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2023, Greek and Roman Small Size Sculpture, edited by G. Colzani, C. Marconi, F. Slavazzi (Berlin)
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12 pages
1 file
AI-generated Abstract
This paper surveys the archaeological evidence for miniature cult statues from the archaic period, analyzing three particular examples of their use and significance. It discusses the contextual issues surrounding these artifacts, including their reemployment in later periods and their representation in art. Through the examination of various examples, including a notable votive bronze figurine and the stylistic characteristics of other related artworks, the study sheds light on the cultural practices surrounding miniature cult statues and their historical implications.
The American Historical Review, 1994
A CIP catalog record for this book has been applied for at the Library of Congress.
Several previously overlooked questions related to ancient Greek dedicatory practices are investigated in this thesis. The main questions addressed are: how do the contexts of Archaic, Classical and Hellenistic votive miniature vessels inform us about the Greek cults in which they are used, and the transmission of such cults? What role did miniaturisation play in the sanctuaries and the rituals in ancient Greek society, and why miniaturisation? A number of supplementary questions accompany the main questions, for example, what did miniaturisation mean in the context of votive dedications in sanctuaries? This thesis aims to demonstrate that earlier explanations arguing that miniatures are simply and profoundly cheap substitutes for more expensive objects do not work well, since many of these small objects are carefully made and some are elaborately decorated, and would thus not have been cheaper, or less time consuming to produce compared to full sized objects. The chronological time frame of the thesis is limited to the Archaic to the Hellenistic period, and its core is three case studies with different themes and different geographical locations in focus (Kalydon, Olympia, Kombothekra, various sites in South Italy, and other sites for comparison). The thesis addresses also issues relating to, for instance, miniaturisation, imitation and models, the functionality, and non-functionality of small votive objects, agency, trade, and colonization. The study of ancient Greek dedicatory practices within the scholarship of Classical Studies tends to concentrate on votive statues, religious architecture, inscribed metal dedications, and stelai. Little attention has been paid to less extravagant dedications even though these groups of material have been found in abundant amounts in sanctuaries throughout Greece. Moreover, in those cases where this material has been published interpretation and thoroughly analyses are often lacking. As a result, this study makes important contributions to two large questions within Classical studies: how did the Greeks view their gods and how did the Greeks interact with the gods. Miniature pottery contributes to our understanding of ancient Greek ritual practice as well of specific rituals. The work presented in this thesis accentuates that miniature pottery’s material meaning and symbolic importance can no longer be dismissed.
Les Carnets de l'ACoSt Association for Coroplastic Studies , 2019
M. Lagogianni-Georgakarakos (ed.), Known and Unknown Nikai, in History, Art and Life (HOCRD, Athens), 68-77, 2021
A trilogy of editions for the diachronic victories of the Greeks Glorious victories between myth and history Glorious victories. between myth and history Glorious victories between myth and history Known and Unknown Nikai In History, Art and Life KNOWN AND UNKNOWN NIKAI In History, Art and Life 387
Ph.D. dissertation, Emory University, 2021
The second century BCE witnessed a noted boom in cult statue and temple construction that coincided with larger trends in civic development across the Mediterranean. In this dissertation, I center on the production and viewing of cult statues, from Asia Minor to the Italian peninsula, in this transformative period. An investigation into the various elements involved in the crafting of a cult statue—the choice of materials, technique, and scale—reveals how a community used sacred art to express its local traditions within an increasingly diverse and expanding world. The creation of cult statues and temples offered a fundamental opportunity for Hellenistic rulers, Greek poleis, Roman magistrates, and the sculptors and architects they employed to engage in community development and political advancement. Amid warfare, political turmoil, and social and economic change, the crafting of cult images not only endured, but prospered. Strong regional variation in political, economic, and social conditions therefore served as catalysts rather than impediments for the acceleration in the production of cult buildings and statues in this period. Through this dissertation, I push beyond the traditional bipolar narrative of the increasing movement of Greek art, materials, and craftsmen to Rome through commissions, plunder, and trade, an approach which obscures the richly complex interchanges that influenced artistic production in the second century. By instead looking at cult statues and their temples within a broad landscape, I bring into dialogue the resilience of local religious expression and the medley of new ideas, techniques, and styles offered by the Hellenistic world and the rise of Rome. Finally, I argue that a cult statue and its temple formed a cohesive unit that shaped a viewer’s experience at a cult site. Using digital models of reconstructed cult statues and temples, I demonstrate the visual effects that set a cult image apart from other sculptures and how statue and temple together shaped the viewing experience at cult sites throughout the second-century Mediterranean. https://etd.library.emory.edu/concern/etds/qj72p856s?locale=e
1978
modify. So 1 submit that, when they unexpectedly arrived (perhaps as a special gift?), the architect had to redesign his facade to incorporate them. The columns had to be thickened and moved off their original axes; while the walls and antae, which could not be so easily altered, were perhaps moved outwards slightly. The positions of the metopes stayed as far as possible the same. But the unique five guttae to the redesigned regula ensured, as C.'s drawing well shows, the neatest possible accommodation to the architrave-joint, now off the centre of the triglyph. Finally, the architect added a touch of that poetry, without which the neatest design seems incomplete. Along the abaci of his unfa-capitals he placed a fringe of beads, or pearls. An ancient Ruskin, he had seen the autumn-dew fringing the 'rock-cornices' of Parnassus. HUGH PLOMMER Cambridge RIDGWAY (B.S.) The archaic style in Greek sculpture. Princeton: University Press. 1977 (1978). Pp. xix + 336, 69 illus. £29.80. What we have here is not a systematic history so much as a commentary by topics, and readers are assumed to have already a fair knowledge of Archaic Greek sculpture. Four general principles are the rejection of G.M.A. Richter's anatomical rule of development, a distrust of the accepted chronology (both absolute and relative), an insistence on the independent traits of local schools and a reliance-where convenient-on statistics of finds. Chapter 1 is a short and explanatory introduction. Chapter 2, on origins, maintains that about 700 B.C. the Greeks adopted the Daedalic style, which came from Syria or Phoenicia, for their statues-mostly female-of wood and around 650 B.C. of limestone too, gaining some knowledge of male anatomical details during this period from contemporary armour; further, around 650 B.C., acquaintance with Egypt brought the technical knowledge of carving marble, the grid for planning statues and an acceptable type for male figures and so the Archaic style was created, especially in Naxosand Samos. Chapter 3 ponders on the kouros, at first a votive or funerary image of Apollo and the determinative type of the new style-its distribution, meaning, chronology, variation by regions (among which Samos is distinguished from the East Greek) and affinity to other male types. In Chapter 4 the kore has similar treatment-characteristics, type and date, distribution, costume, regional variation, meaning and relatives (Nikai); it is derived from Oriental sources and its elaboration attributed to East Greece and Samos. Chapter 5 is on seated and, very briefly, reclining and equestrian statues, which began respectively in Asia Minor, Samos and mainland Greece. Chapter 6 summarises the use of human statues as grave monuments and proceeds to lions, sphinxes and other animals and monsters in the round, with an excursus on stelai. Pediments and acroteria come in Chapter 7, metopes in 8 and friezes in 9. Chapter 10 turns to the identification of sculptors, for which signatures are considered the only valid method. Lastly, Chapter 11 surveys succinctly Archaic survivals, revivals and reminiscences. Throughout R. proffers much good observation and many unconventional or novel ideas, so that some readers will find her stimulating and perhaps inspiring. Others may think that there is too little compensation for the frequent lack of supporting argu
La presenza dei bambini nelle religioni del Mediterraneo antico O biettivo di questa miscellanea di studi è di trattare, grazie all'interdisciplinarietà fra la storia delle religioni, l'archeologia e l'antropologia, la presenza dei bambini come privilegiati intermediari fra uomini e dèi nel Mediterraneo antico, con particolare attenzione alle religiosità ellenica, magnogreca, romana e punica. Nel mondo antico il bambino è un essere tutto permeato di "natura", che solo l'educazione e l'ingresso nella sfera della "cultura" può rendere un individuo vero e proprio. I bambini, dunque, saranno visti attraverso diverse "prospettive", che, mediante i nomi, i giochi, i suoni, i rituali, le sepolture e le voci stesse degli antichi, li vedranno sempre protagonisti di un esclusivo rapporto con il divino. In copertina Fanciullo raffigurato come Ercole che strozza i serpenti Roma, Musei Capitolini, inv. MC 247/S. Negativo: Archivio Fotografico dei Musei Capitolini. ARACNE euro 28,00 Indice 9 Prefazione di Chiara Terranova PARTE I La vita e la morte 29 Il volto della promessa: l'attribuzione del nome nelle scene d'annuncio, tra poesia greca preclassica e Vangeli dell'Infanzia GIOVANNI TOSETTI 53 La musica e l'infanzia nel mondo antico. Fonti scritte e documentazione archeologica ANGELA BELLIA 71 Cenni sulle sepolture infantili nel mondo greco e romano GIORGIA TULUMELLO 111 Raptus a Nymphis. Emozioni e gender nelle epigrafi funerarie di bambini DORALICE FABIANO 141 Fra Greci, indigeni e Greci d'Occidente. Parures e amuleti dalle sepolture infantili del Mediterraneo antico DANIELA COSTANZO, CÉLINE DUBOIS Indice 6 185 Cuccioli d'uomo, cuccioli di cane. Nuove proposte per l'interpretazione del materiale proveniente dalla necropoli di Lugnano in Teverina GIULIA PEDRUCCI 217 A proposito di un amuleto dall'Emporion agrigentino: l'evidenza archeologica della morte del lattante nell'antica Agrigento VALENTINA CAMINNECI 257 Le sepolture dei bambini nelle necropoli di Himera: dati preliminari STEFANO VASSALLO 291 Seppellimenti infantili nella necropoli punica di Palermo FRANCESCA SPATAFORA 311 La scena del parto. Nascita del corpo e salvezza dell'anima tra religione, medicina e -magia‖ nell'altomedioevo ALESSANDRA FOSCATI PARTE II Il mito 341 Le nascite traumatiche di Dioniso: iniziazioni e gruppi dionisiaci FILIPPO SCIACCA 361 Exposition et initiation: enfants mythiques soumis à l'épreuve du coffre et abandonnés aux flots GABRIELA CURSARU 387 Orestes as the avenging child in Greek tragedy BEATRIZ DE PAOLI Indice 7 403 Cannibalismo infantile fra mito e ritualità SERGIO RUSSO PARTE III Il bambino come "soggetto" del rituale 443 Canti di fanciulli in onore della dea. I bambini nell'ambito di pratiche rituali per le divinità: il caso di Ecate e Zeus nella Caria ellenistico-romana ROMINA CARBONI PARTE IV Il bambino come "oggetto" del rituale 467 Doni votivi al Pais. Trottole e giochi dal Kabirion tebano, tra riti di passaggio, Mysteria e miti orfici EMILIANO CRUCCAS 495 Classical and Hellenistic statuettes of the so-called -Temple Boys‖: A religious and social reappraisal Abstract Le statuette dei cosiddetti -Temple Boys‖ in età classica ed ellenistica. Un riesame religioso e sociale
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