The Roman Nude

Heroic Portrait Statuary 200 BC - AD 300
ISBN13: 9780199240494ISBN10: 0199240493 Hardback, 416 pages

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Paperback
Nov 2005,  In Stock

Price:

$225.00 (06)

Description

Statues of important Romans frequently represented them nude. Men were portrayed naked holding weapons. The naked emperor might wield the thunderbolt of Jupiter, while Roman women assumed the guide of the nude love-goddess, Venus. When faced with these strange images, modern viewers are usually unsympathetic, finding them incongruous, even tasteless. They are mostly written off as just another example of Roman `bad taste'.

This book offers a new approach. Comprehensively illustrated with black and white photographs of its subjects, it investigates how this tradition arose, and how the nudity of these portraits was meant to be understood by contemporary viewers. And, since the Romans also employed a range of costumes for their statues (toga, armour, Greek philosopher's cloak), it asks, `What could the nude images express that other costumes could not?' It is Christopher Hallett's claim that - looked at in this way - these `Roman nudes' turn out to be documents of the first importance for the cultural historian.

Features

  • Explores the topics of the body and self-representation, currently of great interest in classical studies
  • Surveys the many examples of nude heroic portraiture and sets them in cultural context
  • Comprehensively illustrated with black and white photographs of the works discussed

Product Details

416 pages; 160 halftones; ISBN13: 978-0-19-924049-4ISBN10: 0-19-924049-3

About the Author(s)

Christopher H. Hallett is Professor of History of Art and Classics, University of California at Berkeley.

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