
Access to this video is a benefit for members through PBS Passport.
Back to Show
Rick Steves' Europe
Art of the Baroque Age
In the 1600s and 1700s, the art of "divine" kings and popes — and of revolutionaries and Reformers — tells the story of a Europe in transition. In the Catholic south, Baroque bubbled over with fanciful decoration and exuberant emotion. In the Protestant north, art was more sober and austere. And in France, the excesses of godlike kings gave way to revolution, Napoleon, and cerebral Neoclassicism.
Support Provided By

26:47
In times of crisis and challenge, we ask ourselves: What is the true value of travel?

25:33
Rick uses Ethiopia as a classroom for understanding global hunger and extreme poverty

26:15
Exploring the Nile Valley from north to south, we see the highlights of Egypt.

25:02
We visit teeming Cairo, straddling the Nile, exploring the back streets on a tuk-tuk.

26:16
Traveling across Germany, we trace the roots of Nazism in the aftermath of World War I.

25:02
After exploring the proud cuisine capital of Lyon we head for Chamonix.

25:02
Switzerland draws travelers from around the world for its legendary mountains.

25:02
In the Alps of Austria and Italy, we celebrate both nature and culture.

25:01
Starting in Glasgow, we travel to Stirling Castle, and watch a sheepdog demo.

25:02
We'll wander across the Isles of Iona and Skye, then set sail for Orkney’s Scapa Flow.

25:02
Let's visit Scotland’s Glencoe, Inverness, the Culloden battlefield and Loch Ness.

25:01
Let's relax in Cefalù, ponder ancient Siracusa, and fill up at a Sicilian banquet