Archaic and Classical Greek Art is a revolutionary introduction to the
images and sculptures of Ancient Greece from the Geometric period to the
early Hellenistic. By carefully examining the context in which
sculptures and paintings were produced, author Robin Osborne shows how
artists responded to the challenges they faced in the formidable and
ambitious world of the Greek city-state, producing the rich diversity of
forms apparent in Greek art. Artistic developments of the period
combined the influences of the symbolism and imagery of eastern
Mediterranean art with the explorations of humanity embodied in the
narratives of Greek poetry, while drawings and sculptures referred so
intimately to the human form as to lead both ancient and modern
theorists to talk in terms of the 'mimetic' role of art. Ranging widely
over the fields of sculpture, vase painting, and the minor arts, and
offering a wide selection of unusual images alongside the familiar
masterpieces, this work discusses
the changing forms of art, and how art was used to define men's
relationships with other men, women, slaves, society, nature, and the
gods.