About This Book
This work examines how ancient Greek religion and visual art informed one another, arguing that cult imagery and sculptural idealism shaped popular and official conceptions of the gods. It surveys differing religious perspectives—popular, official, poetic, philosophical—and traces how anthropomorphism, idealism, individualism, personification, convention, and symbolism influenced sculpture, relief, and vase painting. Emphasis falls on sculpture's role in embodying and transmitting religious ideals, on artworks as records of myth and ritual, and on the tension between inherited cult images and later artistic refinement.
About the Author
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