Dorka Moreno, Martin (editor)
Lipps, Johannes (editor)
Griesbach, Jochen (editor)
The majority of ancient statues can be typologised on the basis of formal overlaps, i.e. arranged in 'schemes'. Individual statue schemes were handed down over centuries in ever new versions and integrated into different material, spatial and functional contexts. These processes of reception and transformation can be understood as cultural appropriations that were aesthetically, politically and/or religiously motivated. As a rule, they presupposed education and thus also had a social component. Often, however, purely practical reasons such as the availability of a certain form led to the reproduction of anthropomorphic figures according to a scheme. In the process, the pictorial works could preserve the former contexts of meaning of their models, only partially adopt them or ignore them and 'overwrite' them with completely new meanings. This volume, which is the result of an international conference in Tübingen, brings together contributions that discuss the above-mentioned processes of reception in individual centres and regions of the Roman Empire.DOI
10.29091/9783752005752ISBN
9783752005752, 9783954904495, 9783752005752Publisher
Reichert VerlagPublication date and place
2021Imprint
Reichert VerlagSeries
Material Appropriation Processes In Antiquity, 1Classification
Archaeology by period / regionSculptureAncient RomePages
368
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