Description
Artful descriptions.
This volume presents kindred works important for evidence relating to late Greek art. They are attributed to two men each known as Philostratus and to a third man called Callistratus, otherwise unknown. To an elder Philostratus, the Lemnian, born ca. AD 190, junior kinsman of the Philostratus who wrote the Life of Apollonius of Tyana and Lives of the Sophists, is attributed the series of sixty-five Eikones or Imagines, descriptions (in two books) ostensibly of paintings in a gallery at Naples. A younger Philostratus, apparently his grandson, is credited with seventeen similar descriptions. The fourteen Ekphraseis attributed to Callistratus are descriptions of statues in stone or bronze, written probably in the fourth century AD. It is not known to what extent the descriptions are of real works of art, but they show how artists treated their subjects, and are written with some artistic knowledge. Yet rhetorical skill dominates: these pieces were written to display the writers' powers of description.
About the Author
Arthur Fairbanks (1864-1944) taught Greek and archaeology at the Universities of Iowa and Michigan and was Curator of Classical Art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Book Information
ISBN 9780674992825
Author Philostratus the Elder
Format Hardback
Page Count 480
Imprint LOEB
Publisher Harvard University Press
Weight(grams) 318g