Art and Archaeology: Book Review: Akroter und Architektur. Figürliche Skulptur auf Dächern griechischer Bauten vom 6. bis zum 4. Jahrhundert v. Chr by Corinna Reinhardt

I am no doubt showing my prejudice, but I didn't expect a book on Greek acroteria to make for such exciting lockdown reading. Because of their position high up on temple buildings, extant sculpted materials tend to be fragmentary – and hence pushed to the literal and metaphorical corners of mod...

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Veröffentlicht in:Greece and Rome 2021, Vol.68 (1), p.148-158
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description I am no doubt showing my prejudice, but I didn't expect a book on Greek acroteria to make for such exciting lockdown reading. Because of their position high up on temple buildings, extant sculpted materials tend to be fragmentary – and hence pushed to the literal and metaphorical corners of modern-day museums. Look to scholarly publications, moreover, and there is a tendency towards classificatory catalogues, markedly less in the way of theoretical discussion (whether about architectural and cultic framing, for example, historical aesthetics, or the intersection between ‘ornamental’ and ‘figurative’ representational modes).
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S0017383520000327
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source Cambridge Journals Online
subjects Aesthetics
Ambiguity
Archaeology
Architecture
Case studies
Collaboration
Culture
Ideology
Literary devices
Material culture
Metaphor
Museums
Narrative techniques
Sculpture
title Art and Archaeology: Book Review: Akroter und Architektur. Figürliche Skulptur auf Dächern griechischer Bauten vom 6. bis zum 4. Jahrhundert v. Chr by Corinna Reinhardt
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