Art, Desire and the Body in Ancient Greece
The body was central to the visual culture of ancient Greece, reflecting an obsession with physical beauty, integrity, dynamism, and power. In this study, Andrew Stewart analyses the problem of the Greeks' strange preoccupation with nakedness and sketches how artworks filter our understanding of the subject. Exploring selected constructions of gender, ranging from the men of the Parthenon frieze to naked girls on Spartan hand-mirrors, Stewart investigates the Greek body as a microcosm of society, focusing upon figurations of the Athenian body politic, erotica for men and women, and selected representations of the Other, such as Gorgons, Satyrs, Centaurs, and Amazons. A cultural, theoretical and sociological study of this seminal topic, Stewart's analysis offers new insights into the society and mentality of the ancient Greeks.
- Brings recent theoretical work on gender, desire, and visuality to bear on a time-worn subject
- Subjects and media range broadly from the Parthenon to erotica
- Richly illustrated with 12 colour plates and 159 half-tones, much of it little-known and seldom-published material
Reviews & endorsements
'This sparky survey offers a critical review of the foreignness of Greek art, focusing in particular on its infatuation with the naked human form, which it sets in the context of the latest literary theory … This is a readable and far-reaching book, applying theory in ways that are relevant for all art, and rewarding for novice and expert alike.' Museums and Galleries Magazine
'… a valuable study - and one which combines a mass of dependable information with a central provocative thesis'. Apollo
'… succeeds in 'making this art seem strange', that is, in helping us to see these objects as they might originally have been seen'. The Art Newspaper
'…Stewart's book is at once readable and rich in new ideas, the most important contribution to the study of both sexuality and art in the ancient world for some time.' London Review of Books.
'Stewart provides an art history of classical eroticism and self-display that at last matches the sophisticated level of literary studies in this area.' Greece and Rome
'The combination of interesting text and plentiful illustrations … would make this a desirable aquisition for any library.' Emma J. Stafford, JACT
'What, for me, makes Stewart a truly great art historian is that, unlike too many in his field, he can and does write as a historian tout court, always alert to the politics, economics and civic nuances that form the supporting (or occasionally destructive) matrix for art, and much of the time using visual evidence just as he might use texts or inscriptions: to plot social change.' Peter Green, The Times Literary Supplement
'Stewart, obviously a good and enthusiastic teacher, has produced a clear and well-written account of a subject that has become quite unnecessarily obscured.' Art Book Review Quarterly
Product details
November 1998Paperback
9780521456807
288 pages
279 × 215 × 19 mm
0.965kg
159 b/w illus. 12 colour illus.
Unavailable - out of print September 2001
Table of Contents
- 1. Bodies familiar and unfamiliar
- 2. Body and gender in the Greek city
- 3. 'Visuality', gaze, and glance
- 4. The public eye
- 5. Looking around the city
- 6. The problem
- 7. Nakedness in Greek life
- 8. Nakedness in early Greek art
- 9. Art, the body, and desire
- 10. Marble
- 11. Bronze
- 12. Painted pottery
- 13. Best and brightest
- 14. Marathon man
- 15. Eternal springtime?
- 16. Bed and battle
- 17. The Doryphoros
- 18. The Knidia
- 19. Of pain and pleasure
- 20. 'Going dorian'
- 21. Athenian perspectives
- 22. Hegeso revisited
- 23. Athens to ca. 510
- 24. From Kleisthenes to Xerxes
- 25. Kimonian and Periklean Athens
- 26. Conflict and disaster
- 27. Revival and ruination
- 28. For men
- 29. For women
- 30. Two images of alterity
- 31. Centaurs and Amazons
- 32. Role reversal: the Praxitelean satyr
- 33. New horizons
- 34. In and out of the city
- 35. The kingdoms: insiders and others
- 36. Gender-drift and the bisexual body.