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Index
Cover
Series page
Title page
Copyright page
List of Illustrations
List of Color Plates
List of Maps
Notes on Contributors
Preface
PART I: Introduction
Chapter 1: The Greeks and their Art
1.1 A Companion to Greek Art
1.2 Greek Art after the Greeks
1.3 A Companion to Greek Art
PART II: Forms, Times, and Places
Chapter 2: Chronology and Topography
2.1 Chronology
2.2 Topography
2.3 Conclusion
Chapter 3: Greek Decorated Pottery I: Athenian Vase-painting
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Late Bronze Age and Sub-Mycenaean
3.3 Protogeometric
3.4 Protogeometric
3.5 Protoattic
3.6 Painters and Techniques
3.7 Black-figure
3.8 Red-figure
3.9 Trade and Distribution
3.10 Pictures
3.11 Shapes
3.12 Chronology
Chapter 4: Greek Decorated Pottery II: Regions and Workshops
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Corinthian
4.3 Boeotian
4.4 Euboean
4.5 Lakonian
4.6 Elean
4.7 Cycladic
4.8 Cretan
4.9 East Greek
4.10 Northern Greek
4.11 Conclusion
Chapter 5: Free-standing and Relief Sculpture
5.1 Introduction
5.2 The Geometric Period
5.3 The Archaic Period
5.4 The Classical Period
5.5 The Hellenistic Period
Chapter 6: Architecture in City and Sanctuary
6.1 Early Development in Greek Architecture
6.2 Forms and Conventions
6.3 The Temples
6.4 Other Buildings in Sanctuaries
6.5 City Planning
6.6 Public Structures in Greek Cities
6.7 Residential Structures
6.8 Tombs
Chapter 7: Architectural Sculpture
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Polychromy
7.3 Pediments
7.4 Friezes
7.5 Metopes
7.6 Acroteria
7.7 Sculptured Column Drums
7.8 Sculptured Ceiling Coffers
7.9 Caryatids and Telamons
7.10 Parapets
7.11 Medallion Busts
7.12 Testimonia
Chapter 8: Wall- and Panel-painting
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Techniques and Pigments
8.3 Tetrachromy, Polychromy, Skiagraphia
8.4 From Mimesis to Visual Trickery
8.5 The Evidence from Macedonian Tombs
8.6 Painting at the Time of Alexander and Later
8.7 Skenographia and the Invention of the Landscape
8.8 Art Criticism
Chapter 9: Mosaics
9.1 Pebble Mosaics: Origins, Function, and Design
9.2 Style and Chronology of Pebble Mosaics
9.3 Alternative Techniques, and the Development of Tessellated Mosaic
9.4 Tessellated Mosaics: Function and Meaning
Chapter 10: Luxury Arts
10.1 Introduction
10.2 Jewelry
10.3 Metal Vessels
10.4 Engraved Gems
10.5 Finger Rings
Chapter 11: Terracottas
11.1 Introduction
11.2 Technology
11.3 Types and Functions of Terracotta Figures
11.4 Terracottas, Bronzes, and Other Sculpture
Chapter 12: Coinages
12.1 Availability
12.2 Iconography
12.3 Opportunities
12.4 Weaknesses
12.5 The Die-engravers
12.6 Conclusion
Chapter 13: Workshops and Technology
13.1 Craft Workshops and the Community in the Greek World
13.2 The Potter’s Workshop
13.3 The Smith’s Workshop
13.4 The Sculptor’s Workshop
13.5 Workshops
13.6 Borrowings and Breakthroughs
13.7 Social Standing and Appreciation
Chapter 14: Ancient Writers on Art
14.1 Introduction
14.2 Inscriptions
14.3 Artists’ Treatises
14.4 Pliny and Pausanias
14.5 Homer and the Poets
14.6 Orators, Rhetoricians, and Essayists
14.7 Philosophers
14.8 Historians and Others
14.9 Conclusion
PART III: Contacts and Colonies
Chapter 15: Egypt and North Africa
15.1 Greeks in Egypt: Prehistory
15.2 Greeks in Egypt: Archaic Contact
15.3 Naukratis
15.4 Other Sites
15.5 Decorated Pottery and Transport Amphorae
15.6 The Persian Conquest to the Ptolemies
15.7 Greek Colonies in North Africa
15.8 Conclusion
Chapter 16: Cyprus and the Near East
16.1 Introduction
16.2 The Greeks in Cyprus
16.3 The Greeks in Syria and the Levant
16.4 The Greeks in Persia
16.5 Conclusion
Chapter 17: Asia Minor
17.1 Introduction
17.2 Ionian Migration
17.3 Temples: An Exemplary Form of Greek Art and Architecture
17.4 Ionian, Phrygian, and Lydian Sculpture and Art
17.5 The Classical Period
17.6 The Hellenization of Dynastic Lycia
17.7 Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Kingdoms
17.8 Sagalassos: From Rural Settlement to Hellenized Greek City
Chapter 18: The Black Sea
18.1 Introduction
18.2 First Traces of Greek Contacts
18.3 Foundation of Colonies and Greek Pottery Finds
18.4 Constitutions, Public Life, and Coinage
18.5 Agriculture, Handicrafts, and Fishing
18.6 Art and Warfare
18.7 Religion
18.8 Architecture
18.9 Sculpture, Painting, and Minor Arts
18.10 Graves and Burials
18.11 Greeks and Scythians
18.12 Greeks and Thracians
18.13 Eastern and Southern Black Sea
Chapter 19: Sicily and South Italy
19.1 Introduction
19.2 Late Geometric and Orientalizing
19.3 Archaic
19.4 Early Classical
19.5 High Classical
19.6 Late Classical
19.7 Hellenistic
19.8 Conclusion
Series page
Title page
Copyright page
List of Illustrations
Notes on Contributors
PART IV: Images and Meanings
Chapter 20: Olympian Gods at Home and Abroad
20.1 Introduction
20.2 The Gods on the Parthenon Frieze
20.3 Gods on Earth: The Wedding of Peleus and Thetis
20.4 Warfare and the Gods
20.5 A Hero Among the Gods
20.6 Epilogue: Gods and Mortals on the Parthenon
Chapter 21: Politics and Society
21.1 Introduction
21.2 Burial and Cultic Evidence, Iconography, and Iron Age Society
21.3 Tyrants, Aristocrats, and their Impact on Art in the Archaic Period
21.4 Images and Dedications of Famous and Anonymous People
21.5 The Impact of the Persian Wars on Early Classical Art (c. 490–450 BC)
21.6 Interaction of Civic Life and Visual Arts during the Classical Period
21.7 Epilogue: Hellenistic Art, Rulers, and Society
Chapter 22: Personification: Not Just a Symbolic Mode
22.1 Introduction
22.2 Personification in Greek Art
22.3 Personification and Agency
Chapter 23: The Non-Greek in Greek Art
23.1 Introduction
23.2 Encountering the Uncivilized
23.3 Pre-Classical Amazons
23.4 Legendary Trojans
23.5 Encountering Non-Greeks
23.6 Greeks versus Persians: Non-Greek Others in Monumental Art of the Classical Period
23.7 Conclusion
Chapter 24: Birth, Marriage, and Death
24.1 Introduction
24.2 Birth
24.3 Marriage
24.4 Death
Chapter 25: Age, Gender, and Social Identity
25.1 Introduction
25.2 Geometric to Archaic
25.3 Classical
25.4 Hellenistic
Chapter 26: Sex, Gender, and Sexuality
26.1 Introduction
26.2 The Seeming Transparency of Greek Art
26.3 Sex
26.4 Gender
26.5 Sexuality
26.6 Heterosexuality
26.7 Homosexuality
26.8 Conclusion
Chapter 27: Drinking and Dining
27.1 Introduction
27.2 The Changing Role of Dining from the Bronze Age to the Classical Period
27.3 The Symposion: A Definition
27.4 The Development of the Symposion
27.5 Sympotic Equipment
27.6 Decoration on Sympotic Vases
27.7 The Export Market
27.8 Drinking, Dining, and Greek Culture
Chapter 28: Competition, Festival, and Performance
28.1 Introduction
28.2 Athlete, Sport, and Games
28.3 Dance, Drama, and Dithyramb
28.4 ‘Tenella Kallinike’ (‘Hurrah, Fair Victor!’)
Chapter 29: Figuring Religious Ritual
29.1 Introduction
29.2 Sacrifice, Procession, Consumption
29.3 Space, Gestures, Time
29.4 Dionysian Imagery
Chapter 30: Agency in Greek Art
30.1 Introduction: Agency and Pausanias
30.2 Concepts of Agency
30.3 From the François Vase to the Euphronios Krater
30.4 Myron’s Diskobolos
30.5 Conclusion
PART V: Greek Art: Ancient to Antique
Chapter 31: Greek Art through Roman Eyes
31.1 Introduction
31.2 Greek Art as Roman Art, and Vice Versa: The Tabula Iliaca Capitolina
31.3 Greek Art as Roman Cultural Capital: ‘Cubiculum B’ in the Villa Farnesina
31.4 Greek Art and Roman Decor: The Sperlonga Grotto
31.5 Conclusion: Greek Art through Roman Eyes
Chapter 32: Greek Art in Late Antiquity and Byzantium
32.1 Introduction
32.2 Athens
32.3 Constantinople
Chapter 33: The Antique Legacy from the Middle Ages to the Enlightenment
33.1 Introduction
33.2 The Medieval Period
33.3 The Renaissance
33.4 The Age of Enlightenment
33.5 Conclusion
Chapter 34: Greek Art and the Grand Tour
34.1 The Grand Tour in Outline
34.2 Greek Art in Italy
34.3 What They Saw on the Grand Tour
34.4 Emma Hamilton’s Attitudes
34.5 Rediscovering Greek Architecture on the Grand Tour to Italy and Greece
34.6 The Impact of the Grand Tour
Chapter 35: Myth and the Ideal in 20th c. Exhibitions of Classical Art
35.1 The Rise of Idealism
35.2 The Beau-Ideal Tradition
35.3 Ideal in Style – Ideal in System
35.4 The Overtly Political Louvre
35.5 Epistemological Tension at the British Museum
35.6 The Educational Aspect of Beauty at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
35.7 Antiquity at the National Archaeological Museum at Athens
35.8 Conclusion
Chapter 36: The Cultural Property Debate
36.1 ‘Who Owns Ancient Art and Cultural Heritage?’
36.2 Owning Ancient Art and Cultural Heritage
36.3 ‘The Nation is the Steward of Cultural Property’
36.4 ‘Of Humankind’
36.5 Deconstructing the National: Critique and New Developments
36.6 ‘Peopling the Nations’ and the Social Value of the Past
36.7 ‘Cultural Property Internationalism’
36.8 Conclusion: ‘Someone Always Owns the Past’
Chapter 37: Greek Art at University, 19th–20th c.
37.1 Introduction
37.2 Origins of Classical Archaeology
37.3 Classical Studies in Germany
37.4 Architects, Artists, and the Study of Greek Archaeology
37.5 Classical Archaeology in the United States
37.6 Classical Archaeology in France and Italy
37.7 Classical Archaeology in Great Britain
37.8 Classical Archaeology in the Interwar Period
37.9 Classical Archaeology after World War II
Chapter 38: Surveying the Scholarship
38.1 First in the Humanities
38.2 Opening the Flood Gates: Content Portals
38.3 Still in the Books Stacks
38.4 Excavation Reports and the National Schools
38.5 Travelers and Popular Writers
38.6 The Search for the Perfect Picture
38.7 The Path Not Yet Taken
Bibliography
Plates
Index
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