MTU Cork Library Catalogue

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Art and the Roman viewer : the transformation of art from the pagan world to christianity / Jas Elsner.

By: Elsner, Jaś.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: New York : Cambridge University Press, 1995Description: xxvi, 374 p. : ill.(some col.) ; 26 cm. + pbk.ISBN: 0521599520.Subject(s): Art, Roman -- Themes, motives | Art, Early Christian -- Themes, motives | Aesthetics, RomanDDC classification: 709.37
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
General Lending MTU Crawford College of Art and Design Library Lending 709.37 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00066395
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Art and the Roman Viewer presents a fresh analysis of a major intellectual problem in the history of art: why did the arts of Late Antiquity move away from classical naturalism towards spiritual abstraction? Arguing from a close examination of ancient art images and texts, Jas Elsner shows how an understanding of Roman viewing practices greatly deepens our insight into this fundamental transformation. The sophisticated arts of the early empire, such as Pompeian painting, sculpted reliefs and silverware, entertain the potential for irony, parody, and deconstruction. By contrast, the symbolic arts of the Christian empire, notably the mosaics of Ravenna, eschew irony, while complexity remains, indeed intensifies, as multiple meanings compete to enrich a fundamentally sacred truth. By addressing the subtleties inherent in ancient viewing, this study embarks on a quest to enrich our understanding of an era of profound artistic change.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • Part I Ways of Viewing in the Roman World
  • 1 Viewing and the real: the Imagines of Philostratus and the Tabula of Cebes
  • 2 Viewing and society: images, the view, and the Roman house
  • 3 Viewing and the sacred: Pagan, Christian, and the vision of God
  • 4 Viewing and identity: the travels of Pausanias or a Greek pilgrim in the Roman World
  • Part II The Transformation of Art from Augustus to Justinian
  • 5 Reflections on a Roman revolution: a transformation in the image and conception of the Emperor
  • 6 From the literal to the symbolic: a transformation in the nature of Roman religion and Roman religious art
  • Part III Epilogue: Modulations of Change
  • 7 The truth within these empty figures: the genesis of Christian visual exegesis

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