Online Learning

Rose has delivered online talks for many years and below you will find a library of talks you can choose from and watch within a week of purchase. Topics range from deep dives into Italian and Northern Renaissance Art, the Baroque, 18th and 19th century art, plus more thematic talks on Women Artists, Women Patrons, the Body and Art and much more. 

Expect fresh, invigorating and charismatic talks, full of anecdotal detail and a wealth of storytelling. With the flexibility to learn around your own schedule, Rose’s content can keep you entertained from home, throughout the year. You can purchase a full series to get the most from a period or theme, or select any of the talks independently.

How It Works

1

Choose a series or individual talk from the library below

From the day of purchase, you have 7 days to watch on catch-up via the Tixoom platform. Each series comprises 5 – 8 x 1 hour talks.

2

Buy the series, or gift to the art-enthusiast in your life

Once you have chosen the series or individual talk, select ‘Buy Now’ and purchase via Tixoom. Keep an eye on your inbox (and junk folder) for a link to the content.

3

Watch from home at your own pace

Login with your email via Tixoom and watch the series via your private portal, whenever works for you. Rose is always delighted to receive questions and feedback so please feel free to be in touch.

Explore Rose's Lectures

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PAST

Influencers: Women Who Shaped the Art World

Throughout the ages, female patrons have used art as a crucial form of social and political expression. Their patronage allowed them to explore their passions, nurture artists and build unique collections. Rose Balston will look at women who were revered as taste makers, thinkers and leaders in their field during their lifetimes, yet have remained in the shadows as history took hold.
(1) Isabella d’Este: In the Court at Mantua
(2) Marguerite of Austria: The Spanish Netherlands
(3) Eleanor of Toledo: The Medici Rise Again
(4) Catherine the Great: Empress of Art
(5) Queen Victoria and her husband Albert: Passionate Patrons

Throughout the ages, female patrons have used art as a crucial form of social and political expression. Their patronage allowed them to explore their passions, nurture artists and build unique collections. Rose Balston will look at women who were revered as taste makers, thinkers and leaders in their field during their lifetimes, yet have remained in the shadows as history took hold.

(1) Isabella d’Este: In the Court at Mantua
(2) Marguerite of Austria: The Spanish Netherlands
(3) Eleanor of Toledo: The Medici Rise Again
(4) Catherine the Great: Empress of Art
(5) Queen Victoria and her husband Albert: Passionate Patrons

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Uncovered: The Body in Art

Across human history the body and art have always been irrevocably entwined. In this six-part series, Rose Balston will analyse the body - drawing examples from ancient art through to contemporary, to explore how the body in art has helped shaped our understanding of the world.
(1) The Eyes
(2) The Nude
(3) The Wounds
(4) The Hands
(5) The Foot
(6) The Expression

Across human history the body and art have always been irrevocably entwined. In this six-part series, Rose Balston will analyse the body – drawing examples from ancient art through to contemporary, to explore how the body in art has helped shaped our understanding of the world.

(1) The Eyes
(2) The Nude
(3) The Wounds
(4) The Hands
(5) The Foot
(6) The Expression

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Old Mistresses: Women Artists from the 16th to 18th Century

As the high drama of the 17th century takes centre stage, Rose will bring you tales of seven revolutionary artists from the Baroque period. This is a time of extraordinary artistic prowess where we see art adopted as a political and religious weapon. Art became shockingly real, emotionally potent and more driven by spectacle than ever before.
(1) Blazing the Trail: Sofonisba Anguissola
(2) The Secret Renaissance: Women of Bologna
(3) Dutch Leading Ladies: Top of their game, side-lined in history
(4) Restoration: A new dawn for British women
(5) Rococo Rock Star: Rosalba Carriera
(6) Angelica Kauffman: Prodigy, Pioneer

As the high drama of the 17th century takes centre stage, Rose will bring you tales of seven revolutionary artists from the Baroque period. This is a time of extraordinary artistic prowess where we see art adopted as a political and religious weapon. Art became shockingly real, emotionally potent and more driven by spectacle than ever before.

(1) Blazing the Trail: Sofonisba Anguissola
(2) The Secret Renaissance: Women of Bologna
(3) Dutch Leading Ladies: Top of their game, side-lined in history
(4) Restoration: A new dawn for British women
(5) Rococo Rock Star: Rosalba Carriera
(6) Angelica Kauffman: Prodigy, Pioneer

2JG93DF Painting titled "The Fighting Temeraire Tugged to her Last Berth to be Broken up, 1838" by Joseph Mallord William Turner dated 1839

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The Greatest Storytellers of the Long 18th century

The 18th century in Europe was bursting at the seams with extraordinary people and ground-breaking events. Art and artists were unleashed onto the wider society as a proliferation of talent burgeoned expansively across the continent. The Grand Tour was consolidated, aristocrats began to obsessively collect art, public art galleries evolved, the Royal Academy and French Salon was consolidated and new synthetic pigments were invented. And charging alongside were the roars of colonialism, industrialization, the Enlightenment, the rights of man, Darwinism and political revolution. A vivid, thrilling and complicated time that has led British historians to term it the “Long 18th Century”, encapsulating events in the centuries before and after - to make greater sense of the Homeric nature of this time
(1) Art and Love: Rococo Romance in 18th century France
(2) Canaletto and the Lure of Venice
(3) Toffs, Taverns, Whores and Hoorays! Hogarth’s London
(4) David: The Art of Revolution
(5) The Golden Age of Portraiture: Reynolds and Gainsborough
(6) The Hidden Truths of John Constable
(7) The Sun is God: JMW Turner the “Father of Modern Art”

The 18th century in Europe was bursting at the seams with extraordinary people and ground-breaking events. Art and artists were unleashed onto the wider society as a proliferation of talent burgeoned expansively across the continent. The Grand Tour was consolidated, aristocrats began to obsessively collect art, public art galleries evolved, the Royal Academy and French Salon was consolidated and new synthetic pigments were invented. And charging alongside were the roars of colonialism, industrialization, the Enlightenment, the rights of man, Darwinism and political revolution. A vivid, thrilling and complicated time that has led British historians to term it the “Long 18th Century”, encapsulating events in the centuries before and after – to make greater sense of the Homeric nature of this time

(1) Art and Love: Rococo Romance in 18th century France
(2) Canaletto and the Lure of Venice
(3) Toffs, Taverns, Whores and Hoorays! Hogarth’s London
(4) David: The Art of Revolution
(5) The Golden Age of Portraiture: Reynolds and Gainsborough
(6) The Hidden Truths of John Constable
(7) The Sun is God: JMW Turner the “Father of Modern Art”

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The Greatest Storytellers of the European Baroque

Art Historian and TV presenter Rose Balston is delighted to continue her “Greatest Storytellers” series. As the high drama of the 17th century takes centre stage, Rose will bring you tales of seven revolutionary artists from the Baroque period. This is a time of extraordinary artistic prowess where we see art adopted as a political and religious weapon. Art became shockingly real, emotionally potent and more driven by spectacle than ever before. This is the art of persuasion, of prestige, of power.
(1) Caravaggio: Saints and Sinners in Baroque Rome
(2) Bernini: Living Sculpture
(3) Rubens and Van Dyck: The Secret Weapon of Kings
(4) Rembrandt: Journey to the Soul
(5) Velazquez: Art and Illusion
(6) Vermeer and the Dutch Golden Age

Art Historian and TV presenter Rose Balston is delighted to continue her “Greatest Storytellers” series. As the high drama of the 17th century takes centre stage, Rose will bring you tales of seven revolutionary artists from the Baroque period. This is a time of extraordinary artistic prowess where we see art adopted as a political and religious weapon. Art became shockingly real, emotionally potent and more driven by spectacle than ever before. This is the art of persuasion, of prestige, of power.

(1) Caravaggio: Saints and Sinners in Baroque Rome
(2) Bernini: Living Sculpture
(3) Rubens and Van Dyck: The Secret Weapon of Kings
(4) Rembrandt: Journey to the Soul
(5) Velazquez: Art and Illusion
(6) Vermeer and the Dutch Golden Age

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PAST

The Greatest Storytellers of the 19th century

The 19th century tells a long and extraordinary story. Change is afoot in all walks of life. It is a whirlwind of productivity and creativity but also of shocking drama. In this series, Rose Balston will dive deep into the lives and works of just a few artists practicing in this tumultuous time: among others Vigée Le Brun, Canova, Goya, William Blake, the Pre-Raphaelites and Whistler. Through their art, Rose will explore the social, political, economic and religious upheaval that challenged every sector of society.
(1) Women, Art and Power: Le Brun, Labille- Guiard & Marie Antoinette
(2) Canova & the Bonapartes: Of God & Men
(3) William Blake: Identity and Nationhood
(4) The Lure of the East: Holman Hunt and J.F Lewis
(5) Francisco Goya: A Time of Unreason
(6) Liberty! Equality! Solidarity!
(7) The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
(8) Whistler: “Individualism” and Modernity

The 19th century tells a long and extraordinary story. Change is afoot in all walks of life. It is a whirlwind of productivity and creativity but also of shocking drama. In this series, Rose Balston will dive deep into the lives and works of just a few artists practicing in this tumultuous time: among others Vigée Le Brun, Canova, Goya, William Blake, the Pre-Raphaelites and Whistler. Through their art, Rose will explore the social, political, economic and religious upheaval that challenged every sector of society.

(1) Women, Art and Power: Le Brun, Labille- Guiard & Marie Antoinette
(2) Canova & the Bonapartes: Of God & Men
(3) William Blake: Identity and Nationhood
(4) The Lure of the East: Holman Hunt and J.F Lewis
(5) Francisco Goya: A Time of Unreason
(6) Liberty! Equality! Solidarity!
(7) The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
(8) Whistler: “Individualism” and Modernity

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Artemisia Gentileschi

Artemisia. A woman who shouts out 'I belong here’. Who believed in her artistic greatness. Who took her place among the most revered and sought after painters of the Baroque period. Drama, passion, anger and moral turmoil, Artemisia's paintings have it all.
Length: 1 hour

Artemisia. A woman who shouts out ‘I belong here’. Who believed in her artistic greatness. Who took her place among the most revered and sought after painters of the Baroque period. Drama, passion, anger and moral turmoil, Artemisia’s paintings have it all.

Length: 1 hour 

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PAST

The Northern Renaissance Part 1

When we look at 15th-century Netherlandish paintings, we find ourselves time-travelling. Through some of the most astonishing paintings in the canon of western art history, we are given privileged access to a long-lost world from 500 years ago. This was a time of uninterrupted innovation where we see artists push their creative skills to new limits.
(1) Oil! Oil! Oil! Jan Van Eyck
(2) The Art of Illumination: The Limbourg Brothers
(3) Rogier van der Weyden: Celebrity in the North
(4) Bridging North and South: Hugo van der Goes and Hans Memling
(5) The End of Days: Hieronymous Bosch
(6) The Dutch Revolt: Pieter Bruegel the Elder

When we look at 15th-century Netherlandish paintings, we find ourselves time-travelling. Through some of the most astonishing paintings in the canon of western art history, we are given privileged access to a long-lost world from 500 years ago. This was a time of uninterrupted innovation where we see artists push their creative skills to new limits.

(1) Oil! Oil! Oil! Jan Van Eyck
(2) The Art of Illumination: The Limbourg Brothers
(3) Rogier van der Weyden: Celebrity in the North
(4) Bridging North and South: Hugo van der Goes and Hans Memling
(5) The End of Days: Hieronymous Bosch
(6) The Dutch Revolt: Pieter Bruegel the Elder

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The Northern Renaissance Part 2

This is a series about Art, Politics, and Power. Following on from Northern Renaissance Part One: A Window Onto the World, we’ll move into the 16th century via the artists of Germany, France, Scotland, and England – Dürer, Cranach, and Holbein to name a few. As the shape of patronage changed, we’ll see how art was bound in the politics of the Protestant Reformation, England’s break from Rome, Henry VIII’s tally of wives, Elizabeth I’s thrilling power struggle, and her fight against Spain – this is one of the most fertile and fascinating periods in Northern European history. Art – as ever – is the most potent and relatable illustration of these extraordinary times.
(1) Durer: Portraits, Prints and Promo
(2) Cranach and the Reformation
(3) Holbein: The Renaissance Comes to England
(4) The Lady with a Unicorn: Tapestries in France
(5) The French Renaissance: Francois Premier and Catherine de Medici
(6) Elizabeth I of England: Power and the Face

This is a series about Art, Politics, and Power. Following on from Northern Renaissance Part One: A Window Onto the World, we’ll move into the 16th century via the artists of Germany, France, Scotland, and England – Dürer, Cranach, and Holbein to name a few. As the shape of patronage changed, we’ll see how art was bound in the politics of the Protestant Reformation, England’s break from Rome, Henry VIII’s tally of wives, Elizabeth I’s thrilling power struggle, and her fight against Spain – this is one of the most fertile and fascinating periods in Northern European history. Art – as ever – is the most potent and relatable illustration of these extraordinary times.

(1) Durer: Portraits, Prints and Promo
(2) Cranach and the Reformation
(3) Holbein: The Renaissance Comes to England
(4) The Lady with a Unicorn: Tapestries in France
(5) The French Renaissance: Francois Premier and Catherine de Medici
(6) Elizabeth I of England: Power and the Face

Contact and Newsletter

For speaking engagements, tour enquiries and other information, please email Rose on: rose@rosebalston.com. 

By joining Rose’s newsletter you will receive invitations to sign up to her public on-the-ground tours and online talks. In due course Rose will run a podcast. All information will be released through the newsletter.