This book assesses the role of relief in the representation of space in Graeco-Roman artistic practice and its study - from Winckelmann to the mid-twentieth century - when Classical art developed as a theoretical discipline. The role of relief in the history of ancient sculpture has long been acknowledged, yet the problems posed by an engagement with the representation of space have not been a subject of specific and sustained inquiry. Neither a conventional history nor a comprehensive historiography, this book traces the study of relief - of its formal character, its artistic purpose, its aesthetic significance, and its historical treatment. The contribution to scholarship is three-fold: (1) By means of a wide array of examples, the book demonstrates that the visual strategies employed to represent space during the Graeco-Roman period were a continuously evolving repertory tied to the refinement of techniques and the transformation of styles that those techniques brought into being. (2) It examines ideas now commonplace, based on scholarship now long-neglected if not completely forgotten. And (3) it reveals how competing interpretations of the representation of space in relief elaborated new approaches to the monuments and their representations.
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"Especially valuable for scholars seeking to address gaps in architectural or historical contexts [...] the book successfully employs older scholarship to enrich our understanding of the physical composition of relief artworks and Graeco-Roman paintings. In this way K.'s book stands as a masterful synthesis of historical, aesthetic and practical insights into Graeco-Roman relief art and its spatial representation."
Jessica Venner, in: The Classical Review, published online 2014: 1-3 (https://doi.org/10.1017/S0009840X24001392)
Jessica Venner, in: The Classical Review, published online 2014: 1-3 (https://doi.org/10.1017/S0009840X24001392)