Fr. 196.00

Women and Visual Replication in Roman Imperial Art and Culture - Visual Replication and Urban Elites

English · Hardback

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Description

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"Why did Roman portrait statues, famed for their individuality, repeatedly employ the same body forms? The complex issue of the Roman copying of Greek 'originals' has so far been studied primarily from a formal and aesthetic viewpoint. Jennifer Trimble takes a broader perspective, considering archaeological, social historical and economic factors, and examines how these statues were made, bought and seen. To understand how Roman visual replication worked, Trimble focuses on the 'Large Herculaneum Woman' statue type, a draped female body particularly common in the second century CE and surviving in about two hundred examples, to assess how sameness helped to communicate a woman's social identity. She demonstrates how visual replication in the Roman Empirethus emerged as a means of constructing social power and articulating dynamic tensions between empire and individual localities"--

Product details

Authors Jennifer Trimble, Jennifer (Stanford University Trimble, Trimble Jennifer
Publisher Cambridge University Press ELT
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 15.09.2011
 
EAN 9780521825153
ISBN 978-0-521-82515-3
No. of pages 500
Series Greek Culture in the Roman World
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Art > Art history

ART / History / General, History of Art, Classical style, History of art: ancient & classical art,BCE to c 500 CE

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