The remodeling of the theater at ancient Corinth in the 2nd century A.D.
included lavish decorations, the chief of which were three dramatic
friezes. In publishing them this book presents the most ambitious
sculptural program known among theaters on the Greek mainland, and
indeed one of the more elaborate decorative schemes among published
theaters of the Roman empire. The friezes (the Gigantomachy, the
Amazonomachy, and the Labors of Herakles) are presented each in turn
with a discussion of its position in Greek art and a stylistic analysis,
followed by a catalogue of the pieces arranged as far as possible in the
proposed sequence of relief slabs. There follows a discussion of known
theater friezes throughout the classical world and of the Corinth
scaenae frons as restored by the author.