan. He would park a boat in international waters and broadcast pop and rock into the UK in defiance of the authorities. It worked beyond his wildest dreams.
- A documentary about the long-running BBC Radio 4 panel game "Just a Minute".
- Documentary which goes behind the scenes at The Archers and follows the production team as they put together the 15,000th episode of the world's longest-running radio soap.
- The story of TIM PAGE, war photographer.
- A long-lost film of the creative community formed by Peter Beard, Jackie Kennedy's sister Lee Radziwill and her relatives, the Beales of Grey Gardens, in 1970s New York.
- A look behind the scenes of the popular Radio 4 comedy series.
- Documentary profiling Japanese contemporary artist Yayoi Kusama whose work, including her much-visited Infinity Mirror Room installations, defies classification.
- Documentary that exposes a darker, less well-known side of film director Ingmar Bergman, focusing on the landmark year of 1957, which saw Bergman direct two films and four plays.
- A film profile of the legendary singer and entertainer.
- A visualisation of the earliest existing episode of the Archers from the BBC archives - 11th March 1952 - using archive footage to recreate the period.
- A highly innovative arts documentary, which uses the latest special effects, to investigate the cultural and scientific background behind the way we judge people by their face. The documentary was presented by US artist and musician, Laurie Anderson whose face was transformed into iconic and historic stereotypes as she talked. Special effects were created by Christopher Tucker.
- A look at powerful women in British television.
- Documentary which gets to the heart of that much-maligned and stereotyped character, the London cabbie, using archive footage, music and film, as well as the drivers themselves.
- Two segments about men on the 25th anniversary of their death: Wilma Wilcox speaks about her husband, the crime photographer Weegee, and Beatrice Wood talks her lover Marcel Duchamp and his urinal.
- Director of Ju Dou, Red Sorghum and Raise the Red Lantern is interviewed from within China whilst making a commercial for Philip Morris (China is one of the largest consumers of cigarettes in the world). Although many of his films have been banned inside his native China, Zhang Yimou is fast becoming the most celebrated Chinese director in the world.
- Ian McKellen ruminates on the history of radio, characterized as Shakespeare's seven ages of man.
- Pulitzer prize-winning cartoonist and author Art Spiegelman discusses his graphic novel "Maus," which chronicles how his father survived the Holocaust. Also included a journey to Auschwitz, with his wife and art director Francoise Mouly-Spiegelman.
- Traces the history of the patata from the food staple of the Incas to the raw material of the gigantic crisp industry. Featuring an Irish politician, an English historian, a French chef and a Peruvian geneticist.
- Premiere. Ronald Eyre reviews what's going on in the theatre, Kenneth Tynan talks to Laurence Olivier about Lilian Baylis and The Old Vic, and a film about David Hockney's sets for The Rake's Progress.
- A portrait of Peter Sellers featuring home movie footage and commentary from friends, family and colleagues. Abridged from "Arena: The Peter Sellers Story" (1995).
- Documentary exploring the meaning and history of cool through the American music that started in the 1940s in the bars of New York and LA, and became known as cool jazz.
- 1975–TV EpisodeA look at five conductors on London buses over five decades and the demise of the Routemaster bus.
- Writer Philip Hoare embarks on a journey to investigate humankind's fascination with the whale. He travels in the footsteps of Ishmael, narrator of "Moby Dick" from Southampton to America to the Azores.
- Documentary profile of the life of the Nobel Laureate, V.S Naipaul widely regarded as Britain's greatest living author.
- Documentary about the Natural History Museum's Blue Whale exhibit.
- Bob Dylan's songs are often inspired by the lives of real people. This film focuses on three - songwriter Woody Guthrie, boxer Rubin 'Hurricane' Carter and comedian Lenny Bruce.
- Documentary looking at how playwright Dennis Potter used popular songs as a powerful dramatic device and to express the depth of his characters in 'Pennies From Heaven' and 'The Singing Detective'.
- A profile of Dennis Potter through archive interview and his role as a television critic.
- The story of Bob Dylan's first time in London in December 1962 to film the BBC drama 'Madhouse on Castle Street'.
- A look at the Newport folk festival and the American folk revival of the 60s, which encompassed old time mountain music, blues and gospel.
- Nigel Williams meets comedy writers Ray Galton and Alan Simpson for lunch as they discuss their career including classics 'Hancock's Half Hour' and 'Steptoe and Son'.
- 1975– 25mTV EpisodeGeorge Melly explores his lifelong relationship with surrealism in all its forms and prominent personalities; Henry Moore discusses Leonardo da Vinci's anatomical drawings.
- Arena enlists supermodels Lily Cole and Lizzy Jagger and actresses Dervla Kirwan and Emer Kenny to help Rolf Harris achieve his ambition of painting Titania as inspired by Shakespeare's 'A Midsummer Night's Dream'.
- Once upon a time a headline caught the eye of 2 songwriters, and the song caught the eye of a rising star.
- Gavin Miller talks to director Martin Ritt, writer Walter Bernstein, and actors Woody Allen and Zero Mostel about 'The Front'
- Diane Keaton and Woody Allen talk about the filming of 'Annie Hall' and their long friendship.
- Investigates Bob Dylan's origins in Hibbing, Minnesota and takes a musical and historical journey down Highway 61 itself. John Bucklen, a teenage companion of Bob Dylan, provides some new insights into Dylan's earliest musical experiments and the journey Dylan himself undertook from a middle- class rock'n'roller in Hibbing to fashionable protest singer in New York.
- Features Observer critic William Feaver on Painting the End of the World, Bill Brandt's selection of landscape photography at the Victoria and Albert Museum, and the best of science fiction illustration.
- A look at American photographer Paul Strand and recent trends in British photography.
- Alan Yentob interviews TV dramatist Dennis Potter about his work through the years.
- When Gary Glitter announced his retirement in 1976, the fans took him seriously and forgot about him. But now, he is back, and being embraced by a whole new generation.
- Writer Germaine Greer and her god-daughter Ruby take a look at a child's Edinburgh Festival and some of the fringe activities, including Gruppo Teatro Libero from Rome and Quentin Crisp.
- Documentary exploring the life of Sir Jonathan Miller CBE - a theatre and opera director, humorist and television presenter. With contributors including Kevin Spacey and Eric Idle.
- Restoration of a concert filmed at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club in 1974.
- Arts documentary which scours the archives to reveal why Charles Dickens' work translates so well onto the screen. It looks at films of the silent era, to the work of director David Lean and high definition TV adaptations.
- Director Michael Waldman goes in search of the fashion icon that was Karl Lagerfeld, tracking down his inner circle to reveal the man behind the sunglasses, and meeting Choupette, Lagerfeld's cat and a rumoured heir to his fortune.
- An epic, emotional and interconnected story about internationally renowned artist and activist Nan Goldin and her personal fight to hold the Sackler family accountable for the opioid overdose crisis.
- Nick Broomfield's new documentary uncovers the story and legacy of Brian Jones, the founder and lost creative genius of The Rolling Stones.
- Documentary that follows Björn Andrésen, the boy catapulted to fame when Luchino Visconti chose him to play Tadzio in his screen adaptation of Thomas Mann's Death in Venice.
- River takes its audience on a journey through space and time spanning six continents, showing rivers on a scale and from perspectives never seen before.
- A hundred years after its publication, this film reveals the tawdry, shocking, poetic, uplifting and gloriously kaleidoscopic humanity of James Joyce's masterpiece, Ulysses.
- An exploration of TS Eliot's The Waste Land, in its centenary year, that for the first time uncovers the personal story behind Eliot's creation of his celebrated poem.
- A visually arresting film that documents the story of Haiti's rich past, through an annual carnival in a small southern town.
- Nick Broomfield takes a distinctly personal look at his relationships with his humanist-pacifist father, Maurice Broomfield, a factory worker turned photographer of vivid images of postwar England.
- Docudrama portrait of Delia Derbyshire, the electronic sound pioneer behind the Doctor Who theme tune, that explores the idea that this extraordinary composer herself lived outside of time and space.
- British-Nigerian poet and activist Femi Nylander travels to West Africa to discover the modern-day impact on its people of atrocities that took place over a century ago.
- An exploration - from Jean-Michel Basquiat to Grace Jones - of how black artists use the sci-fi genre to examine black history and imagine new, alternative futures.
- An examination of the work and the legend of Welsh poet Dylan Thomas.
- How a US lifer survived long-term solitary confinement through a remarkable pen-pal friendship and the making of beautiful little paintings from M&M's.
- An investigation into the extraordinary life and work of B. Catling, an eye-popping insight into the late-flourishing career of a maverick artist, teacher and performer.
- An Arena documentary about the life and work of video art pioneers Steina and Woody Vasulka, which reveals the profound effect they had on the American avant-garde.
- One of the world's greatest writers - Hilary Mantel - delves into her own history, intertwining the themes of the Wolf Hall trilogy with stories from her own life.
- In 1974, Ike White recorded an album while serving life for murder. The album became his ticket to freedom. But, just as he was on the cusp of stardom, Ike disappeared.
- Through the words of James Baldwin, this film brings powerful clarity to how the images and reality of black lives in America today are fabricated and enforced.
- This fascinating and compelling film - told using previously recorded interviews that form the narrative of the documentary - is the definitive story of the artist in his own words.
- Exclusive testimony reveals the multifaceted man behind the maverick performer Fela Kuti, who created a sound for a continent - Afrobeat.
- A portrait of Nobel Prize-winning poet Seamus Heaney. Six years after his death, his family recalls the experiences that inspired his finest poems.
- Contemporary artist Gillian Wearing celebrates the legacy of Victorian novelist George Eliot in an experimental film made up of a diverse cast of people.
- Feature-length documentary for Arena by director Vanessa Engle, telling the remarkable story of a charlatan art dealer who swindled over $50 million from the art establishment before going on the run.
- Werner Herzog sets out on a journey inspired by legendary writer and adventurer Bruce Chatwin's passion for the nomadic life, uncovering stories of lost tribes, wanderers and dreamers.
- A year in the life of Sean Scully, one of the world's richest painters, as he flies around the world to open 15 major exhibitions - a journey that reveals his amazing life story.
- A chance to hang out with Eileen Atkins, Judi Dench, Maggie Smith and Joan Plowright and enjoy sparkling conversation spliced with a raft of astonishing archive.
- Crooner Tony Bennett reflects on his life with his friend and jazz enthusiast Clint Eastwood. Bennett traces his musical lineage, highlighted by concert footage.
- Live performances by tribute bands such as Limehouse Lizzy, Are You Experienced, The Jamm and ABCD, at Crewe's Limelight Club.
- Examining the glamorous life and long career of pioneering photographer Norman Parkinson.
- The turbulent life and career of the Beatles' manager Brian Epstein is examined plus his death in 1967 in mysterious circumstances.
- A look into Kae Tempest's creative process and insights into their life throughout a period of profound personal and artistic change.
- The unique life and talent of Caroline Aherne is celebrated, featuring unseen photographs and contributions from a cast of her lifelong friends, including Steve Coogan, John Thomson, Craig Cash and producer Andy Harries.
- Arena goes to Scarborough for the British premiere of a new Alan Ayckbourn play "Just Between Ourselves".
- Stephen Pile, author of "The Book of Heroic Failures" and David McGillivray, who failed to complete a book about failure, talk to other failures. Larry Hagman also talks to Stephen Pile about success.
- Documentary which looks at the life and premature death of rock'n'roll star Eddie Cochran, with comment from Larry Parnes, Adam Faith, Marty Wilde, Joe Brown, Cochran's mother, and his fiancee Sharon Sheeley.
- Made especially for schools, this version of the BBC Four Arena programme examines the history and purpose of the National Theatre as it celebrates its 50th anniversary.
- George Melly looks at how they sold the 70's and a report on the opening of the Space Studios.
- An interview with Howard Barker, author of 'Stripwell', and an extract from same; commentary by Kenneth Tynan; and an investigation of 'Birds of Paradise'.
- Deborah Norton reviews British stage events, a play extract, and Kenneth Tynan opines about the theatre.
- Mikhail Baryshnikov and Natalia Makarova rehearse for a BBC New Year Gala Performance; Kenneth Tynan draws a portrait of Albert Finney.
- A journey to Berlin with rock musician Lene Lovich and Les Chappell.
- Cartoonist Mel Caiman on the New Yorker magazine and its artists, Richard Hamilton at the Serpentine Gallery, and a new documentary exhibition from Jarrow.
- Peter Hall talks about the history and new South Band location of the National Theater, where he is artistic director.
- Extract from a contemporary play and Kenneth Tynan opines.
- Shirley Conran is the guest columnist; fashion photographer Barry Lategan is filmed working; and Victorian painter Edward Burne-Jones' London exhibition.
- Guest columnist Terry Measham; a look into the work of painter and poet Charles Tomlinson.
- Filmmaker Roger Graef and journalist Simon Jenkins discuss the destruction of historical buildings, in light of a recent SAVE campaign report and the conclusion of the European Architectural Heritage Year.
- Deborah Norton returns with reports, interviews and extracts from what is liveliest and best in the British theatrical scene.
- Jonathan Miller introduces this week's look at what is most stimulating and enjoyable on the theatrical scene.
- Arena looks at aspects of community art and the work of painter Keith Grant, artist-in-residence at the New Charing Cross Hospital.
- Claire Bloom and Kenneth Tynan discuss extracts from Samuel Beckett's 'Happy Days', George Bernard Shaw's 'Too True to be Good', and Tennessee Williams' 'Sweet Bird of Youth'.
- Arena talks with Robert Janz and Dante Leonelli about incorporating time into sculpture.
- Arena brings extracts from Paris' contemporary theatre season, including Frank Wedekind's 'Lulu' and Marguerite Duras' 'Days in the Tree', and an interview with Delphine Seyrig.
- Arena presents the work of British and American video artists.
- Barbara Jefford, Laurence Olivier, Joan Plowright, Kenneth Tynan Billie Whitelaw and many of the people behind the scenes say goodbye to the Old Vic building.
- Liverpool poet and painter Adrian Henry visits 'The Face of Merseyside'; Boyd and Evans use photographs as the basis of their explorations of everyday life.
- Alumni of the Royal Court celebrate its 20th anniversary.
- Barrie Penrose investigates a multi-national art empire and the artists and methods that created it.